Books: The Cheapest Vacation You Can Buy











13425130I recently went to a book festival in my area and I met Lea Nolan, the author of Conjure.  Prior to the event, I’d never heard of this novel, but as Nolan read an excerpt and gave us some backgroud information about her book, I became highly enraptured and had to have it!  So, I picked up a signed copy for myself, and of course, a signed copy for a giveaway, as well.  Good luck!

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From Goodreads: Be careful what you search for…

Emma Guthrie expects this summer to be like any other in the South Carolina Lowcountry–hot and steamy with plenty of beach time alongside her best friend and secret crush, Cooper Beaumont, and Emma’s ever-present twin brother, Jack. But then a mysterious eighteenth-century message in a bottle surfaces, revealing a hidden pirate bounty. Lured by the adventure, the trio discovers the treasure and unwittingly unleashes an ancient Gullah curse that attacks Jack with the wicked flesh-eating Creep and promises to steal Cooper’s soul on his approaching sixteenth birthday.

When a strange girl appears, bent on revenge; demon dogs become a threat; and Jack turns into a walking skeleton; Emma has no choice but to learn hoodoo magic to undo the hex, all before summer—and her friends–are lost forever.

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To enter my giveaway, you must:

-Be 13 years or older (or have parent/guardian permission)

-Agree to HONESTLY REVIEW the novel via a blog (if you have one), or Goodreads, or any other media format you use for book reviews

-Fill in the mandatory question on rafflecopter (extra entries optional)

Click here to go to the Rafflecopter entry form!

This contest is open to USA ENTRANTS ONLY (sorry) and will end at 12:01am EST on May 23nd. Please only enter once. The winner will be announced later on May 23nd, and will receive email notification! Please read my giveaway policy and leave me a comment!



2940011495786_p0_v2_s260x420From Goodreads: King Henry Price is fourteen, he loves everything he’s not supposed to and hates everything he’s supposed to. One day after his usual hour of detention he comes home to find an enigmatic woman named Ceinwyn Dale sitting in his kitchen, telling his parents lies about a special reform school. What she tells King Henry is different, she tells him he’s a mancer, a Geomancer to be exact, that he’s special, one in million maybe. She sure ain’t a fairy giant and King Henry sure as hell ain’t Harry Potter, but why not? Got to be better than the life he’s already got.

King Henry Price is twenty-two, a recent graduate of the Asylum as an Artificer. With the special ability to create lasting items of the Mancy, he’s spurned the Artificer’s Guild and struck out on his own to found an Artificer workshop looking to do things his way. One night, a vampire baroness claiming she’s named Anne Boleyn walks into his shop, telling King Henry he’s going to help her, and she’s not taking ‘no’ for an answer. King Henry is pretty sure the whole name thing is just a joke, but only pretty sure…

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Unfortunately, this novel is just not for me.  I was intrigued by the premise, and I really enjoyed the back and forth nature of the narration, where the narrator tells readers about his life at 14 and then switches to his current life, but the language and humor isn’t my style.

King Henry Price has had a difficult life, and I understand the angst and hatred he carries, but his obsession with sex, the middle finger, and words for certain body parts, both male and female, put me off of the story as a whole. Now, I do think the novel is very well written, and the characterization is also done very well.  In fact, King Henry is probably more true to life than I care to admit, but he also isn’t someone I’d surround myself with in real life, so listening to him cuss and make lude and crude comments throughout was much more than I could handle. Maybe I should have realized this might be the case based on the title, but I really wasn’t thinking “foul mouth” as in lude and crude to the level that this novel takes it.  A little bit of this is always tolerable and can even be funny, but King Henry just takes it over the top and it was too much for me, and I’m sorry to say that I, personally, can only give it one and a half star.

1.5  stars

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



11698723From Goodreads: Reychel thought she was finally free. She was wrong. Everyone saw her gift of prophecy as a blessing, but her gift is uncontrollable. No one alive can teach her to manipulate her unique gift and the answers she needs lie buried within a madman’s journals. She’s thrust in the midst of a brewing war and the only uniting factor for her people is their belief in the Prophet.

Will Reychel learn to control her gift or will she be forced to deliver a false prophecy that could lead her people into a violent war?

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This second novel in the Cloud Prophet Trilogy is much more refined and solid than the first, Anathema.  Jensen has slowed the story down, and the development of the characters takes the forefront, allowing the story to flow together more seamlessly while providing readers with an easily understandable story that is highly enjoyable.

Reychel, a former slave, is now free and in a rival nation, hiding her abilities until the “right time.”  Believed to be the Cloud Prophet, though not entirely sure herself, Reychel must figure out the truth about the prophecy before she claims her heritage.  The main problem is, nothing makes sense, and her abilities seem to be waning, thus, she may be forced to lie to the nation in order to set things in motion, and save those she holds dear, but Reychel struggles with the thought that her lies could end in bloodshed. 

What I really enjoyed about this novel is the mystery surrounding the original Cloud Prophet.  Jensen sheds light on his life and his truths as the story progresses, and as it turns out, nothing is as it seems. I was surprised on many an occasion as I read, and I really enjoyed learning the truth alongside Reychel, even though that truth isn’t necessarily a good one.  And, of course, the mystery behind the betrayals within the castle also spurred me on as I read!  Add in the magical aspects, such as invisible threads leading to portals (which I thought was ingenious), and this story really turns out to be a great read!  This world Jensen has created holds many a mystery, and the magical realm really helped pull me into the story and connect to the characters, who are now very well fleshed out and much more likable.

I really enjoyed seeing Reychel grow into herself in this novel, especially with all the threats that crop up around her.  In the first novel, she seems a bit more sporadic and easily led astray, whereas in this novel she has a much better head on her shoulders, taking matters into her own hands and selflessly attempting to save the world.  She’s a great young heroine, and I’m excited to see where the rest of the story leads in the final novel of the trilogy.  So, if you’ve read the first novel and weren’t sure whether to pick up the next installment for whatever reason, I believe you should definitely give it a go.  The series definitely gets better!  Four stars.

4 stars



16112803From Goodreads: Abe put an end to the threat of the Devourer once and for all.

So why does the world keep getting more dangerous?

Unsettling events pile up one after another: animal corpses appear on the front porch each night, an abandoned graveyard in the North Carolina woods is now home to something unnatural, and wooden men with eerily familiar faces are spotted lurking in the nearby town of Halfway.

Abe finds himself caught in a game set in motion long before the rise of mankind. A game in which even the Devourer was merely a pawn and where losing means the death of every man, woman, and child on earth.

Standing with him are the survivors of Belmont: Anne, Chuck, Leon, and his old squadmate, Henry “The Professor” Monroe. Together they intend to hold the line against the encroaching darkness and prove that there are still things in the light to be feared.

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This second book in the Emergent Earth series is just as good as the first, but this time, the adversary is even more cunning and malevolent.  I have to admit, when I first read the synopsis and saw there would be “wooden men” lurking throughout the story, I was a bit perplexed and couldn’t fathom how the book would play out or how it would even seem feasible.  But, Langolis is an absolutely amazing author and he presents these wooden men in the most sinister of ways, explaining their origin in full, and whisking readers off on a adventure that won’t soon be forgotten.

Abe is back, along with the remaining crew that helped take down the Devourer in the last novel, Bad Radio, and I have to say, I really adore him.  He’s a phenomenal character, fully fleshed out and real, combating a host of supernatural entities set on destroying the world.  Langlois’ vivid imagination, extreme character building, and fast-paced prose will keep readers glued to the pages as the story unfolds, and I absolutely can’t wait for more!  Four stars.   

4 stars

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



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 (On Amazon, with a few on Barnes and Noble as well). 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! (If you could help give these authors some love by spreading the word, that would be epic.)

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16125672Burned Bridges by Marguerite Ashton

Newly sober and dating the man of her dreams, Traci Collins is ready to enjoy the good life, until her new best friend, Olivia Durning, confides a dreadful secret far worse than Traci could imagine.

Sealed by a shared bond, and unaware there is more to the secret than what she was told, Collins feels honor bound to protect her friend when a confrontation between Olivia and her childhood tormentor turns deadly.

A mysterious text forces Traci to question Olivia’s actions and re-examine her loyalties. When the answers to Traci’s questions endanger a life she treasures more than her own, she must decide if friendship has a limit. For a bridge once burnt severs ties forever…

Find it on Amazon.

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personsPersons Missing or Dead by Cliff Black

“Persons Missing or Dead” is a sequel to “Face in The Creek,” and continues the adventures of Daniel Corbin, his daughter, Natasha, and Daniel’s friend, Deputy Sheriff Ezzy Miller.

G Daniel Corbin buys an old Airstream camp trailer to replace one lost in a fire. All he wants is a camp trailer, but what he gets is a search for the trailer’s missing previous owner, which leads to a murder investigation and to more unsolved and even unknown murders over the past eighteen years. Even Daniel’s new lady friend, Shelly, has her troubles with the law.

Find it on Amazon.

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2940015872507_p0_v1_s260x420The Face of Evil by Monisha Pujari

A taut psychological tale, The Face of Evil details the complex, caroming, and escalating relationship between two brothers, one of whom is confronted with the strong possibility of his sibling’s depravity. Expertly crafted, the book will unfailingly capture your attention and bring you to unresolved, deeper questions regarding the nature and eradication of evil. The Face of Evil is an ever-appropriate read, given society’s constant grappling with incomprehensible acts of evil, and our collective inability to rationally process them. A quick, powerful, and commanding read, this book will push you to probe your own feelings with regards to what constitutes evil, and what one does to combat it. Don’t pass this book up – the combination of crisp language, a philosophical edge, and a quickly-paced, dynamic, and gripping narrative makes for an edge-of-your-seat read.

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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2940016580807_p0_v1_s260x420Come and Talk to Me by June Kramin

Regina was determined to keep the secrets from her past buried. She had her reasons for keeping her distance from men, but Donovan refused to play by her rules.
Giving into her heart and marrying him, Regina finally began to feel whole again. When an injury ultimately claims his life, she moves a few states away to a small town where she couldn’t be reminded of him everywhere she turned.

Trying to live her life in isolation, she wasn’t prepared for what the humble cabin next door would bring her. Reggie is not sure she will be able to overcome the horrible twist fate has thrown her way.

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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2940044413191_p0_v1_s260x420The Love Game by Emma Hart

His challenge? Make her fall in love with him.
Her challenge? Play the player.
Until life changes the rules of the game.

New Adult Contemporary Romance.

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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9781455550821_p0_v3_s260x420If You Stay by Courtney Cole

Twenty-four-year-old Pax Tate is an asshole. Seriously. He’s a tattooed, rock-hard bad boy with a tough attitude to match. His mother died when Pax was seven, leaving a hole in his heart filled with an intense guilt that he doesn’t understand. What he does know is that he and his dad were left alone, and they have never been close. Now, he uses drugs and women to cope with the black void in his soul. He pretends that the emptiness isn’t there and this has always worked . . . until he meets Mila.

Sweet, beautiful Mila Hill is the fresh air that Pax has never known in his life. He doesn’t know how to not hurt her, but he quickly realizes that he’d better figure it out because he needs her to breathe. When the memories of his mother’s death resurface to haunt Pax, Mila is there to save him from his overwhelming guilt. Mila restores his broken heart, even as she evokes his powerful, sexual desires. Now for Pax to keep Mila, he needs to work on his issuesand stop being an asshole. But is that enough to make her stay?

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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GirlGirl Over the Edge by Amy Kinzer

It started with a bad decision and ended with an obsession.

Seventeen-year-old best friends Beckett Smith and Chloe Baker can’t shake their reputations after taking risqué photos at a college party. The pictures are distributed to the North Lake High School student body sending the best friends to the bottom rung of the social ladder right before senior year. When Beckett and Chloe return to school, they find themselves ill prepared for the harassment and bullying that follows.

Beckett has an easier time being reaccepted than Chloe. And she’ll do anything to be part of her old clique and to get a second chance at a relationship with her ex-boyfriend, star running back Kale Fenton. But Beckett’s attempts at a normal senior year are at odds with Chloe’s increasingly anti-social behavior. As Chloe’s life spirals out of control she becomes obsessed with the Aurora Bridge in Seattle, also known as Suicide Bridge, a place known for the jumpers. And after everyone’s abandoned Chloe, Beckett is the only person who can prevent Chloe from making the jump.

Girl Over the Edge is a novel about best friends, damaged relationships, and the help that sometimes comes from unexpected places.

Find it on Amazon.

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13209262Unlovable by Choice Jane Doe

Thirteen year old Jessica thinks she just hit the jackpot. The most popular boy in her middle-school, Eric, just became her boyfriend and now she’s finally in the ‘it’ crowd. At first the relationship is like a dream come true but it quickly turns into a nightmare when Eric becomes abusive, controlling and sexually violates Jessica. Unable to understand how someone could say I love you and the next minute treats you like someone they hate, Jessica gets sucked into the abusive behavior and loses herself completely to it.

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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2940044378872_p0_v1_s260x420The Curse of Europa by Brian Kayser

Is there life on Europa? You are invited to accompany a crew of eight astronauts on their mission to the Jupiter ice-moon named Europa. Their mission is relatively straight forward, look for evidence of life in a vast ocean, which is trapped beneath a thick blanket of ice. There is one problem though… “The Curse!”

Find it on Amazon and Barnes and Noble.

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9780615213644_p0_v1_s260x420Mars 185 by David Czaplicki

They were looking for life… and only found death! The first independent settlement is being constructed on Mars. This monumental task is suffering numerous delays and unexplained accidents, finally compelling Calprex, the contractor building Roman, to send Brett Roberts, an ex-employee, to the planet to conduct a thorough investigation. His preliminary findings only deepen the mysteries with the secrets he ultimately uncovers changing mankind forever.

Find it on Amazon.

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If you could help give these authors some love by spreading the word, that would be epic.



16675229From Goodreads: All Schools are the same and Spencer Pendleton expects no less from Greenfield Middle. But Spencer hasn’t met them yet-the Tribe, a group of runaway students who secretly own the school. They live off cafeteria food and wield weapons made out of everyday school supplies. Strangely, no one seems to know they exist, except for Spencer. And the group wants him to join their ranks. All he has to do is pass the initiations…and leave his mother and life behind. Can Spencer go through with it? Better yet, what will happen if he says no?

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This novel started out really funny and I highly enjoyed it, and then it took on a bit of a darker tone, fleshing out the theme of bullying, going from a more humorous tone to a didactic one.  It’s a great middle school novel just the same, though, and I love just how imaginative the author, Clay McLeod Chapman, really is.  As an adult, I never expect to laugh out loud when reading middle grade novels, but this one really had me snickering for a while there, and it drew me right in to the story.  Thus, I was already hooked when the novel went from funny to sinister.

As a kid, I always had this fantasy of living between the walls of places, spying on society, and being self-sufficient, and in a way, this novel really spoke to me on that level.  The Tribe does just this, but their fun antics quickly turn threatening and the more I read, the more I realized just how silly my childhood dream really was.  Mix in some hilarity with the outlandish, and it becomes clear fairly quickly that this really isn’t the lifestyle for me, or anyone, for that matter.  These kids have forsaken society, a place that shunned them and treated them badly, full of cliques and judgment, only to cut themselves off from reality in the sense that they eventually become what they hate.  As I said before, it’s quite edifying with lots of teachable moments, and a great overall theme against bullying.  Overall, I highly recommend it to MG readers, and I think many YA readers would enjoy it as well, especially with the intrigue surrounding the Tribe.  Four stars.

4 stars

Disney Book Group has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its official release on May 7, 2013.



9781423161622_p0_v2_s260x420From Goodreads: Riley, a teen orphan boy living in Victorian London, has had the misfortune of being apprenticed to Albert Garrick, an illusionist who has fallen on difficult times and now uses his unique conjuring skills to gain access to victims’ dwellings. On one such escapade, Garrick brings his reluctant apprentice along and urges him to commit his first killing. Riley is saved from having to commit the grisly act when the intended victim turns out to be a scientist from the future, part of the FBI’s Witness Anonymous Relocation Program (WARP) Riley is unwittingly transported via wormhole to modern day London, followed closely by Garrick.

In modern London, Riley is helped by Chevron Savano, a seventeen-year-old FBI agent sent to London as punishment after a disastrous undercover, anti-terrorist operation in Los Angeles. Together Riley and Chevie must evade Garrick, who has been fundamentally altered by his trip through the wormhole. Garrick is now not only evil, but he also possesses all of the scientist’s knowledge. He is determined to track Riley down and use the timekey in Chevie’s possession to make his way back to Victorian London where he can literally change the world.

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This was an interesting time-travel novel that I think MG and YA readers will like, especially if they’re a fan of Eoin Colfer.  I’ve only read one other of Colfer’s books, and while I liked it, and I liked this novel as well, I didn’t fall in love with either.  The characterization is good, and the events are quick and energetic, but the novel itself just never pulled me in to the point where I just couldn’t get enough.

I liked getting to know Riley, but as a character, he almost seemed like a pushover.  And I didn’t care for Chevron much.  She’s a bit of a typical teenage female trying to save face, believing she’s tougher and better than those around her, and her lack of humility and ability to stop and listen to those around her really rubbed me the wrong way.  She does redeem herself throughout the novel, so I did get to the point where I liked her enough, but I never really got beyond that point, and a lack of connections between myself and the characters always makes it difficult for me to fall in love with the novel.

Colfer definitely has a knack for imaginative literature, though, and the situations these young teens find themselves in were interesting and piqued my interest enough to keep me turning the pages, and enough for me to be curious concerning the next installment.  I really liked the idea of a wormhole and sending important witnesses back in time to keep them safe, and the revelation of who Riley really is was great.  I didn’t see it coming, but it made perfect sense and I really enjoyed how Colfer made it all come together.  Overall, this is a pretty good read.  Three stars.

3 stars

Disney Book Group has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its official release on May 7, 2013.



It’s that time again! For no other reason than that I like giveaways… we’re onto the TWENTY-FOURTH Recently Released Giveaway Goodness Giveaway!

RRGG May

Many of these novels have recently released. I’ve included my reviews below to help you pick the novel you’d like to win. And honestly, there should be something here for everyone!

Interested? Of course you are! I’m offering ONE lucky winner one of these novels:

This is an INTERNATIONAL giveaway from the book depository, but you need to make sure they send to your country before entering–check here.

To enter you must:

-Be 13 years or older (or have parent/guardian permission)

-Fill in the mandatory question on rafflecopter (extra entries optional)

Click here to go to the Rafflecopter entry form!

This contest is open internationally and will end at 12:01am EST on June 1st. The winner will be announced later on June 1st, and will receive email notification! Please read my giveaway policy and leave me a comment!



Desktop55My Recently Released Giveaway Goodness #23–April–has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that the winner has been chosen via Rafflecopter.

And the winner is…

Carl Scott

Book of Choice:

The Dinner by Herman Koch

A tweet has already gone out to the winner, and an email will go out later this evening! If I don’t hear from Carl 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 a SIGNED Hardcover of Every Day: Ends May 9

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Win a Recently Released Book of Your Choice: (Ends June 1)

RRGG May



Endure_COVER_finalLargeEndure (The Protector, #4) by M.R. Merrick

Cover by Parajunkee Design

Available June 5th

YA Urban Fantasy

Final book in The Protector Series

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Goodreads:

Synopsis:

Wrapped in darkness and woven with defeat, every action Chase has taken since being exiled from the Circle has been met with a devastating response. Now he’s been burdened with a quest that seems impossible, and he needs to evolve into something more—something greater than he ever thought he could be.

Armed with magic, friendship, and an unbreakable will, Chase must build an army and find a weapon capable of defeating the ultimate evil. But he knows that nothing great comes without sacrifice. Blessed by the very gods who have abandoned him and carrying the fate of all the worlds on his shoulders, Chase Williams is about find out just how much one man can endure.

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 Book 1 – Exiled is FREE!

Amazon | B&N | Kobo

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MRMerrick2-221x300About the author:

M.R. Merrick is a Canadian writer, and author of Exiled, the first installment in The Protector Series. 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.

M.R. Merrick | Goodreads | Twitter | Facebook



15819003The giveaway for an ebook of Breathless, by Brigid Kemmerer, has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that the winners have been chosen via Rafflecopter.

And the winners are…

  1. Lacey T

  2. Roxanne Davies McCleary

  3. Liene Def

  4. Kristin Aragon

  5. Shelly Hammond

Tweets have been sent to the winners, with emails to follow this evening.  If I don’t hear from the winners within 48 hours, I will select a new winner(s) using Rafflecopter.

Thanks to everyone who participated, and congratulations to the winners… but don’t despair if you didn’t win this round!

Enter to win my other great giveaways:

Win a Recently Released Book of Your Choice: (Ends May 1)

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15819003From Goodreads: Too many secrets. Not enough time.

Nick Merrick is supposed to be the level-headed one. The peacemaker. Since it’s just him and his three hotheaded brothers against the world, that’s a survival tactic.

But now he’s got problems even his brothers can’t help him survive.

His so-called girlfriend, Quinn, is going quick as mercury from daring to crazy. Meanwhile, Quinn’s dancer friend Adam is throwing Nick off balance, forcing him to recognize a truth he’d rather shove back into the dark.

He can feel it—-the atmosphere is sizzling. Danger is on the way. But whatever happens next, Nick is starting to find out that sometimes nothing you do can keep the peace.

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Imagine growing up a fully fledged elemental, having complete control of one of the four elements: earth, water, fire, or air. It sounds phenomenal, doesn’t it? Except, your full control really isn’t much control at all, and when you call on your element, and sometimes even when you don’t, scary things tend to happen.  And that’s why the lesser elementals want you and your entire family dead.  You’re too dangerous.

Brigid Kemmerer’s latest novella, Breathless, gives readers something we’ve been yearning for for a long time, a glimpse into the heart and soul of Nick Merrick.  Up until this point, Nick has been somewhat of a background character, and though readers know a lot about him, we’ve never really experienced the depths of his heart and soul like we have his other brothers in the series.  But that all changes with Breathless.  In this novella, Kemmerer focuses her attention on Nick, air elemental extraordinaire.  And as we really get to know him, Kemmerer shows us his confusion and his true want and need for acceptance, not just from his friends, but also from his family.  Nick has always felt a little bit different than his twin Gabriel when it comes to girls, but until now, he’s repressed those thoughts and feelings.  Yet, while the allure of college calls to him, so does his yearning for a relationship, except for Nick, his preference would cause multiple problems with his family, or so he believes, and so he struggles to accept himself.

This is a very well written novella that I highly enjoyed, especially as we get to see how calm, cool, and collected Nick is anything but as he struggles to figure out just who he is and who he wants to be.  Believing himself to be the exception of the “norm” in his family, Nick’s thoughts and feelings will have readers rooting for him the whole way, and I cannot wait to see how everything pans out for Nick as he takes his next steps towards the relationship he truly desires. Four stars.

4 starsKensington Books has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novella, via Netgalley, prior to its release tomorrow, April 30, 2013.



13597706From Goodreads: Ben and Maggie have met, fallen in love, and died together countless times. Over the course of two pivotal days—both the best and worst of their lives—they struggle again and again to resist the pull of fate and the force of time itself. With each failure, they return to the beginning of their end, a wild road trip that brings them to the scene of their own murders and into the hands of the man destined to kill them.

As time circles back on itself, events become more deeply ingrained, more inescapable for the two kids trapped inside the loop. The closer they come to breaking out, the tighter fate’s clutches seem to grip them. They devise a desperate plan to break free and survive the days ahead, but what if Ben and Maggie’s only shot at not dying is surviving apart?

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Unfortunately, I really didn’t care for this novel.  The characters are a little too immature and their decisions made me constantly wonder just how much common sense they really had.  Ben and Maggie are in a time loop—in other words, they live the same day repeatedly until they are able to figure out a way through without dying.  However, the whole loop concept left me with a few questions.  For instance, how does one get in a loop?  Does everyone experience loops?  If this was Maggie’s fifth loop, having survived four others, then how did she get out of her other loops, and why not employ the same techniques?  Why do the children’s memories of the loop keep changing?  And, perhaps my biggest question and frustration was this: why didn’t the children go to any adults?

Now, while I understand that adults never would have believed them about a loop, they would look into a man chasing them down with a gun.  And, it’d be pretty hard to end up murdered in a storage room if the children were in police custody, or even at home with their parents.  I do understand the idea of fate pushing the children towards their destiny, but I found some of their solutions to be a little too underdeveloped and repetitious, as it were.

Maggie and Ben met in the same place every day, and though Ben initially doesn’t remember, Maggie does, and she drags him off on an adventure every time (instead of going to an adult—insert parent voice here).  Thus, by the second repetition of these events, I began to lose interest.  It’s a very hard thing to do, writing the same scenes repeatedly and making it seem fresh, and unfortunately, this novel falls into the rut of repetitiveness, in my opinion.   Although there were new obstacles thrown in the children’s way, they kept making the same trivial mistakes that ultimately cost them their lives and, though I’m now being repetitive myself, it really irked me that they never thought to pull in the help of an adult.  Perhaps I’m just over thinking it all, but in the end, this novel just wasn’t for me.  Two stars.

2 stars

Disney Hyperion was extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on April 30, 2013.



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 (On Amazon, with a few on Barnes and Noble as well). 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! (If you could help give these authors some love by spreading the word, that would be epic.)

Go No Sen by Jacques Antoine

Emily Kane studies martial arts, but she never thought she’d have to use them… until her home is destroyed in a night time attack. Her family goes into hiding and wants her to assume a new identity on the run with them. But she refuses to become a fugitive and live a lie, as she puts it. She is determined to keep her name, to salvage the life she knows and above all to stay in school, even if she has to do it all on her own. But this may mean fighting off the people who attacked her home, and who may still be hunting for her. Along the way she learns she is not who she thinks she is, and her family is not who she thinks they are either. Who exactly is Emily Kane? Why is she so good at fighting? To solve the mystery of her identity she turns to her high school classmates. She makes new friends when she had always been a loner. But then she has to protect them from the danger swirling darkly around her. The only solution may be to draw her enemies out into the open and confront them face to face.

Find it at BARNES AND NOBLE.

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A Haunting at Hensley Hall by Merabeth James

Pragmatic Charlie Ravynne never imagined she would find herself falling in love with a house of all things, let alone the deserted, dilapidated Victorian mansion she found on the Internet. Her sister, Meg, on the other hand, was not nearly as enamored. In fact, she seriously doubted her sister’s sanity, when she suggested they enter the contest that offered Hensley Hall as the prize.

But Meg’s curiosity was piqued when she learned the previous owners had died in the old mansion. As a self- styled “ghost magnet” whose interest in the paranormal dated back to her childhood, she became more and more intrigued with the notion that HensleyHall was haunted. If they won the contest, she could have her very own ghosts! Though, admittedly, she wasn’t all that sure what she’d do with them!

Soon the contest had hooked them both, though neither really believed they had any chance of winning. They had never won anything in their entire lives (except in grade school when they’d won first prize for the most unusual Halloween costume due to a freak accident neither ever wanted to mention again!)and so, they were both amazed when a registered letter brought the good news. They were now the new owners of Hensley Hall and its occupants.

Arriving at their new home, they were horrified by the monstrous mansion that seemed to be waiting for them with malevolent intent. Imprinted by old tragedies…hates…forbidden loves, and a bloated evil that fed on fear, the derelict mansion they had hoped would be their dream house some day, quickly, turned into their worst nightmare as, bit by bit, they uncovered the dark history surrounding its past.

Almost forty years ago, three schoolgirls had been brutally raped then murdered by the Stoneman, whose signature was a black river rock sealed in the mouth of each victim. Then seventeen year old, Breanna Hensley, vanished and was never seen again, except when night falls and her restless spirit roamed the halls searching for? Is it Devon, her twin brother, and the ‘person of interest’ the police were about to arrest when he fled the scene and died in a train wreck?

As Meg and Charlie Ravynne struggle to solve the mystery surrounding Breanna’s disappearance and find peace for her restless spirit, they begin to believe that Devon is not the one buried in the family mausoleum…that the murderer and rapist the police were looking for is very much alive and somewhere close. Perhaps way too close! Could he be the darkly, beguiling, Zack Mallory, the mysterious boarder who rents the tower room? Or is he, Adrian Adams, their youngest sister, Rayne’s, new love interest? There are more than skeletons rattling around in the cupboards at Hensley Hall…far more…in this paranormal thriller laced with romance.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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A Secret in the Attic by Samantha Jillian Bayarr

Amy has two best friends. Emma is her best friend and rival. Jonathon is her childhood sweetheart.

But then she meets Jake, and everything changes.

When Amy finds an ancient book in an old steamer trunk in her grandmother’s attic, her world is turned upside down. The book contains an old gypsy curse; a curse so powerful, it’s called The Curse of the Widowed Bride. Amy’s secrets could destroy all of them, but what’s a few secrets between friends?

Only one can break the curse. Which one will walk down the aisle?

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Haunted Lake by Lauralynn Elliott

After losing her best friend in a fire, Rachel Madison rents a cabin on Misty Lake, trying to work through her guilt and sorrow. While there, she meets two men, one good looking and friendly and the other handsome, but scarred. Soon, she realizes that the peace she was trying to find here wasn’t to be, as supernatural events begin to take place. The strange encounters with ghosts at the lake cause Rachel to form a strong bond of friendship with the two men. The three friends move closer and closer to danger as the events unfold to a possible tragic result.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Lily’s Ghosts by Laura Ruby

Lily is Furious.

She can’t believe she has to move again after her mom’s break-up with the latest loser boyfriend. Now they’re broke and they’ll have to spend the winter in Uncle Wes’s creepy house in Cape May, New Jersey.

And the place is crawling with ghosts.

From the spiteful teenager who mistakes Lily for her high school nemesis to the restless spirit of her eccentric Uncle Max, Lily is haunted by a host of unhappy phantoms. But why are they here? And what do they want?

With the help of some mysterious clues, Lily and an intriguing new friend, local boy Vaz, uncover a sinister plot. If they don’t foil the villainous plan in time, they may end up doing some haunting of their own.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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When the Dead Speak by S.D. Tooley

The body of a U.S. soldier reported AWOL during the Korean War is found encased in a concrete pillar. What secret did he carry to his grave and why is someone hell-bent on keeping that secret buried?  Sgt Samantha Casey has an advantage over other cops. The dead speak to her, tell her secrets about their life and death. But sometimes what she learns can get her killed.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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The Mill River Recluse by Darcie Chan

Disfigured by the blow of an abusive husband, and suffering her entire life with severe social anxiety disorder, the widow Mary McAllister spends almost sixty years secluded in a white marble mansion overlooking the town of Mill River, Vermont. Her links to the outside world are few: the mail, the media, an elderly priest with a guilty habit of pilfering spoons, and a bedroom window with a view of the town below.

Most longtime residents of Mill River consider the marble house and its occupant peculiar, though insignificant, fixtures. An arsonist, a covetous nurse, and the endearing village idiot are among the few who have ever seen Mary. Newcomers to Mill River–a police officer and his daughter and a new fourth grade teacher–are also curious about the reclusive old woman. But only Father Michael O’Brien knows Mary and the secret she keeps–one that, once revealed, will change all of their lives forever. The Mill River Recluse is a story of triumph over tragedy, one that reminds us of the value of friendship and the ability of love to come from the most unexpected of places.

Find it at AMAZON.

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Death by Honeymoon by Jaden Skye

On the rugged, wild, eastern shore of Barbados, Cindy and Clint are enjoying their dream honeymoon, when paradise quickly turns into hell. Cindy finds her newly beloved taken away from her, drowned in a freak accident in the ocean. The local police are quick to declare it an accident, to insist that he was caught in a sudden riptide. But Cindy, left all alone, is not convinced.

Cindy must return to her and Clint’s now-empty home in New York and face her in-laws, who never wanted Clint to marry her, and who did everything to make her engagement and wedding hell. She must deal with all of these womens’ backbiting, gossiping and unspoken accusations, while she tries to get a handle on her own grief and to get clear on what really happened to Clint.

Cindy is mailed an anonymous photo of a woman she had never met, addressed to Clint. As she tries to unravel the mysterious package, as she begins to dig deeper into Clint's emails and files, she realizes how many secrets Clint had been hiding from his past. She realizes that she didn't really know the man she loved. And she also realizes that Clint was murdered.

She digs deeper, into the depths of Clint's massive corporation, DGB oil, and as she starts to unearth information she shouldn't, she goes too far. Soon her own life is in peril. On the run, she realizes that the only way to get answers, and to save her own life, is to return to where it all began: Barbados. As she heads into the dark underside of the island, into the heart of the local villages, she is shocked to discover what really happened to her husband on their honeymoon.

But by then, it may already be too late.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Hot Tea: A Novel by Shelia Horgan

Cara O’Flynn finds herself in an unusual position. She’s quit her job and can afford to take a few weeks to find a new career. Plus her roommate has run off and left her with an empty room to fill. If she can just accomplish those two tasks before her mother finds out she has no income and no one to help pay the bills, she’s in good shape.

The problem – Cara didn’t plan for three careers in as many days, nor did she anticipate the new guys that dropped in her lap. And then there’s her sister Teagan, while always helpful and funny, she can be a bit annoying at times.

When you’re Irish, all things (good and bad) come in threes. It’s inevitable. Cara should have remembered not to forget that part.

Cara and Teagan bring laughter, intelligence, and family tradition to every experience they encounter.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

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Fudge-Laced Felonies by Cynthia Hickey

While transplanting the rosebush her church’s handsome greeter, Ethan Banning, inadvertently killed, Summer and Ethan discover a hidden stash of diamonds, a rusty can full of cash, and a bloody-gardening glove. This discovery sets Summer and her candy-making aunt on a search for a killer.

As Summer gets closer to the truth-not only of the theft but of her true feelings for Ethan-the diamond thief hatches a plan to hush the feisty sleuth.

Find it at AMAZON or BARNES AND NOBLE.

If you could help give these authors some love by spreading the word, that would be epic.



16065465From Goodreads: Moving to a new high school sucks. Especially a rich-kid private school. With uniforms. But nothing is worse than finding out the first girl you meet is dead. And a klepto.

No one can see or hear Kimberlee except Jeff, so–in hopes of bringing an end to the snarkiest haunting in history–he agrees to help her complete her “unfinished business.” But when the enmity between Kimberlee and Jeff’s new crush, Sera, manages to continue posthumously, Jeff wonders if he’s made the right choice.

Clash meets sass in this uproarious modern-day retelling of Baroness Orczy’s The Scarlet Pimpernel.

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Perhaps the most interesting part of this entire story is just how much of a modern-day retelling of The Scarlet Pimpernel it really is.  From the scarlet badge to the daring feats, complete with betrayal and blackmail, Aprillynn Pike has it all, including humor and a happy ending.  I was pleasantly surprised as I read, especially as I was a bit skeptical when I first picked up the novel.  Not skeptical that it would be good, this isn’t my first Pike novel, but that it would really stay true to the classic it attempts to portray.  And it did.

Jeff is possibly the most unlucky person in the world, especially when it comes to being the only person able to see Kimberlee, a girl synonymous with pompous (and a few other choice words I won’t write).  She grated on my nerves throughout much of this story, which is unfortunate, but I think she was meant to be that type of character.  It didn’t make me feel badly for her, though, on any occasions, not even in the end, so that part may have missed the mark with me, but overall, the story itself is very good, and Kimberlee was characterized quite well, even if I didn’t care for her.

There is a little bit of instant love, to my initial chagrin, but Pike then goes back and fleshes it out quite nicely, putting substance behind the relationship between Sera and Jeff.  I really liked her, and as I learned about her past alongside Jeff, I just wanted to reach through the pages and hug her.  Yes, Kimberlee was a terrible person in life.  And learning about Sera’s past made me dislike Kimberlee all the more…

I can’t imagine a cave full of stolen goods, or being asked to redistribute them all, but Pike does a great job making the story funny and interesting, if a bit too far-fetched for my liking.  While it is a ghost story and I do love the paranormal, some of the feats Jeff and his peers complete, or attempt to complete, didn’t seem real enough to me.  I also never went to a large school (though I teach in one) and we never attempted to do crazy stunts like Jeff and his group do, so while it may seem far-fetched to me, it might not to another reader.

Overall, I thought this was a nice light read, and it ended on a happy note, which was nice, especially since I’ve read some darker novels as of light, and it was definitely time for something lighter.  Three stars.   

3 stars

I recieved an ARC of this novel from the publisher while attending NCTE in November 2012.



13581990From Goodreads: Allison Sekemoto has vowed to rescue her creator, Kanin, who is being held hostage and tortured by the psychotic vampire Sarren. The call of blood leads her back to the beginning—New Covington and the Fringe, and a vampire prince who wants her dead yet may become her wary ally.

Even as Allie faces shocking revelations and heartbreak like she’s never known, a new strain of the Red Lung virus that decimated humanity is rising to threaten human and vampire alike.

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This second novel in the series follows Allie as she attempts to find and rescue her creator, Kanin, who we met in the first novel, The Immortal Rules. Unfortunately, the beginning dawdled a bit too long for me, starting off quite slowly as Allie spends much time traveling and trying to find her maker, eternally a step behind him.  It wasn’t until she joins ranks with some unlikely allies that the novel really took off for me; with the addition of these characters who we know from the previous novel, it became very interesting indeed, especially because, as is true with many of Kagawa novels, not all is what it seems.

I especially enjoyed the fact that the Red Lung virus is back, procured by Sarren himself, and this time it is dangerous enough that it may wipe out both human and vampire alike.  Thus, humans and vampire must come together to survive, and this unity was extremely interesting.  Though we see this same type of unity in the prequel, it is quite different in this novel as the acceptance level of human and vampire is viewed differently.  Kagawa also takes readers into the heart of the city, New Covington, where it all began for Allie, providing an epic glimpse into the world of the vampire prince as Allie and her companions come ever closer to finding Kanin.

Allie is, of course, a great character—strong willed and spurred on to do what is right.  I highly enjoyed her, and I really liked the other characters as well, though I won’t tell you their names because I was surprised by their appearance in the novel and I’d like to keep it that way for potential readers, as well.  What I will say is that these characters were very well fleshed out and presented on an ever-deeper level than readers saw in the first novel.  And, though we may love to hate one or two of them, and we may just love the other, the stakes are even higher and, like I said before, nothing is necessarily what it seems.  I was shocked, dismayed, and ecstatic throughout the novel as these characters waltzed into the story once again.

I loved the extreme suspense at the end of the novel, as well.  I was definitely on pins and needles, and the very end had me wanting to chuck my book across the room (but I didn’t, because it’s a Kindle…).  Of course, I’m now dying to read the next installment, which won’t be out for another whole year.  But, readers, know this: this second novel in The Blood of Eden series is definitely worth it if you can get through the beginning.  Three and a half stars.

3.5 stars

Harlequin has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on April 30.



16245510From Goodreads: This bestseller was the basis for the blockbuster film Die Hard starring Bruce Willis.

High atop a Los Angeles skyscraper, an office Christmas party turns into a deadly cage-match between a lone New York City cop and a gang of international terrorists. Every action fan knows it could only be the explosive big-screen blockbuster Die Hard. But before Bruce Willis blew away audiences as unstoppable hero John McClane, author Roderick Thorp knocked out thriller readers with the bestseller that started it all.

A dozen heavily armed terrorists have taken hostages, issued demands, and promised bloodshed all according to plan. But they haven’t counted on a death-defying, one-man cavalry with no shoes, no backup, and no intention of going down easily. As hot-headed cops swarm outside, and cold-blooded killers wield machine guns and rocket launchers inside, the stage is set for the ultimate showdown between anti-hero and uber-villains. Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good fight to the death. Ho ho ho!

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I absolutely loved Die Hard, so I jumped at the chance to read Nothing Lasts Forever when it hit Netgalley.  Prior to that, I honestly didn’t know it was a book… shame on me.  But that’s okay because now I’ve remedied this and read the novel.  However, I actually liked the movie better.

What?  Yep, I said it.  I know it’s rare, but on occasion, I actually find a movie I like more so than the book it stemmed from, like the movie Stand By Me versus Stephen King’s The Body.  The movie was just so much more poignant… but I digress.  In terms of Die Hard versus Nothing Lasts Forever, here’s my reason for liking the movie more:  spatially and directionally, I have no compass, no imagination, so when it comes to all of Thorpe’s details about the building design and where John McClane is in terms of the building, and there’s a lot, I just couldn’t follow it.  Basically, it came down to this: I knew John was in an elevator shaft, or on the roof, or climbing through a vent somewhere, but in relation to the building, I had no idea where he was and I couldn’t imagine it—blueprints don’t do it for me.  They never have.  Thorp also described the landscapes and rooms in order to help readers visualize the barriers between John and the terrorists, but I had some difficulty visualizing that as well, mainly because I already had no idea where John was located.

Was the book good?  Of course?  It draws the reader in and there is a lot of mystery, suspense, and bloodshed.  But, for the spatially and directionally challenged, like me, it’s even more thrilling to see it come to heads on the big screen, since I can actually visualize everything.  Overall, I’d say those who have a keen sense of direction and can easily follow building blueprints will absolutely adore this novel.  If you’re like me, though, you might prefer the movie, but I’d definitely say that you have to read the book as well.  Thorp is indeed a terrific writer with an amazing plotline, and it’s not his fault that I have no spatial imagination.  Try it and see.  Three stars.

3 starsGraymalkin Media has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read a copy of this novel, via Netgalley, in exchange for an honest review.



14800331From Goodreads: Megan Bright and Jackson Dawes are two teenagers who first meet each other on the hospital ward where they are both being treated for cancer. Megan is scared and worried about her illness, but Jackson seems to be an old hand, having been on the ward for ages. And everybody loves Jackson! He is a whirlwind of life and energy, warmth and sparkle. Megan will need to borrow some of Jackson’s extraordinary optimism to face her and Jackson’s future. A moving story of first love and a remarkably powerful debut novel.

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The title and synopsis of this novel basically foreshadows the dismal events that will transpire within the pages, but even so, it’s still a poignant look at the fragility of life, refusing to leave readers unscathed.  This is the story of cancer.  Of beating the odds.  Of watching good friends succumb. It’s a story of joy, heartbreak, and remembrance. Though relatively short, it packs a punch that will definitely leave readers reaching for the tissue box, even though much of the prose is clipped and choppy, jumping from scene to scene as Megan attempts to come to terms with her illness as it reshapes her entire life.

Though I personally was not a huge fan of the main character, and she wasn’t as developed as I’d have liked her to be, she is very true to life.  She’s also experiencing something completely raw, terrible, and emotional, and her attitude and disdain for those around her are more so a reflex and yearning for normalcy than a true rendition of her persona.  Hence, I hold nothing against her as she comes into herself, embracing her diagnosis and coming to terms with the very real possibility that she may die.  This is a novel that truly tugs at the heart strings and, I imagine, will be a very difficult read for parents, as it deals with kids and teens in a cancer ward.  Although choppy and uneven at times, my emotions were rubbed quite raw near the end, and I found it was indeed a great anthem for Jackson Dawes.  Three stars.

3 stars

Bloomsbury USA Children’s Books has been extremely gracious in allowing me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on April 30.



17669135From Goodreads: A man walks into the Texas Capitol. Shots ring out. A young aide lies dead. The killer’s excuse? He was under a spell.

Sounds like a job for Hunter Gamble, right?

Wrong. After his disastrous “victory” in the trial of Samuel Pollard, Hunter has turned his back on defending oppressed vampires, mages, and zombies. Having accepted a position at his father’s giant litigation firm, he’s trying the glamorous cases, working in a corner office, and making a six-figure salary–and hating every minute of it.

As Hunter plots his exit strategy, he finds himself inexorably drawn to the case of the Capitol shooter, who is an old friend from law school. As he works to clear his friend, Hunter discovers that there is much more at stake in this case than whether one man was under a spell. Before long, he finds himself pulled into a magical conspiracy dating back to before the Unveiling–and with a singularly cold-blooded wizard at its heart.

The clock is ticking. The search for answers is on. And the author of Atticus for the Undead invites you to come along for the thrill ride–and get the magic back.

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In this sequel to Atticus for the Undead, Abramowitz presents readers with another interesting court case, further developing the character of Hunter Gamble as he faces his most formidable opponent yet.  I really enjoyed the deeper development of Hunter in this novel, especially as he must come to terms with the realization that not all he believes is necessarily true.  With his desire to help a colleague in need and the revelations about his own father, Hunter must tread lightly in order to save much more than his client, and as he really came into himself, I enjoyed him more and more.  Hunter is a very complex character, struggling to do what is right, but learning that not all is what it seems, and nothing is as cut and dry as he’d like it to be.  Once again, he’s under fire as he takes on a huge case, going against his ideals that all Arcanes are human and have rights, muddying the water as he attempts to root out evil and save as many lives as possible.  But. is this evil really evil?

Whereas we learned much about witches and zombies in the first novel, Abramowitz focuses on two new groups in this sequel: magicians and the fae.  It was really fun learning about them, especially the fae as I’ve always enjoyed reading about their courts and changelings, an idea Abramowitz uses to his advantage as he throws many twists at his characters. Perhaps the biggest twist came right at the end, throwing the reader for a loop much like the prequel did, and I must say, this is a very good read.  We have both old and new characters alike in this novel, and as the story unfolds, it’s hard not to be enthralled with the court proceedings, especially as everything comes to light.

If you’ve enjoyed Grisham novels with their fast-paced legal drama, and you enjoy the paranormal at all, then I highly suggest you pick up this novel. Three and a half stars.

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

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17342698From Goodreads: The next chapter in the struggle for equal rights begins!

Hunter Gamble is an idealistic young attorney in a very special area of the practice: arcane defense. Funded by enigmatic billionaire Charles McClain and aided by shy-but-energetic research attorney Kirsten Harper, he’s making the world a better place–one vampire, zombie, or werewolf client at a time. After all, they deserve their day in court too, right?

When a young zombie walks into Hunter’s office accused of murder (by brain-eating), Hunter’s idealism is tested as never before as he struggles to secure the man’s freedom. To do so, he must square off against a savvy and ambitious district attorney, contend with a judge who is deeply biased against arcanes, and stand up to a human-supremacist group which will stop at nothing–not even Hunter’s own death–to see his client convicted.

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This was a very interesting novel idea that takes a hypothetical look at the justice system and what might happen should an unveiling ever take place (aka. the fabled zombies, werewolves, vampires, witches, and the like admit their existence and turn out to be more than a figment of our imaginations).  In a world where the human is at the top of the world, Abramowitz brings forth our imagined adversaries and creates a world in which these Arcanes want to co-exist within the human spectrum.  But, as is true every time humanity comes upon a group or race it’s never seen or dealt with before, bigotry and hate crimes abound.

Hunter Gamble has had enough.  A lawyer for the Arcane defense, Hunter takes on the case of the “little people,” fighting back against injustice one witch, zombie, and vampire at a time.  When the case of a lifetime falls into his lap, Hunter struggles to do all in his power to bring justice to a Zombie who, for all intensive purposes, doesn’t want to hurt anyone, let alone his best friend in the world, who’s brain he’s been accused of eating.

I really liked Hunter.  He’s a bit strange, but he stands up for what he believes in, and I enjoyed getting to know him as a character.  Of course, I hated the bigots he was up against, and it was very interesting to see how Abramowitz’s story unfolded through the justice process.

While I’d say the beginning was a little bit slow, once the accusation against Sam took hold, I found myself really getting into the trial, though I could have done without the rather lengthy background information Abramowitz uses to set up the story.  In terms of the trial, I really liked the arguments presented by both defense and prosecutor, and Abramowitz did a great job fleshing out the case, especially with the arguments and red flags thrown around during the proceedings.  I did a have a few questions, though, such as why Sam, the Zombie accused of murder, was allowed to wander around free during his trial, especially when the jury was out deliberating.  That, along with the somewhat hurried ending had me scratching me head, made me take a step back from the awesomeness of the trial, but overall, it was a delightful, short read.  Three stars.

3 stars

I recieved a cpy of this novel from the author in exchange for an honest review.



et cetera