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review 2015-03-25 00:02
Review: Chaos Theory by M. Evonne Dobson
Chaos Theory - M. Evonne Dobson

“My life is a high-wire act looking down at the world, and the people below are like distant data sets. Well, those data sets are leaping up to bite me in the butt, forcing me to fall smack into the chaos below.”


Kami’s character is a teen genius aiming for MIT. She doesn’t relate to people and often gives them nicknames of her own devising. For her science project she gathers scraps of meaningful pieces of her life (concert tickets, letters) and stuffs them in her locker with a color coded marble for her “chaos theory” experiment. Everyday she opens her locker she literally waits for another ball to drop. One small change can significantly effect the future (think Butterfly Effect) and Kami struggles to grasp how she can define that in just a locker.

 

Enter: Daniel. He’s known around school as the boy who killed his sister with drugs. When Kami accidentally gets involved with him, something just doesn’t add up in her logical mind and she can’t let go of the mystery behind the boy.

 

Sandy is Kami’s best friend, probably the only one who knows and understands every side of her. Sandy’s theatre work and gossip network makes her a more than competent part of the team.

 

Sam is Sandy’s boyfriend and a reporter for the newspaper. His inquisitive nature and sleuthing skills of his own help him join in the ranks.

 

But (thank goodness) this isn’t a story about teenagers trying to take down drug dealers on their own. Kami’s little group work with Daniel’s handler, Detective Bob, to figure out the truth behind Julia’s death and the drugs found with her.

 

As the story moves on the chaos theory experiment becomes less about the locker and expands into the real world as Kami herself is gaining more knowledge of people as humans and not just data points. The group learns how each small and seemingly unimportant change in Julia’s life ultimately contributed to the end.

 

Overall, I suggest this book to anyone who likes young adult mystery/crime novels with a small mixture of romance. I’m most defiantly waiting for another Kami File.

 

ReadingBifrost Blog

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review 2015-02-15 00:00
Chaos Theory
Chaos Theory - M. Evonne Dobson “My life is a high-wire act looking down at the world, and the people below are like distant data sets. Well, those data sets are leaping up to bite me in the butt, forcing me to fall smack into the chaos below.”

Kami’s character is a teen genius aiming for MIT. She doesn’t relate to people and often gives them nicknames of her own devising. For her science project she gathers scraps of meaningful pieces of her life (concert tickets, letters) and stuffs them in her locker with a color coded marble for her “chaos theory” experiment. Everyday she opens her locker she literally waits for another ball to drop. One small change can significantly effect the future (think Butterfly Effect) and Kami struggles to grasp how she can define that in just a locker.

Enter: Daniel. He’s known around school as the boy who killed his sister with drugs. When Kami accidentally gets involved with him, something just doesn’t add up in her logical mind and she can’t let go of the mystery behind the boy.

Sandy is Kami’s best friend, probably the only one who knows and understands every side of her. Sandy’s theatre work and gossip network makes her a more than competent part of the team.

Sam is Sandy’s boyfriend and a reporter for the newspaper. His inquisitive nature and sleuthing skills of his own help him join in the ranks.

But (thank goodness) this isn’t a story about teenagers trying to take down drug dealers on their own. Kami’s little group work with Daniel’s handler, Detective Bob, to figure out the truth behind Julia’s death and the drugs found with her.

As the story moves on the chaos theory experiment becomes less about the locker and expands into the real world as Kami herself is gaining more knowledge of people as humans and not just data points. The group learns how each small and seemingly unimportant change in Julia’s life ultimately contributed to the end.

Overall, I suggest this book to anyone who likes young adult mystery/crime novels with a small mixture of romance. I’m most defiantly waiting for another Kami File.
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text 2015-01-15 08:34
TBR Thursday #23
Dear Committee Members - Julie Schumacher
Billy Lovecraft Saves the World - Billy Lovecraft
We Are Watching: Mindshare Book 1 - Stephen M. Stewart
Purenet: The Sanction Series (The Sanction Thriller Series) (Volume 1) - H.J. Lawson
Sacrificed (The Last Oracle, Book 1) - Emily Wibberley
Sherlock Holmes in Japan - Vasudev Murthy
Chaos Theory - M. Evonne Dobson
Ignite - Erica Crouch
Fireblood - Jeff Wheeler
Unborn - Amber Lynn Natusch

Moonlight Reader started the TBR Thursday, and I think it's a good way to a) show what new books I've got and b) confront myself with my inability to lower my TBR. In fact, since I started recording it, it has risen significantly. I get the feeling I'm doing something wrong here...

 

I could just copy last weeks' post as it is still so true. If there's one thing I already knew deep down but I've definitely learned these past weeks is that it's so comforting to look for books, request books and get books. Even when it's still more than 2 weeks before you'll have time again to binge-read them. Which will be necessary, as I added once again a lot of books.

 

I therefore change my goal: the TBR has to stay below 300 (and down from there). I hope I'll manage it.

 

But you wouldn't argue over her book obtain obsession with someone who's completely stressed out for her exams, would you?

It's one of the only things keeping me sane at the moment...

 

(Okay, I'll try not to do it next week)

 

TBR pile currently stands at 293. (+18)

(Netgalley ARCs at 120 (+11))

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