Books: The Cheapest Vacation You Can Buy











From Goodreads: Xandir has been exiled to earth until the end of time. But when his cherub trainee disappears, Xandir makes a deal with rogue angels and giants that could restore life to the mortal woman he loves and end his assignment as a destroying angel in exchange for helping them bring about the end of the world and all of mankind.

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Cedar Fort has been extremely gracious to allow me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release on July 14, 2011, and so I’m extremely sorry to say that I just didn’t care for this story.  The idea of giants was a new concept for me in terms of angel themed novels, and while I really enjoyed the idea, the characters and situations within the novel didn’t spark my interest as much as I had anticipated.  While Young is a talented writer, this story itself didn’t pull me in and I struggled to connect with the many characters introduced within the novel.  This lack of connection, in and of itself, made the reading of this novel quite difficult for me and, to be honest, I thought about setting the book aside because I wasn’t too interested.  Though I did finish the novel, I am saddened to say that my feelings towards it did not change as the story unfolded, and although the action within the novel was non-stop, I think it all was a little too much for me.  One star. 



From Goodreads:  Krista Miller feels like she has lived her entire life in a glass box with her every emotion on display. She can’t help feeling like a defect as her sensitivities have made her socially inept and without any real friends; the one exception being the boy that visits her each night in her dreams.

Krista’s emotions are put to the test when a move to California triggers a devastating change to her fantasy world. The nightly comfort that the boy provides has now become a recurring nightmare as he is taken from her by an unseen force.

Struggling to appear normal, Krista enrolls in a new school and finds it to be nothing like she thought. Her new life is sent spiraling out of control from a strange connection with a boy, Mark, who claims to know all her secrets.

As Krista begins to explore the emotions that Mark evokes in her, secrets about their mysterious past and their predestined purpose threatens to separate them just when they have found each other.

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This was a phenomenal novel!  I am always extremely impressed when authors come up with a completely original idea and make it come alive on the page, and King is a superb writer that does just that.  Krista and Mark are beautiful characters that I want to meet in person—I want them to be real; their caring personalities and wonderful abilities make me wish we could be friends.  King has written their dispositions and life events so convincingly that I truly feel like I know them.

This novel was a rollercoaster ride for me; the sensations I felt as I read were extremely real: anger, gratitude, sadness, anxiety… I felt it all and, on more than one occasion, I actually yelled at the characters, as if they could hear me… I could see it all in my mind’s eye, and that, for me, is what really makes a book phenomenal.  I felt like I became one with Krista, feeling her pain, her confusion, her anger, and it amazes me that I felt so strongly throughout the entire novel, especially as one of Krista’s abilities is her strong sense of emotions—I really connected with her on that point as I read, which is a testament to King’s sheer writing capabilities.  I admit that some of the characters really upset me, such as Matt, and even Krista’s mother, and on more than one occasion I wanted to punch them in the face (professional, I know).  But, King has created these characters to evoke this exact emotion, and as King was able to induce these feeling in me, as the reader, I know that she is destined for great things as an author!

The suspense in the novel kept me on edge as I read, and King creates some wonderfully romantic moments, as well as some nail biting moments in which my anxiety for the characters was overwhelming.  I absolutely cannot wait for the sequel, which is actually set to come out soon (YES!).  I am truly in love with this novel and highly suggest that everyone reads it, sooner rather than later.  You will not be disappointed!  Five stars.



From Goodreads: There are nineteen provinces in the Land held aloft by nineteen pillars. Above the earth there is sky, and nobody knows what goes below except the Nineteen Dragons.

That is all you need to know, but that is not all there is to be known.

The Device has been stolen and the godlike Dragons have been rendered mortal. Someone is murdering them one by one, and each death brings the world closer to its end. Unless the Device is somehow restored to its deceased owner, the Dragons are doomed to destruction—and the human world will go with them.

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Reine has created a wonderful Steampunk novella that will keep readers glued to the pages throughout the suspense and mystery.  Although somewhat confusing in the beginning, as Reine jumps directly into the story, the important characters and relationships within the novel are quickly identified as the Device is stolen and the Dragons must race against time to find the person behind the theft.  If they should fail, they will all die, taking the human world with them.  This was an intriguing concept and I really enjoyed watching the novella unfold.  Reine has created wonderful characters, in the form of Dragons, perfectly matching their dispositions with their human form.  Although short, this novella packs a lot of information into the story, leaving the reader with much to think about even after the conclusion.  While completely different from Reine’s debut novel, Six Moon Summer, this novella is a great read and I highly recommend it!  Four stars!  

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

 

 



The contest for Zombies Don’t Cry has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that our winner has been chosen using Random.org.
 
And the winner is…
 
 
Angie
 
 
An email has been sent out to the winner. If I don’t hear from him/her within 48 hours, I will select a new winner using Random.org. 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:
 

Two winners will win one of the novels in the Haanta Series ENDS 7/14

Recently Released Giveaway Goodness #2 July ENDS 7/31

 

 
 
Win the Original Artwork from Zachary Black and the Doorways to Endra ENDS 7/16
 
 

 

 
Three winners will be chosen: Open Internationally ENDS 7/20
 


From Goodreads: Is the perfect murder the one you can’t forget or the one you can’t remember? Dr. Jennifer White, a brilliant former surgeon in the early grips of Alzheimer’s, is suspected of murdering her best friend, Amanda. Amanda’s body was found brutally disfigured — with four of her fingers cut off in a precise, surgical manner. As the police pursue their investigation and Jennifer searches her own mind for fractured clues to Amanda’s death, a portrait emerges of a complex relationship between two uncompromising, unsentimental women, lifelong friends who were at times each other’s most formidable adversaries.

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Grove/Atlantic, Inc. has been extremely gracious to allow me to read a copy of this novel, via Netgalley, which released on July 5th, and I’m sorry to say that I didn’t care for this novel.  Told through the first person narrative of Dr. Jennifer White, the reader is given a firsthand glimpse of  the rapid deterioration that dementia has on the mind.  While anything other than the first person narrative would have left much to be desired within the novel, the narrative itself is extremely heartbreaking and, at times, difficult to follow.  I have never met anyone with dementia, but LaPlante has created an all too real account of what it’s like inside the mind of someone suffering from this disease as they rapidly go from one thought to the next, only to lose the previous one.  

While there is much suspense and mystery surrounding the death of Jennifer’s friend Amanda, I did find the novel overly repetitive at times, which only makes sense since Jennifer is constantly relearning the same information.  However, repetition of events, especially sad ones, isn’t really my forte.  As I like more upbeat, happy novels, this was somewhat of a downer for me, as the treatment of Jennifer by her family, along with her own lapse of memories, creates a depressing tone and left me feeling dejected in the end, especially as the deterioration of Jennifer’s mind increased.  However, LePlante’s revelation of the murderer does make it a worthwhile read–I never saw it coming.  So, if you don’t mind a little repetition and sadness that accompanies dementia, then I recommend you read this novel.  Two and half stars.



Jenn Sommersby has been so gracious to answer some questions for me concerning her wonderful novel Sleight: Book One of the AVRA-K, her writing process, and some information about what we can expect from the rest of the series.  So, without further ado, I give you Jenn Sommersby:

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I love your debut novel, Sleight.  I was captivated from the very first page.  What led you to write it? 

Thanks, Shana. I love you for saying such nice things about my book. In 2007 I’d written a short story for a workshop through the Writers Studio. My fellow workshoppers read a very different piece than what Sleight is today, and the overwhelming feedback was that my main character (then named Frankie) was “too old for her age,” which made sense. Frankie was only 13 in that story. I sort of abandoned it for a while, a long while, until I was having a convo with a young magician friend of mine. He was at the house doing a birthday party for my son, and during a break, we got to talking about the history of magic, how it used to be a healing art and not a hocus-pocus thing. Then the wheels in my head started to grind, and I threw myself into researching magic and witchcraft dating back to the earliest days of recorded history. Once I discovered the word avrakedavra was actually an ancient healing spell, the story began to fall into place. And I had a vehicle for Frankie, who eventually morphed into 17-year-old Gemma.

What were your inspirations for Sleight, if any, and what made you pick the circus as the setting for your novel?

In terms of tangible inspiration, if there is such a thing, it was my daughter’s best friend. I had been farting around writing stuff I’d lose interest in and not finish, until my daughter’s best friend Alysha finished her first novel two weeks before her fifteenth birthday. I’d spent so much time studying about writing, and practicing and talking about writing without actually producing anything I could show people (other than the nonfiction stuff I’d done), I knew it was time to sh*t or get off the pot. So I did.

I was trying to find a venue that hadn’t been done in YA, at least not recently or that I was aware of, something that was enough different from what was out there as to make it saleable. The circus is one of those things that is rather romantic in theory, because few of us ever see the behind-the-scenes—the difficult living conditions, the back-breaking working environment, the stress of continuous performances. And smaller traveling circuses have all but gone the way of the dodo. It’s an important part of history that sadly, for the most part, has not survived the inflexible economic realities of the last twenty-five years or so. The circus is all about the business of show, of making people smile and forget their lives for an hour or two. Look at the crazy success of Cirque du Soleil, and it is an organization that, although it has fixed venues, also travels about.

As the short story seed for Sleight was written in ’07, it was before I’d heard of the HBO miniseries Carnivale; I only heard about Water for Elephants after my short story was done. There. In one sentence, I’ve quieted the naysayers who say I was looking to capitalize on WFE success. So…short question, long answer. I just liked the circus. Who hasn’t dreamed about running away with one?

I loved the characters (especially Henry), the twists and turns, the suspense, the shades (the dead)… What do you hope readers take away from your awesome novel?

Well, you are very generous to call it awesome in the first place. Hmmm…what I’d want people to take away… I want them to feel like they’ve made some new friends in my characters. I want them to feel connected to Gemma and Henry, and even Ash, so that they find themselves wanting to know more about what is to come for these poor souls. I want readers to feel as though they haven’t wasted their time but instead have just witnessed a grand adventure that is still unfolding. Oh—and because it needs to be said—I did not copy JK Rowling with the word avrakedavra. I haven’t read Harry Potter especially for that reason; I did not want to be accused of lifting anything from her stories. It’s important for readers to understand that Sleight and the AVRA-K series deal with magic from its historical roots of healing and ritual practice, and not from the magic wand/poof-it’s-a-bunny evolution. The word avrakedavra is very, very old (dates back to Mesopotamia, and is either Aramaic or Hebrew, depending on your source), and was used as a healing spell. Even Rowling addressed this in an interview, that she came across the word avrakedavra and modified it to suit her needs (the avada kedavra death curse)—it is precisely the opposite meaning of its original incarnation.

What is the writing process like for you? Do you have a special place that you like to write, or any special rituals that you go through before/during the writing process?

The writing process…it’s a love/hate thing, like anything else that’s worth doing. Sometimes it rocks and makes me feel euphoric, high as a kite; other times, I rot in a vat of despair and wonder if the new WalMart near my house is still hiring. I have concentration issues, so I need NO INTERNET and total quiet when I’m writing, although soundtracks and certain playlists I’ve put together can really move me along, as well—plus I end up making copious notes about research points for when I do get back to the ’puter. I do my best work in the car. Alone. At night, away from my house and my kids (one of them refuses to go to bed at a decent hour and another still gets up 32 times a night), parked in the lot at my favorite coffee shop. Oh, and with a pen and paper. I don’t take my laptop because I don’t want to get robbed, plus writing the first draft by hand means the second draft happens when I transfer paper to screen. THAT makes me giddy as I see the changes happening. Also, when I’m away from the house writing, I have to stay awake, or else a cop will knock on my window with his flashlight and scare me so bad, I might pee, or a bad guy will try to break into my car, or at the very least, bug me for spare change. The constant need to be vigilant about my surroundings helps keep me awake. Also helps that I’m remarkably paranoid…

Why did you choose YA literature as a starting point?  Did you always want to write for this age group, or did it just happen?

Never saw myself writing YA. It sort of just happened. I tend to write very dark fiction—along the lines of Chuck Palahniuk and even some of Flannery O’Connor’s work. I don’t like happy endings, and I don’t like it when everyone gets what they want. For a while, my work was based on my need to shock people. Plus, a lot of my characters were too much like me, which was super boring. After a while, dwelling in this endless sea of unhappiness can get very depressing and tiresome. I needed something different, something fresh to focus on. When the discussion about the ancient history of magic happened, it was like breathing in after a long time under water. It was exactly what I needed to get excited about writing again.

Sleight has hovered in the Top 20 on Amazon’s Top Rated lists for YA/Children’s Lit (#17 in Love/Romance at last check). Do you have any advice for other aspiring authors in terms of self-publishing and spreading the word about their writing?

Write a good story. Do your best work. Don’t rush it—this is not a race. And when you think it’s done, rewrite it again. Save your pennies and hire an editor. Please. Find someone to do a line edit, someone who can give you feedback on what is and isn’t working, both in terms of detail and on a more global, big-picture scale. And by all means, get a decent proofreader to look it over before hitting “publish.” That is one thing self-pub/indies just cannot get past—the errors. If you think readers don’t care, that your story will be so amazing that throngs of readers will look beyond your silly typos, you’re dead wrong. Just recently, I saw a comment on the Kindle Facebook page written by a reader who said she didn’t like buying the self-published books because they were usually crappy and filled with errors. Do you want that to be YOUR book? I didn’t think so.

Lastly, make friends with the book bloggers. They’re the lifeline between the writers and readers. If you are good to them—sincere and not nice only for the time that they are available to service you—they will be good to you in return. Like Shana! I’ve made some fantastic friends through the blogging world.

Do you have a playlist in mind for your novel? If so, what music would you recommend a reader listen to while reading?

I actually included a playlist at the end of Sleight. It includes some of my favorites—Imogen Heap, Mumford & Sons, Metric, Regina Spektor, Muse—but I’m big into classical music and, of course, movie soundtracks. Hans Zimmer, John Debney, Howard Shore, James Newton Howard… I’m sort of lame when it comes to discovering music, so I rely heavily on my music-head husband and friends to send me new bands and good movie scores. I’m building the playlist right now for Stratagem and am hoping to get some new music from little-known artists on it. The music just has to speak to me, and to the scene. It has to relate somehow to the vibe I’m trying to create—that’s why soundtracks are so amazing. I am in awe of composers and musicians. In awe. Talk about talent…

Do you have a favorite author or novel that you recommend your fans read? What are you reading right now?

I am always reading a whack of books. I have Delirium on the go, as well as The Maze Runner. I get a few pages through The Bourne Identity now and again, simply because the action scenes are really well done. When I want to giggle, I read Janet Evanovich; when I want romance, I read Marian Keyes; when I want excellent fantasy, I read Terry Brooks; when I want killer thriller/crime drama, I read Mark Billingham. I’m a huge fan of the young Hannah Moskowitz (Break, Invincible Summer)—she writes WAY beyond her years and experience. A few favorites lately include Trevor Shane’s Children of Paranoia (a thriller) and Blake Crouch’s Run, if you’re into horror. Oh, and people have to read The Gargoyle, by Andrew Davidson. Phenomenal book. I’m a genre hopper, i.e., I read a ton of different things. I don’t read exclusively from YA (although I’ve read most of the heavy hitters) because it gets tedious, and I crave a different set of words when I’m reading for leisure. I’m a huge Chuck Palahniuk fan. I have a non-YA WIP I’ve been kicking words into over the last few years, very much inspired by Palahniuk’s work. Dark, not for the weak at heart. It’s delicious. (Remember: I love villains.)

How you do feel about eReaders? Do you think they enhance or detract from the reading experience? What’s your personal preference?

How could I not like ereaders, given that I published for Kindle? I was very resistant to them at first, writing smug Facebook and blog posts about how dumb they were and how an electronic screen will never feel as good in my hands as a book and how my paper book will never run out of batteries (which is still totally true). And yet, I have joined the dark side. I have a Kobo and a Kindle, both gifts from loving family members (Sleight is loaded onto both). There is something fantastic about finding a book you want and clicking “buy now.” When it is wirelessly downloaded onto your device and you are cozied up with your blankie, a cup of coffee, and your favorite cat, reading within mere minutes, it is strangely seductive. There has been a lot of buzz about how ereaders will end print books (or as some call, “dead tree books”), but I still go to the bookstore on date night. I still spend hours fondling spines and reading blurbs. And almost always, I walk out having paid my $22.95+ (books in Canada are expensive!), just so I can have the feel of a hardback book in my hands.

You’re currently working on the second book in the series, Stratagem.  What can fans expect from this second installment in the series?

Carnage. Lots and lots of carnage. Stratagem is a lot busier than Sleight. The action has been ramped up as Gemma is on the run across foreign territory. I was worried at first that people would find the amount of travel unbelievable, but after watching shows like The Amazing Race, anything is possible. When I was a kid, Around the World in Eighty Days was one of my favorite stories—if Phileas Fogg can do it without the help of private jets, then Gemma can hit four countries in five days, no sweat.

Stratagem doesn’t have the set-up that Sleight did, for obvious reasons. We know the main players now; we know their individual challenges and dirty secrets. But there are more secrets to be revealed, and more malfeasance. And then there’s always the issue of what Lucian will do to make things more interesting—well, he and his minions. Oh, how I love that man…

There is more magic, which is actually more witchcraft-like than anything, and more sleight-of-being (when someone isn’t necessarily who you think they are). As much as I tried to keep the essence of Sleight as firmly planted in reality as possible (beyond the obvious fantastical elements), Stratagem relies more heavily on fantasy than Sleight does. But it’s all groundwork for the third book, which will lean more toward a dystopian atmosphere. Maybe…it all depends on Lucian and what he decides to do in the next little while. He’s in charge. I’m just his lowly secretary.

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Thank you SO much Jenn!! I absolutely LOVE Sleight and CANNOT wait for Stratagem–it sounds so wonderful!

This Giveaway is now CLOSED.

Winners:

EBook: Amanda

Print Books: 1. Savanna Ucinski    2. Tee


From Goodreads: When twenty-year-old police recruit Kiera Hudson is posted to the remote town of The Ragged Cove, her life is changed forever. Investigating a series of horrific murders, grave desecrations and missing persons, with her unique ability of ‘seeing’, Kiera soon realizes her life is in danger.

But when Kiera falls in love with Police officer Luke Bishop, not only is her mind and her heart opened to a terrifying new world, she comes to suspect that Luke might be involved in the killings. In a race against time to unearth the truth, Kiera must discover the identity of who or what is behind the gruesome deaths on the ‘Vampire Shift’.

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O’Rourke has done it again, creating an intriguing masterpiece, completely original and captivating.  This vampire novel is not like anything I’ve ever read before, and O’Rourke’s combination of police knowledge and vampire lore makes for a riveting new series starring Kiera Hudson, a young aspiring policewoman.  Complete with suspense, mystery, and intrigue, Vampire Shift takes the reader on a journey into the depths of The Ragged Cove, a place where many have ventured, but few have returned. 

I love that Kiera is a strong female lead, possessing the gift of sight where so many others miss vital clues.  An asset to any police force, Kiera comes on the scene in The Ragged Cove only to be met with disdain by the current police force.  The fact that Kiera does not crumple and stays true to herself, trusting her instincts, makes her an outstanding, strong character that readers will quickly come to love.

O’Rourke weaves together a story of horror and romance in this first book of the series, and I cannot wait for the sequel to release.  I highly recommend this novel to all readers, both young and old alike.  Five stars to this magnificent novel. 

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

 

Check out the book trailer to further whet your appetite for this amazing novel:

Check out O’Rourke’s other novels:

Black Hill Farm

Black Hill Farm: Andy’s Diary

Zachary Black and the Doorways to Endra 



From Goodreads: Sweeping from post–WWII rural Romania to the cosmopolitan Budapest of 1990, Christina Shea’s Smuggled is the story of Eva Farkas, who loses her identity, quite literally, as a young child, when she is smuggled in a flour sack across the Hungarian border to escape the Nazis.

When five-year-old Eva is trafficked from Hungary to Romania at the end of the war, she arrives in the fictional border town of Crisu, a pocket of relative safety, where she is given the name Anca Balaj by her aunt and uncle, and instructed never to speak another word of Hungarian again. “Eva is dead,” she is told. As the years pass, Anca proves an unquenchable spirit, full of passion and imagination, with a lust for life even when a backdrop of communist oppression threatens to derail her at every turn. Time is layered in this quest for self, culminating in the end of the Iron Curtain and Anca’s reclaiming of the name her mother gave her. When she returns to Hungary in 1990, the country is changing as fast as the price of bread, and Eva meets Martin, an American teacher who rents the apartment opposite hers and cultivates a flock of pigeons on his balcony. As Eva and Martin’s cross-cultural relationship deepens through their endeavor to rescue the boy downstairs from his abusive mother, Eva’s lifelong search for family and identity comes full circle.
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Grove/Atlantic, Inc. has been extremely gracious to allow me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release today, and I am very sorry to say that I didn’t like this book.  The writing style and the storyline just is not for me.  The premise for the novel peaked my interest, but overall I found that the pacing of the story wasn’t to my liking.  In my opinion, the novel has a tendency to gloss over events I deem important, while prolonging the events that are more miniscule.  I also am not a fan of explicit sex scenes, and while I wouldn’t classify the scenes in this novel as “explicit,” they do happen more often than not, and I personally found that this took away from the story. 

While the tale is haunting in its portrayal of life during WWII and the aftermath, including communist oppression and the fact that Jews still had to hide their true identities for years after war had ended, I found myself struggling to connect with Eva/Anca as the story unfolded.  I think this is partially due to the pacing of the novel, and partially due to the fact that I didn’t see much development in her character.  While I think this story was an interesting look at the life of refugees, it was not what I expected and I found myself disengaged as I read.  One star.     



From Goodreads: Ruth Harris, Sherriff Ike Schwartz’s fiancée, is involved in a near fatal automobile accident. But Ike is convinced the crash was rigged. Even though he is embroiled in a close election, has no jurisdiction over the investigation, and can find no support in the usual law enforcement community, he places himself on leave goes rogue to instigate and seek the person or persons responsible for putting Ruth in a coma.

His efforts attract help from unexpected and irregular sources. Old friends in the covert community step up, covert help from his loyal staff combine to help. It is a journey which takes him first to State’s Rights organizations, then to zealots and dissident academics before it finally ends at home in Picketsville.

Along the way Charlie Garland connects with Eden Saint Claire, his father manipulates the re-election campaign, and the folks at the Crossroads Diner cheer him on.

7th in a series.

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The first time I ever saw the above synopsis, I was intrigued, and so I requested a copy through Poisoned Pen Press and Netgalley.  I then put the novel on the back burner because my TBR pile is huge and Rogue wasn’t releasing for a while, so I read other novels.  I came back to this novel not too long ago, in anticipation of Rogue’s release today, and I made a mistake in not rechecking the synopsis through Netgalley, but by relying on Amazon and Goodreads to remind me of the synopsis.  Now, before I go any further, let me state that I’ve never had the following problem before and I’m still not sure how it even happened, but I have emailed Poisoned Pen Press about this and am still awaiting their reply.

So, I looked at Goodreads as I marked the novel as “Currently Reading,” and this is the synopsis I saw:

Ike Schwartz and Ruth Harris had to delay a vacation in Las Vegas because at the last moment, Ruth was required to go to Scone Island, Maine to settle an estate. But that task is soon complicated by one, and then another suspicious death. First, a long term resident slips off a cliff. Was he pushed? Then the woman, who found the body, is, in turn, discovered on a foot path dead from an apparent heart attack, but also with a not easily explained head wound. Ruth finds herself briefly cast as a person of interest in the last death. When things seem to be slipping out of hand, Ike arrives just in time to witness the discovery of a third body—Simon Weiss. Weiss had come to the island to purchase properties with an eye to turning it into a high-end resort. His tactics and personality so alienated the residents that it is no surprise his body is found under the community pier, with a very professionally placed bullet hole in his forehead. As his plans were allegedly financed by the New York mafia, it seems obvious who ordered the hit. This brings the FBI into play, to the distress of the local police. With an array of suspects, motives, and even the island’s history to confound the investigation, Ike, with the aid of local Deputy Sheriff, Tom Stone, and the able, if quirky, assistance of Ruth, unravel these three deaths, but not without heavy costs to villains, residents, and their children. 

You’ll note that the above synopsis is not the actual synopsis for Rogue.  In fact, in all my research, I couldn’t find any book that matched the above synopsis—though I hope there is one because I really want to read it…  But anyway, the above synopsis is what I expected to be reading about.  I began the novel and yes, both Ruth and Ike were present, but there wasn’t a Scone Island, a botched trip to Las Vegas, or murders abounding.  In fact, Ruth was in the hospital in a coma, and I was confused.  I kept reading, but 20% of the way through the novel I stopped, thinking I had made a mistake somewhere along the line and was reading the wrong novel—something I thought was Rogue, but actually wasn’t.  So, I checked my Kindle and found that I was in fact reading Rogue.  Then I checked Amazon and found the exact same synopsis as the one on Goodreads, so I figured that I just hadn’t read far enough into the novel to get to the Scone Island section.  I read a little further, then thought to double check Barnes and Nobel’s website.  Well, I was shocked to find that the real synopsis, the one all the way at the top of this page, was on Barnes and Nobel, and it matched, exactly, what I was reading about in Rogue.  Barnes and Nobel also lists a different cover for the book than what I was seeing on Netgalley, Amazon, and Goodreads. 

Completely confused, I finally went to back to Netgalley and double checked the synopsis.  Lo and behold, their synopsis matched the one on Barnes and Nobel, and though the cover is different (cover above on left), the actual synopsis is the one at the top of this page about Ruth’s car accident.  Interesting.  Of course, my curious self wanted to know what happened, and while I haven’t yet heard back from Poisoned Pen Press, I went back to Goodreads and did some digging. 

What I found: Out of the five editions on Goodreads, four had the wrong synopsis attached.  All editions had the exact same cover (cover above on right), except one, which had the title of Scone Island across the top with the same picture—I wouldn’t have noticed at all had I not been already been looking for discrepancies.  Interesting.  If you ask me, I think the cover of the lighthouse would be perfect for the Scone Island novel—but it doesn’t really fit Rogue at all.  So, I am wondering if perhaps there is a book, or will be a book coming out soon, called Scone Island that will deal with the synopsis I found on Amazon and Goodreads, and perhaps there was a mix-up concerning release dates and covers?  As I’m a librarian on Goodreads, I did change the synopsis to the correct version and I also removed the faulty cover so at least now Goodreads is correct, but there is nothing I can do for Amazon except hope that the powers that be fix it soon. 

Now, I’d love to say that the above events have no bearing on my thoughts of the novel in question, but I’d be lying if I said that.  I was so frustrated throughout the entire process above, waiting and waiting for the Scone Island portion of the novel to begin, that I ended up not liking it as much as I probably would have if I had know what I was getting into ahead of time.  To be fair, Ramsay is a wonderful writer and the novel was suspenseful and mysterious, but as it wasn’t what I expected, I think that clouded my overall intake of the novel.  Perhaps, in the future, I’ll re-read this novel and like it much more, knowing the correct synopsis.  I do plan to read more of Ramsay’s work since he is quite talented (checking the synopsis against all searches prior to beginning any of the books), and I think that, those having the correct synopsis will, in fact, enjoy this novel very much.  Sadly, I can only give it three stars.



From Goodreads: Fourteen-year-old Luce has had a tough life, but she reaches the depths of despair when she is assaulted and left on the cliffs outside of a grim, gray Alaskan fishing village. She expects to die when she tumbles into the icy waves below, but instead undergoes an astonishing transformation and becomes a mermaid. A tribe of mermaids finds Luce and welcomes her in—all of them, like her, lost girls who surrendered their humanity in the darkest moments of their lives. Luce is thrilled with her new life until she discovers the catch: the mermaids feel an uncontrollable desire to drown seafarers, using their enchanted voices to lure ships into the rocks. Luce possesses an extraordinary singing talent, which makes her important to the tribe—she may even have a shot at becoming their queen. However her struggle to retain her humanity puts her at odds with her new friends. Will Luce be pressured into committing mass murder?

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt been extremely gracious to allow me to read this novel prior to its release, but I’m sorry to say that I wasn’t drawn into the story.  It was an okay read, but I was never interested in the characters.  I didn’t really like any of the characters for that matter, and likeable, strong characters are a must for me to enjoy a novel.  Luce, the protagonist, has had a difficult life, yet she doesn’t maintain any qualities that make me really feel for her.  I know that sounds terrible, but she wasn’t really fleshed out to the point that I cared about her one way or the other, and as for the other characters, well…  I found them quite despicable.  I do understand the premise for the novel, and I understand that the mermaids became such due to their horrible treatment by some humans, but I struggled with their conclusion that all humans needed to die because of it.  I realize Porter did this to help create a rift between the mermaids and Luce as she struggles with her task of killing humans, as well as to create a social commentary of the state of humanity, but it was hard for me to stomach. 

While I think Porter is a great writer, and the words flow beautifully off the pages, the story itself is just too dark and dreary for me.  There are some aspects of the novel that literally made me ill, such as the larvae—equivalent to babies and toddlers—that have no one to look after them in their mermaid state.  I really dislike giving away spoilers, no matter how small they are, but I do think that potential readers need to know what I’m about to say, even though this spoiler really has little to no effect on the main portion of the novel.  The mermaids have a rule that they don’t help the larvae, or any very young mermaid that can’t care for herself, since it bogs down the older mermaids.  Just reading about this cruelty weighed down on my heart, but then seeing orcas come onto the scene, and the larvae not being strong or fast enough to escape them, well, that made me quite ill, especially the description of the little hand floating by in the red water.  Yes, it was a very quick scene and it makes Luce very upset as well, but I certainly wasn’t ready for so gruesome a depiction, especially to such a young innocent larvae, and I had to put the novel down for a while after that.  In all honesty, I wouldn’t have picked it up again except that I can never leave a book unfinished, so I eventually did go back and complete the novel.

The fact that this novel doesn’t dwell on anything positive was also a huge downer for me.  I can only take so much negative before a positive must ensue, and I didn’t really find that is this novel.  Neither did I find a conclusion, which makes me sad because I really don’t have any plans to continue on with this series, so I’ll never know if anything good ever happens to Luce.  Porter is a very good writer, but this story is just too dark for me.  One and a half stars.



The contest for Toonopolis has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that our three winners have been chosen using Random.org.
 
And the winners are…
 

Harpreet Singh from Books for Teens

Z (A Voracious Reader)

Heysoulsister

 
Emails have been sent out to the winners. If I don’t hear from them within 48 hours, I will select new winners using Random.org. 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:
 

U.S. ONLY: 1 Winner will be selected for a hardcopy of Zombies Don’t Cry

Two winners will win one of the novels in the Haanta Series

Recently Released Giveaway Goodness #2 July

 

 
 
Win the Original Artwork from Zachary Black and the Doorways to Endra 

 



Tim O’Rourke has been to gracious to stop by the blog to answer some questions for my in regards to his three novels AND to also offer a giveaway!!! So without further ado, I give you Tim O’Rourke!
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You’ve written three really amazing novels: Black Hill Farm (Book 1), Black Hill Farm: Andy’s Diary (Book 2), and Zachary Black and the Doorways to Endra. What led you to write these novels? What were your inspirations, if any?

With Black Hill Farm book 1, I wanted to write a paranormal romance but without vampires or werewolves. I thought this had already been done in so many other books. So I needed something else. I wanted something creepy without there being monsters. As so often in real life the monsters are people and I liked that idea. People often make better monsters as they are real. I wanted the same in Black Hill Farm book 2, but wanted to explore this idea further – so I made my monsters people in authority – those that in everyday life we should be able to trust. For me that is scarier than any vampire or werewolf. Those that exploit their positions of authority are the scariest monsters of all. So that was the premise of my idea and I built the stories around it. I also wanted to write some strong and feisty female leads, which weren’t always looking up to and seeking protection from the guy in their life. I tried to do this with Andy. I wanted her to be the strong character and have the mystery surrounding her. It’s Andy that is the fighter – the survivor – the one that takes charge and comes up with the plan to save her and Ben.

This is also true of Neanna in Zachary Black. She is as strong as Zach and this is seen during the battle at the end of the book. Again it is Neanna who saves Zach from his Uncle as they escape from the hospital. Zach’s sister Anna is also as strong as she escapes from her uncle. Willow, the female werewolf in Zach Black, is also the one chosen to go into Earth to find the league of doorways.

Zachary Black was written for my two teenage sons. They were always complaining that they didn’t really find books exciting and the draw of the PS3 was just too great. So I decided to write a real swashbuckling adventure and I tried to fit in as much adventure and action as possible. But I really got the idea while watching Monsters Inc. with my three year-old son Zachary. I just loved the idea of all those doorways leading to different rooms and each door was unique. As a teenager, I loved watching Clint Eastwood’s westerns. I couldn’t think of any books written today for young adults that were in part set in the Wild West so I wanted to incorporate some of that into my story and bring that genre back for YA. And that was really the spark of the idea that led to Zachary Black & The Doorways To Endra.

The Black Hill Farm series are psychological thrillers that blew me away, especially all the twists and turns and the interactions between Andy and her cousin Ben. Was it difficult to create all the twists and turns, keeping the reader in so much suspense?

Like Detective John Taylor in the book – I viewed the whole thing as a magic trick. Bit by bit revealing the trick along the way.  Letting the reader get closer and closer to the action and not revealing how the trick was done until the very end. I knew the ending of the story, but what was difficult was just revealing enough so as not to give too much away but give enough to keep the reader hooked.  Believe it or not one of the biggest twists in the book, I was actually going to write out, but was persuaded by my wife to keep in. I worried that the reader wouldn’t go for it – but it’s the one that seems to catch everyone out the most – so I’m glad that I kept it.

The story for me only worked if each piece of the story was revealed bit by bit and there were several layers to this.Walkerwas revealing what he already knew about the case to Ben in small slices. Ben was slowly revealing what he knew and Andy was doing the same to Ben. But as each piece came together at the end of the book – the jigsaw was complete for the reader and I hoped that as they finished the last page they looked back and could see each piece and how they’d been there all the time. I wanted the reader to say “Ah yes – I see it now. The clues were there all along!”

It was hard to manage all that – but I hope for the reader it seems seamless and they are unaware of the planning and thought that went into it. Like a good magic trick –it seems slick and simple and that’s what amazes the audience.

Black Hill Farm: Andy’s Diary (Book 2) provides the “other side” of the story in regards to Black Hill Farm (Book 1).  Why did you decide to write the second book this way?

 After finishing Book 1, I noticed that the reader had a downer on Andy and they believed that she was bad. I don’t think people are born bad – I think they get turned bad, and characters in books that are purely evil just for evil’s sake are never very interesting. They are much more fun if we get under their skin and see the situation from their point of view. Therefore I wanted to show the reasons why Andy was the way she was. Like John Walker said, she was like jelly and ice cream that somebody had poured gravy on. They had taken something that should have been nice and sweet and ruined it. I wanted to show the reader who had ruined her and why. I also wanted to show how Andy felt about the dinner party with Parker, how she felt about spending all that time locked in the room with her dad’s corpse. I knew the reader would have come to their own conclusions from book one, but I wanted to give Andy the chance to tell her side of the story.

I really enjoy the way your Black Hill Farm novels are written—as police transcripts of interviews.  Was this a difficult style of writing to master?  Did you have to do much research in regard to police transcripts in order to “get it right”?

I used this style for two reasons. Firstly, I love dialogue, it helps to get to know the characters and I like quick fire dialogue. I think it speeds things along and can be dramatic.  Secondly, it’s a style that I’m used to as I’m a police sergeant in the real world. This is something that I don’t often talk about as I don’t believe it to be relevant to my writing – but in this case I think it has some bearing.  I have used the exact same format that I use during the course of my duties, except obviously everything in BHF 1 & 2 has no bearing on any case that I’ve worked on or come across. But as I was writing a book that was made up of police interviews it was definitely a help to have that experience and knowledge to draw upon. 

Is there a specific character that you identify with in the Black Hill Farm series, or your novel Zachary Black and the Doorways to Endra?  Who/Why?

From the Black Hill Farm books, I guess that I identify mostly with the Detective John Walker. Apart from the obvious fact we are both police officers, I like the way that he is only interested in facts and won’t open his mind to the possibility that there might be something else out there. I think he is quite a sensitive guy and always wants to follow the rules. Except in his personal life he hasn’t kept to the rules and his secret is revealed at the end of the book. I like the conflict that he is struggling with.

From the Zachary Black book, I think I identify with William the most. Apart from being incredibly hairy as a teenager and having to start shaving way before any of my friends, I like the way that he is desperate to do the right thing by his family and friends although he gets this wrong. William has a strong moral compass although he sometimes goes about things the wrong way.

Are any of your characters or stories based on aspects of your own life?

My knowledge of police procedure, custody blocks, etc., are all areas that I draw upon to make my stories believable but the stories are all made up in my head. I guess if I’m to be honest, there are bits of me in John Walker although the character is older than me. The farm in is a real place although the name is different in real life. It’s a place that I used to stay on family holidays as a boy. The town is real but I changed the name to Beechers Hope.

Zachary Black and the Doorway to Endra juxtaposes two worlds that mirror each other.  As the characters move from one world to another, they automatically change clothes, and sometimes form—which was an ingenious and interesting aspect of the story.  Was it difficult to write these juxtapositions and keep the story flowing?

In many ways, writing Zachary Black was harder to write than BHF. There aren’t as many twists, but writing about supernatural characters that change form, etc., is difficult. I didn’t want them to be cartoon characters but have real feelings and emotions that the reader could identify with. That’s why I had William (Werewolf) having to make amends to his father and seek his forgiveness – we all want forgiveness at some time or another in our lives. Neanna (Vampire) wanted revenge for the murder and betrayal of her race. Tanner was not only a police officer in Earth but a peacekeeper in Endra who was in search of his lost love Meadda.  Even Fandel was haunted by the bullying he suffered at the hands of his tormentors at school and university.

Apart from having to give all these characters some emotional depth, the world of Endra had to be real as well. It wasn’t good enough to have different kinds of fruit and animals – Endra had to have some history like it had been there for centuries. That’s why there are references to things like the Battle of Nef that had happened hundreds of years before, the cathedral Knights being hundreds of years old etc. All of this I hope would make Endra seem as real as Earth.

All of this had to be revealed subtly and it was hard to do. I didn’t want to draw big signs to it as if saying to the reader “Hey look how different this place is to Earth” – if that makes sense.

Is there anything specific you hope readers take away from your novels?

I hope readers will take from Black Hill Farm the sense of passion that you feel the first time you fall in love.  How you feel that it is the most real feeling in the world. I’d also like the reader to think about how far they would go for the person they love most in their life. Would they go as far as Ben did for Andy – so he could stay with her? Would they give up their freedom like Andy did to stay and help her dad on the farm? Would they stand back and watch the cruelty that Andy’s mum went through? Even Walker who spent his life following a set of rules broke them for his wife. All of the characters in BHF lost out one way or another.

The same can be said for Zach Black – he goes on a dangerous journey to save his sister. William will go to the end of two worlds to seek his father’s forgiveness and approval, and Neanna puts her life constantly at risk to seek revenge for her race of people.

Which one of your novels was the most difficult to write?  Which one was the easiest?

Zach Black was the hardest book to write. I had to create a whole new world with creatures, different races, games, foods and everything else that went into it to make it believable. Nothing was already there – it all had to be created in my mind.

 Black Hill Farm was the easiest – despite all the twists, I had a wealth of experience to draw upon.

What’s the writing process like for you?  Do you have a special place that you like to write, or any special rituals that you go through before/during the writing process?

I write in the kitchen usually with my three year old son tugging at my arm to go and watch cartoons with him on the T.V.  It is difficult to find time to write as well as holding down a demanding job and spending time with my family. I tend to write in blocks – so when I’m working on a book, any free time that I get I spend writing. Once the book is finished, I then put the laptop away for a few weeks and concentrate solely on the family.

When I am working on a project, I go full at it. I try and write 2,500 words per sitting. This is usually when I get home from work or before I go to work – depending what my shifts are. On my days off I try and write between 5,000 to 7,500 words in one sitting.  BHF 1 took me twenty days to write. But that doesn’t include the time spent editing. I usually do three drafts. Anything more than that and I think the work loses some of its spontaneity and can go stale. There are still mistakes though and they drive me mad. It’s almost that you become blind to them because you’ve read the work too much.

I keep note books with future ideas for stories. I also do sketches of characters and sometimes I sculpt the figures so I have a three dimensional image of them. This often helps if I’m writing about a particular monster or creature. It works as a visual reference. My house is littered with note books, sketches and weird looking creatures that I’ve sculpted.

Do you have a playlist in mind for your novels?  If so, what music would you recommend a reader listen to while reading?

 BHF 1:

 “Chasing cars” Snow Patrol :: “You’re amazing” Bruno Mars :: “Somewhere over the rainbow” Israel Kamakawiwoole :: “With or without you” U2 :: “Wonderwall” Oasis :: “Patience” Take That :: “Someone like you” Adele :: “See you” Depeche Mode :: “Souvenir” OMD :: “Only You”Yazoo :: “Why” Annie Lennox :: “One love” U2

 BHF 2:

“Riders on the storm” The Doors :: “Everybody Hurts” REM :: “Fast Cars” Tracey Chapman :: “Greatest Day” Take That :: “Somewhere over the rainbow” Israel Kamakawiwoole :: “Night Swimming” REM :: “You have been loved” George Michael :: “Just can’t get enough” Depeche Mode :: “Nobody’s diary”Yazoo :: “Stay” Shakespeare’s Sister

Zachary Black & The Doorways To Endra:

“Hero’s” David Bowie: : “Sweet Dreams (Are made of this)” Eurythmics :: “Hungry Like a Wolf” Duran Duran :: “Two Tribes” Frankie Goes ToHollywood :: “Everybody wants to rule the world” Tears for fears :: “Love song for a Vampire” Annie Lennox :: “Where the streets have no name” U2

How did you decide to become a writer?  Did you always want to write, or did it just happen?  

As a kid I really struggled with reading and writing. In fact if it didn’t involve painting, drawing or making things with my hands, I wasn’t very good at it. The problem was my head was always filled with ideas and stories. I would always be telling my friends and family my stories, but I was frustrated as I couldn’t write them down.

I was in remedial for English and struggled to put even the basic of sentences together. So I would express myself through drawing and painting but it was never enough – I wanted to write my own stories!

Then one summer – I was about thirteen I think – I went with my family on holiday to that cottage as described in Black Hill Farm. It was about a 400 mile drive; so on the way we made plenty of stops at service stations along the way. My brother who was younger than me by three years was a confident reader and he was bought a book to read on the journey. I pestered for one but was told no as it would be a waste of money. In the end I got my own way and was bought one of those Fighting-Fantasy role-playing books. It was made up of nice neat sections which weren’t too long and it was more of a game than a book. Anyway, I read that book during the holiday. I then pestered for another which I read, then another and so on. Suddenly reading had clicked with me and I couldn’t stop. Once I had mastered the reading the writing followed and at long last I started to write my own stories. The freedom I felt was truly amazing. Every spare minute was spent either reading or writing my own stories and I started to improve at school. I got moved out of remedial and by the time I had left school I had passed my English exams and then went on to college to study English Literature, Drama and Art.

It was really like reading and writing had saved me. I had this wonderful English teacher and if the weather was nice she would take the class up onto the school fields and read my stories out loud for my friends to hear. I found this embarrassing but secretly enjoyed it too. I was lucky as I had a friend of the family who would spend hours going over my stories with me, helping me with my spelling and grammar etc. Once I got to college, I wrote some plays which were performed by the drama department and that was magic too. So I guess, by the age of thirteen, I knew that I wanted to spend as much of my life as possible writing about all those characters and places that I could see inside my head.

Do you have a favourite author or novel that you recommend your fans read?  What are you reading right now? 

This is a difficult question as my reading tastes are so broad. I love anything from Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to Dr Seuss. I read anything from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte to George’s Marvellous Medicine by Roal Dahl. 

It’s really hard for me to pick a favourite author but if I was pushed I would have to say Conan Doyle. I love Sherlock Holmes and think he is one of the best fictional characters ever dreamt up.  

If I had to recommend a book, give Momo by Michael Ende a go. It’s not a very well known book, but it’s amazing.

Also read Skellig by David Almond – that book is incredible.

And if you want some fun, read Horton hears a Who by Dr Seuss.

What am I reading right now?  The Lair by James Herbert.

What are you currently working on in terms of novels?  What can readers expect in the Zachary Black series? 

I’m currently working on a YA dark romance called The Rugged Shore. It’s darker than the Black Hill Farm books and is about two sixteen year olds (Samantha & Tom) who find the body of a boy in a lake and how this affects the rest of their lives. Unlike BHF, this book follows the two main characters into adulthood, up to the age of twenty-six. Again there are plenty of twists and both characters make decisions that have a profound effect on them and those around them.  I’m hoping to have the book available by the end of June/early July.

As far as the Zachary Black Trilogy goes, I’m starting work on the second book as soon as The Rugged Shore is finished. I have it written in note form, but needs fleshing out. It should be available in the autumn and the final part early in 2012.  What can you expect from the rest of the series? Zach and Neanna fall in love – but does it last? Zach finds out what really happened to his parents. There is a traitor amongst them and their identity is revealed. There is a race of mechanical men yet to come and more and more modern technology keeps turning up in Endra. But why? And how? But some of the biggest surprises will be discovering where and what Endra really is and the biggest surprise in the Zachary Black books will be finding out what Caroline Hughes from BHF was doing out on the road that night when she got hit by the car.

This is a bit of a spoiler so skip this bit if you don’t want to know, but there is a link between BHF and Zachary Black.  Some clues: Constable Moody is in both of them. In BHF2 he talks about being suspended from the police because he failed to investigate the disappearance of a boy that ran away from his uncle. In Zachary Black, Fandel goes to Constable Moody to report Zach missing. Both books mention ‘The Great Wasteland Railroad Station’ in the desert. Anna finds it deserted after fleeing her Uncle Fandel and Detective Walker ends up there. In the very last line of BHF 2 Walker says that before stepping through the doorway he looks back to see Caroline one last time. And all the main characters have the surname Black!

There are other subtle clues to look out for – such as both series of books are set in a desolate cottage/farmhouse near the edge of a cliff face. Both are set in Cornwalland a lot of the characters from both books make references to “doors” or “doorways”. For example, Detective John Walker tells Richard Jones that he should read Andy’s diary as it will open all sorts of doorways for him. There are others but it will be fun to find them yourself.

As I said earlier in the interview, all the clues are there and I hope by the end of the Zachary Black trilogy you have one of those moments when you say “Oh my god! How come I didn’t see that coming?’

 That’s it; I won’t say anything else as I don’t want to spoil it for you. But I hope it will be worth the wait. Ha!

 Thanks Shana for the interview. I’ve really enjoyed it.

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Thank you Tim!!! I am excited to have you on the blog and have really enjoyed getting to know more about you and your wonderful books!!
 
This giveaway is now CLOSED.

Winners: 

Kaylish – Winner of Zachary Black (1) and The Delf (4)
 
Trixia Y. — Winner of Fandel Black (2) and William (3)


11094528From Goodreads: When Zachary Black discovers a door set between two giant cliffs, he realizes he has never seen anything so peculiar. Unable to resist the doorway, Zach opens it to find that he is looking into Endra. Have you ever had someone say to you that they have seen your double? Well, that is your ‘reflection’ from Endra who has sneaked through one of the doorways. Not usually a problem if they go back, but what if they decided to stay? What if they decided to change something? What if they were trying to kill the person you love?

With the help of a beautiful Vampire named Neanna and a werewolf called William, Zachary’s journey takes him across the vast plains of Endra, through the streets of London and across the Atlantic Ocean as they pass back and forth through the doorways in a race against time. But the doorways have the power to change you – altering your appearance and abilities as you pass between the two worlds.
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This is a great novel for all ages, but especially MG and YA.  I really enjoyed reading it and the idea of the alternate universe was original and refreshing.  O’Rourke has created a unique, well-developed world, and the story pulled me in immediately as it drops right into the action.  I thoroughly enjoyed O’Rourke’s explanations of the creatures on Endra and the many changes they undergo as they pass back and forth through the doorway between the worlds in hopes of saving the world as we know it.  The characterization was superb, and I especially loved Zachary Black, Neanna, and William—their coming-of-age story and realizations along the way were witty and real, causing me to fall in love with them as they went along their journey.

This novel has a little something for everyone, and I feel like this adventure story and the writing style are similar to that of Tolkien and Lemony Snicket.  O’Rourke has a very vivid imagination and it shows through his storytelling, inviting the reader to join this epic journey between two worlds.  I highly recommend it!  Four stars.

4 stars

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



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

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

 

 All of these novels have just recently released. I’ve included my reviews below to help you pick the novel you’d like to win.

This Giveaway is now CLOSED.

 Winner:

 SweetShenanigans, who chose Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs

 

 @ABookVacation



The contest for the first Recently Released Giveaway Goodness has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that our winners have been chosen using Random.org.
 
And the winners are…
 
Ishita Singh from The Reading Fish
Chose Die For Me by Amy Plum 
 
 
Kacennnka from Kacennnka
Chose Starcrossed by Josephine Angelini 
 
 
Livre4Ever from À demi-mot
Chose The Girl in the Steel Corset by Kady Cross
 
 
 
Emails and tweets have been sent out to the winners. If I don’t hear from them within 48 hours, I will select new winners using Random.org. 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:
 

Toonopolis Giveaway: Three winners will be chosen.

U.S. ONLY: 1 Winner will be selected for a hardcopy of Zombies Don’t Cry

Two winners will win one of the novels in the Haanta Series 

Recently Released Giveaway Goodness #2 July 



I’m really excited to have Michelle Franklin on the blog today answering some questions about her Haanta book series!  So without further ado: 

_________________________________________

You’ve written the Haanta Series, currently 21 novels long, which is a huge feat!  What led you to write this series?  What were your inspirations for the many novels?

I hadn’t written for six months due to work. When I was laid off, my editor suggested I write something new. I had previously written another epic fantasy series that was quite a few books long but I didn’t feel it was written well enough to go anywhere. I already had a world to write in so I began writing short stories about a commander and a giant. In six months, I wrote a few hundred of them and started putting them online. Many people seemed to enjoy the stories so I began writing the novels beginning with how Rautu and Boudicca met. I don’t really think about how long something is. When I finished book 4, I said “I think that’s it”, and then I wrote books 5-10, and again I said “I think that’s it.” And then a few of the stand alone books and books 11-14 came. Now, I don’t put a limit on the story. It’s however long it’s going to be. As for the inspiration, I’m really inspired by everything, even something as simple as a change in season.

You have created avery interesting setting for your novels. Was it difficult to create this alternate world in your writing? Is there any particular reason you chose to portray giants as opposed to othermythical creatures? 

The world of the Two Continents is a place I’ve known for a long time. There are always new details that enter my mind when we go and visit a capital city, for example, but I feel more like I’m touring a world that already exists. I see things the way the characters see things, so if it’s new for them, it’s new for me.  It’s always been giants for me. When I was in high school and writing historical fantasy, there were even giants on Ellis Island. I always had the notion of a small female lead and a giant male at her side. Families of giants, giant companions, half-giants while playing D&D- I always loved them. I always wanted more stories about giants when I was younger. Now I have them.

There are many, many characters within your novels.  Which character do you identify with the most in the series?  Why?

There are quite a few characters. There are about 5-10 new characters in each book. Not so many when comparing to War and Peace. Not every character is in every novel, but they all return to play their roles.  Boudicca is my Frewyn counterpart. She’s clever, sarcastic, plain-looking, has terrible hair, and is a hard working farmer turned fearless warrior. She’s the heroine I always wanted to be, even with the bad hair. 

Are any of your characters or stories based on aspects of your own life?

Yes, very much so.

What do you hope readers take away from your series?

I just hope they enjoy it. 

What is the writing process like for you?  Do you have a special place that you like to write, or any special rituals that you gothrough before/during the writing process?

I write everywhere: in cafes, is hospital waiting rooms, but my place of peace is my desk. There, I have the original artwork from the series made by Twisk to bolster me, Villars chocolate bars and my Jane Austen collection. I have no rituals other than making breakfast.

Do you have a playlist in mind for your novels?  If so,what music would you recommend a reader listen to while reading?

I do have a playlist. Certain characters and places have certain songs attached to them. I usually listen to Jennie Muskett, Martin Phipps, Two Steps from Hell, Bear McCreary, Dead Can Dance, Faun, Mytery of Bulgarian Voices Choir, Origa, Kow Otani, Kunihiko Ryo, Shigeru Umebayashi, Yoko Kanno, Takanashi Yasuharu, Dervish, Thomas Bergersen. There are many more, but these artists and composers make up the chief of my main playlist. As for reading, I cannot listen to music while reading. However, I do listen to audiobooks, all of them read by Juliet Stevenson and Olivia Williams. 

How did you decide to become a writer?  Did you always want to write, or did it just happen?  

I didn’t decide really. I’ve always been writing- not everything has always been of decent quality, but I always had an inclination that I must write.

Do you have a favorite author or novel that you recommend your fans read?  What are you reading right now? 

If you haven’t read Jane Austen’s Persuasion, what are you waiting for?  Now, I’m reading the Liar by Stephen Fry and Sandition by Jane Austen. 

How many more novels do you foresee in the Haanta series?  What can readers expect as they read this series?

I cannot answer that question only because I do not know the answer myself. As people read the series, they’ll be introduced to more and more of the world, different races, different languages, different types of magic, etc. I try not to introduce too much in one volume.

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Thank you Michelle!!! I am excited to have you on the blog, and I’ve highly enjoyed getting to know you better!

This giveaway is now CLOSED.

Winners:

The Commander and the Den Asaan: Lissette Martinez

 Tales from Frewyn: EVK



From Goodreads: The Haanta Series is the longest, ongoing, online romantic fantasy series. Thousands of readers visit the world of the Two Continents to enjoy the daily short stories featuring all their favorite characters from the Haanta Series novels. In between the business of the books, the commander, Rautu, Otenohi, Unghaahi, Leraa, Kai Linaa and Alasdair enjoy some time together in Diras Castle, but as the stories portray, mischief lies in every corner of the keep where spiders, chocolate pies, petulant giants, and grouchy cooks abound.

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These were some very interesting short stories compiled into a novel shedding light on the Haanta Series.  As I have only yet read the first book in the series (currently 21 total), I did find that, though the stories are interesting and very well written, I didn’t know all the characters within the short stories, which somewhat confused me on occasion.  I know the Commander and the Den Asaan very well, but do not know the other characters because they have not yet been introduced into the series, so while I knew of a few of them, they remained somewhat flat characters because there was little development of them, as there should be in short stories.  While I liked the stories a lot, I think the characters and surroundings will make more sense once I’ve read the second and third books in the series, as the Den Asaan’s brothers and other characters will be revealed in these novels.  If you’ve read the first two/three books in the series, then I highly suggest reading this book of short stories—it’s very well done.  Otherwise, you should read the first few books in the series first.  To read my review of book one, The Commander and the Den Asaan Rautu, click here.  Three stars!



From Goodreads: The Kingdom of Frewyn is being invaded by the Galleisian infantry and at the forefront of the battle is Boudicca MacDaede, a First Captain in the Frewyn armed forces. Her regiment is charged with defending the borders between the two nations, but when Frewyn’s last line of defense falls, Captain MacDaede enlists the assistance of a Haanta, one of giants from the islands to the far north. Promising to free him from his imprisonment in exchange for his help, she gains his trust long enough for them to win the battle and save the Frewyn border from being breached. The giant’s freedom is granted, but Rautu cannot return home unless he redeems himself in the eyes of his people for his past transgressions. He is offered a place by the captain’s side, and together, they defeat the Galleisian forces and become the saviors of Frewyn.

One year later, King Alasdair Brennin takes the Frewyn throne, Boudicca is made commander, Gallei and Frewyn reach an accord, and Rautu is granted an invitation home. He is eager to return and see his brothers but finds it difficult to leave Frewyn without Boudicca at his side. He has become accustomed to her company and the idea of being made to live without her begins to distress him. Rautu invites the commander to the islands in hopes of finding a way for them to remain together, but when they arrive at the white shores of Sanhedhran, not everything goes as planned: one of the dangerous Haanta magi is freed, Rautu’s three brothers are strangely missing, and the neighboring nation of Thellis leads an attack on the islands.

Together, the commander and the Den Asaan Rautu must find a way to unite their two nations and defend against the Thellisian fleets, but can they do so successfully when outside forces are attempting to keep them apart?

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Franklin has done a phenomenal job creating this alternate world in which giants and humans unite.  I was drawn in by the story and Franklin’s prose, which flows beautifully off the page and into the imagination.  I love fantasy books, and this series (currently 21 books long) has something for everyone!  This novel alone has war, bloodshed, magic, romance… a feast for the book connoisseur (ages 18+). 

I really enjoyed the two main characters, the Commander and Den Asaan, as they embark on their many adventures throughout the novel.  I was pulled into the story from the very beginning as the Commander meets the giant, Den Asaan, and enlists his help in the ongoing war.  Watching the two characters banter back and forth, attempting to hide their feelings for each other, was intriguing and I enjoyed the realness of the characters and their plights.  While Den Asaan is a bit of a male chauvinist, underneath his burley manner he is really quite caring at heart.  His character is a wonderful juxtaposition of the Commander, a strong willed, sarcastic, funny female lead.  Together they help create a well rounded couple that will remain in your mind long after the completion of book one.  Three and a half stars.

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



From Goodreads: Madeline MacFadden (“Mad Mac” to fans of her bestselling magical stories) spent blissful childhood summers in Ticonderoga Falls. And this is where she wants to be now that her adult life is falling apart. The dense surrounding forest holds many memories, some joyous, some tantalizingly only half-remembered. And she’s always believed there was something living in these wooded hills.

But Maddie doesn’t remember the dark parts — and knows nothing of the mountain legend that holds the area’s terrified residents captive. She has no recollection of Ash, the strange and magnificent creature who once saved her life as a child, even though it is the destiny of his kind to prey upon humanity. And soon it will be the Harvest. . . the time to feast.

Once again Maddie’s dreams — and her soul — are in grave danger. But magic runs deep during Harvest. Even a spinner of enchanted tales has wondrous powers of her own.

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HarperCollins has been extremely gracious to allow me to read an ARC of this novel, via Netgalley, prior to its release yesterday, and I must say, I’m in LOVE!  This was a beautifully written novel and I was captivated the entire way through.  One of my favorite aspects of the novel is the multiple points of view, which is turn creates very short chapters.  There are many characters within the novel, both good and evil, and having their perspective of events is such a great aide to the story, allowing the reader to see deep inside their souls as events unfold around them.  I also liked that, though Destefano uses multiple points of view, she doesn’t rehash the exact same stories repeatedly.  One chapter may be Maddie’s point of view in terms of coming across a dead body, and the next chapter could be Ash reminiscing about a past harvest.  While there does seem to be some sort of connection between the events of each chapter, the fact that they don’t simply rehash the same event from a new perspective is refreshing.  I really enjoyed the way this novel was written and I was enamored the entire way through. 

I also loved the idea that our dreams are feasted upon by unknown entities—huge winged creatures that harvest our dreams and possess the power to kill us in our sleep if they aren’t careful.  This was really intriguing, especially since most of us cannot remember our dreams upon awaking… I highly suggest everyone read this novel—it will keep you enthralled and in suspense from the very first page.  Four and a half stars!   



The contest for Jason Beymer giveaway has just concluded, and I’m excited to say that our winner has been chosen using Random.org.
 
And the winner is…
 
Heykiddego
 
Book Choice:
 
Nether
 
 
Emails and tweets have been sent out to the winner. If I don’t hear from him/her within 48 hours, I will select a new winner using Random.org. 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:
 

Recently Released Giveaway Goodness ENDS 6/30. Three winners will be chosen.

 

Toonopolis Giveaway: Three winners will be chosen.

 

U.S. ONLY: 1 Winner will be selected for a hardcopy of Zombies Don’t Cry



et cetera