Books: The Cheapest Vacation You Can Buy











M.R. Merrick has just released the cover of the third installment in his Protector series, and it’s TO DIE FOR!  OMG, it’s so, so pretty!  Release is set to release (no pun intended) on December 10, 2012, and I am eagerly awaiting it–this series is absolutley amazing!

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Synopsis: After uniting the shifters and calling in  reinforcements, Chase has to face his toughest challenge yet: learning to  control his emotions. But as tensions rise and his powers grow, controlling his  emotions becomes the least of his problems.

Terrorized by a multi-shifter who is  hell-bent on turning him, Chase questions just how far he’s willing to go to  stop his father.  Meanwhile, Tiki’s  virtuous nature has placed him in the middle of Vincent’s past, leaving Chase to  oppose a senate of vampires and defend a demon he hates.

Trying to balance his friends, his enemies,  and his inner demons, Chase is left searching for answers about the Mark, his  destiny, and where he can find the next soul piece. Stopping Riley is his top  priority, but as more obstacles arise, he finds himself doubting all the  decisions he’s made – especially regarding Rayna.

One thing is for certain: Chase has finally  realized that he doesn’t know anything. The light doesn’t always quell the  darkness, the monsters don’t always stay in the shadows, and the past doesn’t  always stay in the past – sometimes, the demons inside are the hardest to  fight.

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M.R. Merrick is a Canadian writer and author of The Protector series, a young adult mash-up between urban and epic fantasy. Having never traveled, he adventures to far off lands through his imagination and in between cups of coffee. As a music lover and proud breakfast enthusiast, he’s usually found at the computer between a pair of headphones and in front of a large bowl of cereal.

Links: M.R. Merrick | Goodreads | Exiled (Protector #1) | Shift (Protector #2)



From Goodreads: “Love in my world usually ended up with someone hearing ‘I smite thee ‘ as she was cursed to be some lame flower for the rest of her life.” For three years, Alexandria has lived among mortals–pretending to be like them and trying to forget the duty she’d been trained to fulfill as a child of a mortal and a demigod. At seventeen, she’s pretty much accepted that she’s a freak by mortal standards… and that she’ll never be prepared for that duty. According to her mother, that’s a good thing. But as every descendant of the gods knows, Fate has a way of rearing her ugly head. A horrifying attack forces Alex to flee Miami and try to find her way back to the very place her mother had warned her she should never return-the Covenant. Every step that brings her closer to safety is one more step toward death… because she’s being hunted by the very creatures she’d once trained to kill. The daimons have found her.

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On the run for the past three years, unaware of the reason her mother forced her to flee the Covenant, Alex once again finds herself running, this time to save her life, and I found myself captivated from the very beginning of this novella.  The daimons were a very scary entity that provoked my curiosity, as did the story behind Alex’s flight from the Covenant, and although short, I learned a lot of information that really piqued my interest.  The novella itself is very well written, and if that’s any indication of what’s to come in the first full novel in the series, Half-Blood, then I am all in.  Not only is the story enticing, but Alex also seems like a very down to earth character, and I can’t wait to get to know her better and learn more about her world.  Armentrout has done a fabulous job pulling me into the story and this novella really blew me away.  Five stars.

I purchased this novella from Amazon.



From Goodreads: Sixteen-year-old Lark Ainsley has never seen the sky.

Her world ends at the edge of the vast domed barrier of energy enclosing all that’s left of humanity. For two hundred years the city has sustained this barrier by harvesting its children’s innate magical energy when they reach adolescence. When it’s Lark’s turn to be harvested, she finds herself trapped in a nightmarish web of experiments and learns she is something out of legend itself: a Renewable, able to regenerate her own power after it’s been stripped.

Forced to flee the only home she knows to avoid life as a human battery, Lark must fight her way through the terrible wilderness beyond the edge of the world. With the city’s clockwork creations close on her heels and a strange wild boy stalking her in the countryside, she must move quickly if she is to have any hope of survival. She’s heard the stories that somewhere to the west are others like her, hidden in secret—but can she stay alive long enough to find them?

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If you’re a fan of steampunk, then I really think you’ll enjoy this novel.  I really liked it, though I found parts of it to be just a bit too long and lagging; I wanted more action throughout the novel, and this book gently speeds up and slows down on a consistent basis.  Now, this isn’t a terrible thing, but I did find myself wanting it to move much faster, to get to the good parts, as it were, because I was honestly scared for Lark and the slowing of pace nearly killed me.  Really.

Lark’s had a fairly crappy life.  She’s 16 and hasn’t been harvested yet, and everyone knows it.  Every. One.  It doesn’t matter that Lark hasn’t even spoken to them, has never seen them before, they all know she’s defective.  Most children are harvested around 11 or 12, and she’s just much too old.  When her name is finally called, however, she finds that being harvested isn’t as grand as it’s made out to be, and as she figures out that a life of pain awaits her, it’s run or forever be a slave.

I loved Lark.  Though she doesn’t make the best decisions all the time (no one does, though, right?), she’s headstrong and determined.  I can’t imagine experiencing everything she did… treated like a dog by her “peers,” trapped and tortured by the Institute, escaping through the Wall only to be pursued by the pixie bots, fighting against magical woods and the shadow people just to survive… and I felt terrible for her.  Like I said, she’s had a crappy life.  But I loved how she took everything in stride and made the best of bad situations, changing from a scared little girl to a triumphant heroine set on doing what is right… I love stories life this (probably because, truth be told, I would run like a scared little girl and try to save myself).

Once outside the Wall, observing the pockets of magic and the destitute that surrounds her, Lark’s travels go back and forth between intense and mundane.  In between fighting off pixies, hiding inside magical bubbles, and running from the Shadow men (cannibals of a monstrous nature), Lark just sort of stumbles around, looking for food, freezing at night, and it isn’t until Oren, a boy caked in mud, really fortifies his appearance within the novel that I found it really picked back up.

Oren is a mystery.  He’s hot and cold, one minute acting like a wild beast and the next, tentative and caring.  I couldn’t figure out who or what he was until Spooner wrote it into the novel, and I was floored… I think perhaps a part of me suspected, but it was such a dormant part that I never figure it out.  I really did enjoy him though, and I am excited to see what happens with him and Lark in the next installment of this novel because Spooner really has piqued my interest with her creation of characters, not to mention her steampunk, magical world.  Three and a half stars.

Learner Publishing Group and Carolrhoda Lab have been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on October 1, 2012.



Ravens

P.T. Michelle has stopped by the blog today to tell us a little about her choice of Ravens in her Brightest Kind of Darkness series.  Here’s what she had to say: 

Why did you feature ravens in your BRIGHTEST KIND OF DARKNESS series?

I’ve always been fascinated by ravens, by their perception in society and the fact they’ve been depicted in old drawings and stories since the beginning of time.

In researching ravens, I fell in love with their duality; every culture has a mythology about ravens. Some associate ravens with evil, believing them to be a witch in another form, others believe them to be the devil’s minions. Then there are the cultures that feature the raven either as the creator of their world or as having had a hand in it’s creation like creating the sun or finding water. Other cultures see ravens as tricksters with the talent to predict the future and the ability to bring messages to the gods. Ravens were also considered birds of war by some, who watched the ravens and used that knowledge to help predict a battle’s outcome.

While ravens feature in just about every culture, their roles spanning from one extreme or the other, one aspect is definitely true in every culture; their presence is never innocuous. It always means “something”! :)

And this is why I choose ravens. They have such a rich and varied mythology. I wanted to put my own spin on it in BRIGHTEST KIND OF DARKNESS.

Raven Facts: Wiley, Smart, Opportunistic, Loyal, Territorial, Playful and Affectionate

  • Ravens can solve complex problems, like figuring out how to add rocks to a deep jar in order to raise the water level so they could get to the meat floating in the water. Ravens are called “wolf birds” for a reason. They’ve been known to lead wolves to injured (potential) prey so that they can also share in the feeding. Ravens have worked together as a team. One pulls on the dog’s tail and gets the dog to chase after him, while the other raven raids the dog’s bowl for kibble.
  • Ravens mate for life and hold funerals for their dead.
  • Ravens can mimic human speech and other bird calls.
  • Ravens can live in extreme temperatures from the tundra to the desert.
  • The oldest raven in the wild lived to be 17. The oldest raven in captivity lived to be 44. He was a Tower of London raven.

Ravens in Action

How to tell a raven from a crow: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=guBwMUAWAJI&NR=1&feature=endscreen

Ravens are much bigger than crows. Here you can see a raven and a crow side by side to see the difference in their sizes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-ZyBNWVD70w&feature=related (around 2:38-2:40)

Ravens can be very playful and gentle: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAj_SkR8lJY&feature=channel&list=UL

Ravens can talk in various voices: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GusdG_SSWw&feature=relmfu AND http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zA9KTw07Ax0&feature=relmfu

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BRIGHTEST KIND OF DARKNESS, BOOK 1

Nara Collins is an average sixteen-year-old, with one exception: every night she dreams the events of the following day. Due to an incident in her past, Nara avoids using her special gift to change fate…until she dreams a future she can’t ignore.

After Nara prevents a bombing at Blue Ridge High, her ability to see the future starts to fade, while people at school are suddenly being injured at an unusually high rate.

Grappling with her diminishing powers and the need to prevent another disaster, Nara meets Ethan Harris, a mysterious loner who seems to understand her better than anyone. Ethan and Nara forge an irresistible connection, but as their relationship heats up, so do her questions about his dark past.


Read an excerpt

Amazon | Barnes & Noble

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LUCID: BRIGHTEST KIND OF DARKNESS, BOOK 2

Once Nara combines her prophetic ability with Ethan’s power to outsmart Fate at his own deadly cat-and-mouse game, she’s more determined than ever to help Ethan learn the meaning behind the raven sword tattoo that suddenly appeared on his back after their confrontation with Fate.

During her quest to uncover the tattoo’s secrets, Nara enlists the help of some new friends and discovers her own surprising connection to Ethan.

While Nara digs deeper into the mystery, her desire for answers leads her down a dangerous path full of powerful and ruthless enemies. Swept into an age-old battle, Nara quickly learns that keeping one’s enemies close can be a necessary evil, making an intangible enemy she can control far more preferable to the human enemies she can’t.

Read an excerpt

Amazon | Barnes and Noble

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ABOUT P.T. MICHELLE

P.T. Michelle is author of the young adult series BRIGHTEST KIND OF DARKNESS.
When P.T. isn’t writing, she can usually be found reading or taking pictures of
landscapes, sunsets and anything beautiful or odd in nature.

LINKS: Website |
Blog | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads
| Pinterest | Newsletter

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And don’t forget to ENTER to win these AWESOME BOOKS!!!

PRIZE #1: SIGNED paperback of Brightest Kind of Darkness by P.T. Michelle (US ONLY)

PRIZE #2: SIGNED paperback of Lucid by P.T. Michelle (US ONLY)

GRAND PRIZE: SIGNED paperback of Brightest Kind of Darkness, SIGNED paperback of Lucid & Triskele necklace (US ONLY)

To enter the rafflecopter giveaway, click HERE!



From Goodreads: Once Nara combines her prophetic ability with Ethan’s power to outsmart Fate at his own deadly cat-and-mouse game, she’s more determined than ever to help Ethan learn the meaning behind the raven sword tattoo that suddenly appeared on his back after their confrontation with Fate.

During her quest to uncover the tattoo’s secrets, Nara enlists the help of some new friends and discovers her own surprising connection to Ethan.

While Nara digs deeper into the mystery, her desire for answers leads her down a dangerous path full of powerful and ruthless enemies. Swept into an age-old battle, Nara quickly learns that keeping one’s enemies close can be a necessary evil, making an intangible enemy she can control far more preferable to the human enemies she can’t.

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This sequel is amazing.  I read it from cover to cover in one sitting, absolutely absorbed by the tale P.T. Michelle weaves as we learn more about Nara’s and Ethan’s abilities.  Having won against Fate, and with Nara safe for the time being, Ethan sets out to reconcile with his family, leaving Nara to figure out her many questions on her own.  Thus, Ethan is missing from the novel for more than half of it, but while I really missed him, I truly enjoyed Drystan.  Upon meeting him, the reader automatically knows there’s something special about him, but as we already know through Nara and Ethan, no two abilities are alike.  Though Drystan doesn’t come right out and say it, Michelle writes his ability into the story in a not so subtle way, which I loved, because here I knew something Nara didn’t know—love the dramatic irony—and it made me smile every time it came up.

But, abilities aside, Drystan also has a really cool hobby: Parkour, the stunt-sport consisting of running, climbing, and jumping off of cliffs and tall buildings.  Of course, as Nara’s life becomes jeopardized due to her intense questioning of ravens, Drystan’s hobby comes to the forefront, and I loved watching him attempt to teach Nara to protect herself.  Even more alluring were the scenes in which Drystan used Parkour in pursuit of those who attempted to hurt Nara; it really made my heart race as I imagined him jumping and twisting through the air—so cool.  This being the first time I’ve ever heard of the sport, I am now vastly interested in learning more about it.

Throughout much of this novel, my heart was in my throat.  Just when Nara recovers from one close call or spooky premonition, another swoops in and I really felt the adrenaline as I read, which made the novel all the more fun.  Trying to figure out the mystery of the ravens alongside the mystery of who was trying to sabotage Nara was extremely enticing, and though I was able to figure out who the bad guys were fairly early on, it actually didn’t damper my fear for Nara at all, but rather caused me to fear even more.  Not knowing who is after someone is scary, but sometimes I think knowing is even scarier, and that’s how I felt in this novel as I read.

When Ethan returns to the scene, he’s seems to have a much darker, scarier side than I was expecting, and it turns out Ethan has some secrets of his own.  Of course, the novel ends (nooooooooooooo) before the reader is given any real answers behind Ethan’s transformation, and as Drystan sort of disappears from the novel upon Ethan’s return, I am really dying for the next installment.  Especially as Michelle gives the reader a small glimpse into what’s to come for our beloved characters, Ethan and Nara, but I can’t say anything more as it’d be a spoiler.  This is definitely a series you don’t want to miss!  Five stars.

I received a copy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.

To read my review of Brightest Kind of Darkness, the prequel to Lucid, click HERE.



From Goodreads: Can the living coexist with the living dead?

That’s the question that has New Victorian society fiercely divided ever since the mysterious plague known as “The Laz” hit the city of New London and turned thousands into walking corpses. But while some of these zombies are mindless monsters, hungry for human flesh, others can still think, speak, reason, and control their ravenous new appetites.

Just ask Nora Dearly, the young lady of means who was nearly kidnapped by a band of sinister zombies but valiantly rescued by a dashing young man . . . of the dead variety.

Nora and her savior, the young zombie soldier Bram Griswold, fell hopelessly in love. But others feel only fear and loathing for the reanimated dead. Now, as tensions grow between pro- and anti-zombie factions, battle lines are being drawn in the streets. And though Bram is no longer in the New Victorian army, he and his ex-commando zombie comrades are determined to help keep the peace. That means taking a dangerous stand between The Changed, a radical group of sentient zombies fighting for survival, and The Murder, a masked squad of urban guerrillas hellbent on destroying the living dead. But zombies aren’t the only ones in danger: Their living allies are also in The Murder’s crosshairs, and for one vengeful zealot, Nora Dearly is the number one target.

As paranoia, prejudice, and terrorist attacks threaten to plunge the city into full-scale war, Nora’s scientist father and his team continue their desperate race to unlock the secrets of “The Laz” and find a cure. But their efforts may be doomed when a mysterious zombie appears bearing an entirely new strain of the virus—and the nation of New Victoria braces for a new wave of the apocalypse.

Lia Habel’s spellbinding, suspenseful sequel to Dearly, Departed takes her imaginative mash-up of period romance, futuristic thriller, and zombie drama to a whole new level of innovative and irresistible storytelling.

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Once again, Habel has delivered a unique, enticing zombie novel that captivated me from start to finish.  Told through many character viewpoints, in a future where technology is extremely far advanced, but where the people have reverted back to 17th century mannerisms, Habel unleashes “The Lax,” a strain of virus that has created not only thinking, reasoning, emotional zombies, but also the flesh eating kind as well.

If you enjoy novels by Jane Austen, Emily Bronte, or Fanny Burney, then I believe you’ll really enjoy this novel as the romanticism and “coming out” of a young woman is the same.  The characters are extremely chaste and “court” each other, giving the novel an overall romantic feeling while still containing espionage, murder, mystery, and mayhem—aspects you won’t find in our beloved Austen, Bronte, or Burney.  And, I absolutely love the mix.  Honestly, I’ve always been interested in the high society life of the past, but find many of the classic novels to be a little dry.  I want a mystery along with my romance, and that’s exactly what Habel delivers in this sequel to Dearly, Departed. 

Some may find the many points of view daunting, but I think Habel handles this well through her titling of chapters.  When the viewpoints change, a new chapter emerges, and I always feel like Habel is giving the reader tiny cliffhangers at the end of each chapter as the story shifts to another character and generally leaves the story the reader was just following in order to learn about another.  I honestly do love this type of storytelling—I become so enamored in one aspect of the characters’ lives and then am whisked away to something different, filling all the gaps within the story slowly as Habel begins to pull them all together for a wonderful finale.  It just amazes me and keeps my apt attention from start to finish.

This novel is, of course, very long, which is my only complaint as I found some of the story to be more so filler than pertinent to the story (though not very much), but overall, the story is perfection within itself, and I really enjoyed it.  If you want to read a truly unique zombie novel, then this series is it.  Four stars.

Random House Publishing and Del Ray have been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on September 25, 2012.



From Goodreads: When eighteen-year-old Winter McCall is offered a chance to leave her life of poverty behind on the streets of London, she moves to a remote part of the South West of England. Here she takes up the job as housekeeper to the young and handsome, yet mysterious, Thaddeus Blake.

Warned that he has some curious habits, Winter soon realises that not all is as it firsts appears at the remote mansion where she now lives and works.

Blind to the real danger that she is in, Winter finds herself becoming attracted to Thaddeus, and with nowhere and no one to run to, she slowly succumbs to his strange requests. But none of them are as strange as asking Winter to stand each night in the moonlight.

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In the wee hours of the morning, Tim O’Rourke released his latest novel, Moonlight, a new series that he’s had under wrap and key, only recently announcing its upcoming release to his fan base.  Highly exuberant about any new release of O’Rourke’s, I set aside my vast reading pile to swoop in and devour this enticing story of Winter and Thaddeus.  And once again, O’Rourke does not disappoint.

Winter—aka. Winnie—is homeless, living on the streets of London just trying to survive day by day.  Thaddeus, a poet with a massive house and odd sleeping habits, is a lonely young man looking for someone to help with the burden of his home.  Or, so he says when he approaches Winnie with the opportunity of a lifetime.  Of course, not all is what it seems, as Winnie soon discovers, and I absolutely loved sleuthing around beside her as I read, trying to piece together the puzzles within the novel and figure it out before all was revealed.  I failed, of course.  Every time I thought I knew what was happening, a new twist would arise, forcing me to change my predictions, over and over again.  It turns out that I was technically right the first time I assumed something about the characters, but only partially, and I love how O’Rourke can cause me to second-guess myself as I read.  Any novel that keeps me on my toes is amazing, in my opinion, and so far, every single one of O’Rourke’s books have done it.  Every. Single. One.  Now that, ladies and gentlemen, is the power of a truly gifted writer.  O’Rourke simply amazes me.

Winnie is a great character, and for those of you who have read O’Rourke’s Kiera Hudson series, I’d say she definitely rivals Kiera—neck and neck.  (Haven’t read the Kiera Hudson Series?  What are you waiting for?  Do. It.)  I really enjoyed Winnie’s candid, no-nonsense personality, and as she began to suspect that things were very wrong, her bravado and spunk really endeared her to my heart.  Though I didn’t agree with all her choices, in the end, I believe she did exactly as she should.

Thaddeus is, of course, an amazing character.  His nearly bi-polar personality was scary to watch, and his cagey responses to Winnie’s questions kept me on edge throughout the novel.  Of course, I was convinced he was worse than Jack the Ripper as I read (is he?  Read and find out…), so my fear for Winnie was palpable throughout the novel, especially as the truth unfolded and the characters were left with some dire choices to make.

Now, while there is a cliffhanger of sorts at the end, one of the things I love so much about O’Rourke’s writing is that he generally closes each novel very neatly.  As the reader, I know there is more to come, but the main concerns within this novel have been address very well, and though I’m dying to get my hands on the sequel already, I am content with the wait as O’Rourke didn’t leave many loose ends, as so many novels do, nowadays.  Also, I know O’Rourke writes extremely quickly, and I won’t have to wait a whole year for the sequel, so… that’s another plus.

Overall, this is a fantastic new series and if you haven’t read any of O’Rourke’s work to date, then this is the perfect one with which to begin.  There is some language usage within the novel, but otherwise the story is relatively clean, save some descriptive horror scenes, but even those were miniscule and didn’t make me squeamish.  I’d recommend this for readers aged 15 and above, especially those who like a good mystery.  Five stars.

I received a copy of this amazing novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.

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AND NOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY!  Tim O’Rourke is giving away ONE eBook copy of this awesome novel (international), along with a signed print of the cover, and YOU can win it HERE!  ENDS Oct 7, 2012.



Every Saturday I run a feature for the 99 Cent Club, and below are the eBook picks for this week; currently they’re ONLY 99 Cents (On Amazon, with a few ALSO on Barnes and Nobel–I checked). I don’t know if these are permanent prices, so please don’t shoot the messenger, and double check pricing before pressing the buy button. Enjoy!

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The Temple by Heather Marie Adkins

Vale Avari has a mysterious past and a laundry list of super-powers, but that’s nothing compared to what she finds upon moving from small town U.S.A to jolly-good England.

A chance dart throw lands her in Quicksilver, an off-the-map place with a big problem – people are dying, and word is, it’s supernatural.

At her new place of employment, a temple dedicated to the ancient Mother Goddess, Vale learns something even more shocking – women guards are disappearing at an alarmingly patterned rate; women who possess special gifts like her own.

Supernatural powers aside, Vale isn’t ready to believe in the Wild Hunt as the culprit, and she’s determined to prove the deaths are acts of human violence.

Find it at AMAZON.

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The Bro-Magnet by Lauren Baratz-Logsted

Women have been known to lament, “Always a bridesmaid, never a bride.” For Johnny Smith, the problem is, “Always a Best Man, never a groom.” At age 33, housepainter Johnny has been Best Man eight times. The ultimate man’s man, Johnny loves the Mets, the Jets, his weekly poker game, and the hula girl lamp that hangs over his basement pool table. Johnny has the instant affection of nearly every man he meets, but one thing he doesn’t have is a woman to share his life with, and he wants that desperately. When Johnny meets District Attorney Helen Troy, he decides to renounce his bro-magnet ways in order to impress her. With the aid and advice of his friends and family, soon he’s transforming his wardrobe, buying throw pillows, ditching the hula girl lamp, getting a cat and even changing his name to the more mature-sounding John. And through it all, he’s pretending to have no interest in sports, which Helen claims to abhor. As things heat up with Helen, the questions arise: Will Johnny finally get the girl? And, if he’s successful in that pursuit, who will he be now that he’s no longer really himself?

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Seven Days From Sunday by M.H. Sargent

This fast paced thriller is set in Iraq, where the country’s most wanted terrorist has promised a catastrophic attack in seven days time. His previous proclamations have always come true, so a small CIA team, including a beautiful female doctor, find themselves under the gun to find him and stop him.

Meanwhile, it’s a normal day at a Green Zone checkpoint in Baghdad. Until an attractive young Iraqi woman approaches, carrying the bloody head of an American contractor in her head scarf – an American who had been beheaded just hours before on a live Web feed.

As the CIA team investigates the incident, the CIA doctor inspects the severed head and finds a written message stuffed inside the dead man’s mouth. A message that will lead the team to an unsuspecting Iraqi family. And change everything.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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The Damascus Letter by Daniel Dick

When the head of the CIA’s Clandestine Service learns that the United States is under imminent threat of another attack, potentially involving agents of the Iranian Government, he turns to the one man he knows can uncover the truth and stop the bloodshed. Akil Hassan—born an Arab, raised an American—was the CIA’s top man inside the Middle East, until he broke the Agency’s rules. Cast out, he’s now being offered a second chance. But in order to stop what’s coming and save tens of thousands of lives, he’s going to have to risk everything he has—his career, his family, his life—by breaking the rules all over again.

Reminiscent of Tom Clancy, this carefully researched and often prescient novel offers a rare and fascinating glimpse into the terrorist mindset while delivering a pulse-pounding tale of covert espionage. Loaded with ultra-relevant issues and themes, full of rich characters, and offering a frighteningly realistic scenario of terrorism that is all too plausible and all too real, The Damascus Letter enlightens as well as entertains.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Feyland by Anthea Sharp

What if a high-tech computer game was a gateway to the dangerous Realm of Faerie?

WHEN A GAME…

Feyland is the most immersive computer game ever designed, and Jennet Carter is the first to play the prototype. But she doesn’t suspect the virtual world is close enough to touch — or that she’ll be battling for her life against the Dark Queen of the faeries.

TURNS REAL…

Tam Linn is the perfect hero — in-game. Too bad the rest of his life is seriously flawed. The last thing he needs is rich-girl Jennet prying into his secrets, insisting he’s the only one who can help her.

WINNING IS EVERYTHING…

Together, Jennet and Tam enter the Dark Realm of Feyland, only to discover that the entire human world is in danger. Pushed to the limit of their abilities, they must defeat the Dark Queen… before it’s too late.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Death Speaks by Tamara Rose Blodgett

Caleb’s in high school now and thinks the chaos of last year is behind him. Unfortunately, a serial killer is on the loose and children are his victims. Caleb agrees to help the police apprehend the murderer…until the killer takes notice of Caleb and his paranormal friends.

Carson and Brett remain the bullies they always were and their posse continues to grow. How long can the two groups stay out of each others’ way before there’s a firestorm of retribution…

The Government Graysheets continue to keep tabs on Caleb’s every move while Jade’s family threatens their relationship. Can they still be together even when events threaten to tear them apart?

Find it at AMAZON.

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Death Screams by Tamara Rose Blodgett

Caleb’s second year of high school starts off without a hitch until Jade touches the wrong clairvoyance sample that foretells a murder in her future. Will she remain safe even while assisting police officers Garcia and Gale in a race to prevent a cataclysmic death?

Sophie and Jonesy aren’t seeing things eye to eye, but when her safety is threatened by an attacker targeting Astral-Projection girls, they put their differences aside. The FDA approved depressant has  begun to be administered to the teens for suppression of paranormal abilities during sleep for safety reasons. Or so they’ve been told.

Carson and Brett have escalated the violence that they perpetrate and leave Caleb no choice but to reciprocate. After saving the newest member of their group from certain abuse, Caleb knows the bull’s-eye is dead center on him. Again.

Does Caleb use the undead as a weapon of defense while his group hangs in the balance of imminent peril?

Find it at AMAZON.

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Created by Shannon Shaw 

(Mature Young Adult)

Seventeen year old Ethan awakes to find himself strapped to a medical gurney after being rescued from the middle of a rural forest while under attack from creatures that shoud not exist. Exhausted and in disbelief, he soon learns that he has been selected to take part in a government program that will make him the stuff of nightmares.

Guided by another of the Created, Ethan must deal with the rules of his new vampire world, a burgeoning romance with a girl no longer of his kind and fight to stay alive.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Psion Beta by Jacob Gowans

Sammy, a 14-year-old fugitive, accidentally discovers he has the powers of a Psion.

Plucked off the streets, he is thrust into the rigorously-disciplined environment of Psion Beta headquarters. As a new Beta, Sammy must hone his newfound abilities using holographic fighting simulations, stealth training missions, and complex war games. His fellow trainees are other kids competing to prove their worth so they can graduate and contribute to the war effort.

But the stifling competition at headquarters isolates Sammy from his peers. Learning to use his incredible powers is difficult enough, but when things go horribly wrong on a routine training mission, he must rely on the other Betas to stay alive.

The Silent War is at a tipping point; even one boy can be the difference.

But to do so, he must survive.

Find it at AMAZON.

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The Right Path by Debra L. Martin and David W. Small

Fifteen-year-old Abraham “Ham” Jones, a cripple, and Zia Slate, a fourteen-year-old tomboy with an attitude, find themselves unlikely partners in this post-apocalyptic tale of survival. It is decades later since the world blew itself apart. Life is harsh, gangs rule the streets, the system cops keep the peace anyway they can. Being a kid in this world isn’t easy, being a cripple is about the worst sentence handed down. Being a girl with no protection is only slightly better.

Ham and Zia’s lives are irrevocably changed when they meet a mysterious old man bearing gifts – a cane for Ham and a knife for Zia. But, nothing is as it seems. Everyone wants something and no good deed goes unpunished. Forced into a desperate encounter, they must fight for their lives when it’s discovered they now have possession of two of the legendary memory weapons, the very weapons that ultimately destroyed the world.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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From Goodreads: Eighteen-year-old Kimberly gets the shock of her life when she learns the father she thought was dead is not only very much alive, but never even knew she existed. Angry with her mother for lying all these years, Kimberly flies to Colorado to meet the father she knows nothing about before heading off to college in the fall.

Her father’s world turns out to be nothing like she expected. Rather than the typical nine to five lifestyle, Kimberly’s father runs a summer foster camp that teaches young children skills to build their confidence and self-esteem. The Colorado Rocky Mountains are a different world than the sunny shores of California, taking Kimberly completely out of her element, and causing her to second-guess her spur of the moment decision.

Never being one to quit anything, Kimberly is determined to show her father that a surfer girl can fit into this rugged mountain wilderness. That is if she can deal with Mason, an arrogant nineteen-year-old guy who has made it his mission to point out every mistake she has made since her arrival. While she would love nothing more than to rub it in his know-it-all face, Kimberly can’t deny the feelings he stirs up inside her, or the chemistry between them, even during their verbal assaults.

When a tragic accident leaves them stranded in the mountains, Kimberly must use her shaky skills to save Mason and survive the elements. Suddenly, fighting is the last thing on their minds as they must rely on each other if they want to live. In their struggle for survival, they realize what they thought they knew about each other isn’t true after all.

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Once again, King has blown my mind with another beautiful young adult novel that sucked me in from start to finish.  I absolutely adore King’s books, all of them, and Unlikely Allies is another gem that I highly recommend to any who enjoy a sound, realistic plot line, swoon worthy characters, a bit of drama, and a triumphant ending.

Kimberly, our protagonist and a highly engaging character, is visiting her father for the first time, having just found out about his existence.  Whisked away from California to the Rocky Mountains, she is in for a “rude awakening,” but in my opinion, Kimberly handles herself extremely well.  Though she doesn’t necessarily fit in with those around her, she shoulders the animosity of some campers/staff extremely well, while quickly making friends with others.  I really enjoyed her happy-go-lucky attitude, and though I’ll say the book moved a bit faster than I would have liked (I so wanted more of Mason and Kimberly), I really loved every moment of it, especially the witty banter.

Mason, nicknamed “Greeky” for his Greek god physic and attitude, is to die for.  Though he is downright nasty in the beginning, I found his search within himself to be extremely real and well written.  Mason’s life hasn’t been peaches and cream, and the appearance of Kimberly brings extreme thoughts of jealousy to the forefront as, in my opinion, they should—we’re only human, after all, and if someone walked into my life and laid claim to the only person who’d kept me grounded throughout everything I experienced, I’d probably react the same way Mason does.  But with time, all things heal, and I loved watching both Kimberly and Mason fight their attraction only to realize their true feelings for one another… though the timing couldn’t be worse as they’re thrust into a battle to survive…  (and I just loved this… my heart was in my throat for the remainder of the story).

King’s story is highly engaging, bringing to life not only the characters, but also the Rocky Mountains.  I’ve never been there, but through the descriptions of the wilderness and the harsh realities of an unforgivable terrain, I was easily able to imagine it every step of the way.  I love novels where I’m drawn into the scenery as much as I am into the characters’ lives, and King achieves both in this latest release. Five stars.

5 stars

I received a copy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.



From Goodreads: “I was sixteen the first time my grandmother died . . .”

Sarah Parsons has never seen Amber House, the grand Maryland estate that’s been in her family for three centuries. She’s never walked its hedge maze nor found its secret chambers; she’s never glimpsed the shades that haunt it, nor hunted for lost diamonds in its walls.

But all of that is about to change. After her grandmother passes away, Sarah and her friend Jackson decide to search for the diamonds–and the house comes alive. She discovers that she can see visions of the house’s past, like the eighteenth-century sea captain who hid the jewels, or the glamorous great-grandmother driven mad by grief. She grows closer to both Jackson and a young man named Richard Hathaway, whose family histories are each deeply entwined with her own. But when the visions start to threaten the person she holds most dear, Sarah must do everything she can to get to the bottom of the house’s secrets, and stop the course of history before it is cemented forever.

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Shrouded in mystery and full of eerie adventures, Amber House captivated me from start to finish.  I loved following Sarah and Richard through the house, exploring the many passageways in search of treasure.  Learning about the deep, sorrowful past of the house through Sarah’s visions and her ancestor’s journal was just as riveting as the search for treasure and, truth be told, I adored everything about this novel.

Sarah’s autistic brother, Sam, is my absolute favorite.  His sheer energy and penchant for exploration, as well as his love for his sister, quickly endeared him to my heart.  Though he’s just a small child, he added a lot of depth and character to the novel, and I am so glad the authors decided to create him the way they did.  It’s hard to explain, but I think you’ll understand when you read the novel; he’s absolutely amazing.

Richard was a dreamy addition to the novel, and I love that, like Sarah, he has special connections to the house, and more importantly, to Sarah.  While I picked up that he is tied to the house very early on in the novel, I couldn’t put my finger on his ability until he blatantly stated what it was, and at that point, I nearly died, especially with the revelation it brought.   This story is spun very well, and I honestly cannot wait for the sequel (but readers, rest assured, there is no cliffhanger in this novel and it could very well stand alone, but thank God it’s not going to!).

Sarah’s mother, ever the rich snob, drove me absolutely batty, but without her antics and the crossing between rich and poor, I think the story would have fallen flat.  The addition of high society characters and a love triangle or sorts made the story all that more interesting and, of course, the fact that the novel takes place in Maryland is another plus.  Having visited many of the places described in the novel, I felt an even deeper connection with the characters and plot—I just love when that happens!

I did not like the “Good Mother” spider, though. Not one bit… but I am also under the impression that this spider is a figment of the authors’ imaginations.  At least, I hope she is, because if not, I’m in a world of trouble.  I did Google the spider to see if she existed after I was creeped out of my mind while reading, but to no avail.  I tweeted one of the authors about the spider as well and am wating to hear back… and I’m just dying to know!  Especially when Richard says that these spiders are native to the area (meaning MD) and aren’t on the West coast, where Sarah is from… I mean, what a way to give a girl a heart attack as she’s reading the novel in the dead of night… suddenly I felt like a billion little spiders were in my bed with me… (Update–I heard back from the authors and the Good Mother does NOT exist… thank God).

But moving on from all that creepy spider talk, I want to live in Amber House.  I don’t necessarily want the abilities that Sarah has, though it is pretty cool, but I’d love to even just visit the place… it sounds so magnificent, with its sheer size, not to mention the maze it totes, or the stables and dock… I really want to live here.  Too bad it doesn’t exist (right?).  Five stars.

Scholastic Inc. and Arthur A. Levine Books have been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on October 1, 2012.



From Goodreads: Julia has been ripped from the escape she’d planned for herself. When she awakens to discover that her reality has shifted to include a supposed soul-meld with a man she hates… and who hates her, she rebels. Julia doesn’t want to be Queen of the Blood Singers if it means captivity in a gilded cage.

Broken from the horrific events surrounding her friends, Cynthia migrates to the very city that Julia resides in and determines to find her as the police follow the bread crumbs she left in her wake. Detective Truman’s discovery at her apartment exposed her departure for the escape it was.

The Feral has come full circle and must begin a new life from the shadow of the old. His placement in the hierarchy of the pack is uncertain when he finds that he has an integral enemy already in place and a pack member to protect. While he desperately seeks answers to what had been… what could be.

Can the vestiges of Julia’s former life be restored so she might reunite with her one true love or has that door closed forever because of supernatural circumstances beyond their control?

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Did you read that synopsis?  Did you?  Because it’s amazing.  I love how Blodgett is able to create different stories that continuously evolve within her novels, all destined to meet at the climactic point of the story, intertwining it all together and leaving the reader breathless.  While they seem removed from one another, the story breaking from one character’s plight to the next, Blodgett always brings it together so seamlessly and I absolutely love her books.  Especially this one.  With Julia working hard to remain in control and choose her own path, Cynthia wandering the streets, hiding from the weres and looking for her best friend, Jason attempting to get back his mate, and Scott attempting to ignore his bond, the novel unfolds impossibly fast, whisking the reader away on a supernatural ride that is sure to please.

In this novel, three supernatural groups take the forefront and Blodgett does a phenomenal job making them extremely real.  The weres, lacking females and a softer side, are intent on mating with Julia as they believe the bond will allow them to shift without the need of the moon.  Likewise, the meek, though duty bound Blood Singers believe Julia to be the Queen they have waiting a millennia for, highly gifted and meant to bond with one of their Blood Singers to strengthen her powers and awaken as their protector against those who would harm them.  And the vampires, dangerous in their own right, especially to one another, believe Julia will allow them to live amongst the daylight, no longer forced to walk the earth at night.  Of all these groups, I find the Blood Singers to be the most interesting, not only because Julia is one of them, but because it’s a completely unique paranormal group with extraordinary powers that readers won’t find in most novels.

Julia, of course, is still my favorite. I love her strong personality and will power, attempting to do what is right, but also remain true to herself.  I can’t imagine being told that I was bonded with a certain person and that was it, even if I did have a strong pull towards them, and I love that Blodgett keeps the reader guessing  who Julia will end up with throughout the entire novel: William, the kind, compassionate vampire that shares her blood and truly cares for her… Jason, her husband turned feral by the unforgiving weres, or Scott, her destined mate according to the Blood singers… only time will tell.  Five stars.

I received a copy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.

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AND NOW FOR THE GIVEAWAY!  Tamara Rose Blodgett is giving away ONE eBook copy of her awesome novel (international), and YOU can win it HERE!  ENDS Oct 3, 2012.



From Goodreads: A feast for the brain, this gory and genuinely hilarious take on zombie culture simultaneously skewers, pays tribute to, and elevates the horror genre.

Seventeen-year-old Nero is stuck in the wilderness with a bunch of other juvenile delinquents on an “Inward Trek.” As if that weren’t bad enough, his counselors have turned into flesh-eating maniacs overnight and are now chowing down on his fellow miscreants. As in any classic monster flick worth its salted popcorn, plentiful carnage sends survivors rabbiting into the woods while the mindless horde of “infects” shambles, moans, and drools behind. Of course, these kids have seen zombie movies. They generate “Zombie Rules” almost as quickly as cheeky remarks, but attitude alone can’t keep the biters back.

Serving up a cast of irreverent, slightly twisted characters, an unexpected villain, and an ending you won’t see coming, here is a savvy tale that that’s a delight to read—whether you’re a rabid zombie fan or freshly bitten—and an incisive commentary on the evil that lurks within each of us.

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In all honesty, finishing this book was the most difficult thing I’ve done in a long time.  Generally, most people probably would have quit while they were ahead, but I always feel that novels deserve to be read all the way through just in case there is a saving grace, and I’ve found those saving graces in a few novels before.  Unfortunately, I didn’t find it with this novel.  Now, while there is an interesting twist to this zombie apocalypse story near the end, everything leading up to it was so vulgar and difficult to wade through that by the time I got to the twist, I just didn’t care anymore.

My first issue with this novel comes from the formatting itself, and while I know this is no issue of the author’s, and it was an ARC copy, so it shouldn’t exist in the final copies, it made it extremely difficult for me to read.  Why?  Throughout the first 40% of the novel, sporadic words and phrases were replaced by random letters and numbers, and I honestly couldn’t figure out what they were supposed to say.  On occasion, words would be separated by spaces, and while extremely annoying to try to read, I could figure out what the words were fairly quickly, but once random letters and numbers joined the mix, I could figure out the words anymore and I had to overlook that portion of the story.  If it had happened once in a blue moon, then it really wouldn’t have bothered me, but the fact that it happened quite often, and sometimes entire words would be missing with just the letter D in their stead… well, that made it too difficult for me to follow the story on the whole.

However, formatting aside, I found the novel itself to be extremely juvenile, but not in a good way, not in the way that I’d give it to my kids to read.  Instead, this novel is completely off humor and constantly cracks jokes about tits, masturbating, farts, and erections… things that might cause the reader to crack a sheepish smile the very first time it comes up, but the sheer amount of redundancy caused me to groan and role my eyes continuously.  I also found the characters names for each other to be quite ridiculous, like War Pig, and I didn’t find it funny in the least.  I felt like the “witty banter” between the teens was unrealistic and much too juvenile, aside from being sick, and it got very old, very fast.

Then, there was the extremely graphic nature of the book.  No detail is spared in this novel, and when the zombies sink their teeth into others, as they do a lot, the reader is gifted the entire experience though extreme graphic phrasing.  I understand horror books that do this, but I was not ready for this in The Infects, and it really made me sick as I read.

Overall, I didn’t enjoy this novel in the least, though I have heard that Beuadoin’s other novels are very well written and not as graphic, so perhaps I’ll check out one of them.  One star.

Candlewick Press has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on September 25, 2012.



The giveaway for Blood Bond, by Heather Hildenbrand, has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that the winner has been chosen using Rafflecopter and Random.org.

And the winner is…

DeeDee Brinkman Griffin

A tweet has been sent to the winner, with an email to follow shortly! If I don’t hear from her within 48 hours, I will select a new winner using Rafflecopter. Thanks to everyone who participated, and congratulations to the winner… but don’t despair if you didn’t win this round!

 

 

Enter to win my other great giveaways:

Win One of Forty-Two Books!

Win a book of your choice:



I am ecstatic to say that I have just now achieved my goal of 200 books read in 2012–and it’s only September!!!  Obviously, I am going to have to update my challenge, but before I do, I think a giveaway is in order.  I’ve gone back through my reading list, picking the books that I’ve given the highest ratings this year, 5 stars, and am offering ONE of them to TWO lucky winners.  That means two of you will win your choice of any novel below:

I know you’ve heard of many of these awesome novels, but before you decide which one you really want to win, check them all out, especially any titles you aren’t familiar with–they’re all SUPERB READS!  Read carefully as both Hardcopies and Ebooks are available.

Hardcopy Titles (from the Book Depository–Please make sure they deliver to your country before choosing):

Ebook Titles:

  • Forever Changed by Tiffany King–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Dead Flesh by Tim O’Rourke–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Blood Song by Tamara Rose Blodgett–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Unlikely Allies by Tiffany King–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Awry by Chelsea Fine–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Eligere by Christina Daley–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Dead Night by Tim O’Rourke–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Death Weeps by Tamara Rose Blodgett–EBook Copy from Amazon
  • Vampire Hollows by Tim O’Rourke–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Savage Vengeance by Tamara Rose Blodgett–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Tomorrow Land by Mari Mancusi–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Death Screams by Tamara Rose Blodgett–EBook Copy from Amazon
  • The Enforcers by Joshua Grover-David Patterson–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Wishing for Someday Soon by Tiffany King–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Indisuptable Proof by Gary Williams and Vicky Knerly–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Dead Angels by Tim O’Rourke–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Three Keys to Murder by Gary Williams and Vicky Knerly–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Dancing in Heaven by Christine Grote–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Blood Bond by Heather Hildenbrand–EBook Copy from Amazon or Barnes and Noble
  • Shift by M.R. Merrick–EBook Copy from Amazon

To enter you must:

  • Be 13 years or older (or have parent/guardian permission)
  • Fill in the required information on the form below (extra entries optional)

Click HERE to go to the Rafflecopter Entry Form!

This contest is open INTERNATIONALLY and will end October 18th at 12:01am ESTThe winners will be announced on October 18th in a new post, and they will receive email notification! Please read the giveaway policy and leave a comment!



From Goodreads: The Apocalypse does not end. The Changed will grow in numbers. The Spared may not survive.

Even before the EMPs brought down the world, Alex was on the run from the demons of her past and the monster living in her head. After the world was gone, she believed Rule could be a sanctuary for her and those she’d come to love.

But she was wrong.

Now Alex is in the fight of her life against the adults, who would use her, the survivors, who don’t trust her, and the Changed, who would eat her alive.

Welcome to Shadows, the second book in the haunting apocalyptic Ashes Trilogy: where no one is safe and humans may be the worst of the monsters.

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I have been eagerly awaiting the release of this novel ever since Ashes’ epic cliffhanger left me dying in agony… but here’s the thing, when I finally got it, it didn’t pick up where Ashes left off!!!  Ahhhh!  So, my silly self was thoroughly confused and then I started second guessing myself, thinking that perhaps this wasn’t the book I’d been waiting for, with evil zombie children trying to eat people… and maybe this was something different and I couldn’t remember because it’d been a full year since I read Ashes and, and, and… I kept reading.  And guess what?  It is the book I’ve been waiting for, which I knew in the back of my brain somewhere, but became flustered when it didn’t pick up where I wanted it to.  But it eventually got back to the cliff hanger I was dying to resolve, and this story, though long, long, long, is exactly what I wanted, and it’s just as good as the first, and it leaves us, again, with a terrible cliffhanger that makes me wring my hands and scream.  Would it be as good if it did anything less?

Well, here’s a lesson I’ve been learning as I review books.  A year is much too long a wait in-between, and while I remember the main parts of all the books I read, the characters’ names and the minute details elude me, so when it comes to reading a sequel, I really must re-read at least the last chapter or two of the previous novel in order to remember (which I did do when I began to spaz out thinking I was reading the wrong book).  The other lesson I learned is that sometimes sequels don’t resolve anything.  As much as I loved this novel, and I really, really did, old questions from the first were still left unanswered, and new questions arose that… remained unanswered.  And perhaps the most obnoxious part all together, I believe, is that Alex and Tom, who were separated in the first book, still haven’t made it to each other.  But in the end, that’s okay, because there’s another book coming out (next year), and once again, I can’t wait (though I’ll do a much better job remembering that it’s the book I’m waiting for, I swear).

In this second installment of the Ashes Trilogy, Bick divides her story between Alex, Tom, and Chris as they attempt to survive the Changed (children/teens affected by the electronic pulse that killed all technology and turned them into zombies) and now a new faction of adults intent on studying all children and teens who weren’t affected… making this another great novel of teens versus adults (who I find to be ultimately evil in most aspects) and crazy people eating teens.  Through Alex’s point of view, we gain much insight into the Changed, such as their tendencies, how they communicate, and that they still have carnal desires.  And, as the plot line unfolds, we learn that Alex may not be as safe from the change as she originally thought…  Tom is running toward Alex, but at the same time, attempting to elude the adults insistent on tracking him and using him for research, and Chris is running from Rule to avoid torture and the iron hand of the elders who believe they have ultimate rule over all, including the Changed.  Together, these three stories intertwine seamlessly and provide a riveting read that was easy to follow and kept my attention from start to finish (all 500+ pages of it).  And in my opinion, it should have kept right on going!  Four stars.

Egmont USA has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on September 25, 2012.



From Goodreads: From debut author Douglas Nicholas comes a haunting story of love, murder, and sorcery. During the thirteenth century in northwest England, in one of the coldest winters in living memory, a formidable yet charming Irish healer, Molly, and the troupe she leads are driving their three wagons, hoping to cross the Pennine Mountains before the heavy snows set in. Molly, her lover Jack, granddaughter Nemain, and young apprentice Hob become aware that they are being stalked by something terrible. The refuge they seek in a monastery, then an inn, and finally a Norman castle proves to be an illusion. As danger continues to rise, it becomes clear that the creature must be faced and defeated—or else they will all surely die. It is then that Hob discovers how much more there is to his adopted family than he had realized.

An intoxicating blend of fantasy and mythology, Something Red presents an enchanting world full of mysterious and fascinating characters— shapeshifters, sorceresses, warrior monks, and knights—where no one is safe from the terrible being that lurks in the darkness. In this extraordinary, fantastical world, nothing is as it seems, and the journey for survival is as magical as it is perilous.

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This novel was really not for me.  I think it’s more for those who like Tolkien’s style of writing, very descriptive and a bit slow paced, fueling the story with few events and much journeying along dangerous mountains.  To be quite honest, I was bored throughout most of this novel, dying to get to the shape shifters and sorcerers.  While warrior monks and knights are okay, they didn’t really do anything for the story, in my opinion, aside from creating a pit stop for the main entourage as they traveled through the mountains in the bitter cold.  The synopsis makes the reader think that the novel will surround the pursuing monster, but I really didn’t feel like the characters were threatened along their epically long journey, nor was I all that interested in their trek.  There just weren’t enough events to keep me grounded as I read, and again, I felt there was way too much description.  In some cases, less is more, and while I liked the characters enough, I would have liked much less traveling and discussing of their clothes, their sex lives, and their observations and much more action.

Yes, Nicholas does have the characters continually stumble upon gruesome scenes of murder, but as they just stumbled upon it and nothing ever seemed to happen to them, I didn’t find the read all that interesting.  I need a much faster paced read, which Nicholas delivers in the end, once the evil that has been chasing our four main characters finally reveals itself. Had the novel been like the end is, fast paced, gruesome, and extremely riveting, I think I would have liked this story much, much more, but as is, I can’t say I enjoyed it all that much.  One and a half stars.

Simon & Schuster, Inc., along with Atria Books have been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on September 18, 2012.



Every Saturday I run a feature for the 99 Cent Club, and below are the eBook picks for this week that caught my eye and are (currently) ONLY 99 Cents (Both on Amazon and Barnes and Nobel–I checked). I don’t know if these are permanent prices, so please don’t shoot the messenger, and double check pricing before pressing the buy button. Enjoy!

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Endurance by Ann Aguire

When rebellion destroys the underground world in which Thimble and Stone have grown up, they take Stone’s son and try to escape the chaos. Along the way, they must evade the Freaks, beings who feed on human flesh. Leaving behind the roles of Builder and Breeder which they were assigned at birth, they wander the underground tunnels, looking for safety yet afraid to go “topside” where legend has it that the light and water will burn their skin from their bones.

Their journey takes them upward to an unimagined world of tinned food, comfortable furniture, and books. Away from their regimented society for the first time, and still facing imminent danger, Thimble and Stone acknowledge the forbidden attraction which both have denied for years.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Ember by Jessica Sorensen 

What if you knew when someone was going to die?

For seventeen-year-old Ember, life is death. With a simple touch, she knows when someone will die. It’s her curse and the reason she secludes herself from the world. The only person who knows her secret is her best friend Raven.

Then she meets Asher Morgan. He’s gorgeous, mysterious, and is the only person Ember can’t sense death from. So when he pushes into her life, she doesn’t mind.

But when unexplained deaths start to haunt her town, Ember starts questioning why she can’t sense Asher’s death and what he may be hiding.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Seranfyll by Christina Daley

For the first time in her life, Rain has a choice to make.

The thirteen-year-old slave girl lives in the country of Yoan, where slaves aren’t allowed proper names, let alone anything else. After being sold by a gambler and “bought” by a thief, she ends up purchased by an eccentric young nobleman named Lord Domrey Seranfyll…while he’s drunk. He’s so smashed that he actually buys nine other slaves with Rain and takes them to his massive manor in the countryside, which is rumored to be haunted. In fact, loads of rumors surround Lord Domrey. Like that his horse can fly. Or that he’s a devil.

But after getting even more intoxicated, Lord Domrey does something rather peculiar: He sets all ten slaves free that same day. And then he passes out. Many of the newly freed slaves leave, but Rain chooses to stay and look after the odd young lord. He freed them, so he can’t be as bad as people say, right?

But Rain’s going to learn quickly that choices have consequences, and that being “free” means much more than what she thought before.

Fans of Harry Potter and Howl’s Moving Castle will enjoy this humorous and magical tale about choices, consequences, and what it really means to be free.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Employment Interview with a Vampire by J. Bennet

And you thought your boss was cold!

At the age of 24, Deidre finds herself unemployed with few job skills and a growing pile of overdue bills. When a perky career counselor suggests an open housekeeping position, Deidre knows this could be her only chance for a decent job.

She doesn’t bother asking many questions…like what the career counselor meant when she said the employer had certain “peculiarities”.

Deidre is in for a very unpleasant surprise. Not only is her prospective boss a vampire, but he’s also cranky, adamantly prefers the telegraph over the telephone and gets dangerous when his prune juice isn’t delivered on time.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Doppelganger by Milda Harris

Citrus Leahy is having a really bad day. First she’s late to school. Then she runs into the girl who drives her nuts because she always calls her Orange instead of her name. To cap it all off, when Citrus finally makes it to class, she sees herself already inside. Wait. What? Citrus Leahy has a doppelganger! It’s probably aliens taking over the world and her life has just turned totally upside down. Goodbye, normal. Hello, paranormal! Luckily, her crush Aedan has the exact same problem!

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Nina by Kathleen S. Allen

Nina’s father has been accused of setting an explosion and killing over a hundred people. He’s on the run. But Nina knows he is innocent, now she just has to prove it.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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BloodSingers by Tamara Rose Blodgett

A sub-species of human beings…

Twenty-year old Julia Wade, a young woman tragically widowed, is in the middle of a bizarre bid between two mythical species who are vying for the unique properties she offers; her blood. The vampires need her to balance the food load of the human species and give them their coveted “Lightwalkers.” The Were wish to be moonless changers; a Rare One can make that a reality.

Julia wants to belong to herself.

Can she free herself and begin a new life?

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Iron’s Prophecy by Julie Kagawa

Meghan Chase is finally getting used to being the Iron Queen, ruler of the Iron Fey. Her life may be strange, but with former Winter prince Ash by her side at last, she wouldn’t have it any other way.

But when they travel to the Summer and Winter courts’ gathering for Elysium, the oracle from Meghan’s past returns with a dire prophecy: “What you carry will either unite the courts, or it will destroy them.”

Now Meghan faces a devastating choice that may determine the future of all fey—and her and Ash’s unborn child….

A novella from Julie Kagawa’s bestselling Iron Fey series.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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The Assassin and the Pirate Lord by Sarah J. Maas

On a remote island in a tropical sea, Celaena Sardothien, feared assassin, has come for retribution. She’s been sent by the Assassin’s Guild to collect on a debt they are owed by the Lord of the Pirates. But when Celaena learns that the agreed payment is not in money, but in slaves, her mission suddenly changes – and she will risk everything to right the wrong she’s been sent to bring about.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.

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Xenofreak Nation by Melissa Conway

Ten years in the future, bioengineered animals provide organs for human transplantation. Grafts of animal skin have replaced tattoos in popularity, which gives rise to a unique new demographic: xenofreaks. Bryn Vega’s father is head of the Pure Human Society and when she’s kidnapped by the Bestia Butcher, the most notorious of the criminal xenosurgeons, she assumes it’s payback for her father’s anti-xeno activities. Scott Harding is her taciturn jailer-called Cougar because of the claws replacing his fingers-but Scott is not who he seems. Deep under cover for the Xenofreak Intelligence Agency, he’s been given unprecedented immunity to find the Bestia Butcher’s lair and do whatever it takes to bring him to justice. When Bryn is forced to undergo a radical xenoalteration, she discovers a terrible secret: her father is using The Pure Human Society as a front for his own purposes. His willingness to sacrifice his daughter to accomplish them sends her running to Scott for protection, and into the hard-core underground subculture of the very xenofreak society she once despised.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBEL.



From Goodreads: “There are only two reasons a non-seer would see a spirit on St. Mark’s Eve,” Neeve said. “Either you’re his true love . . . or you killed him.”

It is freezing in the churchyard, even before the dead arrive.

Every year, Blue Sargent stands next to her clairvoyant mother as the soon-to-be dead walk past. Blue herself never sees them—not until this year, when a boy emerges from the dark and speaks directly to her.

His name is Gansey, and Blue soon discovers that he is a rich student at Aglionby, the local private school. Blue has a policy of staying away from Aglionby boys. Known as Raven Boys, they can only mean trouble.

But Blue is drawn to Gansey, in a way she can’t entirely explain. He has it all—family money, good looks, devoted friends—but he’s looking for much more than that. He is on a quest that has encompassed three other Raven Boys: Adam, the scholarship student who resents all the privilege around him; Ronan, the fierce soul who ranges from anger to despair; and Noah, the taciturn watcher of the four, who notices many things but says very little.

For as long as she can remember, Blue has been warned that she will cause her true love to die. She never thought this would be a problem. But now, as her life becomes caught up in the strange and sinister world of the Raven Boys, she’s not so sure anymore.

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The premise of this novel is absolutely amazing, but unfortunately, the story itself didn’t really hold my attention.  The beginning of the novel started off strong, but with the introduction of the Raven boys, I started to become confused and lose interest.  For me, Gansey was just a little too technical and too haughty, constantly looking for a lost medieval noble’s grave, overly obsessed with ley lines and mediums, and to be quite honest, I didn’t understand what he was trying to do most of the time.  Between the shifts in narration (which I usually adore, but had a hard time following in this novel) and the lack of a resolution concerning the main synopsis (Gansey being Blue’s true love or the boys she kills), I found myself unable to really immerse myself in the story.  I don’t think having so many characters helped me understand it any easier, either.  Between Blue and the four Raven boys, Blue’s mother and the three other “witches” living at her house, Gansey’s parents and teachers, and Ronan’s older brother, I just couldn’t keep up.  Too much seemed to be happening all at once, and since I had a hard time connecting it all together, I became frustrated, and I think a lot of the story was lost on me.  It’s unfortunate because my interest was again piqued when the ghost revelation was revealed, but that, again, was short lived as I became thoroughly confused again.

Seeing as this novel is getting extremely high reviews on Goodreads, it’s obvious that most readers really enjoy this story, and I am, in fact, in the minority, so I do urge you to at least try it out and see what you think because our tastes in books might be vastly different.  Unfortunately for me, I just never got to the point of really caring for any of the characters or the plotline as it unfolded.  One and a half stars.

Scholastic Press has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on September 18, 2012.



From Goodreads: Gabriel Merrick plays with fire. Literally.

Sometimes he can even control it. And sometimes he can’t. Like the fire that killed his parents.

Gabriel has always had his brothers to rely on, especially his twin, Nick. But when an arsonist starts wreaking havoc on their town, all the signs point to Gabriel. Only he’s not doing it.

More than Gabriel’s pride is at stake — this could cost him his family, maybe his life. And no one seems to hear him. Except a shy sophomore named Layne, a brainiac who dresses in turtlenecks and jeans and keeps him totally off balance. Layne understands family problems, and she understands secrets. She has a few of her own.

Gabriel can’t let her guess about his brothers, about his abilities, about the danger that’s right at his heels. But there are some risks he can’t help taking.

The fuse is lit…

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Gabe is my absolute favorite.  I thought Chris was my guy, but having now read a book focusing all on Gabe, resident bad boy with a fetish for fire and blowing things up… Chris has fallen by the wayside.  He was a little young for me, anyway.  Lol. No, but in all seriousness, Gabe has stolen the show in this second novel in the Elemental Series, and I loved every minute of it.

I believe that the Merrick boys’ temperament is really decided by their element, and since Gabe plays with fire, as you can imagine, he runs a bit hot.  Losing his head in many a situation, Gabe struggles to connect with those around him and control his anger, especially as fire constantly calls to him. What’s not to love?

While Chris, Becca, and the whole rest of the clan are a major part of the story that’s still unwinding after the climax of Storm, I loved having a new character to get to know in Layne.  She’s completely different from all the other characters and I really enjoyed her, especially as she morphed and grew into herself, as did her relationship with Gabe.  Ah, Gabe.  Of course, he lands himself in more trouble than usual in this novel, and I loved watching him come to grips with his past as the story unfolded.  I also loved watching his friends and family really be there for him, standing behind him even when they were concerned about his exploits… I definitely cried a few times while reading this book—I wouldn’t say it’s epically emotional, but some of the situations really got to me; they were so beautiful.

Kemmerer is a very gifted writer and so far, I’ve loved every single book I’ve read of hers.  She really knows how to create and flesh out characters, and her stories flow so seamlessly that they pull you in and don’t let go until the very end.  And even then, I found myself sitting there in Merrick withdrawal, wanting to read them all over again, especially as May can’t get here fast enough, and I need more!!!  Five stars.

5 stars

I received a signed ARC of this novel from the author and I also purchased it from Amazon (don’t want to ruin the signed copy!!! Gotta have one for the Kindle, too!).



From Goodreads: Being a force of nature doesn’t keep you safe.

Hunter Garrity is used to watching his back. The kids at school sense something different about him. And they’re right.

Hunter has powers that have nothing to do with how hard he can throw a punch.

Maybe that’s what Clare Kasten is picking up. She’s shy, quiet, and intense, but she’s sought him out. There’s no telling what she wants from him.

But Hunter knows enough to sense a secret when it’s close. And getting close to Clare is a danger he’s ready to face…

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Alas… Hunter.  He is one of the characters from Storm that I really enjoyed, though about halfway through the novel I was able to figured him out, partly.  Kremmerer still threw me for a loop because, while I was 99% sure about him, that 1% still crept up and bit me.  And he’s such a great character!  Vying for Becca’s attention, totally swoon worthy, but something was always off about him…

Now, if you haven’t read Storm, then you must before you pick up Fearless, as this novella would completely spoil your perceptions of Hunter (and perhaps this review will too, SPOILER ALERT DECLARED), and that would be a tragedy.  So go read Storm.  Right now.  Seriously.  It’s amazing.  Then read this (novella and review).  It’s really good too.

I love that Kemmerer continues to give her readers glimpses into her characters’ lives in-between her full-fledged novels.  First with Elemental, giving us insight into Michael, the oldest of the Merrick boys, and now with Hunter, an elemental outside the Merrick family.  Not only does it help tide the reader over while we wait on pins and needles for the next novel, but it fleshes out the characters even more, giving us added insight into their personalities, and I absolutely love it.

In this novella, which take place prior to the series’ start, we learn a lot about Hunter’s personality.  Like I said, I really liked him in Storm, and his heroism continues to shine through in Fearless, though I really wish there was even more to this novella (aka. LONGER!).  It was great to get to see how his family interacted/reacted to him, further solidifying some information we learn in Storm, and I truly enjoyed this quick glimpse into his life as the kid who gets picked on and is duped by a girl.  It really put everything I previously knew about him in proportion and I can’t wait to see what happens next for him, especially after such a rocky conclusion in Storm.  Four stars!

4 stars

I purchased this novella from Amazon.



et cetera