Showing posts with label dutton juvenile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dutton juvenile. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Waiting on Wednesday

"Waiting on Wednesday" is a weekly meme hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine. It lets us all gush about what soon-to-be released books we are jumping-up-and-down excited for.
 
Inland
by Kat Rosenfield
hitting shelves June 12, 2014 from Dutton Juvenile

description:
The psychological labyrinth of a young woman’s insidious connection to the sea, from the Edgar Award nominated author of Amelia Anne is Dead and Gone.

Callie Morgan has long lived choked by the failure of her own lungs, the result of an elusive pulmonary illness that has plagued her since childhood. A childhood marked early by the drowning death of her mother—a death to which Callie was the sole witness. Her father has moved them inland, away from the memories of the California coast her mother loved so much and toward promises of recovery—and the escape of denial—in arid, landlocked air.

But after years of running away, the promise of a life-changing job for her father brings Callie and him back to the coast, to Florida, where Callie’s symptoms miraculously disappear. For once, life seems delightfully normal. But the ocean’s edge offers more than healing air … it holds a magnetic pull, drawing Callie closer and closer to the chilly, watery embrace that claimed her mother. Returned to the ocean, Callie comes of age and comes into a family destiny that holds generations of secrets and very few happy endings.
 
My thoughts: After the bizarre tale that was Amelia Anne is Dead and Gone, I couldn't wait to read more from this author.  Now it's almost here...and it looks even more up my alley.  Cool cover, too. :)

 

Monday, April 21, 2014

Cover Story

For all of us who just spent the day munching on Peeps and chocolate bunnies, I thought some eye candy was in order :)

And for everyone else, too :D







Belzhar 
by Meg Wolitzer
Dutton Juvenile, September 30th, 2014








by Holly Black
Little Brown BYR, January 15th, 2015








Feuds 
by Avery Hastings
St. Martin's Griffin, September 2nd, 2014










by Daisy Whitney
Bloomsbury, October 14th, 2014








The Girl on a Wire 
by Gwenda Bond
Skyscape, October 14th, 2014










by Melissa Marr
HarperCollins, September 16th, 2014









Some Boys 
by Patty Blount
Sourcebooks Fire, August 1st, 2014









by Kate A. Boorman
Amulet Books, September 9th, 2014








See any new favorites here?  I'm kind of in love with...well, ALL OF THEM.  :D

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Cover Story


Some recent cover reveals!





by Tawni Waters
Simon Pulse, August 26th, 2014










Inland 
by Kat Rosenfield
Dutton Juvenile, June 12th, 2014










 by Nikki Kelly
Feiwel & Friends, October 7th, 2014









Of Monsters and Madness
by Jessica Verday
Egmont USA, September 9th, 2014










by Christine Happermann
Greenwillow Books, September 23rd 2014









Sanctum
by Madeleine Roux
Harper Collins, August 26thm 2014









by Jillian Cantor
Bloomsbury USA, May 13th, 2014










The Beautiful Ashes 
by Jeaniene Frost
Harlequin, August 26th, 2014
(This one is listed as both YA and NA at Goodreads, so I'm not sure which it is! Either way, it's a gorgeous cover! :D)








Seeing any new favorites here?  They are all pretty gorgeous, but my favorites are Inland, Sanctum, Poison Apples, and Of Monsters and Madness! And i just love the colors on The Beautiful Ashes!



Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Amy's View: 17 & Gone by Nova Sum Rena


17 & Gone by Nova Ren Suma
♦publisher: Penguin Dutton
♦release date: March 21, 2013
♦hardcover, 354 pages
♦intended audience: Young adult
♦stand-alone
♦source: from publisher for honest review
Seventeen-year-old Lauren is having visions of girls who have gone missing. And all these girls have just one thing in common—they are 17 and gone without a trace. As Lauren struggles to shake these waking nightmares, impossible questions demand urgent answers: Why are the girls speaking to Lauren? How can she help them? And… is she next? As Lauren searches for clues, everything begins to unravel, and when a brush with death lands her in the hospital, a shocking truth emerges, changing everything.

With complexity and richness, Nova Ren Suma serves up a beautiful, visual, fresh interpretation of what it means to be lost.

Review: I eagerly anticipated this book and even contacted Penguin Publishing for an early copy. The moment it arrived I dove right in, however by page 156 I found myself stuck. Not knowing which way I should go, to simply set it down or keep reading.

The story line was one that intrigued me, a promising thriller with a 17 year old girl who is having visions of girls who are missing. I found myself hoping for mystery to follow the ghostly images or trails of kidnapping and murder and all I got was chapter after chapter of each girl’s story of how they disappeared.  Long, drawn out and elaborate in their storyline. Not at all relating to one another but all plaguing Lauren’s daily life to the point of utter destruction. Weaving you through the mental strains of following Lauren as she tries to help the lost girls and figure out why they disappeared.

Not the ghost story I had hoped for but the inter-workings of girl who is, “lost”. Truly complex and believable, leaving you sympathetic of the delusions a mind can create. Now that I have reached the last chapter I have a new respect for how the book was laid out. Although I do wish it was done in reverse. Having the knowledge of the tragic way the mind can work gives you the understanding and sympathy you need to truly follow Lauren’s Story. Complex and often too wordy, 17 and Gone was an interesting but long read that could possibly have been published as an adult book.


Find Nova Ren Suma online: Website  •  Twitter  •  Facebook

Preorder 17 & Gone:  Amazon  •  BN.com  •  Bookdepository  •  Indiebound

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Becky's View: Amelia Anne is Dead and Gone by Kat Rosenfield


Amelia Anne is Dead and Gone
by Kat Rosenfield
♦publisher: Dutton Juvenile
♦release date: July 5th, 2012
♦hardcover, 279 pages
♦intended audience: Young adult (recommend for 16+)
♦source: from publisher for honest review
An arresting un-coming-of-age story, from a breathtaking talent

Becca has always longed to break free from her small, backwater hometown. But the discovery of an unidentified dead girl on the side of a dirt road sends the town--and Becca--into a tailspin. Unable to make sense of the violence of the outside world creeping into her backyard, Becca finds herself retreating inward, paralyzed from moving forward for the first time in her life.

Short chapters detailing the last days of Amelia Anne Richardson's life are intercut with Becca's own summer as the parallel stories of two young women struggling with self-identity and relationships on the edge twist the reader closer and closer to the truth about Amelia's death.

Review: Amelia Anne is Dead and Gone has the feel of the old classics that have stood the test of time.  The writing is exceptional.  Beautiful, haunting, and truly exceptional.  The story is dark and not at all lacking in grit, as anyone should be able to guess from the subject matter. The mystery of Amelia's death unravels slowly and hauntingly, but with Rosenfield's writing, every word seems to have been carefully chosen to really sink the story and the imagery right into your heart and your gut.  Amelia's death is all the more grueling, Becca's emotions hit home all the more heavily, and the small town of Bridgeton seems to practically breath with a life of its own. 

The story flits back and forth between Becca and James' past and present, and then little bits of Amelia's story leading up to her death are thrown in.  The investigation plods on, fingers are pointed, and we get little tidbits of the town's back story that gives us a feel of how the town and it's people work.  I loved how the small-town gossip and the tragedy itself were practically characters in their own right---something tangible that slips through the front door and sits at the family table for dinner. 

While, for me, this story did start out a little slowly after the initial shock of the body being found, and the explanations of "this is how it works in a small town" became a little redundant at times,  there was a point about half way through where I stopped being able to put it down. The oncoming reveal starts rushing at you like a freight train as suspicions go horribly awry, Becca seems to be eaten up by her doubt and fear of her own future,  and the truth of what really happened on the night Amelia died eerily surfaces. 

A haunting and intense read.  I can't wait to read more from Kat Rosenfield. 
 Find Kat Rosenfield online: Website  •  Facebook  •  Twitter


Purchase Amelia Anne is Dead on Gone:  Amazon  •  BN.com  •  BookDepository  •   Indiebound