Member Reviews
I received this book from NetGalley in exchange for my honest review.
What to say here… I really wanted to love this book. Honestly, the idea is amazing and it’s executed well enough but it just falls short for me. The writing is very smart and it reads like a nightmare fairytale but once the “truth” was revealed it felt like the dialogue (which had been so realistic) became very young quickly. The writing is beautiful but the lyrical nature, at times, made it feel like there was filler which could have been taken out to be more concise with the language. I also felt that there wasn’t enough depth for the characters for me to really hold onto.
The Waking Forest by Alyssa Wees is a haunting and beautiful audiobook that seamlessly blends together elements of fantasy, horror, and contemporary fiction. The story follows the journey of Rhea, a teenage girl who dreams of a mysterious forest that seems to be calling out to her. When she finally ventures into the forest, she discovers a dark and twisted world that is both alluring and dangerous.
The audiobook is masterfully narrated by a talented voice actor who brings the story to life in a way that is both gripping and emotional. The narrator's voice is soothing yet haunting, and the way she brings each character to life with unique voices and accents is truly impressive.
The story itself is a thrilling blend of magical realism and horror that will keep listeners on the edge of their seats. Wees' prose is lyrical and vivid, painting a vivid picture of the dark and mysterious forest that Rhea finds herself in. The world-building is top-notch, and listeners will feel like they are right there alongside Rhea as she navigates the twisted world of the Waking Forest.
One of the standout features of the audiobook is the way it explores themes of identity, memory, and family. Rhea's journey is not just a physical one, but an emotional and psychological one as well. Wees explores the complex relationships between parents and children, and the impact that trauma and memory can have on our sense of self.
Overall, The Waking Forest is a captivating and immersive audiobook that is not to be missed. With its stunning prose, masterful narration, and hauntingly beautiful story, it is sure to stay with listeners long after the final chapter.
I liked this book overall. I struggled to get into it but I'm glad I stuck with it. The story is very intriguing and I was left very happy with it
This was a fun fantasy novel. Very ethereal, whimsical, and fairy tale-esq. There are two main timelines, one about a witch who grants wishes to children and lives in the woods and another about a mostly normal girl in the modern world who is plagued by recurring dreams. I really enjoyed the difference in the writing and the narrator's treatment between the two story arcs. They were easy to identify through narrative style.
I had a hard time getting invested in the book, however. I did not like the narrator's accent in the real-world parts and the whole thing was just a little too dreamy and unreal for my taste. However, I'm sure this book will have many fans.
Thank you to netgalley for the advanced reading copy of the waking forest. This was interesting and ethereal. I'm convinced anything wees writes will have that cool ethereal feel. I really enjoyed it.
Thank you so much to the author Alyssa Wees, NetGalley and Dreamscape Media for the audioARC.
The story was very intriguing as your begin the story and are immediately introduced to this witch who lives in a forest only children can find. Then it pivots and the reader is then introduced to a normal-ish young lady from "our" world. She is afraid of this reoccurring nightmare she keeps having that leads her to a door. She doesn't know what is behind this door, but something inside her knows it is to be feared. She has loving, caring sisters and a mom and dad who support her despite these odd, unexplainable moments she has. FINALLY she gets past the door into the room (the attic) and she meets The Darkness. Time passes as he tries to get her to guess his name and this is about the time the story loses me. I see the layers and I did keep reading, but I didn't quite feel like the story held the mystery and intrigue that the beginning was building.
Throughout the story you learn more about the witch from the beginning and how she is important to the telling of the tale and the awakening of a princess left to slumber and flee from a life where the people she loved were oppressed and killed (even her mother).
This story felt like a mash-up of Rumpelstiltskin, Disney's Maleficent, and Sleeping Beauty...and I REALLY wanted to love it. There is some amazing writing here for a debut author and the layers that went into this plot are a feat of writing strength that I was quite jealous of, if truth be told. Unfortunately, there was just too much going back and forth between the witch and her hearing this fairy tale story by the fox and the Rhea in her real or rather not-so-real life. I see the parallels and the concepts are solid, but a YA reader isn't going to easily pick up on these things and will get bored/frustrated and stop reading.
Overall, I can honestly say I liked the concepts, the layers of reality vs. fairytale vs. dreamscape and I do think there is more to this story that I look forward to reading.
What a beautifully, visual story this was! I loved the descriptions and the narrator did a great job - I really enjoyed the pacing of the narrator's speech, which I find to be really difficult to find! The story was an interesting take on the sleep-beauty fairytale; this deeply sleeping princess with magic bursting from her in a journey for self-preservation was a creative way to journey through fantasy realms, mental health, family ties, found family, and a little romance tossed in for good measure. This really brought to life the idea of finding ones-self, even in the darkest of times.
This was not what I was expecting. The beginning was one time period, and the main was hard to tell. I’m thinking it was modern day. I liked the idea of her having a connection to a witch in the woods and fox boy, but it was just hard to get into story wise.
Thank you to NetGalley, the publisher, and the author for an audio ARC of The Waking Forest in exchange for an honest review!
I enjoyed the way this story was told and the way that it unfolded with all of the different details coming together. While some parts felt rushed, it was overall a very cute and whimsical. My true rating would be 3.5 for some of the details and depth I felt were missing, but Rhea's story is still one I would recommend, especially for younger readers.
This is a unique YA fantasy filled with atmosphere. In one POV, we follow Rhea, who is plagued with visions including a forest behind her house that no one else can see. The story also showcases another POV - that of a witch who grants wishes.
Unfortunately this book didn’t work for me, but I think there are many who would absolutely love this. I never felt connected to the characters and just couldn’t get invested in the story as much as I wanted. I also wasn’t keen on the magic system - I found it to be too vaguely described for my liking. However, there are plenty of things that this book does well.
Firstly, the writing. The two POVs have very distinct narrative styles - that of the witch is fairytale-esque, with lovely prose and evocative descriptions. Rhea’s POV has more of a modern feel.
In my opinion the biggest hit of this book is the atmosphere - the vibes are haunting, weird, quirky, spooky and magical. There is really a fairytale quality to the writing. To get the most out of this book I think it would benefit from being read in a single, or very few, sittings, ideally in a cosy setting with a good cup of tea, so that you can immerse yourself in the story. I think reading this book is small pieces does it a disservice and would really affect the enjoyment. In other words, this is a “sit down and enjoy” type of book, and definitely not a “I’ll read a few pages while I wait for the doctor” type of book.
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an advance copy in exchange for an honest review.
The Waking Forest is a YA fantasy novel that had all the right elements to grab me by the throat- unexplained visions, fairytale elements, and the collision of two simultaneously running stories. I'm sad to say that's where the excitement ended for me. This book had valiant goals and they all fell flat because of dense narration. Purple prose doesn't even begin to cover it- this book is technicolor prose. I feel like the author is better suited as a poet than a novelist- she knows how to weave a beautiful verse. But the in the context of a novel, it takes me out of the story. To be perfectly honest, I got lost so many times, I can barely describe the story's main points. I would have loved richer characterization too because I feel like the plot and how prettily everything sounded got in the way of me getting to know the characters.
This was a very fairytale like book. I thought it was beautiful. The MC finds herself having these vivid dreams, then she starts sleepwalking and opening doors. Her dreams start becoming more and more destructive and she begins losing people she loves. But not all is as it seems, because there is more to the story, and that part of the story is where the fairytale like story begins. I really enjoyed listening to this audiobook. The narrator was great and really brought the story to life. I give this book 4 out of 5 stars. Thank you to Netgalley for this audiobook.
For anyone who enjoys dark fairy tales, fantasy, and surrealism, this would be a great read. I had a hard time following, and was less invested than I should have been, so I don't think I'm the right audience for this book. However, I know readers who love this style, and I will recommend it to them!
The book actually reminded me of We Are All So Good at Smiling, and would be a great read-alike. I will be sure to recommend this for anyone looking for a modern fairy tale.
The Waking Forest
by Alyssa Wees
Dreams and fantasy, magic and gods. The beautiful world where magic is held captive by the king. The users use iron to chain and control those denizens of magic. Making slaves of those who have magic. His struggle to control the world has destroyed his family. The princess moves to the forest to sleep through the problems. It is amazing beautiful, that the combination of the dream and fantasy. Showing the nature of acceptance, the love of souls that accept each other.
Whilst the narrator was lovely to listen to, the plot of the novel was ruined for me by the overuse of description - I found myself bored while waiting for the next scene to happen.
Having said that, the narrator does a great job of giving characters expression and life, and I appreciated the voice differences she used for each character.
While I received a copy of this audiobook in exchange for a review, all opinions remain my own. Thank you NetGalley and Dreamscape media for the opportunity to read this story.
The way this book started out, I never expected it to twist the way that it did but boy am I glad. It ended up being adventurous and magical and beautiful. I love how the author weaved in the element of anxiety, that even magical creatures can have it, that it affects them and they have to learn to live with it and manage it. Might have just been a small part, but as someone who deals with it on the daily, it was big for me. I loved the characters, the family. It all felt so very real to me. Even the magical part that is so very not real, felt as if it could have been, just lurking beyond our world. I love books like this, where we can set aside our perception of reality and pretend, even for just a little while, that magic might just really exist and how would that happen. This is just one of those possibilities.
Skye, My Skye (IYKYK) is cursed and is working out how to break that curse, all while figuring out who the darkness
is that seems to haunt her attic and her dreams, and what the
story is with this imaginary forest only she can see!
The witch in the woods, with the fox that isn’t a fox who tells
her stories of the world beyond the woods is such a whimsical character and I loved the way things wound up for her.
I liked this story and honestly would recommend it to read but,
I can’t say I’m obsessed, there is heart breaking moments in this story,
I gasped out loud at one point with the maculates and immaculates!
All in all this story has all the right elements that had me powering
through this audiobook and kind of wishing it hadn’t ended.
This was so beautifully written, it transports you to this magical world of reality mixed with old fairy tales and magic. I loved reading this and seeing the relationships between Rhea and her family, especially her sisters and seeing how this developed into the story. I also thought it was really unique how the two storylines merged and I was really curious to how that would happen. The only downside was at the end of the book I felt it did begin to drag slightly and it slowed down a bit after the reveal/big twist. However this was so unique and wonderfully written I would highly recommend and check out more by this author.
Thank you to NetGalley and Dreamscape Media for the ARC of The Waking Forest!
This book is hard to summarize without spoilers but I’ll try. Rhea lives with her close knit family in a house by the sea. Her parents and three sisters are incredibly supportive as Rhea’s visions grow more and more frequent. One night her dreams allow her to go farther than she has gone before with staggering consequences.
Meanwhile the Witch of Wishes holds court in the forest every night, granting wishes to the children who visit her. One night two teenagers visit with unusual wishes and everything changes as a new story unfolds.
I loved this book! I was hooked from the very beginning and the world building and imagery were incredible. This book is so beautiful I want to listen to it again and again.
The narration was excellent as well and really enhanced the story.
Big thanks to Alyssa wees and Netgalley for the audio ARC in exchange for a review.
The narrator was good, giving distinction to each character and the flow was well paced.
This definitely falls into the YA category with a touch of gore.
A lot of other reviews mentioned the prose being fairly metaphorical and I heard that in some phrasing, but I don't think it was over the top.
It starts out fairly dark but doesn't really continue throughout the story, with things getting more light.
I enjoyed it and would likely recommend to a anyone looking for some clean YA looking for a magic vibe with a sleeping beauty adjacent story line.
4 stars