Monday, June 25, 2012

The Glimpse Blog Tour: Book Trailer & Giveaway! (UK Only!)


The Glimpse by Claire Merle
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Release date: June 7th 2012

In a near future, society is segregated according to whether people are genetically disposed to mental illness. 17-year-old Ana has been living the privileged life of a Pure due to an error in her DNA test. When the authorities find out, she faces banishment from her safe Community, a fate only thwarted by the fact that she has already been promised to Pure-boy Jasper Taurell.

Jasper is from a rich and influential family and despite Ana’s condition, wants to be with her. The authorities grant Ana a tentative reprieve. If she is joined to Jasper before her 18th birthday, she may stay in the Community until her illness manifests. But if Jasper changes his mind, she will be cast out among the Crazies. As Ana’s joining ceremony and her birthday loom closer, she dares to hope she will be saved from the horror of the City and live a ‘normal’ life. But then Jasper disappears.

Led to believe Jasper has been taken by a strange sect the authorities will not interfere with, Ana sneaks out of her well-guarded Community to find him herself. Her search takes her through the underbelly of society, and as she delves deeper into the mystery of Jasper’s abduction she uncovers some devastating truths that destroy everything she has grown up to believe.












 Find out more at: http://findtamsin.blogspot.co.uk/

Thanks to Faber and Faber I have a copy of The Glimpse to give away!
Competition is Open: UK ONLY!
Competition Closes: July 2nd 2012.



COMPETITION CLOSED! WINNER ANNOUNCED SOON!

Monday, June 18, 2012

Summer Break!

Hi guys!

Just a quick note to let you all know it's going to be quiet around here for the next fortnight. I'll be in West Cork for a summer staycation where I'll hopefully be spending my days outside enjoying the sun!

In the meantime, don't forget to enter my Summer Spotlight Mega Giveaway and my giveaway of Silence by Becca Fitzpatrick. You can find both competitions by clicking the 'current contests' tab at the top of the page. 

Author Claire Merle will be popping by next week as part of the blog tour for her book, The Glimpse, and I'll be back blogging in July.

See you then!

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Reviewed by Jen: The Hunt by Andrew Fukuda.


Product details:
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Books
Release date: May 10th 2012
Paperback, 304 pages.
Rating: 4½ out of 5
Ages: 12+
Source: Received from publisher for review.
Reviewed by: Jen

Against all odds, 17-year-old Gene has survived in a world where humans have been eaten to near extinction by the general population. The only remaining humans, or hepers as they are known, are housed in domes on the savannah and studied at the nearby Heper Institute. Every decade there is a government sponsored hunt. When Gene is selected to be one of the combatants he must learn the art of the hunt but also elude his fellow competitors whose suspicions about his true nature are growing.


The Hunt by Andrew Fukuda has got to be one of the most tense books I have ever read.  Every time I opened it up I had this feeling of dread in the pit of my stomach as I sat on the edge of my seat reading.   This is not a book for the faint of heart!! 

On page one of The Hunt the story’s narrator, Gene, describes how a six -year old human showed up for the first day of kindergarten.  She made it through most of the morning, but by naptime her classmates had devoured her.  The teacher got to her first.  You have to know that any book that starts with a six-year old being eaten by her kindergarten teacher is going to be intense!  Gene goes on to describe how he is the only living human left of his family, and as far as he knows the entire country. He also describes the tedious rituals he endures in order to pretend that he is just like everyone else, because if he doesn’t he will surely be devoured within seconds of discovery.  Gene wishes he were like everyone else: fast and sleek, bloodthirsty and unemotional.  Being human in a world of vampires, although the author never uses that word to describe his dystopian society, is depressing and lonely.   While Gene has managed to keep everyone fooled for seventeen years his luck runs out when he is chosen for The Hunt.  The Hunt is a government sanctioned competition to hunt and eat as many humans, called hepers, as possible.  For most “people” being chosen for a heper hunt is a dream come true, but for Gene the hunt will mean discovery and sure death. 

I thought this story was an interesting twist on the ideas from The Hunger Games.  The main character is thrown into a competition where the winner is the one who can kill the most, but the similarities stop there.  The competitors in The Hunt are never in danger of being killed themselves.  They need no weapons to take down and eat the humans they are chasing.  They just need to make sure they are the strongest and fastest if they want to taste real human blood and not the synthetic animal meat they are used to. 

The tension of this book lies in Genes attempts to keep people from discovering that he is actually a heper.  Gene is housed at The Institute for a week to prepare for The Hunt and his disguise supplies are all back home.  As the days wear on Gene is getting closer and closer to discovery.  Every page I read I was pretty sure that Gene was going to get eaten.  Then the author would find a creative way to save his main character only to throw him into an even more harrowing situation. 

I thought the differences between people (vampires) and hepers (humans) was fascinating.  The author does an excellent job of creating a society where everyone is only able to come out at night.  Yes, unlike some vampire tales these vampires will dissolve into pus and goo if caught in the sun.

The Hunt is absolutely not a run of the mill vampire story.  There is no vampire/human love story and there are no werewolves to be found.  This is a survival story set in a dystopian world where being human will most definitely get you killed.  So if you want to know if Gene survives in such a brutal world you will have to read The Hunt for yourselves.  If you love edge of your seat thrillers than The Hunt will not leave you disappointed!

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Book Review: The Selection by Kiera Cass.


Product details:
Publisher: HarperCollins Children's Books.
Release date:  June 7th 2012.
Paperback, 327 pages.
Rating: 3½ out of 5.
Ages: 13+
Source: Received from publisher for review.

Thirty-five beautiful girls. Thirty-five beautiful rivals…

It’s the chance of a lifetime and 17-year-old America Singer should feel lucky. She has been chosen for The Selection, a reality TV lottery in which the special few compete for gorgeous Prince Maxon's love.

Swept up in a world of elaborate gowns, glittering jewels and decadent feasts, America is living a new and glamorous life. And the prince takes a special interest in her, much to the outrage of the others.

Rivalry within The Selection is fierce and not all of the girls are prepared to play by the rules. But what they don’t know is that America has a secret – one which could throw the whole competition… and change her life forever.


In a world where society is divided by numbers, America Singer is a five.  It’s nothing that marks her out as special, but nothing so bad either that she has to work as a servant, always going hungry, never having enough, like her secret boyfriend Aspen, who is a six.  America’s mother wants great things for her pretty daughter. She wants her to move up the world.  She’d like America to marry a four, maybe even a three.  And so, when an unbelievable opportunity  presents itself in the form of The Selection, whereby pretty girls compete for the heart of Prince Maxon and the crown of IllĂ©a, America’s mother is all for it.  At first, America is not interested, but then when her relationship with Aspen takes an unexpected and heart-breaking turn, she sees The Selection as her escape from reality. After all, living it up in a palace for a couple weeks can’t be so bad, right?

Billed as The Bachelor meets The Hunger Games, The Selection has been heavily marketed as a work of dystopian fiction.  However, if you’re expecting a hard-hitting read featuring a brutal regime and a caste system that has rules and regulations that are almost impossible to adhere to, then this isn’t the book for you.  Essentially, The Selection is a dark fairytale, or dystopian-lite, if you like. There’s a lack of world building and background information here, which will annoy some readers, and the only thing that might disrupt the order of America's society, a rebellion that is supposedly rising, is talked about, but never actually seen.   I have my own theories on that particular plot point, but it’s not something that really bothers America and the rest of the girls who have been chosen for The Selection. After all, they have their pretty dresses and their fine jewels to keep them occupied.

The Selection is a light, fluffy read that mostly deals with America’s new life at the palace and her growing attraction to Prince Maxon, who turns out to be not as dull as he might first seem. Okay, he is a little dull, at times but he’s a nice guy too, and he likes America right from the start.  It’s not all plain sailing though, because, while Aspen may no longer be a part of her everyday life, he still occupies a special place in America’s heart. Soon, America will have to decide if she should give the Prince a chance, or if her heart truly belongs to the servant boy she loved so dearly once upon a time.

The Selection is perfect for those days when you are looking for a read that’s light and fun, and not too taxing.  I enjoyed it enough that I’ll continue with the series, although I would like to find out much more about what’s going on outside the walls of the gilded world America now inhabits.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Shift Blog Tour: Author Em Bailey on her typical writing day!


Shift by Em Bailey
Publisher: Electric Monkey
Release date: May 7th 2012
Ages: 12+

There were two things everyone knew about Miranda Vaile before she'd even started at our school. The first was that she had no parents - they were dead. And the second was that they were dead because Miranda had killed them."

Olive used to be the school queen-bee. But that was before her breakdown. Now she's the class loner, and can only watch as new girl Miranda latches on to Olive's ex-best friend Katie. Soon Miranda is talking like Katie, dressing like Katie - even going out with Katie's boyfriend.

And then Katie dies. Everyone seems to believe it was a tragic accident, but OIive isn't so sure. What if the wild rumours are true? What if Miranda really is a killer...?

Guest Post: Author Em Bailey on her typical writing day: 

On weekdays I set my alarm for 6am so I can do some writing before everyone else wakes up. Then when it rings I turn it off, roll over and go back to sleep until my daughter wakes up an hour later. This basically happens every day. I guess I'm just not one of those authors – much as I long to be - who gets up at the crack of dawn and has a chapter completed before breakfast.

When I first started writing seven years ago it was more of a hobby than anything else – something that I did in the evenings after my 'real' job had finished, or on the weekends. Time was always limited, especially as I had a young daughter to care for as well. It was only when we moved to Germany three years ago that I started writing full-time. But even now there never seems to be enough time to get everything done (hence my constant attempts to get some writing done before breakfast).

I find I work between 9 am and 1 pm so I try to put my head down during this period and do as much as I can. This isn’t always easy. There are lots of great things about working at home, but I often find myself fighting the urge to go and rearrange the furniture rather than knuckle down and work. The internet is also a curse, of course, and I generally switch it off so I won't be tempted to read just one more blog...

I have a fairly short concentration span so after lunch my attention starts to wander. I try to do less demanding work then – re-reading drafts, doing chapter breakdowns or replying to work emails. I have a corner set up at home for working, but really, my 'office' is wherever my computer is. I often work in the library, just for a change of scenery. I'm also less likely to try and rearrange the furniture in there (although it's not entirely out of the question).

I try to go for a walk at some stage during the day. It's good to move after sitting for a few hours and I also find walking helps me think through any manuscript troubles I might be having. I did a lot of walking while writing Shift – attempting to nut out the twists and turns of the plots as I strode along.

Now that I write full-time I try not to work in the evenings or on the weekends, although this goes out the window when a deadline is looming. I think if you're a writer you're probably always working anyway. Even when I'm hanging out in the park with my kid or in the supermarket I find myself listening in on conversations, looking out for potential characters and watching the way people interact. In the evenings I read a lot – especially as I still can’t really understand the German TV shows. I try to read broadly – not just YA titles as I think that reading lots of different types of books brings a fresh perspective to my work.

Then there's sleep - which I think is a very important part of the writing process! On more than one occasion I've woken up with a solution to a plot dilemma which had seemed irresolvable the night before. That's how I justify the extra hour of sleep in the morning.

*****

Thanks for the great guest post, Em!  

I'll be posting my review of Shift later this month, so keep an eye out for that! In the meantime, you can follow the rest of the Shift blog tour!



Saturday, June 9, 2012

Second Chance Summer Blog Tour: Author Morgan Matson talks favourite Summer Reads!


Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Books
Release date:  June 7th 2012

Taylor's family might not be the closest-knit – everyone is a little too busy and overscheduled – but for the most part, they get along fine. Then they get news that changes everything: Her father has pancreatic cancer, and it's stage four – meaning that there is basically nothing to be done. Her parents decide that the family will spend his last months together at their old summerhouse in the Pocono Mountains.

Crammed into a place much smaller and more rustic than they are used to, they begin to get to know each other again. And Taylor discovers that the people she thought she had left behind haven't actually gone anywhere. Her former summer best friend is suddenly around, as is her first boyfriend. . . and he's much cuter at seventeen than he was at twelve.

As the summer progresses, the Edwards become more of a family, and closer than they've ever been before. But all of them very aware that they're battling a ticking clock. Sometimes, though, there is just enough time to get a second chance – with family, with friends, and with love.


Guest Post: Morgan Matson talks favourite Summer Reads!

© Meredith Zinner

Summer books are my favorite! I love reading them in summer (of course) but I also love reading them in the dead of winter, when it’s freezing outside and all I want is to wear flip-flops and get a suntan.  Here are some of my favorite books – the ones that always conjure summer up for me!

The “Summer” Series by Jenny Han
This trilogy – The Summer I Turned Pretty, It’s Not Summer Without You, and We’ll Always Have Summer, are such incredibly evocative books.  Not only do they capture summer perfectly – set at a beach house with a pool! – but there’s a love triangle that still manages to give me goosebumps. 


 Along For the Ride and The Truth About Forever, Sarah Dessen
I love Sarah Dessen’s books that take place during summers. Along for the Ride captures the lazy beach town perfectly – I felt I knew Colby, and wanted to move there immediately.  The Truth About Forever is less of a beachy read, but still a great summer book – with new jobs, new friends, new boys.  The kind of book that’s full of the possibilities of summer.


The Last Summer (of You & Me)
This book by Ann Brashares (she wrote the Sisterhood books) is another summer-beach-love triangle.  Tragic and heartbreaking and summery, all at once.


13 Little Blue Envelopes, Maureen Johnson
Sometimes you want to read about the beach, but sometimes I want my summer books to have a bit of adventure to them. This book is a quest/ scavenger hunt across Europe – perfect to read when you want to vicariously travel without having to go anywhere!

 *****************


Thanks for the great guest post, Morgan! It's always a pleasure to have you stop by! :) I totally agree, the Summer series by Jenny Han is the ultimate series for summer! I really need to read some Dessen soon. I've heard so many good things! 


Want to know more about Morgan and her books?
Check out the Website
Follow @morgan_m on Twitter




Second Chance Summer is out now from Simon and Schuster. Paperback, £6.99. eBook also available.



Friday, June 8, 2012

Book Review: Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson.


Product details:
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Books
Release date: June 7th 2012.
Paperback, 468 pages.
Rating: 4½ out of 5.
Ages: 12+
Source: Received from publisher for review.

Taylor Edwards’ family might not be the closest-knit—everyone is a little too busy and overscheduled—but for the most part, they get along just fine. Then Taylor’s dad gets devastating news, and her parents decide that the family will spend one last summer all together at their old lake house in the Pocono Mountains.

Crammed into a place much smaller and more rustic than they are used to, they begin to get to know each other again. And Taylor discovers that the people she thought she had left behind haven’t actually gone anywhere. Her former best friend is still around, as is her first boyfriend…and he’s much cuter at seventeen than he was at twelve.

As the summer progresses and the Edwards become more of a family, they’re more aware than ever that they’re battling a ticking clock. Sometimes, though, there is just enough time to get a second chance—with family, with friends, and with love.



A bittersweet tale of great loss, love lost, heartbreak, betrayal and redemption, Morgan Matson’s Second Chance Summer contains every essential summer reading ingredient you could wish for. Just like her stunning debut novel, Amy & Roger’s Epic Detour, this one is pretty much perfect in every way, marking Matson as one of my go to authors for great summer reads.

Like a lot of people, Taylor Edwards takes the people closest to her for granted.  She’s not particularly close to her mom, doesn’t have a lot in common with her siblings, and while she has a special bond with her dad, she doesn’t see him all that often, because he’s always working.  The members of Taylor’s family are always so busy doing their own thing, living their own lives, that they don’t really have a whole lot of time for each other.  But when life deals Taylor’s dad a cruel blow in the form of terminal cancer, giving him only a matter of months to live, all he wants to do is to spend that time with his family.

Taylor has her own reasons for not wanting to return to the lake house in the Pocono Mountains.   She hasn’t been back there since she was twelve, not since that summer when everything went wrong, and she has no intention of ever going back there again.  But it’s what her dad wants, one last summer when they’ll all be together, and she can’t say no to that.

Second Chance Summer, is such a touching, heartfelt tale, which enters into truly tear-jerking territory in its final heartbreaking chapters. Matson doesn’t relegate Taylor’s dad to the sidelines in this book, and she doesn’t scrimp on detailing the advancement of his illness. In fact, she tells it all, right to the end. And that’s what makes this book so sad, because this is the summer when Taylor gets to know her dad, really gets to know him and all the little things that make him who he is.  And as Taylor and her dad bond in what will be their last summer, we get to know him too. And you know what; Taylor’s dad is a really nice guy.   He gets Taylor in ways that most other people don’t, he worries about her and wonders if she’ll be okay when she’s gone.  He worries that she’ll just run away, shutting everyone out of her life, like she always does, like she did that summer she was twelve.

For five years, Taylor has been running away from something that she now has to face the consequences of.  Initially I thought that Taylor made a bigger deal out of things than was really believable.  Mostly what’s so bad when you’re twelve really isn’t a huge big deal when you’re seventeen, and that’s if you even remember it, but then as I got to know Taylor, I understood why it was still such a big deal to her. It’s because she never faced up to it, she never explained why she did what she did, and she never said sorry.  Taylor learns a lot of lessons in her second chance summer, the most important of those being that it’s never too late to say sorry, it’s never too late to say the words you’ve always wanted to say, and that you should always say them, no matter how hard it is, no matter how much it hurts, no matter what.

Second Chance Summer sees Taylor reconnect with her first boyfriend, Henry, who is no longer the twelve year old guy who wanted to hold her hand, no longer the boy who liked her more than any boy ever had before, or maybe even since.   At seventeen he’s totally hot, but when they have their first meeting on the dock, he blows cold towards Taylor. But there’s a long summer ahead, and even though time is running out for Taylor’s family to be together, she knows there’s still time to reconnect with Henry, to make amends with her ex-best friend Lucy, and finally, to say goodbye to her dad, although Taylor doesn’t know if she’ll ever really be able to do that.

A total summer must-read, Morgan Matson’s Second Chance Summer will make you remember your own special summers, your childhood crushes, and your sad times too.  Ultimately, it is a beautiful book, and is written in a voice that is pitch-perfect all the way through.   And as an added bonus, Amy & Roger even make a small surprise appearance here.  Those two are just too cute!

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Giveaway! Win a copy of the new UK Paperback of Silence (Hush, Hush #3) by Becca Fitzpatrick! (Includes extract from book #4 FINALE!)

All you Patch fans out there, did you know that today sees the UK paperback release of Silence (Hush, Hush #3) by Becca Fitzpatrick?  Not only does this new paperback version have a very cool red cover, it also contains an extract from FINALE book #4 in the Hush, Hush sequence.  I've read the extract, and it's pretty damn awesome, let me tell you!

To be in with a chance to win a copy of Silence,  and to get your hands on that all important sneak peek of Finale, all you need to do is fill in your details below and leave a comment telling me what you love about this series. Is it the best YA Angel series of them all? Is Patch the hottest YA bad boy out there? Have you found an alternative Angel series to get stuck into while you await the release of Finale? Have you found a new hot Angel boy to obsess over? What do you think of the UK cover for Finale which I posted earlier today?

Leave me a comment, any comment! I like reading your thoughts!





COMPETITION CLOSED! WINNER ANNOUNCED SOON!

UK Cover Alert: Finale by Becca Fitzpatrick!

Exclusively revealed by Simon & Schuster UK yesterday, here is the UK cover for Finale the fourth and final book in Becca Fitzpatrick's Hush, Hush series.

Let me know your thoughts on the cover!

I think it's a great cover, and I also think that someone should send "Patch's" phone number my way...! (If my boyfriend is reading this I am SO just kidding. Kinda. Not really). Ha! 



Finale (Hush, Hush #4) by Becca Fitzpatrick
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Books
Release date: October 23rd 2012

Nora is more certain than ever that she is in love with Patch. Fallen angel or no, he is the one for her. Her heritage and destiny may mean that they will always be enemies, but there is no turning her back on him. But now they face their biggest challenge. Can their love survive a seemingly insurmountable divide. And in the end, will there be enough trust left to rebuild what has been broken? The lines are drawn - but which sides are they on?



Check back later today when I'll have a special giveaway to celebrate the paperback release of Silence (Hush, Hush #3) by Becca Fitzpatrick!

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

UK Book Trailer: Rapture by Lauren Kate!

Who's excited to read Rapture by Lauren Kate when it releases later this month? I love the Fallen series and can't wait to see how it all ends for Luce and Daniel.  And Cam! Love that guy!!

In the meantime, check out this great trailer for Rapture from Random House Children's Books.

Enjoy!



Rapture (Fallen #4) by Lauren Kate
Publisher: Random House Children's Books
Release date: June 21st 2012

The sky is dark with wings . . . .

Like sand in an hourglass, time is running out for Luce and Daniel. To stop Lucifer from erasing the past they must find the place where the angels fell to earth. Dark forces are after them, and Daniel doesn’t know if he can do this—live only to lose Luce again and again.

Yet together they will face an epic battle that will end with lifeless bodies . . . and angel dust. Great sacrifices are made. Hearts are destroyed. And suddenly Luce knows what must happen.

For she was meant to be with someone other than Daniel. The curse they’ve borne has always and only been about her—and the love she cast aside. The choice she makes now will be the only one that truly matters.

In the fight for Luce, who will win?

The astonishing conclusion to the FALLEN series. Heaven can’t wait any longer.






Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Book Review: Eighteen Kisses by Laura Jane Cassidy.


Product details:
Publisher: Puffin.
Release date: May 2nd 2012.
Paperback, 240 pages.
Rating: 3½ out of 5.
Ages: YA.
Series: Jacki King  #2
Other books in series: Angel Kiss.
Source: Received from publisher for review.

Jacki King loves being back in Dublin - she's enjoying the music scene and interning at Electric magazine. She still has flashbacks to the murder case she solved the year before, though her friends, especially Nick, keep her distracted.

Until, one day, Jacki's frightening nightmares begin again. And when the police contact her about a local missing girl, she knows the two are connected.

Two years before, on her eighteenth birthday, Kayla Edwards disappeared.

No body has ever been found.

But now Kayla is communicating with Jacki from beyond the grave - and she won't stop until the truth is revealed . . .



A taut, suspense filled mystery that will keep you guessing right to the end, Eighteen Kisses, the second installment in Laura Jane Cassidy’s Jacki King series, sees the teenage investigator back in action as she’s called on to help solve the case of  Kyla Edwards who  disappeared two years previously on the night of her eighteenth birthday party.  No body has ever been found, and the case remains unsolved.  But Kayla wants to be found, and so she calls to Jacki, visiting her dreams, causing nightmares that Jacki can’t bear to relive night after night.  If Jacki wants the nightmares to stop, she knows what she must do.

And so, Jacki says a temporary goodbye to the small town of Avarna as she relocates to the bright lights of Dublin, where she sets about meeting those nearest and dearest to Kayla, her friends and family, all of who were there on the night Kayla went missing. One of who might be responsible for her disappearance.  Jacki also spends her time catching up with old school friends, sampling the Dublin music scene, and working on her internship at Electric magazine, where she meets, and connects with Dillon, a fellow intern.   But what of Nick, her boyfriend back in Avarna?  Well, he’s still in Jacki’s life, but it’s fair to say that with everything else that’s going on, Jacki doesn’t have a whole lot of time for romance, and their relationship in this book, is not a very happy or a very healthy one.

Cassidy’s portrayal of teenagers and their rollercoaster relationships is, here, refreshingly realistic as always.  I had to sympathise with Nick at times, because even though he’s not at his best in Eighteen Kisses, not by a long shot, it’s clear to see that he feels excluded from Jacki’s life and that he’s hurting. So what does he do? Instead of talking things through and asking Jacki what’s going on, he instead bottles everything up and then lashes out when things don’t go his way. And none of Jacki’s friends seems to like him either, which is a bad, bad sign.   Jacki, for her part, wants to spend time with Nick, but she’s being torn every which way, and she hasn’t told him all or any of her secrets, so it’s difficult for them to strike a balance with one another.

And then there’s Dillon, who is easygoing and fun, and who likes all the same bands that Jacki does. I wanted to tell Jacki that they’re all like that at first, but in any case I sense major relationship drama ahead for her!

Eighteen Kisses will take you on a tour around Dublin as Jacki goes about solving the Edwards case, and it was great to see locations that I know well included in the story.  At one point, Jacki even popped into my favourite record store for a browse and a coffee. She hangs out at one of my favourite gig venues too, which was pretty cool!

Most of all though, what I loved about Eighteen Kisses was the unpredictability of the story.  There’s a large cast of characters here, and Cassidy includes plot twists and every turn to keep her readers guessing.

I’m a big fan of the Jacki King series, and very hopeful for a third book as there’s still plenty of work for Jacki to do. And, of course, I want to see if she chooses Nick or Dillon. Or maybe Jacki will decide that she doesn’t have time for a guy in her life and is better off on her own. I have a feeling that’s something this fiercely independent girl might do!

Monday, June 4, 2012

Winners: Night Circus Party Packs//Wild Ink//The Summer of Secrets!!

Winners of The Night Circus Party Packs - with thanks to Vintage Books

April Hunter - Dunbartonshire
Melissa Symonds - Surrey


Find out more about The Night Circus on the Vintage Books Website 
 
 

Winners of Wild Ink by Victoria Hanley - with thanks to Prufrock Press


Anna Scott - London, England.
Mary Preston - Queensland, Australia.
Patricia McKelvy - Arizona, USA. 

Read an extract of Wild Ink: here



Winners of The Summer of Secrets by Alison Lucy with thanks to Canvas Books

Jennifer Lane - Merseyside
Leoni Lees - West Midlands
Rebecca Matthews - Camberly
Mary Tipping - Wiltshire
Kate Verrier - Hampshire
Gina Hunt - Tilshead
Sharon Wilden - Wiltshire
Sarah Morton - Leicestershire
April Hunter - Dunbartonshire
Kulsuma Begum - London




Congratulations to all the winners - especially to April who was extra lucky and won two prizes!  I didn't have time to email you all individually, but, rest assured, if your name appears here, then your details have been forwarded to the publishers and you should have your prizes soon.

Many, many thanks to the publishers for providing such wonderful prizes!

If you haven't yet entered my Summer Spotlight Mega Giveaway, there's still time, so get those entries in!

I also have a competition for fans of Becca Fitzpatrick's Hush, Hush series coming up this week. Keep an eye out for that!

Friday, June 1, 2012

Friday Fun: Starcrossed & Dreamless goodies for Josephine Angelini fans!

To celebrate the upcoming publication of Dreamless by Josephine Angelini (July 2012) Macmillan publishers sent me these goodies to share with you.  There's a bunch of avatars, wallpapers and banners for you to have fun with. Go forth and spread the Dreamless love!

To be in with a chance to win a copy of Dreamless enter my Summer Spotlight Mega Giveaway where you could win a copy of Dreamless along with other great summer reads! 


Avatar
Avatar
Skyscraper
Wallpaper 320x480
Wallpaper 640x960


Wallpaper 1280x1024
Wallpaper 1600x1200









Click on image to see larger size. 
Right click and save to store image on your computer.

Don't forget to keep up with all the latest news on Josphine Angelini and her Starcrossed series at My Kinda Book.