Monday, January 30, 2012

Book Review: Someone Else's Life by Katie Dale.


Product details:
Publisher: Simon & Schuster UK.
Release date: February 2nd 2012.
Paperback, 478 pages.
Rating: 3½ out of 5.
Ages: 14+
Source:Received from publisher for review.

When seventeen-year-old Rosie’s mother, Trudie, dies from Huntington’s Disease, her pain is intensified by the knowledge that she has a fifty-per-cent chance of inheriting the crippling disease herself. Only when she tells her mum’s best friend, ‘Aunt Sarah’ that she is going to test for the disease does Sarah, a midwife, reveal that Trudie was not her biological mother after all... Devastated, Rosie decides to trace her real mother, hitching along on her ex-boyfriend’s GAP year to follow her to Los Angeles. But all does not go to plan, and as Rosie discovers yet more of her family's deeply-buried secrets and lies, she is left with an agonising decision of her own - one which will be the most heart-breaking and far-reaching of all...


Described as Jodi Picoult for teens, Someone Else’s Life is an emotional rollercoaster ride of a novel brimming with family ties, secrets and lies.  Dramatic plot twists await at every turn in this page-turning debut from Katie Dale.

For seventeen year old Rosie Kenning, life can’t get much worse.  She’s just lost her mother to Huntington’s disease, a crippling debilitating illness which saw fun-loving, vibrant Trudie waste away to nothing over a number of heartbreaking years.  Now, with a fifty per cent chance of inheriting the Huntington’s gene, Rosie’s facing the very real possibility that the same fate awaits her.  Then an emotional meeting with her neighbour turns Rosie’s world upside down as she learns that Trudie wasn’t her biological mother after all.  Determined to find out the truth about herself and her family, Rosie joins her ex-boyfriend Andy on his gap year travels as she embarks on a transatlantic journey to find out the truth.
                      
Someone Else’s Life gets off to a flying start. The hard-hitting emotional issues that Rosie has to deal with endear her to us as do her feelings for Andy, the boy she lost when her mother became ill, leaving Rosie with not much time for school or boyfriends.  Along with her strong characterization, Dale’s writing style is consistently fast-paced and engaging.  Before I knew it, I was one hundred pages into the book and completely engrossed in Rosie’s story.  At this point, I was thinking that all those ‘Picoult for Teen’s’ commendations were so spot on, but then my interest in this one started to wane a little. I’m a big fan of realistic fiction, but the thing about realistic fiction is that it has to be believable. Dale gets it right at the start but as her plot twists start to spiral out of control, Someone Else Life becomes more of a melodramatic guilty pleasure than the heart-wrenching piece of realistic fiction it seemingly sets out to be.

To fully enjoy this book, you’ll have to prepare for dramatic plot twists and lots of them, with a storyline that contains not only life-threatening hereditary illnesses, but switched at birth stories, teen pregnancies, break-ups, make ups and a multitude of other relationship dramas – the whole shebang really. Reading Someone Else’s Life is like watching a Soap Opera or a Lifetime Movie. You know it’s all going to get a bit overblown in the end, and yet, you can’t stop watching. I love Lifetime Movies, by the way. I can appreciate dramatic plotlines, but I have to say, with how things started, I was expecting something more from this book. In the end it was a case of one convenient plot twist too far for me.

With major crossover appeal, and despite my personal quibbles, Someone Else’s Life is a strong debut, and its one that will garner many fans for Katie Dale. While I felt that it lost some of its initial poignancy with one too many plot twists, overall I found Someone Else’s Life to be an engaging, compelling page-turner with a lot to say and I look forward to reading more from Katie Dale in the future.

Sunday, January 29, 2012

Hello 2012 Mega Giveaway - more books added +++ Competition Winners!

THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED!
2012 Mega Giveaway - Closing Soon!!





With just a few days left to go in my 2012 Mega Giveaway, I've decided to add a couple more books to the prize pack! If  you haven't entered yet, what are you waiting for? Get those entries in now! The competition is international and ends January 31st.

Find out more about the giveaway and fill in the entry form: here.


So, in addition to these books:


Beautiful Malice by Rebecca James (Signed)
Captivate by Carrie Jones
Carrier of the Mark by Leigh Fallon
Crossed by Ally Condie
Delirium by Lauren Oliver
Divergent by Veronica Roth (ARC)
Entice by Carrie Jones
Everneath by Brodi Ashton (ARC)
Forgotten by Cat Patrick (ARC)
Girl, Missing by Sophie McKenzie
Glow by Amy Kathleen Ryan (ARC)
Hunting Lila by Sarah Alderson (ARC)
Need by Carrie Jones
The Opposite of Amber by Gillian Philip (ARC)
Silence by Becca Fitzpatrick
Sister, Missing by Sophie McKenzie (ARC)
The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith (ARC)
Starcrossed by Josephine Angelini (ARC)
Tempest by Julie Cross (ARC)
The Truth about Celia Frost by Paula Rawsthorne (ARC)

Winners can now also choose from:

Angel's Fury by Bryony Pearce (Signed ARC)
Fated by Sarah Alderson
The Future of Us by Jay Asher & Carolyn Mackler
Pretty Twisted by Gina Blaxill
Vixen by Jillian Larkin (ARC)




All original entries still count - you don't have to enter again!!


Anyone who hasn't entered yet: ENTER HERE!



+++++COMPETITION WINNERS+++++ 

Yeah, I know I said I wasn't announcing comp winners on the blog anymore, but since I'm here talking about competitions anyway, here's a quick round up!

Kitchen Witch of the West won A Witch in Winter by Ruth Warburton in the 2012 YA Debut Giveaway.

Maidenveil won a copy of Unleashed by Nancy Holder & Debbie Viguie.

Kara S won an audiobook of Tempest by Julie Cross with thanks to Macmillan Audio.

Kate V won a copy of Darkness Falls by Cate Tiernan with thanks to Hodder & Stoughton.



I hope you all enjoy your prizes and that you've received them by now.  If you haven't, email me!



Friday, January 27, 2012

Reviewed by Liz: The Other Life by Susanne Winnacker.


Product details:
Publisher: Usborne.
Release date: February 1st 2012
Paperback, 320 pages.
Rating: 4 out of 5.
Ages: 13+
Source: Received from publisher for review.
Reviewed by: Liz

3 years, 1 month, 1 week and 6 days since I’d seen daylight. One-fifth of my life. 98,409,602 seconds since the heavy, steel door had fallen shut and sealed us off from the world

Sherry has lived with her family in a sealed bunker since things went wrong up above. But when they run out of food, Sherry and her dad must venture outside. There they find a world of devastation, desolation...and the Weepers: savage, mutant killers.

When Sherry's dad is snatched, she joins forces with gorgeous but troubled Joshua - an Avenger, determined to destroy the Weepers.

But can Sherry keep her family and Joshua safe, when his desire for vengeance threatens them all?

 
Susanne Winnacker’s The Other Life is a promising start to a dark new series that really encompasses what it means to fight for your survival. Sherry and her family have been living in the same bunker for three years. After a breakout of a deadly virus, families were forced to stockpile rations and stay underground until it was safe to come out. But three years have gone by, and all communication from the outside world has stopped. No-one knows what’s happening or how many people are still alive. But the worst thing is that Sherry’s family have run out of food. So she and her father venture out and breathe fresh air for the first time in what seems like forever. Fresh air, however, isn’t the only thing they take in. What Sherry and her father see is beyond what they’d ever imagined. After a deadly encounter with Weepers (those affected by the virus), Sherry is left running for life. With the help of Joshua, the boy who saved her, and the only other survivors in the area, Sherry must make it back to her family – and her father – before she loses them forever.


The Other Life was a great survival story that made me really think about what life would be like if there ever were such a breakout of a virus. What would the government do? How would we all survive? I don’t think I could have been as strong as Sherry was. After she and her father were separated, she was determined to find him and bring him back safely, no matter the cost. I really liked that she had a close bond with her family; a lot of the time in YA, families are mysteriously absent or not important to the storyline, but in The Other Life, family played a vital role, and I loved the dynamic between Sherry, her parents and her siblings. She was a good older sister, and very protective over her younger brother, Bobby, and sister, Mia. I admired her courage and her ability to focus on what she wanted to do. Being thrown into such a chaotic situation would have been too much for most people, but Sherry just took it all on and tried her best.


Joshua was also another intriguing character. His whole life revolved around hunting the Weepers that had taken so much away from him. His past was full of horrors and pain, and I really felt for him the whole way through. He’d taken on this task of killing Weepers, but he was too emotionally involved and didn’t always act sensibly when it came to them (even though he was a skilled fighter). I think he was suffering a lot, and finding Sherry and being able to talk to her about it seemed to help a little.  I really liked all his scenes with Sherry. It was great to read about the two together, because their lives had both been so drastically affected by this virus that having the time for a relationship seemed sort of odd and strange for the both of them. The romance was sweet and slow, and sort of like a ray of hope in the miserable world they were all forced to live in. 


One thing I really enjoyed about The Other Life was the little flashback pages included before every chapter. They were events that happened before the virus broke out - just random things like a day at school, or a conversation with a friend, but it showed just how much things had changed in just three years. When you compared Sherry’s life now - killing Weepers, living on rations, hiding away – to her life before, which consisted mainly of her worrying about a crush and her enemy at school, you could see how serious things were really were, and how things could never go back to the way they were before. These flashbacks really helped give perspective on the brutal place the world had turned into.


The pacing was perfect for me, and the story flowed really well, making it easy to read. There were a few revelations at the end that set the stage for the sequel, but there wasn’t a cliffhanger (for which I was very grateful), so the wait for book two won’t be too painful. I’m really looking forward to finding out more about the government’s involvement in the virus, and what’s going on in the other parts of the world.


Overall, The Other Life was an engaging dystopian story that’s already got me excited for the sequel, The Life Beyond. Definitely recommended to fans of the genre!

Thursday, January 26, 2012

Guest Post: Kiss, Date, Love, Hate author Luisa Plaja talks Film & Filmmaking in YA.


Please welcome Luisa Plaja to the blog today! Luisa stopped by today to talk a little bit about her new novel Kiss, Date, Love, Hate (released February  2nd) and has also written a fun guest post on YA books featuring films and filmmaking. I picked up some great rec's from this post!

Note to Luisa: You need to read Anna and the French Kiss right now! :)

I'll be reviewing Kiss, Date, Love, Hate in February, but for now, over to Luisa...


Kiss, Date, Love, Hate by Luisa Plaja
Publisher: Corgi
Release date: Feb 2nd 2012

What if you could change your friends' lives and loves through the settings of a computer game...?

Lex Murphy's group of friends have all dated, hated, ignored and lusted after each other for the last few years. If only there was a way of matching people perfectly to avoid all the unrequited love, dumping and drama! Then Lex's friend George is given a mysterious Sims-like game by his software-testing dad which involves building character profiles in the categories of Life, Looks and Love. Lex and George populate the game with avatars for all their mates, making a few 'wishful thinking' adjustments to the settings - and find that the next day these tinkerings have come true! But how long can this new calm, loved-up atmosphere continue?


Guest Post: Luisa Plaja on YA books featuring films and filmmaking:

Kiss Date Love Hate is mostly set during a film course in the October half-term holiday. The main character, Lex, spends the week altering her friends’ lives and loves, but when she’s not busy creating havoc she’s quietly making a short film with her course partner. 

Like Lex, I love film and cinemas, and I’ve been on very enjoyable (though FAR less eventful) filmmaking courses. I also love reading about film-loving characters. So I wanted to list a few other YA books that touch on movies and filmmaking.

1) Notes From aTeenage Underground by Simmone Howell
I absolutely loved this book about movie-lover Gem and the underground film she sets out to make, with her friends Lo and Mira as producer and star. Gem’s summer shapes up very differently from how she expected, and she hits friendship and family traumas on the way to discovering a lot more about life and herself. Simmone Howell is one of my favourite Australian authors and this book is inspiring and brilliant.

2) Viola in Reel Life by Adriana Trigiani
Adriana Trigiani is a bestselling author of adult fiction, and her debut teen novel is a sweet story for younger teenagers. It’s set in a boarding school, with a heroine who loves to shoot films. There’s a mystical element to Viola’s filmmaking and her Indiana surroundings are beautifully described. 

Can you believe I haven’t read this one? I know from what everyone has said that I really should. When I asked Twitter for help with this post, this book came up because Anna is a movie buff. It probably needs no introduction, but just in case: it features an American girl in Paris, a hot boy and loads of what I’m told is totally swoonworthy romance.

4) Dani Noir by Nova Ren Suma
I haven’t read this one either but it’s now on my wishlist. I’ve heard lots of great things about this author, and the book sounds amazing. It’s the story of Dani, a girl from a small town who loves watching noir films in an arty cinema, and one day stumbles upon her very own cinematic mystery.

5) Just Henry by Michelle Magorian
The product description says: “When Henry develops an old camera film he uncovers a mystery and events spiral until his life resembles the drama of the big screen.” Film, drama, mystery – it sounds fantastic!


I’d love to hear other recommendations if anyone knows of any more.

Thank you very much for having me at Daisy Chain Reviews, and thanks to all the Twitter friends who helped with this post!

------------------------------- 
Kiss, Date, Love, Hate by Luisa Plaja is published by Corgi on February 2nd 2012, £5.99.



Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Bite-Sized Book Review: The Gathering Storm by Robin Bridges.



Product details:
Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Hardcover, 389 pages.
Release date: January 10th 2012.
Rating: DNF/1½ out of 5 for my partial read.
Ages:12+
Source: Netgalley

St. Petersburg, Russia, 1888. As she attends a whirl of glittering balls, royal debutante Katerina Alexandrovna, Duchess of Oldenburg, tries to hide a dark secret: she can raise the dead. No one knows. Not her family. Not the girls at her finishing school. Not the tsar or anyone in her aristocratic circle. Katerina considers her talent a curse, not a gift. But when she uses her special skill to protect a member of the Imperial Family, she finds herself caught in a web of intrigue.

An evil presence is growing within Europe's royal bloodlines—and those aligned with the darkness threaten to topple the tsar. Suddenly Katerina's strength as a necromancer attracts attention from unwelcome sources . . . including two young men—George Alexandrovich, the tsar's standoffish middle son, who needs Katerina's help to safeguard Russia, even if he's repelled by her secret, and the dashing Prince Danilo, heir to the throne of Montenegro, to whom Katerina feels inexplicably drawn.

The time has come for Katerina to embrace her power, but which side will she choose—and to whom will she give her heart?


The Gathering Storm, the first in a trilogy from debut author Robin Bridges promised so much but failed to deliver on a number of counts. Unfortunately this one with which combines what should have been a glorious historical setting with what should have been an intoxicating paranormal twist, just fell flat for me. The story of Katerina, a Russian Duchess with a deadly secret, was slow moving and convoluted with clunky dialogue, a confusing amount of characters, many with similar names, and a plot and setting which fell completely flat. The Tsarist Russian setting of the book, which is what initially piqued my interest in relation to The Gathering Storm, just didn’t come to life for me on its pages, although I appreciated the inclusion of a number of actual figures from the history of the time, and the research that went into reimagining them for this story.


With its Imperial Russian setting and myriad of paranormal elements, The Gathering Storm sounded like just my kind of book.  The historical and paranormal aspects of the story though, don’t complement each other in this complex debut that I had to give up on.

Disclaimer: I read to approx. page 200 of this book and then skipped to the final chapters to see how things wrapped up.






Bite-Sized Book Reviews: A review in approx 200 words for when I need to play catch up on reviews!

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Read All About It #4 - Recent Exciting Book News & Deals!




I just took a look at my 'Book Deals etc.' folder and saw that it was bursting at the seams, so I reckon it's high time I did another 'Read All About It' post. So much book news to get through!

You can see previous Read All About It posts: here.


Strange Chemistry Reveals First Acquisitions!

Strange Chemistry the new YA imprint from Angry Robot books, launches in September 2012 and has just announced two exciting additions to its launch list!


Shift by Kim Curran

About the book:

When your average, 16-year old loser, Scott Tyler, meets the beautiful and mysterious Aubrey Jones, he learns he’s not quite so average after all. He’s a ‘Shifter’. And that means he has the power to undo any decision he’s ever made. At first, he thinks the power to shift is pretty cool. But as his world quickly starts to unravel around him he realises that each time he uses his power, it has consequences; terrible unforeseen consequences. Shifting is going to get him killed. In a world where everything can change with a thought, Scott has to decide where he stands.

Find out more about about Kim on her website




 Poltergeeks by Sean Cummings



 About the Book: 


Julie is an apprentice witch – or so she believes. When a dark power comes stalking out of the past to haunt her and her mother, Julie learns that she is far more than just a witch. With the help of her best friend Marcus and a rather unusual Great Dane, Julie has to race against time to ensure she can defeat the bad guy, save her mother and avoid being grounded – again!


Find out more about Sean on his website



The Nightmare Affair by Mindee Arnett


A contemporary fantasy described as Paranormalcy meet Hex Hall this is one book I can't wait to get my hands on. The Nightmare Affair by Mindee Arnett releases Winter 2013

About the book:


16-year-old Dusty Everhart breaks into houses late at night, but not because she’s a criminal. No, she’s a Nightmare. Literally. Dusty is a magical being who feeds on human dreams.

Being the only Nightmare at Arkwell Academy, a boarding school for magickind, and living in the shadow of her mother’s infamy is hard enough. But when Dusty sneaks into Eli Booker’s house, things get a whole lot more complicated. He’s hot, which means sitting on his chest and invading his dreams couldn’t get much more embarrassing. But it does. Eli is dreaming of a murder. The setting is Arkwell.

And then it comes true.

Now the Dusty has to follow the clues--both within Eli’s dreams and out of them--to stop the killer before more people turn up dead. And before the killer learns what she’s up to and marks her as the next target. 

Find out more about Mindee: 

Twitter: @Mindeearnett

Add The Nightmare Affair on Goodreads



This is What Happy Looks Like by Jennifer E. Smith

About the book:

Headline Review has acquired a new title by the author of The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight.

Headline senior commissioning editor Hannah Sheppard bought This is What Happy Looks Like, the fifth novel by YA author Jennifer E Smith, for publication in spring 2013.

The title begins with a misdirected email which sparks an "unlikely and irresistible romance" between two 17-year-olds on opposite sides of the US.

What the publishers are saying:

"It has been fantastic to watch the love pour in from readers of The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight so I'm thrilled that Jennifer is writing another gorgeous contemporary romance. Jennifer's skill at developing the romantic relationship through dialogue and banter make her books an absolute joy and a luxury to read. I know her fans will love This is What Happy Looks Like."  - Hannah Sheppard, Senior Commissioning Editor, Headline.



Dead Blue by Elle Cosimano

About the book:

DEAD BLUE is a rollercoaster ride of a novel, guaranteed to keep readers on the edge of their seat, and stars a wonderful protagonist called Nearly Boswell, a math-genius from a suburban Washington DC trailer park. With the body count rising, Nearly realizes that she is the only student able to decipher the complex clues left for her by a serial killer who has every intention of framing her for murder. With mysterious blue-inked symbols turning up on every body, can Nearly find the real perp in time to save her own life? 

Publishing Fall 2013 from Dial, an imprint of  Penguin USA.

Find out more about Elle:

Facebook: ellecosimano

Add Dead Blue on Goodreads



Grotesque by Page Morgan

OK, so there's not a whole lot of info about this one yet, but guys!! A gothic thriller...set in PARIS!! Sign me up for that! We have a wait though. Grotesque, the first in a trilogy isn't out until Spring 2013 (Delacorte). I want it NOW!!!!

OK, so....

About the book:

Page Morgan’s GROTESQUE, a new gothic thriller series set in Paris at the turn of the twentieth century, about two sisters on a search for their missing brother and the deadly and otherworldly truths that they discover.





 *******************
Additional info & quotes

Please note:  Release dates and book titles may not be final and may be subject to change.

Book News: Faber Launches YA online community 'THE SPARK'.


FABER AND FABER LAUNCHES THE SPARK - A PLACE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE TO SHOWCASE THEIR CREATIVE SKILLS

Faber and Faber has launched THE SPARK 

www.facebook.com/thesparkpage, a place for 13 - 16 year olds who have an interest in creativity and reading. During 2012 THE SPARK, hosted on Facebook, will invite young people to take part in some exciting projects around acting, film-making, writing and music, each linked to and inspired by a Faber Young Adult title. Whilst students aren’t obliged to read the books to take part, we hope that they will not only be inspired to produce some creative work, but will also be encouraged to engage with the related books, and develop a greater interest in reading generally. Our aim is that THE SPARK will become a vibrant community where young people who love reading and creating can meet, talk and share. We have been extremely impressed by the entries for our recent project, run in association with the GUARDIAN, to find a talented young artist to create a new, iconic cover image for William Golding’s LORD OF THE FLIES and we hope that we can discover a similar level of creativity in each of the new projects to be launched this year.


Launch Project

ACTINGTHE GLIMPSE by Claire Merle publishing June 2012

Launching in January 2012, we’re looking to find a young actor to play one of the characters in Claire Merle’s debut YA novel, THE GLIMPSE, in a series of web films. Entrants are invited to film themselves performing one of two audition scripts available at www.facebook.com/theglimpse and all entries will be showcased on THE GLIMPSE You Tube Channel.

The competition is open to anyone aged 13-18 years old 
(see terms and conditions) and the winner will be announced in March 2012

Coming soon…

Over the next few months we’ll be launching further projects for musicians/composers, film-makers and writers.

Music – THE CREWEL by Gennifer Albin publishing October 2012
We’re calling on musicans, band-members and singer-songwriters to produce an original music track inspired by Gennifer Albin’s novel CREWEL, to feature in the official book trailer.  Launches February
2012

Writers – THE THINGS WE DID FOR LOVE by Natasha Farrant
To coincide with publication of Natasha Farrant’sTHE THINGS WE DID FOR LOVE, we are looking for aspiring writers to submit stories, poems or articles inspired by the themes of love or war.  Launches March 2012

Filmmaking – THE FURY by Alexander Gordon Smith publishing April 2012
Alexander Gordon Smith's terrifying new book THE FURY is sure to keep readers awake at night.  We’re looking for a young filmmaker to make a trailer for it. Launches April 2012

We hope THE SPARK will inspire creativity and conversation around books and plan to continue with further book-related creative projects in the future.

Find out more at www.facebook.com/thesparkpage. Follow THE SPARK @thesparkfeed



Monday, January 23, 2012

Book Review: Darkness Falls by Cate Tiernan.



Product details:
Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton.
Hardcover, 400 pages.
Release date: January 5th 2012.
Rating: 4 out of 5.
Ages: 14+
Series: Immortal Beloved #2
Other Books in Series: Immortal Beloved.
Source: Received from publisher for review.

Nastasya has lived for hundreds of years, but for some reason, life never seems to get any better. She left her spoiled, rich girl life to find peace at River's Edge, a safe haven for wayward immortals. There, she learned to embrace River's Edge, despite some drama involving the sexy Reyn, who she wants but won't allow herself to have. But just as she's getting comfortable, her family's ties to dark magick force her to leave.

She falls back into her old, hard partying ways, but will her decision lead her into the hands of a dark immortal? Or will it be her first step to embracing the darkness within her?


Immortal Beloved saw party girl Nastasya turn her back on bad habits and dangerous friends as she said goodbye to hundreds of years of crazy behaviour, wild nights out, fine food and designer clothes. Leaving behind her best friend, Innocencio, Nastasya found herself at River’s Edge ‘home for wayward Immortals’ where she learned life lessons from wise Immortal River and fell for the sexy Reyn.  Now in Darkness Falls, Nastasya has to decide if she can live with the darkness that lies within Reyn’s past while all the while trying to fight the darkness within her that is manifesting itself in dangerous ways. And then there’s Incy, who won’t stop looking for Nastasya until he finds her and brings her back to the life they once shared. Can Nastasya resist the lure of her old life and prove that she has changed, or will her dark ways win out?

When I read Immortal Beloved, I thought it was a good read, if a little slow paced, and while I was intrigued by the character of Nasty, loved her snarky dialogue, and wanted to know her secrets, I can’t say that I much liked her. I also found reading about her new life at River’s Edge a little boring. I know that Nasty wants to be a better person, and she is a better and more likeable character in this book, but let’s face it, her life of mucking out stables and peeling potatoes is not exactly entertaining. I wanted to see more of party girl Nas. I wanted to read about her fabulous wardrobe and her wild nights out with Incy. Thankfully, in Darkness Falls, we get the best of both worlds. This book has action, it has character development, it has steamy kisses, and it has Incy.

I probably shouldn’t like Incy as much as I do, bit I can’t help myself.   He’s the character I’m most drawn to in these books, and if you’ve read them, you’re probably asking yourself right now what the hell I’m thinking!  I admit it; I sometimes take the bad boy thing too far! Even in Immortal Beloved where we pretty much get to see Incy in flashback form only, he was the character I wanted more of.  Sure, Reyn may be sexy, but he’s not a big talker, and I’ve never found his character very appealing. So, I’m all about Incy, and it seems that Nastasya is too, for she finds it difficult to resist the lure of her old privileged party lifestyle once her old friend finds his way into her life again.

Darkness Falls, a book about magick, Immortals, mystery and love where Nastasya confronts both her inner demons and the dangers that haunt her every day life, is an addictive read, and I can’t wait for more when the third and final installment in this series, Immortal Light releases next year. I’m also very interested to find out more about the mysterious Miss Edna who is briefly mentioned in the pages of Darkness Falls, but who I think is going to have a much larger role to play in Nastasya’s life as this series concludes.  I can’t wait to find out more!

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Busting the Newbie Blues in 2012!



    Busting the Newbie Blues a great event organized by one of my favourite bloggers Small Review is back, and I'm taking part again! I love this event because not only does it offer bloggers helpful advice and encouragement, it also enables me to find great blogs which for some reason or another might not be on my radar. 

    You can see my 2011 Busting the Newbie Blues post here if you want to check it out.

    You can find out more about the event here.


    When did you start your blog? 

    March 2010


    Do you ever still feel like a newbie? 

     Yes and No. At this point I feel pretty comfortable in my blogging skin, but then there are some days too when I feel totally out of the loop. I guess the thing is with the internet and with blogging is that it's a very fast moving medium, constantly evolving and changing. Sometimes I keep up, sometimes I fall behind. I don't think I'll ever stop learning.


    What has been the biggest challenge you’ve faced so far?  Did you make any mistakes new bloggers can learn from? 

    When I answered this last year I said my biggest challenge was dealing with HTML and fixing up my layout. That's still true, by the way. It's a constant struggle. These days I try not to mess with the HTML.


    Scheduling post and blogging regularly is always a challenge too. I can appear to be very organized --people often say this to me in my real life and I have to laugh in their faces. :-p I am Miss Last Minute. If I can get away with not planning something, I will do it.  I like being spontaneous. Trust me though, in blogging matters, scheduling is key. And it's something I'm still working on. At this point I know that scheduling posts for maybe three days is as much as I can hope for, though. Currently I don't have anything scheduled for next week. Hmmmm....

    Oh, and reading slumps. We blog because we love to read. And then we are sent books for review that we might not necessarily read, but we read them, because it's a new publishing contact, or because we were sent it for review and now we feel obligated. I've done this, and my advice to new bloggers is don't fall into that trap. Read for fun, read because you love to read, review what you want to review. You don't have to review every book you read. You don't have to read every book you are sent. That said, the majority of review books I receive are 'surprise' review books. If you are requesting all those review books, you probably want to be reviewing most of them  too!


    What did you find most discouraging about being a new blogger? How did you deal with this? 


     Comments! The lack of comments! I used to really stress about this. And then I stopped stressing. I usually get a fair amount of comments on my posts nowadays, but if you look back to this time last year, I used to get more. Because I was obsessed with comment counts. I thought that comments equaled success in blogging terms, and I wanted more, more, more. But while comments are nice, they're not the be all and end all.  If you want to receive comments on your blog, you have to give them. But then I decided that I didn't want to spend all of my free time commenting on blogs. So now I just comment when I can, and if people like my blog enough to comment, that's cool. If I notice you on my blog, I'll more than likely seek out yours and comment too. :)

    It's also discouraging if you comment over and over again on certain blogs and they never visit you in return. I know, I've been there. But I've probably done that too, and it's not intentional. It's not because I don't like your blog. I'll get their eventually. Like I said, I'm completely disorganized. I have very poor time management skills, and if anyone tells you otherwise, they're flat out lying!

    Also (I know, I know, I need to wrap this up--this is important, though!) This didn't apply to me as a new blogger, either because it wasn't happening, or maybe just because I wasn't aware of it, but I will say to new bloggers: don't be turned off blogging or reviewing because of recent events in the blogging/reviewing community. Just don't be. Write your honest reviews, and if anyone has a problem with that, then that's their problem, not yours. Honestly...


    What do you find most encouraging?

     The lovely community of bloggers I met when I first started blogging. A bunch of us started around the same time and now y'all are my book twins.

    Comments, too. I don't stress about having a whole lot of comments on my post, but it's still nice to get them, especially on book reviews. I like hearing what people think about my reviews, if they've felt the same as me about a certain book, or if they feel totally differently. I like to hear that too.


    If you could go back in time and speak with your newbie self, what five bits of wisdom would you tell yourself?

    Don't stress the follower count and don't stress over comments either. Blogging is a marathon, not a sprint. Stick with it and you'll get the followers and the comments.


    ARC's are good, but they aren't the be all and end all of blogging. You don't need to get ARC's to be a blogger. Additionally, your blog won't suffer if you never get an ARC.


    Remember: Quality not Quantity. One or two meme's once in a while is fine. A meme every other day, not so much. Concentrate on the reviews!


    You don't need to post every day. You don't need to stay awake until 1a.m to write that review. Seriously. It doesn't have to go live tomorrow. The next day will do.


    Remember why you started blogging and remember that blogging should always be fun. Don't ever take it too seriously. It's not a job.


    What do you like best about the blogs you read? Have you tried to replicate this in your blog? 

    I like blogs that have good quality, detailed and honest reviews. I don't want to read a blog that rates everything five stars, where every book is the best book ever, because that's just not true.


    I like a little personality and bloggers that are innovative with the features they do.

    I like clean and simple layouts. 

    I like nice people. Bloggers that whinge and moan. Not for me.

    Yes, I've tried to replicate all of this in my blog. Have I succeeded? You tell me. :)


    What do you dislike about blogs you’ve seen? Do you try to avoid this? 

    I dislike mean and bitchy reviews. I don't like writing negative reviews, but I do it, because I always want to be honest in my reviews. I never get personal, though.

    Also, reviews that tell me nothing other than the synopsis I already read on Goodreads.


    Meme filled blogs. I'm all good with memes, but I've seen blogs where everything is a meme.

    Cluttered layouts. MUSIC on blogs. I love music. But not on blogs. Countdown widgets that autoplay. Ugh.

    Oh, and complicated comment systems. I know they look fancy, but they are sometimes a waste of my time and I might just have to leave without commenting.

    I think I've avoided all of this. None of that here.


     How did you bring your blog to the attention of so many people?  

    Twitter - every blogger should utilize twitter. I'm very active on twitter & I get a lot of my traffic from there.

    Submitting to Search Engines and Book Blogger Directories.


    Commenting on other blogs, reaching out, saying hello.

    Blog Tours (although I'm not sure on how much traffic they bring) and giveaways! (Lots of traffic. Traffic jams!)



    When and how did you get your first ARC (or first few ARCs)?  

    I've looked back through my posts and it looks like my first review copy was Beautiful Malice by Rebecca James--one of my favourite books, so I got lucky!  This came about via a Waiting on Wednesday post I did about a month after starting the blog which the UK publisher saw (probably after I had sent her the link on twitter!) and got in touch.

    I contacted one or two UK publishers in the Summer of 2010 to inquire about blogger mailing lists,  and I'm still working with those publishers today. (I think the first publishers I contacted were Bloomsbury & Simon & Schuster--lovely people!)

    A lot of UK publishers offer review copies via twitter, and this is where I make most of my contacts/have gotten most of my review copies in the past.

    I've never requested very many review copies. It's tempting, but I have to stop myself. If I requested everything I'd like to read I'd never get anything done, and then everything would go insane!




    That's all! I hope you like this post! Feel free to ask questions and leave feedback, because as I said above, comments aren't the be all and end all, but I love them all the same! :)

    Thursday, January 19, 2012

    Reviewed by Jen: Tiger's Voyage by Colleen Houck.



    Product details:
    Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton.
    Paperback, 543 pages.
    Release date: November 1st 2011.
    Rating: 4 out of 5.
    Ages: 12+
    Series: The Tiger Saga #3.
    Other books in series: Tiger's Curse, Tiger's Quest.
    Source: Received from publisher for review.
    Reviewed by: Jen

    The third book in the gripping Tiger's Curse series! 

    With the head-to-head battle against the villainous Lokesh behind her, Kelsey confronts a new heartbreak: in the wake of his traumatic experience, her beloved Ren no longer remembers who she is. As the trio continues their quest by challenging five cunning and duplicitous dragons, Ren and Kishan once more vie for her affections--leaving Kelsey more confused than ever.

    Fraught with danger, filled with magic, and packed with romance, TIger's Voyage brings Kelsey and her two tiger princes one step closer to breaking the curse.

    Please Note: There may be spoilers for previous books in the Tiger Saga series in this review.


    Colleen Houck’s Tigers’ Voyage is the third installment in her Tiger’s Curse series.  Like the first two books before it Tiger’s Voyage is filled with romance and adventure interwoven with mythology and folklore.  Kelsey once again risks everything to help Ren and Kishan break the curse as her quests become more dangerous and the stakes much higher. 

    As the story begins Ren still is unable to remember Kelsey and the feelings he once had for her.  Although confused and heartbroken Kelsey is determined to continue on her quest to break the curse that has left Ren and Kishan living as tigers for the majority of their lives.  The next adventure facing the group is to recover Druga’s pearl necklace.  In order to find the necklace Kelsey and the brothers must find five Chinese dragons who will instruct them in how to recover the necklace.  Each encounter is its own adventure encompassing death-defying risks.  By far Tiger’s Voyage is the most thrilling of the series as the characters face endless challenges in order to recover Druga’s necklace.  The incorporation of Chinese folklore also enhances the story’s mythology, which is one of my favorite aspects of this series. 

    The love triangle becomes more complicated in Tiger’s Voyage as Ren initially has no memory of Kelsey.  While Kelsey still feels passionately about Ren she begins to consider the idea that Kishan may in fact be the better choice.  Kishan’s love is steady and uncomplicated, even if the sparks are not as hot.  One problem I had with this story was the idea that Ren would lose his memory and have no feelings towards Kelsey.  In the first book he was immediately drawn to her and knew that there was something there.  Although he does not remember her wouldn’t he again have those same feelings?  Also, I have a feeling that this series will end with Kishan’s heart being torn apart. Kelsey will never be able to fully love Kishan as her feelings for Ren are still raging. 

    I did enjoy Tiger’s Voyage although again I felt as if some of the scenes could have been edited down.  The quests dragged on and Kelsey’s anguish over which brother to choose took up much of the story.  Yet, the vivid writing and endearing characters make Tiger’s Voyage a story you find yourself unable to put down. 

    Tuesday, January 17, 2012

    Darkness Falls Blog Tour & Giveaway: Interview with Cate Tiernan.


    Today I'm welcoming Cate Tiernan to the blog as part of the Darkness Falls blog tour. If you didn't already know, Darkness Falls is the second installment in Cate's Immortal Beloved trilogy. I'll be reviewing Darkness Falls on here soon (I really enjoyed it!) but for now, read on to find out more (Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Incy - yes please!) and to possibly win a copy of the book too!

    ******************


    Darkness Falls continues the story of Nastasya, an Immortal who has lived for over 450 years. For anyone who hasn’t yet met Nasty, how would you describe her?

    Whew! Nastasya is quite a character! At the beginning of the trilogy, she’s, well, awful. Selfish, narcissistic, snide, unkind . . . but by the end of book three, I hope people find her quite different. My idea with Immortal Beloved was to take someone that seemed to have no redeeming qualities, and then show how even she can change, given a second chance.

    Nasty is a character who’s really grown on me since I first met her in Immortal Beloved, and in this book we learn much more about the lives of the other Immortals in Nasty’s life. From Reyn to River, Lorenz and of course not forgetting Innocencio, everybody has a story to tell. Who is your favourite character to write about besides Nastasya, and why?

    Well, I find them all interesting. They’ve all had life stories and experiences that I would love to explore. I could write whole books about many of them. But after Nastasya, I love writing Reyn, because he’s so unexpressive and guarded, but I still have to show enough to let the readers know what’s going on beneath his reserve. I love River. What a life she’s had! I think Brynne is so fun. I would love to show Asher’s centuries of being Jewish, all over the world. I always fall in love with my characters, and want to tell their stories.


    In Immortal Beloved and Darkness Falls we get to journey through time with Nasty, revisiting her throughout history and finding out more about her particular blend of magick. What kind of research did you undertake while writing the series?

    So. Much. Research. Though I know the copyeditor will check everything, I try to be as accurate as possible. I research so many minute details, and get so sucked into following different topics—clothes, food, weapons, architecture, geography, travel, boats, trains, horses, different cities at different times, wars . . . it’s all so interesting. I’m constantly torn with wanting to put much more detail in, just because I know it, and it’s a bummer when I have to admit that it might not add that much to the actual story.

    Who would you love to see in the roles of Nasty and Incy if a movie of the series were ever made?

    Gosh. I don’t know current young actors well enough to really say. They would have to be young but with an ability to seem really old and hint at centuries of experience. From my very limited knowledge of actors, I think maybe Dakota Fanning? Evan Rachel Wood? Mia Wasikowska? I’m just going on physical appearance here. I’m sure there are so many talented people I have no clue about. For Incy—Joseph Gordon-Levitt? I just don’t know. It’s fun when readers send in their suggested cast lists.

    What can we expect for Nasty and Co. in the third and final book in the trilogy, Immortal Light, out next year?

    It’s the culmination of what Nas has been working toward. In book two, she took a giant step backward. In book three, she takes two steps forward, one step back, then three steps forward. In book one, Nastasya was coming to terms with herself. In book two, she was coming to terms with her immediate community at River’s Edge. Book three pushes her out into the larger community, with somewhat mixed results. Things with Reyn progress (squee), but again it’s a bit forward, a bit backward, then a bit forward. But I hope readers will be happy about where Nas ends up.


    Darkness Falls (Immortal Beloved #2) by Cate Tiernan is out now from Hodder & Soughton in hardback & ebook, priced £12.99.


    Follow Cate on Twitter




    Thanks to Hodder & Stoughton I have a copy of Darkness Falls to give away to one lucky winner!
    Competition is open to: UK & ROI only.
    Competition closes: January 24th 2012.
    Just fill in the form below to enter.
    Good luck!

    COMPETITION CLOSED! WINNER ANNOUNCED SOON!

    Monday, January 16, 2012

    Hallowed Blog Tour: Cynthia Hand picks her Dream Movie Cast!


    Today I'm kicking off the blog tour for Cynthia Hand's Hallowed today with a very fun Dream Movie Cast guest post from the author herself. If you ever wanted to find out who Cynthia would pick to play Clara, Christian, Tucker and your other favourite characters from the books, now's your chance to find out!

    I have to say that Rachel Hurd-Wood is exactly how I picture Clara!  Zac Efron is pretty much a no-brainer as Christian, although saying that, I also picture Chace Crawford in the role.  I've always pictured (Mean Girls era) Lizzie Caplan in the Angela role, although now I think Vanessa Hudgens is an even better choice!

    What do you think?

    *********************


    Unearthly is currently in development at the CW to be made into a television series, so I’ve actually given quite a lot of thought to how Unearthly might work on the big (and little) screen. I should be hearing pretty soon whether it’s been greenlighted to shoot a pilot, which is so exciting and surreal that I can hardly believe it. So, like I said, I’ve given a lot of thought to the kind of actors that I’d want to play my characters. Here are my top choices. (Please keep in mind that this is my dream/fantasy cast for a feature film, not what I think would be a realistic cast for my CW show. . .)

    Clara.
    #1 Anna Sophia Robb



    There’s a real celestial quality to this actress, a sweet (and dare I say unearthly?) beauty to her, but also a feistiness and a sense of goofiness, which I think is key for Clara. My Clara has to be able to laugh at herself, and has to be strong, in both body and spirit, and has to have a soulful quality, in her eyes especially, and I think Miss Robb could pull that off. I have to giggle at choosing ASR though, because if you look up the dream cast of any author where her main character is a blond, she will inevitably pick Anna Sophia Robb, too. I bet that girl doesn’t have any trouble finding a job. So I guess it makes me feels less unique to pick her, but I truly think she would be a great cast for Clara.


    #2. Rachel Hurd-Wood



    It was the fans who turned me on to this fine actress as a potential Clara. All these Unearthly dream-cast videos kept popping up on the internet, and 90% of them suggested Miss Hurd-Wood for Clara. I had only seen her in Peter Pan, which is a big favorite of my son’s right now (he’s going through a serious pirate phase), but she was pretty young in that film. And British. :) But I can totally understand what the fans see in her. There’s a certain brightness to her, and she seems like a lovely combination of smart and beautiful and slightly awkward that I think fits Clara perfectly. And I love her voice, although I am not certain she’s quite sarcastic enough for Clara, but then I’ve never see her in a role where she played a sarcastic character. I am charmed by her, anyway, and would love to see her as Clara, although I think she’s 21 or 22 now, which I think makes her a bit too old. I’d like the actress who plays Clara to really be 16 or 17 years old.


    #3 Elle Fanning


     
    You know how I said Rachel Hurd-Wood was too old? Well, Elle Fanning may be a tad too young. In which case I’d go with Dakota, but there is a quiet humor to Elle that really says Clara to me, and an innocence that I find charming. Plus an occasional goofiness, which we’ve already established is a necessity. That and I just happen to think she’s angelically beautiful.


    #4 Saoirse Ronan


    Talk about soulful-eyed! You can’t get more expressive eyes than this girl, which is why I thought she was a perfect choice for the forthcoming movie adaptation of The Host. And I also think she’d be a fine Clara, especially after I saw her kick-buttingness in Hanna. I’m not sure about goofiness, though. . .


    Now on to what you’re really waiting for, the boys.


    Sigh. I wish I knew the names of more teenage boy actors. None of the ones I’ve stumbled over come close to either what Tucker or Christian look like in my head. But I will give it my best try.




    Christian #1 Zac Efron


     
    He’s too old now, definitely, but when I was first writing Unearthly, Zac Efron was the closest approximation to Christian I could come up with. Dark, slightly wavy hair, strong eyebrows, greenish eyes, slender build. Although I think the Christian in my head is a little darker and has a little different face shape. And I think Zac Efron is, again, far too old to play a 17 year old anymore. I did like 17 Again, and I really, really liked him in Me and Orson Wells. Is it a crime that I haven’t seen High School Musical?
     

    Christian #2—Cameron Bright


    Again with the slightly wavy hair, the strong eyebrows, the green eyes. Plus there’s kind of a mystery to him which I think suits Christian very well. The look of Cameron Bright is pretty darn close to the Christian in my head, and I think he’s around the right age. However, I haven’t seen this guy act since he was a child actor, and I don’t know what his more grown up voice sounds like, or if he could pull off Christian’s many layers.



    Okay, okay, calm down. Here comes my Tucker picks, which were even harder!




    Tucker #1—Kellan Lutz


    Whew! This guy is hot! And brawny and tawny and blue-eyed AND dimpled. Here’s something I’ve never told anybody before, but back when I was selling the film rights to Unearthly, a company wanted to buy them, and tried to get Mr. Lutz to read the manuscript (this was before there was even an ARC!) of Unearthly and sign on to play Tucker. And when they told me this, I had no idea who Kellan Lutz even was. So I Googled, And I watched Twilight, in which they dye his hair and cover him in white face paint, so I just wasn’t seeing it. But then I came across this picture, and I was like, okay. I can see that. And I like that Kellan is mischievous, which is one of Tucker’s key personality traits. But let’s face it, he’s too old. I really think movies should cast 17 year olds as 17 year olds, and Mr. Lutz in mid-twenties and definitely looks it. Now if he had a younger brother. . .

    (Part of me still can’t believe that this guy might have read Unearthly. This thing I made up. Sprung from my brain cells. And he read it. Maybe. It kills me.)



    Which brings me to my next too-old Tucker pick: Tucker #2 Liam Hemsworth



    Again, he’s too old! But he’s got the farm-boy vibe and the stormy blue eyes, so he’s my next best choice. Seriously, though. I don’t know of an actor who would make a perfect Tucker. I just have to have faith that he’s out there, in all his blue-eyed, dimpled glory.




    Angela




    For Angela I would choose someone dark-haired and sassy, Maybe Vanessa Hudgens or Vanessa Morano (she could get the know-it-all-edness of Angela down perfectly, I think), Lucy Hale would be a good pick, or maybe even Selena Gomez.

    Wendy


    For Wendy I’d choose someone wholesome and down-to-earth, with dimples like Tucker, if possible. Like Emma Roberts, see above, or Brigit Mendler.



    Maggie

    Okay, I have some possibilities for Maggie. She is a hugely important character in my mind, and I modeled her a bit after Lorelei from The Gilmore Girls, but I don’t really see Lauren Graham in this role. Not that I don’t heart Lauren Graham; she rocks.

    But I have 2 other choices here.

    #1 Charlize Theron



    Okay, can’t pass up the pic of CT with Anna Sophia Robb. Now picture CT with long auburn hair and give both of them blue eyes. They’d make a pretty fine Maggie and Clara. Plus Charlene is sarcastic as all get-out, from what I gather, which would be great for Maggie. 

    #2—Nicole  Kidman

     


    Nicole Kidman is actually perfect for Maggie. She’s got the right coloring, red hair, blue eyes, and she’s funny and gorgeous. And she apparently loves butterflies. . .

    I also like Naomi Watts or Elizabeth Banks or Gwyneth Paltrow, as they all have equal parts beauty and sass.


    But here’s the thing:

    Nobody is a perfect fit. All of my characters were very distinctive in my mind, and none of them were based on specific actors. And part of the fun and magic of seeing your work move from the page to the screen is being surprised and delighted by the new ways your characters are interpreted. If (fingers crossed) Unearthly does become a series on the CW, I hope that the actors can ACT, that’s the main thing. I don’t care whether they have the exact look that was in my mind when I was writing so much as I care about how they embody the spirit of that character.


    ****************
    Hallowed (Unearthly #2) by Cynthia Hand  is out now from Egmont, £6.99.