Seasons
of Time by Miriam Khan opens with an eerie
prologue of a jealous unnamed mystery woman and possible spell-casting that is
the essence of the novel.
The
novel is about Lara Voight, who is sent to spend the summer with her step-mother's
grandmother Gracen, a rude combination of grudge and age.
As
soon as Lara arrives at Gracen's mansion, she experiences burning pains and
emotions as well as a fragrant familiar scent that often results in a vision of
the past. Soon, she discovers that she is the "spitting image" of a Penelope
Le Rose 'Pen' and comes across her diary.
Lara
learns that Pen was murdered in the past. Naturally intrigued, she begins to
delve deeper into the mystery and Pen's past life. As she ventures forward, the
visions increase and Lara begins to discover things about herself. The visions
become quite real and she can literally see through what is happening through
Pen's eyes and feel her emotions.
"My
hand immediately traced my mattress for Pen's Diary, a book that was my
revelation, my retreat to the real me, my beginning with the people I would
always cherish whether I knew them or not."
Soon,
other characters are pulled into the mystery as well. We meet Sheba and her
brother Will, to whom Lara is attracted. We meet Elias, one of Pen's past loves
and relationships, as well as Joseph and Hector.
Lara
is highly sarcastic offering constant comic relief throughout Seasons of
Time, something I particularly liked. At one point while thinking how the
wheelchair-bound Gracen gets around her mansion, she says "Elevator?
So that's how the old ogress got up and down the stairs."
Because
Pen's diary is over a hundred years old, the change in language is clear
between the diary and modern-day writing. It adds a lot to Seasons of Time
and I felt that Pen's writing was a little Jane Austen-like.
In
one of the entries, Lara reads "I see nothing but
our love bloom from note to note. The sky seems tangible my friend. The clouds
sift whispers of a sonnet which I memorise long before I sleep."
One
of the things I felt were rather abrupt was Lara's quick shifts in emotions,
especially from Will to Elias and vice versa. Although, the reader gets the
feeling that Penelope is reincarnated into Lara, still I felt that the shifts
were too quick. We get Pen's love for each man but we don't get the reason
behind such love.
I
did however like that Seasons of Time is considerably clean young-adult,
with the exceptions of a couple of burning love sensations, there isn't any
'adult content', which seems to be inserted in most novels these days.
There
were times when I felt the novel resemble Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights. The line "You
are mine, Pen," he ushered. "Nothing will keep me from you now"
reminds me a lot of Healthcliff.
"Elias
was the one who cast a spell on the likes of [her]. Elias was the condemnation
and the blessing. A heaven embraced by the arms of a deeming hell."
Overall,
I enjoyed Seasons of Time a LOT and liked how past and present mixed in
this quick-paced novel, particularly the twist in the end. The first few long
chapters were a bit tiresome because I don't like to stop mid-way but that was
made up for towards the middle and end with shorter chapters.
Although
I like the cover, I do not feel it is fitting for the novel. It's too general
and does not seem to reflect Lara, Pen or even the mansion where most of the
events take place.
The
novel is narrated from the first person perspective of Lara with shifts to the
first person of Penelope. I enjoyed the imagery the word choice used throughout
the novel as both helped with the flow of the lines and the contributed to the
themes and plot.
I
liked how the author created important roles for secondary characters. With the
exception of Will and Sheba's parents, all other characters play significant
roles in the novel.
Overall
rating: 4.25 stars
Check
out the prologue and excerpt of the first chapter of Seasons of Time here.
Note:
I received a free copy from author Miriam Khan in exchange for an honest review.
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