Ratings16
Average rating4.1
The last thing teenager Kelsey Hayes thought she'd be doing over the summer was meeting Ren, a mysterious white tiger and cursed Indian prince! When she learns she alone can break the Tiger's curse, Kelsey's life is turned upside-down. The unlikely duo journeys halfway around the world to piece together an Indian prophecy, find a way to free the man trapped by a centuries-old spell, and discover the path to their true destiny.
Series
2 primary books3 released booksTiger's Curse is a 3-book series with 2 primary works first released in 2011 with contributions by Colleen Houck.
Reviews with the most likes.
4.5 Stars
This book was utterly fantastic. Between the lore, the myths, the world, and the characters, there were so many different facets to this amazing story. I went into this book not having heard anyone else really comment on the series and I had no expectations whatsoever, but let me just say I was blown away by this book. The detail and the writing were amazing and while there was a lot of information to divulge it was an easy read.
The book also moved at a very comfortable pace with progress constantly being made in the quest to undo the curse on Ren and Kishan. From the little bit we saw of Kishan, I think he is a fascinating character and I cannot wait to learn more about him. However, I do not like that this book set up what I assume is a love triangle between Kelsey and the two brothers. And that set up is the reason I docked half a star. I'm tired of love triangles and I was really hoping this series did not have one, but it looks like there will be. However, hopefully I'm wrong and it will just be a strong friendship between Kelsey and Kishan.
As the first in the series, this book did an excellent job of introducing the adventure and giving us the back-story on the events surrounding the curse. While we did get a lot of information, we were also kept in the dark a lot too, which I actually appreciated. We know the “villain” who enacted the curse is still alive, however we do not know anything about what his current motivations and actions are. I'm sure the next book is going to have a lot more to do with him as the gang gets closer and closer to breaking the curse.
I cannot remember how often I've started reading this book, but putting it back down after a chapter or two. I found it boring when I was elementary school, middle school and high school. Now as a college student, I'm not even going to bother reading this book and will do anything to get rid of it after 9 years of having it.
I don't know what it is about this book that makes it so boring and lackluster. Maybe the start is very slow and I for the life of me cannot get past it and into the potentially more interesting part. Maybe the writing is just bland and the main character comes across as Bella Swan 2.0.
The fact that this book uses Indian culture/religion/mythology is great since most books use Greek/Roman/Norse. This could've been a great way for my younger self to get interested in other mythology, but there was this invisible force that prevented me from even getting halfway into the book.
I'm probably rating this one a star higher than I would under normal conditions. Normal conditions being that I'm not all caught up in the emotions of the book, and not sitting here all mopey because I haven't got a hold of the second book yet to see what happens. :)