Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Waiting on Wednesday: Dance of the Red Death

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event that is hosted by Jill at 
Breaking the Spine and spotlights upcoming releases that we're 
eagerly anticipating.


This Week I am waiting on this beauty!
Bethany Griffin continues the journey of Araby Worth in Dance of the Red Death—the sequel to her teen novel Masque of the Red Death.
In Dance of the Red Death, Araby’s world is in shambles—betrayal, death, disease, and evil forces surround her. She has no one to trust. But she finds herself and discovers that she will fight for the people she loves, and for her city.
Her revenge will take place at the menacing masked ball, though it could destroy her and everyone she loves…or it could turn her into a hero.
With a nod to Edgar Allan Poe, Bethany Griffin concludes her tragic and mysterious Red Death series with a heroine that young adult readers will never forget.

Expected Release: April 23, 2013
Published By: Green Willow Books
Format: Hardcover, 400 pages


Why I am Waiting:


  1. Have you read Masque of the Red Death?  If you have all you have to do is see this cover and description and you get it.
  2. If you haven't read Masque of the Red Death, you should and you would get it too!
  3. That is all...
What are you waiting on? Link me up!

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

**REVIEW** Yesterday by C.K. Kelly Martin

THEN: The formation of the UNA, the high threat of eco-terrorism, the mammoth rates of unemployment and subsequent escape into a world of virtual reality are things any student can read about in their 21st century textbooks and part of the normal background noise to Freya Kallas's life. Until that world starts to crumble.
NOW: It's 1985. Freya Kallas has just moved across the world and into a new life. On the outside, she fits in at her new high school, but Freya feels nothing but removed. Her mother blames it on the grief over her father's death, but how does that explain the headaches and why do her memories feel so foggy? When Freya lays eyes on Garren Lowe, she can't get him out of her head. She's sure that she knows him, despite his insistence that they've never met. As Freya follows her instincts and pushes towards hidden truths, the two of them unveil a strange and dangerous world where their days may be numbered. Unsure who to trust, Freya and Garren go on the run from powerful forces determined to tear them apart and keep them from discovering the truth about their shared pasts (and futures), her visions, and the time and place they really came from.Yesterday will appeal to fans of James Dashner's The Maze Runner, Veronica Roth's Divergent, Amy Ryan's Glow, Laini Taylor's Daughter of Smoke and Bone, and Ally Condie's Matched.


Trailer

Review

Yesterday was nothing like I had expected.  It runs on a couple unique premises and boarders on another.  The main focus is time travel and memory altercation but you have a little bit of premonition thrown into the mix as well.  This made for an interesting and indulging read.  Not to mention it is set in Canada and in Toronto!  This is under an hour from where I grew up and let's face it, it's interesting to read a book that you know the places  that are discussed and visited.  I would like to top that off with the fact that it also takes place in my birth year.  Yup, I'm old but you know what this book didn't make me feel that way.

 The pacing for this novel started out with a bang for me.  The prologue hooked my curiosity and had me diving into the start of everything but then it was like hitting a Jello wall.  It didn't stop but became a little slower to push through, then when I finally broke free of this gelatine like  time period it was hit the ground running time.  As stated above there was many unique premises to keep it interesting and as bits I the story fell into place you found out what each thing really was or really held.  The premonition thing remained a bit of a mystery but I can handle that...  If I must.

  There were many moments that I found myself feeling for Freya.  She lives in a world that only she seems to feel out of place with.  She's awkward and really doesn't feel she fits anywhere and really in this time period she doesn't belong.  When she started to relax among the couple of people she found didn't judge her I had this feeling inside me that it wasn't going to last but I was wrong. The only reason that she doesn't stick with them is because of the discoveries she makes and th danger that she is in.  There was never any real connection between Freya and I but that didn't stop me from enjoying her as a character.  Sometimes the lack of connection can kill a book and the character but Ms. Martin did an excellent job with her and left no room to dislike her.

  Garren was a wild card really.  Freya believed she knew him somehow and he believed she was crazy.  However you put a little evidence that things are messed up in front of him and he will give it a shot.  But wait then there is a bunch more information dumped on him and he decides Freya is crazy again. I guess this did make him a little more realistic but really what does it take for him to say "Okay we are from the future and you see things.  How do we make this work?" It takes A LOT.  Though when it clicks with him things are a little easier.  Though Garren never really appealed to me, I did like him.  

  The relationship part of this novel left me a little disappointed.  Not any fault of the author but more myself.  I am left wondering that if they are stuck in the past and they know the future how could they ever be with anyone else?  Not that Freya wants to but their options are kind of limited.  They did somewhat develop their relationship which I appreciate but in the end it just felt like they came together because of their past and undeniable future together.

  There is no denying that I enjoyed this read.  Yesterday has way too much individuality not to enjoy.  The world building was great and reading the references to areas in Toronto was great fun.  The ending left me in wanting a little bit I will freely admit but that is not uncommon.  I just wish I knew how they proceeded with life.  The twist right near the end kind of left me in shock and wondering what would happen the next time around.  If you have a chance to read this one don't pass it by.  Being well written an engaging is not always something you find together and I know I will pick up other reads by this author from here on out.

Quotes
A lie gets half way around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.  Winston Churchill's making pronouncements in my head again, like when I woke up from my first dream about the blond boy.

You know you're in a bad way when you find yourself taking someone else's underwear...

You think of the weirdest thing when you're in trouble.  Toothpaste.  Deodorant. When my next opportunity to shower will come along.

When they took Joanna I began to wake up to what was wrong with our world but it wasn't until they took Latham that I was truly wide awake.  And by then it was already too late.

Monday, February 4, 2013

Teaser Tuesday 5.2.2013

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:
• Grab your current read
• Open to a random page
• Share two (2) "teaser" sentences from somewhere on that page
BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
• Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lista if they like your teasers!


My teaser this week is from p. 65 of Lord of Emperors by Guy Gavriel Kay.

"Crispin was, that day - early winter in Jad's holy city of Sarantium - happy to be alive and not anxious to be burned for heresy. The irony was that he hadn't yet realized or acknowledged his own happiness."

What are you reading today?

Sunday, February 3, 2013

**REVIEW** The Lives We Lost by Megan Crewe

First, the virus took Kaelyn’s friends. Then, her family. Now it’s taken away her home.
But she can't look back—the life she once had is gone forever.
A deadly virus has destroyed Kaelyn’s small island community and spread beyond the quarantine. No one is safe. But when Kaelyn finds samples of a vaccine in her father's abandoned lab, she knows there must be someone, somewhere, who can replicate it. As Kaelyn and her friends head to the mainland, they encounter a world beyond recognition. It’s not only the “friendly flu” that’s a killer—there are people who will stop at nothing to get their hands on the vaccine. How much will Kaelyn risk for an unproven cure, when the search could either destroy those she loves or save the human race?
Megan Crewe's second volume in the Fallen World trilogy is an action-packed journey that explores the resilience of friendship, the ache of lost love, and Kaelyn’s enduring hope in the face of the sacrifices she must make to stay alive.

Expected Release:  February 12, 2013
Published By:  Disney Hyperion
Review Copy: ARC,  276 pages
*copy provided by publisher


Review


  This installment of this series was completely different than the one before it. With the "Friendly Flu" dominating more than anyone could have ever imagined.  The writing, the world and the characters were once again masterfully done and enjoyable to read.  Though the world has become a seriously darker and more dangerous place.  This book is so much more of a struggle for everyone involved and a test of not only courage but all limits.  

  So in the first one we had a kind of pre-apocalyptic view of the world.  The virus was contained to the island and the people on it were struggling to survive, to get supplies and to stay alive.  Stepping into The Lives We Lost was as easy as breathing and I wasn't sure where everything was going to go seeing the worst of it was already over.  Well you think it is, then you step foot on the main land.  Everything is pure devastation, like in pure apocalypse mode.  I was entranced and appalled by the state and behaviour of the world.  Guess we all go back to the animalistic instinct just to survive and don't care about those around us.  The journey the characters take to try and save everyone, including themselves.

  After reading The Way We Fall I really wasn't sure if I could like Kaelyn any more than I already did.  Though at times I felt she would be whiny I am sure in her place I would of had those moments too.  Overall though she was a strong willed and well spoken character.   In this one though she seemed to step it up a notch.  She was a leader and would stop at nothing to get the possible vaccine into the right hands and hopefully get the world back on its feet somewhat.  There is also the fact that she is realistic, though she cares deeply about Gav she accept that now isn't the time to become  seriously, romantically involved.   

  Though the rest of the characters: Gav, Tessa and Leo, aren't a huge impact in this one their presence is ever necessary to the story.  I have loved Gav since his debut in book one.  Not as a romantic interest but as a bad boy.  He did turn out to be a love interest but he also had so much more to him than met the eye.  This time round he is there to support Kae just as she supported him but this time he didn't  feel useful and kind of seemed out of his element.  Leo kind of made things a little awkward but his knowledge of how the main land is helped and despite old feelings him and Kae seem to make it alright.  The problem for me was Tessa.  I just expected so much more from her and was sorely disappointed when she seemed more concerned with the things that helped her not the group as a whole.

  If you are a fan of apocalyptic reads then you are seriously missing out if you haven't started this series.  They are masterfully written and hard to put down.  This book was as good as the first but in a different way and fans are sure to be pleased and if you're like me completely and utterly hooked.  Once you pick up this series there is no going back, only forward and the next instalment is way too far away for my liking.  I need it like yesterday!


Quotes
Maybe despite the chaos, the most important places had gone untouched.  Maybe Nell and the others were just fine and all we'd  lost were a bunch of already abandoned buildings.

Yes.  If we were all together, we could protect each other.  Safety in numbers.  I would never have asked them to risk it before, but now with the situation on the island becoming even more precarious, it felt right.

I slid my hand around his neck and kissed him.  Gav kissed me back, his gloved fingers cupping my cheek.  and for the space of that moment, at least, I believed what he'd said too.

For the first time the gravity of what Leo had told us about the mainland completely sank in.  The rest of the country hadn't been callously ignoring our island's plight.  They had been so overwhelmed they couldn't even save themselves.

I closed my eyes, but the tears I'd been fighting slipped out, streaking down my cheeks.  I wanted to say of course it'd be okay, he'd be okay, he could beat this.  But I wasn't sure I could say it like I meant it.




Saturday, February 2, 2013

^^Excerpt & Giveaway^^ A Song for Julia by Charles Sheehan-Miles


Everyone should have something to rebel against.
Crank Wilson left his South Boston home at sixteen to start a punk band and burn out his rage at the world. Six years later, he's still at odds with his father, a Boston cop, and doesn't ever speak to his mother. The only relationship that really matters is with his younger brother, but watching out for Sean can be a full-time job.
The one thing Crank wants in life is to be left the hell alone to write his music and drive his band to success.
Julia Thompson left a secret behind in Beijing that exploded into scandal in Washington, DC, threatening her father's career and dominating her family's life. Now, in her senior year at Harvard, she's haunted by a voice from her past and refuses to ever lose control of her emotions again, especially when it comes to a guy.
When Julia and Crank meet at an anti-war protest in Washington in the fall of 2002, the connection between them is so powerful it threatens to tear everything apart.


Release Date: December 15, 2012
Published By: Cincinnatus Press
New Adult/Contemporary Romance
Buy It:


About the Author


Charles Sheehan-Miles has been a soldier, computer programmer, short-order cook and non-profit executive. He is the author of several books, including the indie bestsellers Just Remember to Breathe and Republic: A Novel of America's Future.

Find Him:


Excerpt

I kept my eyes closed another fifteen seconds or more. And, let me tell you, fifteen seconds is a long, long time. Finally I opened them, and he was looking at me with an expression I couldn’t interpret. For someone who was always joking, always making snide remarks, he looked serious.  Too serious. More serious than I was comfortable with. I didn’t need serious in my life.  I saw his Adam’s apple bob as he swallowed, then he said, “I’m at some dump in Arlington.  Sharing a room with Mark.”
“Oh,” I said, my voice unnaturally tense.
“What about you?” he asked. He spoke very slowly, carefully.
“Um … my parents have a condo in Bethesda. I was planning on heading back there tonight.”
“I don’t want to say goodbye,” he said.  I couldn’t get control of my breathing. I felt lightheaded. Out of control. “Come back to my place.”  He titled his head, leaned close and whispered, “Are you sure?”
I found myself chewing on my lower lip again. “Yes.”
I dropped my eyes and leaned forward, putting my hand on the back of the taxi driver’s seat.
“Can you take us to Bethesda instead? Wisconsin Avenue and Montgomery.”
Suddenly it was quiet in the cab. Tense, awkward. I couldn’t believe I’d done this. I did not do one-night stands. But here I was, half-hyperventilating, with this guy I’d only known for eight hours sitting beside me in the cab. And I guess if it was just for now that was fine, but what if he wanted to see me again? What if he wanted to date? What if?
I didn’t think I could handle that.  This was so stupid. Things were so much easier with Willard, before I broke up with him. I was always in control. There was no passion there, true. There wasn’t anything there. But it was comfortable. Easy. I wasn’t afraid.  Crank, though: he made me afraid.  The cab cleared the traffic and turned up at Massachusetts Avenue, and we were speeding out of downtown DC.
“You’re awfully quiet now,” Crank said.
I looked at him, and his eyes were boring into mine, intense, probing.
“Having second thoughts?” he asked. “It’s okay.”
I leaned a little closer. “No. Just … it’s just tonight. We don’t see each other again. We don’t call each other in Boston. We don’t … anything. Okay? We enjoy each other’s company tonight, and then we’re done.”  He stared at me, surprised. And … his face looked disappointed. He swallowed, his Adam’s apple bobbing once in his throat. “I don’t know why, but that’s … not what I expected.”
“Don’t get expectations. Not with me.” He shook his head. “Usually I’m the one who says things like that.”
The cab came to a halt, and he paid it, and we were out on the street. A cool wind blew through the streets of downtown Bethesda, and traffic rolled by us. I took his hand and walked to the entrance of the high rise, swiped my access card to unlock the front door, and we walked into the lobby.
The night concierge was sitting at the counter, watching a small television. She looked up briefly, gave us a casual wave and went back to her show. Good. If it had been the day concierge, my appearance with Crank would have been reported back to my parents by morning.


Giveaway
One lucky winner will get an e-copy of A Song for Julia.
Available in Mobi. or Epub


Organized By:

Girl Reading by Katie Ward

I have known about Katie Ward's first novel Girl Reading ever since it was published back in 2011, but somehow it took me this long to finally read it. I started reading Girl Reading very soon after Sailing to Sarantium and had some difficulties to adapt my reading mood accordingly, especially as Sailing to Sarantium left me in the middle of the story that will continue in the latter book of The Sarantine Mosaic duology. However, my difficulties had nothing to do with Ward's writing or the stories as such, only in that Girl Reading is a very different book from Sailing to Sarantium.

After I really got into the story, or rather stories, I started to enjoy the book very much. The timespan on Girl Reading is very ambitious from the 14th century to late 21st! But it works, it works very well.

The book consists of seven seemingly separate stories, but somewhere in every story there is a picture being made of a woman reading, whether it is a painting or a photograph. All the way until the last story I kept wondering why on earth is this book marketed as a novel, when it so clearly was a collection of short stories! Well, all I will say without spoiling the reading experience for anyone who have not read the book yet is that I was totally wrong. :) Girl Reading is most certainly a novel, but it is not until the last story that the reader will understand why! Very cleverly constructed book, I must say!

Ward's writing is beautiful. She has her own way of writing dialogue without separating it from the rest of the text with quotation or other punctuation marks which felt a bit odd in the beginning, but which I actually started to like a lot, when I got further into the book.

My favorite parts of Girl Reading were stories, or chapters, called Angelica Kauffmann. Portrait of a Lady, 1775 and Featherstone of Piccadilly. Carte de Visite, 1864. I was especially impressed in the way Ward in Featherstone of Piccadilly wrote the part (and skip the rest of this paragraph, if you don't want to know any details of the story), where a family brought their little girl to be photographed and only a couple of pages later we learn that the pictures were taken post-mortem. The parents had wanted some photographs as a memento of their dead child.

I've been so lucky with my reads this far this year that it's starting to feel a bit scary! But what can I do, Girl Reading was a very enjoyable read. I might even want to read it again at some point. Now that I know how the stories are connected it would be interesting to read them again.

Katie Ward has a website, if you want to read more about her and her writing.
Photo by Jo Rodger.

^^Promotional Event^^ Residue by Laury Falter *Excerpt & Giveaway*

When Jocelyn Weatherford is whisked away from a preparatory academy in upstate New York to live with her extended family in New Orleans, she is unprepared to encounter the dangers awaiting her. Yet even as she is thrust into an unfamiliar world of witches and voodoo magic, the greatest threat of all may be the boy she has fallen for.
While handsome and charming, he is also a Caldwell...a member of the family the Weatherford's have been feuding with for centuries. As their forbidden love grows it becomes the volatile spark that forever changes their world and everyone in it.
Included on the Following Goodreads Lists: Best Supernatural Series, Young Adult Romance, Books That Should Be Made Into Movies, Favorite Books, Books That Should Get More Attention, Best Female Characters from YA and Children's Fantasty and Science Fiction


Original release date: April 2012
Genre: Paranormal Romance

Event organized by: AToMR Tours

Buy Links:




About the Author


Laury Falter is the bestselling author of the Guardian Trilogy (Fallen, Eternity, & Reckoning).  When she isn't writing, she likes to take her two stray dogs for walks and enjoy date nights with her husband.

Laury's debut novel, Fallen, hit Amazon's Top 100 list in three genres and the remaining two books in the trilogy made showings in the Top 100 of the same genres as well. With a new series available, Residue, about a teenage girl who learns she is a witch and falls in love with a boy from a feuding family, her reader following continues to grow rapidly.

Find Her:



Excerpt

The directions I followed, took me to a quiet side street lined with worn buildings, and more 
specifically, to an unmarked, weathered door along a row of doors looking remarkably the same. 
Without the typical store sign or even a window to peer in, I didn’t know whether I might walk 
into someone’s house. To be on the safe side, I knocked. 
The door rattled loosely against its frame and then settled. A few moments passed and no one 
came, so I knocked again. Again, there was no answer.
Wondering if the directions were wrong, I tried the door handle. It was unlocked, which almost 
surprised me. Opening it a crack, I peered inside.
While it was incredibly dim inside, lit only by candles held in wall sconces and open lanterns 
hanging from the ceiling, I could see that it was actually a store. Disheveled and poorly laid out 
with towering wooden bookshelves stuffed with merchandise, I couldn’t see all that far inside.
“Hello?” I called out without receiving an answer back.  
Figuring they may be in the storage room, if one even existed, I stepped inside.
“Hello?”
No one responded so I moved farther down the aisle.  
This was no regular OfficeMax or OfficeDepot. It didn’t even resemble a college bookstore.
In the place of textbooks on biology, calculus, and the English dictionary there were witch 
almanacs, spell books for solitary witches, and tomes on spells and rituals for every purpose.  
Where pens and paper should have been, there were tarot card stacks and candles of every color, 
style, and size imaginable. Canisters of countless herbs, stones, and gems replaced impulse-
purchase bins of calculators and keychain flashlights. 
What exactly am I supposed to buy in here? I wondered.  
Then, just as I reached the cash register, which looked like an antique ready for a museum, the 
store’s front door opened, allowing in a thin stretch of light down the side aisle. I listened as the 
store’s most recent patron strolled toward the back, where I now stood when the scratchy voice
of an older woman drew my attention away.  
She hobbled out from the back room, hunched and bracing herself against the counter as she 
walked.

“What you lookin’ for?” she asked.  
Hesitating, I didn’t know quite how to explain it and then settled on the most basic of answers.  
“My school supplies.”
She lifted her chin in a brief gesture of acknowledgement and then shuffled down the long 
counter, stopping at nearly the end of it. From there, she withdrew a clothed bundle, tied with 
twine at the top. Rather than carrying it back to me, she dragged it, drawing up dust where it had 
settled. Leaving it before me, she then held out her hand for payment.  
“Eighty-five dollars.”
I placed the cash in her palm and she dropped it in a canvas bag beneath the register, without 
bothering to count it.  
“You got the potent kind,” she stated.
“The what?” 
“They’re dangerous,” she warned. “Watch yerself with them.”
Interestingly, I wasn’t the least bit surprised that whatever the brisk woman sleeping across the 
hall from me had ordered on my behalf wasn’t safe.
“All right,” I shrugged. I wasn’t quite sure what was in the bundle or how I should treat them to 
prevent inflicting harm.  
Then several things happened simultaneously. Just as I turned around to leave, the person 
waiting patiently in line behind me spoke. And just as he spoke, the room broke into chaos.
The wall sconce candles flickered first. Next the tarot cards lifted from their spot on the shelves 
as if a brisk wind had picked up and carried them, disheveled, through the air. Then heavier 
things began to move. Candles darted off the shelves like projectiles, hitting the walls with 
enough force to leave wax marks. Books slid off and slammed to the floor or against the
bookshelves opposite them. The ceiling lanterns swung fiercely from side to side, slamming 
against the whitewash to send down chunks of plaster. The glass canisters banged against each 
other threatening to break.  
That was when I felt arms around me, pulling me to the ground, and a body covering me, solid 
and secure. My top hat was gone and hands now covered my head with elbows pressed against 
my ears, dimming the sound of the destruction around us. With my face covered by my own 
hands and my body in a crouched position, only my legs were exposed.  
I had to give the person credit. Despite the devastation going on around us, nothing touched me.
It raged for several seconds, prolonging the demolition of this elderly woman’s store. Then, just 
as quickly as it had begun, it came to a screeching halt.
My protector’s hands freed my ears and the body stretched across my back moved away. That 
was when I heard the voice. It was comforting, concerned, and a little uncertain. I was instantly 
drawn to it, realizing a ridiculous urge to listen to it endlessly. I couldn’t help feeling foolish, 
especially since his question was so understandable given the circumstances. 
“Are you hurt?” he asked.  
I felt a hand, warm and firm, on my shoulder, coaxing me to react.

Releasing the breath I’d been holding, I stood and blinked a few times, clearing the haziness in 
my head.  
“Never been better,” I muttered and when he handed my top hat back I heard him chuckle.  
A quick look around told me that the elderly woman had survived unharmed but her store had 
not. Every piece of merchandise now lay broken, littering the floor. 
Without any warning whatsoever, she launched in to a tirade, speaking rapidly and in French, 
a language I hadn’t learned well enough yet. Then she stopped suddenly, to my surprise, with a 
chuckle, wide eyed and beaming.
I chalked it up to delirium at seeing her store destroyed at some unknown phenomenon until her 
other patron standing beside me spoke.
“Huh…” he mumbled.  
“What?” I asked, still battling the surreal state I was in, watching as the woman shrugged and 
disappeared into the back room still chuckling.  
Then he chuckled to himself, surprised. “She said she’s never seen this before. Apparently she’s 
read about it and been told of it but hadn’t witnessed it herself.”  
“Witnessed what?” I asked, taking my sack of school supplies.  
He laughed again, farther down in his chest. “Well…” He cleared his throat uncomfortably. “She 
thinks she just saw the introduction of two fated lovers.”  
“Really? Who?” I asked, my head swiveling back and forth now, profoundly intrigued and 
looking for the people they were referring to, the two whom they believed to be the cause of this 
mess.
He hesitated and then spoke deep, firm, and with certainty. “She meant us.”

Giveaway 

One physical copy of this book is up for grabs (US Only sorry INT peeps)
Just fill out the form below.  Winner will be drawn Feb. 20 and will have 24h
to respond before a new winner is chosen.