Monday, March 21, 2011

Novella Review: In the Storm + Giveaway

Contest Closed!


Debut author Karen Metcalf offered me the chance to read and review her novella, In the Storm. Carly finds herself in a new world when just moments before, she was in her normal one. The one where she lives with her sweet little brother and evil stepfather. They don’t exist in this new world… just Morgan, a boy Carly instant falls for.

I found a few things confusing at first, but Karen did a wonderful job of pulling everything together. This is one of the most unique stories I’ve read in a while. It’s young adult urban fantasy, so if you like the genre, I’m sure you’ll like this. And it’s a nice break from vampires and werewolves.



Synopsis:

Abandoned by the world around her, Carly believes she is fated to a life of torment at the hands of her stepfather and is desperate for an escape. When she can bear the abuse no longer and gives in to a thunderous rage, she suddenly finds herself in an unfamiliar, yet beautiful, storm world. This limbo between dimensions appears to be her private sanctuary, but it may just be her purgatory. 

No one escapes fate without sacrifice, but is the price more than Carly is willing to pay? 

Giveaway!

The lovely Karen has given me three digital copies to give away to interested readers. If you’re interested, please fill out this form. Must be 13 to enter. Contest ends: 3/31

Friday, March 4, 2011

Book Giveaway: Pretty Souls

Contest Closed!


I decided to try something different for this giveaway. I’ve done so many, but this time I’m going to make you all work for it. Here is the cover of Pretty Souls by Julie Particka.



And here is the synopsis: My life followed a simple pattern. Run to keep my inner wolf asleep. Make sure my blood-sucking foster sister, Cass, feeds. Hunt for supernatural trouble when we should be sleeping. Keep my grades up and my head down. It was mostly a game. Until people started wandering around like living zombies. Until people I care about started getting hurt. Until the menace came knocking on my front door. Game’s over. Time for the soul-stealer to realize just because he’s hunting something doesn’t make it prey. Cass and I bite back. ~The Paranormal Response Team~ Saving the World Before Breakfast.

I got the honor of getting to blurb this book. It’s the first time I’ve ever done it, so I was probably more excited than I should be. Haha!



And a close-up picture.



So… what do you need to do to win? I’m holding a recreate the cover contest. Post a reply to this thread with a link to your cover and an email address so I can reach you if you win. I’ll choose a winner (possibly with the help of some friends) on March 31, 2011 at 10 PM EST. So make sure you get it in my then. You have two weeks. Good luck!

Cover Love: Beautiful Chaos

The cover of Beautiful Chaos was recently revealed. What do you think? Personally, I love it. I think it’s my favorite cover of the three. Not sure how I feel about the gold font, but the image is gorgeous.


Thursday, March 3, 2011

Book vs. Movie: I Am Number Four

I bought I Am Number Four by Pittacus Lore several weeks ago, so I could see the movie on opening night. It took me a while to finally pick it up. I read it in only three days. I had heard complaints of it being slow. It kind of was… for a sci-fi/fantasy. But I thoroughly enjoyed it. Four becomes John, when he and Henri run to a new town: Paradise, Ohio. Trying to fit in, he goes to school, tries to make friends, and stay under the radar so the Mogadorians don’t come after him.

Slowly, John’s Legacies (powers) come into fruition, and he begins training. He needs to learn to control them so he can save his life, defeat the Mogadorians, and one day return to his home planet of Lorien. While he trains with Henri, he gets close to a girl at school and finds a friend in Sam. I loved the relationships in this book and the mild drama. I also loved the back story of the planet Lorien.

Normally, for me, the action sequences are some of my favorite. Not so here. The action begins less than 100 pages from the end. I’m not sure if I just didn’t like the writing of the action or if it was the actions of the characters. Probably a combination. There were, I will say, a number of instances where I rolled my eyes or gritted my teeth because I thought their actions weren’t so bright.

The book was pretty good. I have higher hopes for, The Power of Six. It looks like we’re getting a new point-of-view for book two, but I think our characters from book one will make an appearance.

A note about the movie tie-in edition of the book. In the back is a preview of the sequel and the Lorien horoscope. What would your powers be?



Synopsis:

We may be walking past you right now.

We are watching as you read this.

We may be in your city, your town.

We are living anonymously.

We are waiting for the day when

We will find each other.

We will make our last stand together—if

We win,

We are saved, and

You are saved as well.

If we lose, all is lost.



I did see the movie; the day after I finished the book. I’m not sure which I liked more. To be honest, I was a bit disappointed with both. But I also think that it was mostly due to the hype. Most of the stuff that I loved from the book were either skipped over or rushed so much that they weren’t very enjoyable. That being said, the action sequences were awesome. A lot of the action stuff in the book that I found repetitive and… just bad… was not in the movie.

There were some things that irritated me, and one that really peeved me. But, still, I plan on grabbing it once it’s available on DVD. Also, the movie has a great soundtrack… if it had one. I can’t find it anywhere, but the music in the movie was great, and I’ve been looking for it.

I recommend both the book and movie, but… don’t expect one to resemble the other. If you go into the movie expecting it to look like the book, you’ll likely be disappointed. My recommendation: appreciate them for what they are. They are two different things, both good, just different.

Monday, February 28, 2011

Book Review: Dime Store Magic

I absolutely adored Dime Store Magic. While we are still in Kelley Armstrong’s The Women of the Otherworld series, the narrator is no longer Elena. Paige Winterbourne, whom we met in Stolen, gets to take center stage and tell her story. It picks up shortly after Stolen left off. On the first read-through of this book, I had trouble getting into it. I had trouble with Paige, to be honest. I was used to Elena, and Paige had such a different voice. Couple that with the fact that I wasn’t a fan of Paige’s in Stolen.

But once I got into it, I found that Paige is very different than when we saw her through Elena’s eyes. So if you have trouble getting into it, keep going. ;) I found that I had a lot in common with Paige, including a crush on her love-interest, Lucas Cortez. She’s young, but she’s smart and ambitious and strong.

As a pagan, I love reading books about witches, but I also do so with trepidation. I’ve read books that have offended me, and I’ve read others that have some amazingly accurate details. Paige is a witch, a full-blooded supernatural… which is nothing like the pagan religion. However, I have to admit that I was a bit miffed by the scene with the wiccan girls, but I quickly got over it.

Dime Store Magic is a fantastic book. I love the expansion of Kelley’s Otherworld. Look for my review of Industrial Magic coming soon.

Original US cover

Synopsis:

Forget the cackling green hag in The Wizard of Oz, forget Samantha from Bewitched. Real witches are nothing, NOTHING like this. For years real witches have hidden their powers, afraid of being persecuted. They have integrated so well into the community, you could have a witch living right next door and never know about it. Take Paige, for instance, whom we first met in Kelley Armstrong’s novel Stolen. Just an ordinary twenty-something who runs her own website design company, worries about her weight and wonders if she’ll ever find a boyfriend. Okay, so she’s leader of the American Coven and guardian of Savannah, the teenage daughter of a black witch. Really, life is ordinary. But then a telekinetic half-demon, Leah O’Donnell, shows up to fight for custody of Savannah. And although Paige is ready for her, she’s not quite so prepared for the team of supernaturals that Leah brings with her, including a powerful sorcerer who claims to be Savannah’s father.

When all hell breaks loose -- literally -- and Paige is accused of witchcraft, Satanism and murder, the Coven, fearing exposure, abandons her. Cut off from her friends, Paige is forced against her better judgment to accept the help of a young sorcerer lawyer. And she quickly comes to realize that keeping Savannah could mean losing everything else.

Breathtakingly thrilling, hip and funny, this new novel is another page-turning triumph from an author who is going from strength to strength.




Sunday, February 27, 2011

Book Review: Stolen

Stolen is book two in The Women of the Otherworld series by Kelley Armstrong. The first book, Bitten, focused on Elena Michaels, the only female werewolf in the only werewolf pack in North America. In this installment, the werewolves learn they aren’t the only supernatural race. First, Paige and her mother, witches, show up. And before long we meet sorcerers, shamans, vampires, half-demons, and more.

The story in this book isn’t my favorite. In fact, Stolen may be my least favorite in the series, story-wise, but I love the inclusion of other supernaturals. Not only did werewolves not know about other supernaturals, but most supernaturals didn’t know there were still werewolves. The cast gets expanded, and many of the new characters are wonderful to see play against the wolves we met in Bitten.

If you enjoy urban fantasy, be sure to check this series out. You won’t be disappointed! It's one of two adult series that I didn't drop. 

New US cover

Synopsis:

Elena Michaels is back-and she has company. Lending a mission of vampires, demons, shamans, and witches, Elena is lured into the net of ruthless Internet billionaire Tyrone Winsloe, who is well on his way to amassing a private collection of supernaturals. He plans to harness their powers for himself-even if it means killing them. 

For Elena, kidnapped and imprisoned deep underground, unable to tell her friends from her enemies, choosing the right allies is a matter of life and death.

New Canadian cover

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Breathless Reads Tour

I had such an amazing time at the Breathless Reads Tour where I got to meet: 

My friend, Melissa of Surviving Writing a Book, and I drove the five hours down to North Carolina. Well, I drove. She played on my iPad. And after the 2.5 hours spent at the signing, I drove back.

A couple of interesting things to note. We left at noon and got there just a few minutes before 7:00. We did stop for dinner, but somewhere… we lost time. Beth Revis agreed with Melissa’s theory that we were kidnapped by aliens for a short time. And on the return, I stopped to get gas and a caffeinated beverage (yumm, coca-cola!). It was a sketchy area, where there were bars on all the windows. And I received the strangest compliment… “You smell clean.” I had no idea what to say to that. Haha!

Melissa and I walked into the bookstore pretty much as they were announcing the authors, which means we arrived right on time. All five authors were set up on a panel with two women asking the questions. I’m going to go through the questions and answers that I was able to take notes on.



Why do you write young adult?

All five of them had similar answers which included: loving Coming-of-age stories, that time in life is fascinating, and they can’t imagine writing anything else.

Beth added that adult books are boring. I have some recs for her. Haha!

How is your main character similar to yourself as a teen?

Andrea said that Calla is very different than her, however Calla’s brother has a lot of similarities with Andrea’s brother.

Kirsten said small things slipped in. Small events, details, but nothing major. However, the bad guy in her Kiki Strike series is based on a kid she went to school with and disliked.

Beth’s answer was the funniest. She said that many of the people who died in her book were based on ex students of hers.

Ally said that in Matched, the relationship between Cassia and her grandfather is very similar to her relationship with her own grandfather and also the falling off the treadmill incident came from her.



What is the easiest and hardest part of writing a book with romance?

Beth said that the hardest part was writing the kidding scenes, but the best part is when things blow up!

Ally agreed that the kissing scenes were hard. There are so many first kiss scenes in YA books, and they worry about making theirs the same as all the others. Ally said she loves falling in love with the characters relationship, when she realizes that they’re perfect for each other.

Andrea, on the other hand, loves the kissing scenes. Everyone then said that’s why her scenes are better than most. She said the key is tension. That they need electricity; there needs to be banter, and the characters must be equals.

Kirsten said she her books are equal thriller and romance. She likes that the romance is dangerous, and it’s intriguing to think about women wondering if they’re falling in love with someone who’s trying to kill her.



What is your writing process like?

Andrea said she writes her books completely out of order and then pulls all the scenes together at the end. She said she fails at outlining, and that she needs coffee and music and had a playlist for each book.

Kirsten likes her expresso soda, Manhattan Special and that she writes mostly from beginning to end. But every book of hers has sprung from a scene that just pops into her head. However, that scene may be the beginning, middle, or end.

Brenna said that she, too, jumps around, but it’s a bit more chaotic. She said she’ll skip the middle of a scene, or even leave words out of sentences if she can’t find the right word.

Beth said she has to write everything in order. First sentence first, second sentence second, etc…

What advice would you give to aspiring writers?

Beth says that you need to do new things. Experiences are needed in order to write. Also, don’t take too much advice from one single person.

Brenna says not to be too much of a perfectionist on the first time through. You’ll never get anything done. Note: This is my problem.

Kirsten says to exercise your butt power… the ability to sit on your butt for hours and hours until you write something you like. Sometimes it’s about waiting to find the right words, but you have to sit there and do it. She also says not to let anyone tell you that you can’t do it and to take criticism for what it’s worth.

Andrea says that many authors will tell you to write what you love and write what you know. She says that while she agrees that you have to write the story you need to tell, not something just because you think it’ll be published. She also says to write what you’re passionate about and write about what you’d like to know. She said it’s important to find your own process; to try different ones and see what works best. There’s no one correct way.

Ally says to cut yourself some slack. And keep working at it.



How many books did you write before the one that you got published?

Ally was there for her book, Matched, but that wasn’t her first. She had five published with a small publisher beforehand.

Andrea said she wrote two practice novels that no one besides her family will ever see. But when she was writing Nightshade, she knew it was different and would be published.

Kirsten said she was really lucky. She wrote the first Kiki Strike book for herself. Someone asked her about it, and she gave him what had been written so far. He happened to get sick, so he read it since it was the only reading material around. She said she didn’t think he was actually going to read it. But it got passed on and published.

Brenna said she queried one novel before The Replacement. And there are many other novels she had started but never finished.

Beth said she used to write books while she was in school. She said “I wrote a book, and it sucked. I wrote another book, and it sucked. Then I wrote eight more. They sucked, too. A lot. And then I got Across the Universe published.” (paraphrased)



What genre would you like to write in?

Brenna said she’d like to write an edgy contemporary, but fantasy elements always sneak in.

Andrea would like to write a noire, but thinks it would be very difficult as it’s different than what she writes.

Kirsten said she’d like to write horror. She grew up reading horror, and her first adult book, as a kid, was Amityville. She is also interested in writing a dystopian/noire.

Ally would like to write a “happy book for boys age 7-9” per her son’s request.

What are you currently reading?

Brenna is reading Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins

Beth is reading Blood Magic by Tessa Gratton

Andrea is reading The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi.

Ally is reading something (I didn’t catch the title) by Kate Morton.

Kirsten is reading The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest by Stieg Larsson and books for research on code breakers in WWII and royal scandals.

What advice would you give to your main character?

Ally says “Trust yourself.”

Brenna says “Stop being self-conscious.”

Beth says “Don’t trust anyone.”

Andrea says “Be more careful.”

Kirsten says “Things are rarely what they seem.”



What are you working on now?

Beth is re-writing her entire second book, A Million Suns, the sequel to Across the Universe. She’s at 30,000 words and needs three times that by Tuesday. *sends good writing thoughts her way*

Brenna is working on The Space Between, a second stand-alone.

Kirsten recently finished All You Desire, the sequel to The Eternal Ones. She is also working on the third Kiki Strike novel.

Andrea said Wolfsbane will be available in July and the third book, Bloodrose, March 2012. She is also working on a fourth for the series, however, it is a prequel set in Scotland, 14th century, I believe. She is also working on a steampunk series.

Ally is working on Crossed, the sequel to Matched.

At this point, the questions are turned over to the audience…



Would you like to have your book turned into movie?

All five of them said yes.

Who would you cast as main character?

Andrea said she has no one for Calla, but she sees Ben Barnes as Ren and Chase Crawford as Shay.

Kirsten likes Emma Stone.  



An audience member as Ally “Did The Giver influence you?”

Ally said probably, but that 1984 was a much bigger influence..

How do you not pull too much from one book?

Inspiration from a lot of different places. But different writers write differently and do different things with ideas.

Brenna said she has a junk shop in head where things are pulled from all over.But she combines things differently.

Nothing new under the sun. The ideas are all very old. Things borrowed and evolved. Don't read in the genre you're writing in. Things that are new are exciting to write.



How do you name your characters?

Andrea said she can't write a character if the name is wrong. She will spend more time on names than writing a chapter. She has a name book that she played with when she was little and loved Majesta when she was a little girl. She said the pack names came from the origins of where they're from.

Kirsten needs a name first. She steals names. She will watch movie credits just to see interesting names. Sometimes hearing a name will cause an entire character to spring to life.

Ally writes first person so names come later and they often change until she gets it right.

Beth just picks names.

Brenna says sometimes a name will come to her, and she uses it even if she doesn’t like it. So she has to adjust to names she doesn't like because if she changes a name it changes who the character is.

How much say did you have in your cover art?

Everyone said none… The most they’d get is a suggestion.

In case you didn’t know, Across the Universe has a reversible cover with the ships blueprints on the inside. Beth said that she was asked about blueprints, and she responded that she had already drew a little diagram. She said she made a circle to make a ship… because that should be aerodynamic. Haha! When asked about the outside of the ship, she said “I don’t know; they're on the inside of the ship.”



The event was a lot of fun, and there were a lot of laughs. These ladies are smart, funny, and just absolutely fantastic. I wish we had had more time to spend with them. This is one of the best author events I have ever been to.

After the panel, I got to get each book signed. So I got my place and line, and was chatting with the girls standing in line around me. As with most YA author events I’ve been to recently, there have been few teens. Mostly it’s women in their 20’s and 30’s. There was a raffle, and everyone had a chance to put their names in. There were five winners, and five prizes. They called the first two names. The third name was a girl who was a few people ahead of me in line. The fourth name was the girl behind her. I found out later that they had come together, so it was really funny they had both won. And I commented that the area we had in line was good luck. So I bent down to put my booksmarks in my rolling bookbag, and they called the fifth name. They said “Andrea”. My ears perked up because that’s my name. But… I hadn’t put my name in. Then… they called my last name. I said “Oh, hey… that’s me.” The guy behind me said “Are you serious?” So, apparently, the space in line was good luck. So… how did my name get in there? Thanks to Melissa! I got the last book as I was the last name called. It was The Eternal Ones. But I already have it so I’m giving it to you! Well... to one of you who managed to read all the way to the end. ;)



Contest Closed! How do you enter?

1. You must be at least 13.
2. You must have a US mailing address. If you don’t, but you know someone who does, see if they’ll send it to you. ;)
3. You must follow this blog and Melissa’s.
4. Fill out this form. Ends 2/28/11.