Monday, November 18, 2013

Reviewed by Arianne: Finding Your Inner Cherokee by Siobhan Curham.


When Leanna first contacted me about reviewing Finding Your Inner Cherokee, I was thrilled. I'm not usually a reader (or reviewer!) of non-fiction but having loved the book which inspired this e-companion, Finding Cherokee Brown, I was sure I'd love this one, too.

Finding Your Inner Cherokee is all about beating the bullies. Filled with relevant statistics and advice, it is not so much a how-to guide on vanquishing the bullies but more of a handbook designed to give that extra boost to the victims of bullying, who so often feel abandoned and alone.

This book is not designed to sugar-coat the impact of bullying or cajole bullies into 'fessing up. It focuses on the victims and making their lives better, not giving special treatment to bullies in the hopes of creating a reformed character. Make no mistake - Finding Your Inner Cherokee deals with bullying head-on.
 
This e-book companion is a departure from Siobhan's usual YA fare (her other books include the award-winning Dear Dylan and a shiny new series, Shipwrecked, which is being written in conjunction with a TV show). It is not, however, a departure from her other career as a life coach. It's a great combination of the two.
 
Finding Your Inner Cherokee about standing up for yourself in the right way and realizing you are not the only one. It uses 'case studies' and suggests organisations that can help deal with bullying-related issues. There's a welcome emphasis on personal motivation and inner triumph. It's about resolving, not dwelling on, problems. Longtime followers of Curham will feel rewarded by clear links to the field of neurolinguistic programming (a technique briefly featured in Finding Cherokee Brown) and will quickly see the psychology behind many of the ideas detailed within the e-book's pages.
 
Of course, the big question mark hanging over this book is its effectiveness in a real-life situation. Many readers will ironically find it easier to relate to the strength of Curham's fictional characters and not the direct voice she uses here. It can be repetitive and slightly patronising. However, Curham clearly works with the reader's best interests at heart and some of the features within the book could prove really helpful to victims of bullying and those around them.
 
In short: As an idea, Finding Your Inner Cherokee is completely empowering - the concept is pure gold. It's not as practical or useful as it would like to be, but it's full of good intentions and thought-out advice. Well worth checking out.

*******

Finding Your Inner Cherokee
by Siobhan Curham
. Release date: November 18th 2013. Arianne's Rating: 4/5. Source: Received from author for review.


Check Out: Arianne's Review of Finding Cherokee Brown.

Finding Your Inner Cherokee is a non-fiction e-book, full of case studies, exercises and advice, designed to help reassure and empower victims of bullying. You can download it for FREE at Siobhan Curham's website: www.siobhancurham.co.uk


Guest Post: Siobhan Curham on Bullying and Finding Your Inner Cherokee.


Finding Your Inner Cherokee by Siobhan Curham || Release date: TODAY!

Finding Your Inner Cherokee is a non-fiction e-book, full of case studies, exercises and advice, designed to help reassure and empower victims of bullying.

Finding Your Inner Cherokee will be available from Amazon Kindle and all other e-book stores from 18th November and can be downloaded for FREE at Siobhan Curham's website: www.siobhancurham.co.uk



 ********

Guest Post: Siobhan Curham on Bullying and Finding Your Inner Cherokee 


In March of this year, my novel Finding Cherokee Brownwas published. Finding Cherokee Browntells the story of a 15-year-old girl who finds the confidence to stand up to her bullies in her own unique way. After the book was published I received many emails from readers telling me that the book had helped them deal with bullying in their own lives. This made me want to do more to help and so the idea for Finding Your Inner Cherokee was born. Finding Your Inner Cherokee is a non-fiction e-book, full of case studies, exercises and advice, designed to help victims of bullying find their inner strength and become happy again.

At the start of the book I talk about four basic truths about being bullied. These are four truths that I wish I’d known and believed back when I was being bullied:

1.      You are not alone
2.      What is happening is not your fault
3.      You have nothing to feel embarrassed about
4.      It will stop and your life will get better

In this guest post, I want to focus on TRUTH NUMBER TWO: What is happening is not your fault.

When you’re being bullied it can be really hard to believe this one. Bullies can seem so confident and strong. When they call you names or make fun of you it can be hard not to believe that it is somehow your fault; that you have asked for it in some way. But here’s the truth of the matter:

Bullies. Are. Freaks.

The Oxford English Dictionary defines a freak as: abnormal, unusual, odd, strange.
Bullies are freaks because bullying is not normal behaviour.

Think about it for a moment. If you were totally happy with your life – if you had a great family, an awesome group of friends, enough money to live comfortably and you were healthy and fit – why would you need to make anyone else’s life a misery? You wouldn’t. You’d be too busy having a good time. It therefore follows that bullies must be very unhappy people. I know this might seem hard to believe – and I’m certainly not suggesting we throw a pity party for the people who make our lives so tough. But this fact is important because it proves that none of it is your fault.

In Finding Your Inner Cherokee, I condense this down into a bullying equation:

Unhappy person + chance to make someone else feel bad & experience short-term happiness = bully

By putting someone else down and causing them pain, the bully experiences a feeling of power, and this gives them a short-term burst of happiness. They get a kick out of seeing another person upset or afraid because it makes them feel better about their own unhappy life. But it’s only ever a temporary high and that’s why they keep on doing it. The key word in the equation above is someone – as in, anyone – as in, not you, personally. If the bully wasn’t picking on you, they’d be picking on someone else to make themselves feel better. Therefore it’s not you who has something wrong with them – it’s the bully.

I really believe that words have the power to transform our lives for the better and in the book I regularly give the reader what I refer to as power tweets. A power tweet is a statement which, like a tweet, is 140 characters of less but packs a powerful punch. If you are being bullied and feel that it might somehow be your fault, write this power tweet down and read it regularly:

“I’m not the one with the problem – they are.”

In a lot of cases it’s impossible to know the exact reasons behind your bully’s behaviour, but think of this: You are kind. You are not a bully. And one day, hopefully very soon, you will be free of them and happy again. You will move on. They won’t. They won’t be free of themselves and whatever is making them act in that way – and they still won’t be happy.

Finding Your Inner Cherokee will be available from Amazon Kindle and all other e-book stores from 18th November and can be downloaded for FREE at my website: www.siobhancurham.co.uk

 Follow Siobhan on Twitter: @SiobhanCurham

*********

Siobhan Curham and Netmums Join Forces Against Bullying

Siobhan Curham, author of Finding Cherokee Brown, Dear Dylan and Shipwrecked, is fast becoming the authority on anti-bullying.

She has been chosen by Netmums, the UK’s biggest parenting website, to write regular articles on all aspects of bullying to help parents handle this sensitive issue which affects 46% of young people.

Siobhan’s input will include a series of articles during National Anti-bullying Week (18th – 22nd November 2013). Topics that Siobhan will write about will include: Tips for Staying Strong for your Child, Creating an Anti-bullying Action Plan, Home-Schooling, How to Build Your Bullied Child’s Confidence and Cyber-Bullying.

Siobhan will also take part in two anti-bullying clinics on the Netmums website on 26th & 27th November, answering questions alongside Alex Holmes, who runs the Diana Awards Anti-Bullying Ambassadors scheme.

 Source: Press Release.


Check back later today when Arianne will be reviewing Finding Your Inner Cherokee.

Friday, November 15, 2013

Read All About It: News, Deals and Cover Reveals from Cat Clarke, Stephanie Perkins, The Divergent Movie & More!

Here's a round up of the latest book news, deals and some cover reveals that I've discovered over the past few weeks!  It's also basically a digest of all the exciting news stories that come my way and which I've mostly already posted on my twitter and Facebook feeds, so if you want up-to-the-minute book news and you don't want to have to wait around for me to type this up, you can follow me on those sites!

 Like DaisyChainBookReviews on Facebook  ||   Follow  @daisychainbooks on Twitter and then you'll never miss a thing!


A Kiss in the Dark by Cat Clarke || Release date: April 2014

When Alex meets Kate the attraction is instant.

Alex is funny, good-looking, and a little shy – everything that Kate wants in a boyfriend.

Alex can’t help falling for Kate, who is pretty, charming and maybe just a little naive…

But one of them is hiding a secret, and as their love blossoms, it threatens to ruin not just their relationship, but their lives.
********** 


Book Deals, Book Deals, Book Deals....

Anna, Lola & Isla in the UK (Just in case you missed it!)

 
Usborne has signed three novels from US author Stephanie Perkins. 

Rebecca Hill, Usborne fiction director, acquired UK and Commonwealth rights, excluding Canada, from Donne Forrest, subsidiary rights director at Penguin US for three YA contemporary romance titles.

Anna and the French Kiss will be published in the UK in January 2014, with Lola and the Boy Next Door following in June. Perkins' new novel, Isla and the Happy Ever After will be published simultaneously in the UK and US on autumn 2014.

Hill said: "Stephanie’s glorious writing has always had me sobbing, swooning and smiling from the bottom of my heart."

Perkins previously worked as a bookseller and librarian before becoming a novelist. The three books revolve around friends Anna and Lola, and are set in locations including Paris and San Francisco.


 *******

Daughters Unto Devils by Amy Lukavics

T.S. Ferguson at Harlequin Teen has acquired Daughters Unto Devils, a horror novel set in the 1800s, by debut author Amy Lukavics. Coping with a secret pregnancy and her family's move to the prairie, 16-year-old Amanda must figure out whether she's being haunted by an evil presence that is tainting the land or if she's simply losing her mind. Joanna Volpe at New Leaf Literary & Media negotiated the two-book deal. 


A History of What Happened by Juliana Romano


Stacey Friedberg at Dial has bought Juliana Romano's debut novel, A History of What Happened. Pitched as The Perks of Being a Wallflower meets The Summer I Turned Pretty, the YA novel takes place during one year of high school, as an introspective 15-year-old grows distant from her childhood best friend and closer to her friend's longtime crush. Publication is scheduled for 2015; Logan Garrison at the Gernert Company negotiated the two-book deal for world English rights. 


 

I'll Believe You When You're Gone by Jessica Alcott


Phoebe Yeh at Crown has acquired I’ll Believe You When You’re Gone and an untitled YA novel by pseudonymous novelist Jessica Alcott. Charlie, who thinks of herself as an ugly duckling, is bracing herself for another year of not fitting in at high school. Enter her charismatic English teacher, and the mutual crush that ensues, leading up to the fateful night of Charlie's 18th birthday when boundaries are crossed. The author currently works for a children's publisher. Publication is set for spring 2015; David Dunton of Harvey Klinger negotiated the deal for world rights. 


Shoes in the Street by Suzanne Nelson 



Michelle Frey at Knopf has acquired Suzanne Nelson's Shoes in the Street, a YA novel that follows a variety of characters from Nazi Germany to present-day New York, as their lives are interwoven through their contact with a special pair of pink high heels. Publication is set for fall 2015; Ammi-Joan Paquette at Erin Murphy Literary Agency did the deal for world rights. 


******** 


More Book Covers of Awesome...


UK Cover
 Far From You by Tess Sharpe || Release date: March 2014


Sophie Winters nearly died. Twice.

The first time, she's fourteen, and escapes a near-fatal car accident with scars, a bum leg, and an addiction to Oxy that'll take years to kick.

The second time, she's seventeen, and it's no accident. Sophie and her best friend Mina are confronted by a masked man in the woods. Sophie survives, but Mina is not so lucky. When the cops deem Mina's murder a drug deal gone wrong, casting partial blame on Sophie, no one will believe the truth: Sophie has been clean for months, and it was Mina who led her into the woods that night for a meeting shrouded in mystery.

After a forced stint in rehab, Sophie returns home to a chilly new reality. Mina's brother won't speak to her, her parents fear she'll relapse, old friends have become enemies, and Sophie has to learn how to live without her other half. To make matters worse, no one is looking in the right places and Sophie must search for Mina's murderer on her own. But with every step, Sophie comes closer to revealing all: about herself, about Mina and about the secret they shared.

******** 


The Murder Complex by Lindsay Cummings || Release date: June 2014

An action-packed, blood-soaked, futuristic debut thriller set in a world where the murder rate is higher than the birthrate. For fans of Moira Young's Dust Lands series, La Femme Nikita, and the movie Hanna.

Meadow Woodson, a fifteen-year-old girl who has been trained by her father to fight, to kill, and to survive in any situation, lives with her family on a houseboat in Florida. The state is controlled by The Murder Complex, an organization that tracks the population with precision. The plot starts to thicken when Meadow meets Zephyr James, who is-although he doesn't know it-one of the MC's programmed assassins. Is their meeting a coincidence? Destiny? Or part of a terrifying strategy? And will Zephyr keep Meadow from discovering the haunting truth about her family? Action-packed, blood-soaked, and chilling, this is a dark and compelling debut novel by Lindsay Cummings.

******** 


Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn || Release date: June 2014 

Two years ago, fifteen-year-old Jamie Henry breathed a sigh of relief when a judge sentenced his older sister to juvenile detention for burning down their neighbor's fancy horse barn. The whole town did. Because Crazy Cate Henry used to be a nice girl. Until she did a lot of bad things. Like drinking. And stealing. And lying. Like playing weird mind games in the woods with other children. Like making sure she always got her way. Or else.

But today Cate got out. And now she’s coming back for Jamie.

Because more than anything, Cate Henry needs her little brother to know this one simple truth: she’s not the crazy one and never has been.

He is.
 

********


Wish You Were Italian by Kristin Rae || Release date: May 2014 

When seventeen-year-old Pippa Preston ditches her summer art program abroad, she sets out on her own in hopes of falling in love with an Italian, but the road to amore gets detoured when she's torn between a sexy local and a hunky American archaeology student. As she explores the famous cities of Rome and Pompeii, Pippa must sort out her feelings before her parents figure out where she really is, ending her short-lived dream of independence. 

*********

From Book to Screen...Divergent Movie Post & Full Length Trailer.





********* 

Eeek! A new book from Cat Clarke! Excitement! Cat Clarke's Undone is one of the best books I've read this year, and so I'm really looking forward to this new release from her. Wish You Were Italian sounds really cute. I love books with European settings - can't go far wrong with Italy!

And the Divergent movie trailer - I thin it looks pretty awesome! Can't wait to watch this movie! 

What do you think of the latest round up of book deals and cover reveals?  Let me know in comments!




Please note that book covers may not be final and may be subject to change.  Additional sources:  PW Children's Bookshelf, The Bookseller, Amazon UK, Entertainment Weekly, Youtube.

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Authors for the Philippines.


Hi, guys! Just a quick post to tell you all about Authors for the Philippines - an online bookish auction which was set up in order to raise money for the Red Cross Typhoon Haiyan Appeal. You can find all the details on THE WEBSITE, but I thought I'd highlight some of the items up for auction here as there is a ton of great stuff on there. You can bid on everything from signed books and manuscripts, critiques and even author visits to your school or local bookshop.

Anyone can bid on the items - the auction is open WORLDWIDE.

AUTHORS if you'd like to donate an item to the auction, click HERE for details.

The auction runs from today until Wednesday, November 20th 2013, so get bidding!

Here are some of the goodies on offer at the moment! (new items being added all the time!)


Click Image for direct link to item

The very first signed ARC of AFTER THE END. This book is to be released by HarperTeen in May 2014, but the winning bidder can read it 6 months in advance. Winner will be the first person worldwide to receive a signed and dedicated Advance Reader Copy. Will ship internationally.


Click Image for direct link to item

Exclusive signed printed unbound manuscript of Say Her Name by James Dawson

UK YA author James Dawson is offering an EXCLUSIVE chance to see his new YA horror novel SAY HER NAME (June 2014) before anyone else in the whole wide world. The auction winner will receive a signed printed unbound manuscript – a money can’t buy prize!


Click Image for direct link to item

A signed copy of Unbreakable and a signed paperback box set of the Beautiful Creatures novels by Kami Garcia.


Click image for direct link to item

First edition of The Graveyard Book, signed in 2008 by author, Neil Gaiman and illustrator Chris Riddell, donated by author Sue Eves.


Click Image for direct link to item

 Submission Package critique from A Witch in Winter author, Ruth Warburton. 


Email critique of: 1) The first 3 chapters of your YA or MG manuscript 2) Synopsis 3) Cover letter


*****


There are also goodies on offer from Cat Clarke, C.J. Daugherty, Michelle Harrison and many others!


Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Guest Post: Dianne K. Salerni on her Inspiration and Research for The Caged Graves.


The Caged Graves by Dianne. K. Salerni || Release date: May 2013

17-year-old Verity Boone expects a warm homecoming when she returns to Catawissa, Pennsylvania, in 1867, pledged to marry a man she has never met. Instead, she finds a father she barely knows and a future husband with whom she apparently has nothing in common. One truly horrifying surprise awaits her: the graves of her mother and aunt are enclosed in iron cages outside the local cemetery. Nobody in town will explain why, but Verity hears rumors of buried treasure and witchcraft. Perhaps the cages were built to keep grave robbers out . . . or to keep the women in. Determined to understand, Verity finds herself in a life-and-death struggle with people she trusted.

Inspired by a pair of real caged graves in present-day Catawissa, this historical YA novel weaves mystery, romance, and action into a suspenseful drama with human greed and passion at its core.


********

Guest Post: Dianne K. Salerni on Inspiration and Research for The Caged Graves. 


In November of 2009, I was researching ghost stories associated with central Pennsylvania, especially the Pocono Mountains, when I stumbled across a strange photograph online: a grave with an iron cage around it. The article that went with the photo was really short on facts, claiming that local legend said the girl’s parents thought she was a vampire … or a werewolf … or something like that. (I’m not kidding. That’s about what the article said.)

The grave was located outside Catawissa, Pennsylvania – near Rorhbach’s, the author helpfully added. Well, Rorhbach’s turned out to be Rorhbach’s Farm Market, and my husband used Google Earth to identify a cemetery plot near their orchard. So, in January 2010, after a family ski trip in the Poconos, we set off to find “Old Mt. Zion Cemetery.” 

We weren’t even sure the cemetery would be there, let alone the grave, so imagine our shock when we pulled the car up beside the abandoned graveyard and saw two caged graves! One of my daughters refused to get out of the car. The other daughter came within a few steps of the nearest grave, changed her mind, and ran back to wait with her sister. My husband took a bunch of photos, then said, “Uh, it’s kind of chilly out here. I think I’ll go wait in the car too …”

I was half-inclined to run back to the car myself. The graves were THAT creepy. They belonged to Asenath Thomas and Sarah Ann Boone. The women were clearly related in some way, since Sarah was a Thomas by birth and Asenath was a Thomas by marriage. Both women died in 1852, within a few days of one another.  I was hooked. One caged grave is weird. Two is a story.

Other than visiting the graves, the rest of my research for the book was conducted online. I found an article written by a local historian who believed the cages were erected to keep out grave robbers. In the mid-19thcentury, fresh corpses were in demand by medical schools. This was a logical (although still creepy) explanation for the cages -- but why build something permanent when the danger of grave robbing would pass very quickly?  Why were only these two graves protected? What made these women potential targets? Who they were? Or what they died from?

Along with the mystery of the graves, I wanted my story to explore the unique flavor of this mountainous, central Pennsylvania setting.  Again searching online, I discovered that a little known battle of the Revolutionary War had taken place nearby – about 75 years prior to the burial of those women. When the Americans lost, captured Continental soldiers were brutally massacred by British and Indian forces. The countryside was razed by the victors, driving settlers to flee into a vast marsh. Most of them died of exposure in what would eventually become known as the Shades of Death swamp, but a few stragglers made it out and took refuge in Catawissa -- the town with the mysterious cemetery.

Tying these elements together became the heart of my story and a three-pronged mystery. How did Sarah Ann and Asenath die? Why were their graves caged? And how are they connected to events in the Shades of Death 75 years earlier?

My novel The Caged Graves is fictional, of course. The real story behind these graves remains a mystery.


****** 

Thanks to Dianne for the great guest post. I really enjoyed reading about the inspiration behind The Caged Graves. To find out more about Dianne and her books check out her WEBSITE or find her on TWITTER.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Book Review: The Caged Graves by Dianne K. Salerni.


Product details:
Publisher: Clarion Books.
Hardcover, 329 pages.
Release date: May 14th 2013.
Rating: 4 out of 5.
Ages: 12+
Source: Purchased.

17-year-old Verity Boone expects a warm homecoming when she returns to Catawissa, Pennsylvania, in 1867, pledged to marry a man she has never met. Instead, she finds a father she barely knows and a future husband with whom she apparently has nothing in common. One truly horrifying surprise awaits her: the graves of her mother and aunt are enclosed in iron cages outside the local cemetery. Nobody in town will explain why, but Verity hears rumors of buried treasure and witchcraft. Perhaps the cages were built to keep grave robbers out . . . or to keep the women in. Determined to understand, Verity finds herself in a life-and-death struggle with people she trusted.

Inspired by a pair of real caged graves in present-day Catawissa, this historical YA novel weaves mystery, romance, and action into a suspenseful drama with human greed and passion at its core.



“Sometimes the dead don't stay where you put them.”  - Dianne K. Salerni, The Caged Graves.

Seventeen-year-old Verity Boone returns to her hometown of Catawissa, Pennsylvania after a long absence in order to reconnect with a father she no longer knows, and marry a man she’s never met.  Verity’s mother died when she was two and since then she’s lived with her aunt. She knows that leaving her old, comfortable life behind won’t be easy; but she’s excited to reconnect with her father, and to meet the man she’s agreed to marry.  However, when Verity meets her future husband, Nathanial McClure, things don’t exactly go to plan. For one thing, Nate’s not as romantic as his letters suggest. He seems awkward; unsure of himself – and of Verity. Nate and Verity’s unofficial-first-date turns disastrous when their walk leads them to the graveyard where Verity’s mother is buried. This guy knows how to do romance, huh? However, there’s worse to come when Verity insists on seeing her mother’s grave and discovers that not only does her grave, along with one other lie outside the unconsecrated ground of the graveyard, it is also encased in an iron cage. Nate can’t offer an explanation as to why this is, and so Verity, determined to find out the truth embarks on a journey of discovery that stirs up the superstitions and suspicions of the Catawissa townsfolk.

Dianne K. Salerni really knows how to weave a story; The Caged Gravesis a multi-layered, plot-twist filled mystery that kept me guessing from start to finish.  I had initially thought that this book was paranormal; I think I read an article about caged graves at one point where the focus was on vampires – but while there are no vampires here, this book is haunting and gothic nonetheless, with plenty of shivers-down-the-spine scenes if you dare read it late at night.  It also helps that while Salerni’s characters are fictional, the graves in this book are very real.  Salerni was inspired to read this book after stumbling upon a pair of real caged graves in Catawissa, the mystery of which remains unsolved to this day.  The inclusion of a real life mystery here just added to the fun for me.

However, Catawissa life is not so much fun for Verity.  Along with solving the mystery of the caged graves, Verity also has to deal with matters of the heart, and a whole bunch of Catawissa ladies who wanted Nate for themselves, including her cousin, who hates Verity on sight. Rather than falling head over heels for Nate, as she thought she would, Verity finds herself father more taken with the doctor’s apprentice, Hadley. Unlike, Nate, who Verity suspects may only be interested in the land he will inherit on his marriage to her, Hadley is worldly and confident, and might just sweep Verity right from under Nate’s feet. The romance in The Caged Graves is sweet and coming-of-age, and lends to the charm of he book while also providing a welcome contrast to the dark mystery surrounding Verity’s mother’s death.

A hidden corner of history coupled with romance and a mystery that kept me hooked, The Caged Graves is the perfect tale to read by the fireside on a cold winter’s night. I enjoyed this one and will definitely be checking out We Hear the Dead, also by Salerni, which deals with the spooky world of spiritualism and séances, subjects I just love to read about.


Check back on Wednesday when Dianne K. Salerni will be along to talk about her inspiration and research for The Caged Graves.
 

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Guest Post: Sherry Soule talks Urban Legends in the Spellbound Series & Read An Extract of Beautifully Broken!


Beautifully Broken by Sherry Soule || Release date: July 2013.

They say every town has its secrets, but that doesn’t even begin to describe Fallen Oaks. The townsfolk are a superstitious lot and the mystical disappearance of a local teen has everyone murmuring about a centuries old witch’s curse.

When sixteen-year-old Shiloh Trudell takes a summer job at Craven Manor, she discovers a ghost with an agenda. That’s where she meets the new town hottie, Trent Donovan, and immediately becomes enchanted by his charms.

Finally, Shiloh’s met someone who is supercute and totally into her, but Trent is immersed in the cunning deception that surrounds the mysterious Craven Manor. So much so that he may lose sight of what is truly important to him. And she can’t decide whether she wants to shake him or kiss him. Yet neither one of them can deny the immediate, passionate connection growing between them.

With cryptic messages from a pesky wraith, Shiloh will finally begin to understand the mysterious significance of the strange mark branded on her wrist and decide how much she’s willing to sacrifice to protect the other teenagers in town.

Unfortunately, for Shiloh, not all ghosts want help crossing over. Some want vengeance.


********** 

Guest Post: Sherry Soule on Urban Legends in the Spellbound Series 

Fun Fact #1

Shadow People, (also known as Shades) are usually vague human shapes, completely black or dark in color, with no discernible facial features. Sometimes they appear as mere silhouettes, generally lacking any characteristics of gender.
However, there are many types of shadow beings; there are hooded shadows, cloaked ones, solid or wispy, and even smoky shapes. They dart into corners, through walls, into closets, or behind bushes, and buildings. Sometimes they simply fade into the dark recesses of the night. Lacking in the description is one common denominator unifying the many different types of Shadow People that enter our world—they are all thought to be “intensely dark.” 
The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines paranormal as an adjective meaning “not scientifically explainable.”
In the Spellbound books, Shadow People are ominous creatures that were once slaves of a band of fallen angels. When they rebelled, the Fallen hexed these creatures to spend eternity in a hell dimension. A few have found a way to slip through the gateway. The real worry is—what happens if they ALL escape?
Spooky, huh? So, do you believe in Shadow People?

Fun Fact #2

One of my inspirations for the über spooky town in my YA series was the video game, “Silent Hill.” Readers of the Spellbound series have often wondered if the town had a real-life counterpart, and if there was a particular town that inspired the haunted area, we’ve come to know and fear in the books…
Actually, there have been many speculations, and now here’s a place you can actually visit for REAL...
So, while researching the different elements of Fallen Oaks and looking for a foggy and woodland area, I came across Marin County in California. The popular SF Bay Area tourist spot planted the seed for what developed into what we’ve come to know and love as, Fallen Oaks. The coastal town is actually located in the Madrone Woodlands near Larkspur, California neighboring Muir Woods. (You need to use a Bing map to locate the region.)
Echoes of the tragic disappearances still plague the town. When the season passes and all the tourists leave, the haunting memory of past events once again shatter the peace of the inhabitants of Fallen Oaks...
Have you ever been to the coastal towns of Marin County?

Fun Fact #3
Werewolves and Lycans (shortened form of the word lycanthrope, which means shape-changer) are two completely different species. The terms are definitely NOT synonymous. The werewolf can only transform on a full moon, and they represent more of witchcraft and curse, unlike the lycan who can transform into a wolf at will. The lycan species are also considered shapeshifters, but can ONLY shift into wolves—not into other animals. Lycans are also capable of walking on their hindquarters, and are much more muscular than werewolves. Lycans and werewolves do share these qualities; they both have enhanced physical attributes, enhanced strength, reflexes, coordination, speed, and regenerative abilities. However, these traits seem to apply to lycans, even when in human form.
Furthermore, lycans can retain their human intelligence and personalities while transformed, whereas werewolves become pure animal, devoid of any memory regarding their actions once they shift. Silver is the lycans only weakness, as they seem to be violently allergic to it.
In MOONLIGHT MAYHEM, (second book in the series), the story hinges on a terrible secret guarded by some of the town’s residents as one-by-one teens are attacked by a mysterious creature.
Do you think it’s a lycan or a werewolf stalking the kids in Fallen Oaks?

Fun Fact #4


A Grimoire, or in some cases it’s called a Book of Shadows (BoS), is used to store magical information, like a textbook of magic spells, rituals, supernatural-related data, and invocations. Some grimoires can even be a sort of magical journal that keeps a record of a witch’s magical experiments and exploits.
Overall, a grimoire is used predominantly by Wiccans; however, this does not mean that those outside of Wicca can’t use a grimoire.  Nor do you have to be in a coven, like the Blood Rose Circle or Generation Hex.
I used the grimoire concept in a different way in my YA series about a teenage witch, where the magical book is used more like that of a diary and contains prophecies, a demon index, and spells, which was written by her ancestors and passed down through the generations.
Do you have a grimoire or personal journal?


******

Thanks to Sherry for stopping by the blog today as part of the Spellbound Winter Book Tour. All previously published books in the Spellbound series have recently been re-worked to included more epic romance and suspenseful thrills! The new versions also include exclusive bonus material and brand new scenes. 




Places you can cyberstalk author, Sherry Soule:
Spellbound Series Universe: http://thespellboundseries.blogspot.com
Twitter @WriterSherry: http://twitter.com/writersherry

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Guest Post: Sally Nicholls on Ghost Stories and Inspiration for Close Your Pretty Eyes.


Close Your Pretty Eyes by Sally Nicholls || Release date: November 7th 2013.

Eleven-year-old Olivia has been in care since she was five, and is just beginning her nineteenth placement. Her new home is a secluded farmhouse, centuries old, where she slowly bonds with her foster family. But the house holds dark secrets. Olivia discovers that it was once a notorious baby farm, where unwanted children were left to die. She becomes convinced that the place is haunted. She is desperate to save her new family from the ghosts. The danger is real - but does it come from the twisted mind of a very disturbed child?


 ********

Guest Post: Sally Nicholls on Ghost Stories and Inspiration.

Why do we tell ghost stories? Is it because we still believe in ghosts? Because we like to be scared? Or is sometimes a ghost story the right way to tell another, sadder story? Er … probably not. But that’s what I’m trying to do in my latest novel, Close Your Pretty Eyes.
           
Close Your Pretty Eyes is about a young girl who has never been able to escape the first five years of her life. Years in which her mother beat her, starved her, locked her in cupboards, and went off for days at a time leaving her to look after her younger siblings. To Olivia, her mother and the other monstrous women in her childhood are still very real presences in her life. She dreams about them. She has vivid flashbacks that take her back to her early childhood. Her ability to feel safe and to form new relationships has been damaged by her early experiences.

Amelia Dyer
When I was reading about post-traumatic stress disorder for this novel, one fact stayed with me. Adults suffering from PTSD become frightened of the thing that hurt them – earthquake, car crash, attack, whatever. Children become frightened of monsters.

Close Your Pretty Eyes is a book about monsters. It’s about the monsters in Olivia’s past and the monster she’s terrified she will become. And there’s a particularly monstrous ghost as well, with a dark purpose of her own.

Olivia’s ghost is one of Victorian England’s most notorious serial killers, the wonderfully scary Amelia Dyer. Amelia Dyer was a baby farmer. She would deliver your baby for you – for an extra fee, she would guarantee that the child would be stillborn. For around £10, she would ‘adopt’ the child, who would be quietly murdered and dropped in the river. And if you weren’t willing to give up the rights to your child, you could pay her a weekly fee to care for it. Infant mortality in 1896 was rife, and if the baby died a few months later, you would be hard-pressed to prove that it had died as a result of neglect. Nobody knows exactly how many people Dyer murdered, or allowed to die, but it is believed to be around four hundred.

Close Your Pretty Eyes is a scary book. Amelia Dyer is a scary ghost, but she isn’t the most frightening monster in the book. In many ways, that’s Olivia herself.
           
The best stories aren’t about other people. They’re about ourselves.
  

********

 Thanks to Sally for the great guest post. I first read about Victorian Baby Farms and Amelia Dyer in Mary Hooper's Velvet and I've been on the lookout for another book that deals with the subject, so this one sounds like it'll be right up my street. Close Your Pretty Eyes releases tomorrow.  Find out more about Sally and her books by checking out her WEBSITE and following her on TWITTER.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Book Review: Allegiant by Veronica Roth.


Product details:
Publisher: Harper Collins.
Hardcover, 526 pages.
Release date: October 22nd 2013.
Rating: 4½ out of 5.
Ages: 14+
Series: Divergent  #3.
Other Books in Series: Divergent, Insurgent.
Overall Series Rating: 4½ out of 5.
Source: Received from publisher for review.

One choice will define you.

What if your whole world was a lie?
What if a single revelation—like a single choice—changed everything?
What if love and loyalty made you do things you never expected?


The faction-based society that Tris Prior once believed in is shattered—fractured by violence and power struggles and scarred by loss and betrayal. So when offered a chance to explore the world past the limits she’s known, Tris is ready. Perhaps beyond the fence, she and Tobias will find a simple new life together, free from complicated lies, tangled loyalties, and painful memories.

But Tris’s new reality is even more alarming than the one she left behind. Old discoveries are quickly rendered meaningless. Explosive new truths change the hearts of those she loves. And once again, Tris must battle to comprehend the complexities of human nature—and of herself—while facing impossible choices about courage, allegiance, sacrifice, and love.

Told from a riveting dual perspective, Allegiant, by #1 New York Times best-selling author Veronica Roth, brings the Divergent series to a powerful conclusion while revealing the secrets of the dystopian world that has captivated millions of readers in Divergent and Insurgent.


*Note: This is pretty much a spoiler-free review for Allegiant, but there may be spoilers for previous books in the series in this review.


Insurgent ended with a bang in the form of a shocking revelation that brought Tris Prior’s faction-based society to its knees. In the opening pages of Allegiant, the third and final installment in Veronica Roth’s crazy-popular Divergent series, we are introduced to a whole new world; a world without factions, a world where betrayal is rife, where tensions simmer barely beneath the surface, a world where revolution is inevitable. But where if there was a way out? What if you found out that your whole world was a lie? It’s a game changer, right? And, so, for Tris and Four all bets are off. The rules have been re-written.  There is a world beyond the fence, and that world is about to be explored.

Welcome to Allegiant.

Guys, I can’t tell you how excited I was to read this book. And then I was scared. Because my copy of Allegiant arrived almost a week after release and I had already seen a lot of not-so-great and some downright damning Goodreads ratings. Eeek! What’s with all the one-star ratings?!  That, of course was before I had to impose a Goodreads/Twitter time-out upon myself because of spoiler-fears. What is it with this book and spoilers? Jeez. I know a bunch of people who have had this book ruined for them, and that is not cool because some major, and I mean MAJOR things happen in Allegiant. Thankfully, I avoided all spoilers. Also, I needn’t have been scared, because I thought Allegiant was awesome. I loved it. Okay, Allegiant, just like its predecessor Insurgent (hello plot-holes and underdeveloped characters) is not perfect –let me say that straight off. But it’s so much fun. And it takes risks. Boy, does it take risks.  I loved that. I love that this series completely sidesteps everything I don’t like about YA; predictable love-triangles, followed by predictable HEA’s. None of that here. This is dystopian fiction. And boy does it act like it.

So, we’re beyond the fence. Or, rather, Tris and Four, Christina and a couple more of their former faction buddies have made it over the fence in search of the truth and a better life. But, is life beyond the fence all that it seems, or is it just another world, different from their own, but similarly built upon a shaky foundation of secrets and lies? No such thing as a perfect world, after all. I’m not going to delve too far into the plot here in case of spoilers, but here’s a sneak peek of what you’ll be reading about: There are revelations. There is jealousy. There is Science. And genetics. There are explosions, guns and lots of lies from shady characters. Also, Four learns something about himself that might just change the way he feels about himself and everyone around him forever. Wow!

Let me address the character of Four in this book. Actually, he’s mostly referred to as Tobias here since the factions no longer exist and all, but I’m in the habit now of calling him Four. However, here, he is very much Tobias. If you didn’t already know, Allegiant is narrated not just by Tris, as in previous books, but also by Four. And the depiction of his character here has garnered a mixed response from fans. Four has always been mysterious; an enigma. He’s the strong, silent and steady type. Until now, we’ve only known the Four of Dauntless, the brave, confident, leader. We’ve never been inside his head before, and Four’s inner monologue is very different than what I expected it would be.  He surprised me, and at first I really wasn’t sure about the direction that Roth was taking with his character, or, in fact, if she was remaining true to his character, but then, little by little, I really started to understand exactly what Roth’s intention was here. If you didn’t like Four’s narration in Allegiant, or if you walked away from the book thinking that was not the Four you know and love, think again. And think about all that the character has been through. Think about his upbringing. Think about what happened to make him second-guess himself. Think about what happened to him and why he feels like he can’t put his real self on display to the world. Until now, Tris is the only one who has seen the real Tobias. But now we get to see him too.

Ah, Tris and her Tobias. I love these guys. They are so freakin’ hot together. Here’s something you might like if you’re a shipper:

“His fingers slide into my hair, and I hold onto his arms to stay steady as we press together like two blades at a stalemate. He is stronger than anyone I know, and warmer than anyone else realize; he is a secret I have kept, and will keep, for the rest of my life.”

        Veronica Roth, Allegiant.

I know, I know, this review is veering towards super long territory already. Stick with me, guys!

In the world of YA female protagonists, Tris Prior is a breath of fresh air; strong and brave, and with a great sense of what is right, I’ve rooted for Tris right from the start of this series. And, here, she shines. Where Four falters in the new world, Tris is steadfast, and when dark truths start to come to light, Tris is determined to do what’s right. Oh, and I wanted to share this quote that Veronica Roth says inspired the character of Tris:


“My will is mine...I shall not make it soft for you.” – Aeschylus, Agamemnon.


Perfect. So perfect for Tris.

Allegiant is a brutal book.  It is heartbreaking in places. It left me kind of down in the dumps, I’m not going to lie, and I had to take a few days to ponder it before I could pick up another book and start reading again. But, that’s great. That’s what good books should do. They should make you think. And feel. And, sometimes, they should make you cry.  Allegiant ticked all of these boxes for me, and I commend Veronica Roth for going where she did with this book. She is Dauntless, and this was a great ending to what is a truly epic series. I can’t wait for the movie already! I just know it’s going to be a good one.

I miss Tris. I miss Four big time. I miss Christina too, because for all I said in my Insurgent review about the lack of secondary character development, I felt like I really got to know Christina here. She and Tris have a great friendship; loyal and honest throughout. There’s a whole bunch of great stuff with Tris and her brother Caleb too, which made me realize a whole lot of things and write a whole paragraph on themes of love in this book; familial love, selflessness and the power of maternal love. I’m maybe thinking that I should just go and write a thesis on this book because I also had a bunch of stuff written about genetics that I don’t have room to go into here. I think the nature versus nurture debate even popped up in my notes at one point. And I’ve gone way over my word count for this review.

Bottom line: it looks like readers are really divided over this book, but for me, there was so much to love. And I loved it all. Go read. Enjoy.  And, most of all: be brave.