Tuesday, May 31, 2011

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.

Above
by Leah Bobet

hitting shelves Spring, 2012 from Arthur A. Levine Books

description: Matthew's father had lion's feet and his mother had gills, and both fled the modern-day city to live in underground Safe, a secret community of freaks, ghost-whisperers, and disabled outcasts hidden beyond the subways and sewers. Raised underground, Matthew is responsible for the keeping of both Safe's histories and the traumatized shapeshifter Ariel, the girl he took in, fell in love with – and can't stop from constantly running away.

But Safe is no longer safe: the night after a frightening encounter in the sewers, Safe's founder Atticus is murdered by the one person Safe ever exiled: mad Corner, whose coup is backed by an army of mindless, whispering shadows.

Only Matthew, Ariel, and a handful of unstable, crippled compatriots escape to the city that cast them out; the dangerous place he knows only as Above. Despite Ariel's increasingly erratic behaviour and with the odds against them, Matthew must find a way to rescue Safe from Corner's occupying army. But as his quest leads him through abandoned asylums and the dregs of urban poverty, Matthew discovers that the histories he's devoted his life to aren't true: Corner's invasion -- and Ariel's terrors – are rooted in a history of Safe much darker and bloodier than Matthew ever imagined.

And even if he manages to save both home and Ariel, he may well lose himself.

My thoughts: Okay, I know this one is loooong way off, but look at it!! And it sounds so deliciously bizarre!! I mean, characters sporting lions feet, gills, bee wings...and an army of mindless whispering shadows? This one definitely has me intrigued!

Monday, May 30, 2011

Review: Queen of the Dead

Queen of the Dead by Stacey Kade

publisher: Hyperion Books CH

release date: May 31, 2011

hardcover, 288 pages

intended audience: Young adult


sequel to: Ghost and the Goth (my review)

rating:



source: from publisher for honest review

Warning: description and review may contain slight spoilers for those who haven't read book one!

description: After being sent back from the light, Alona Dare - former homecoming queen, current Queen of the Dead - finds herself doing something she never expected: working. Instead of spending days perfecting her tan by the pool (her typical summer routine when she was, you know, alive), Alona must now cater to the needs of other lost spirits. By her side for all of this - ugh - “helping of others” is Will Killian: social outcast, seer of the dead, and someone Alona cares about more than she’d like. Before Alona can make a final ruling on Will’s “friend” or “more” status, though, she discovers trouble at home. Her mom is tossing out Alona’s most valuable possessions, and her dad is expecting a new daughter with his wicked wife. Is it possible her family is already moving on? Hello! She’s only been dead for two months! Thankfully, Alona knows just the guy who can put a stop to this mess. Unfortunately for Alona, Will has other stuff on his mind, and Mina, a young (and beautiful) seer, is at the top of the list. She’s the first ghost-talker Will’s ever met—aside from his father—and she may hold answers to Will’s troubled past. But can she be trusted? Alona immediately puts a check mark in the “clearly not” column. But Will is - ahem - willing to find out, even if it means leaving a hurt and angry Alona to her own devices, which is never a good idea.

Review: I love this series. Truly, I am hoping for way more than three books to it because I absolutely love these characters and Stacey Kade's writing. So very rarely do I find a book that is so fun and humorous and energetic, but still has the surprising emotional depth to make me cry. No kidding, there was part in this that I literally cried! Another thing you will hardly every hear me say is this: I loved the second book even more than the first. And yet, that is absolutely true here!
Will and Alona are just so entertaining together and their relationship is sweet with this wicked little bite to it. They are such opposites and are almost constantly bickering, but not in a hateful way. Will is this kind-hearted guy with a streak of dark intensity built up from seeing ghosts his whole life; Alona is just the same as she was in life---spoiled and always ready with the painful truth for anyone who is less than perfectly fashionable. In this book, we get to see them change a lot (especially Alona!!) as they are faced with some really personal dilemmas---Will with his father's past, Alona with her family and dealing with them moving on. Will's friend, Lily, (who those who read book one will remember is in a persistent coma from a car crash) plays a major part in this one---and it's the events that happen between Alona and Lily that have me absolutely dying to get my hands on book three!! I'm also dying to see what the cover to book three will look like---read this one and you'll know why!! There is bound to be some very significant changes. :) I can't wait! I will miss Will and Alona until then---I love the way Queen of the Dead ended. Just perfect. It claims to be a "killer cliffhanger" but I didn't find it that way...even though you know there is more, it was still came a satisfying close. There's just a lot of really good themes in this one---letting go, not letting go, self-sacrifice for someone you care about, hoping, family, love and it's unpredictablity...it's all there. Don't miss this one!

Visit Stacey Kade's website here.

Purchase Queen of the Dead: AmazonBN.comBookDepository Indiebound

Sunday, May 29, 2011

In My Mailbox {68}


In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by The Story Siren, where we all share what we got during the week!


For Review:
Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs
This one uses bizarre old photos to really up the creepiness factor to the story! So excited to read this!

Many thanks to Quirk Books!

Won:
(Thanks so much to Reading Teen for these! I had no idea I had won their awesome contest until these showed up on my doorstep!)

Demonglass by Rachel Hawkins
Already read this one but I'm so happy to finally add a finished copy to my collection! (review here)

The Near Witch by Victoria Schwab
I'm already hearing amazing things about this one from readers and authors...so excited to read this!

Balefire by Cate Tiernan
Love book mash-ups! This one looks really intriguing, too! :)

The Iron Witch by Karen Mahoney
I read this one and have a copy already, so I'll probably be passing this one on one way or another! :) Keep an eye out!

Well that's all for me! Happy reading, everyone!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

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.

Mist
by Kathryn James

hitting shelves September 1st, 2011 from Hodder Children's Books

description: Midnight: a mist-haunted wood with a bad reputation. A sweet sixteen party, and 13 year old Nell is trying to keep her sister, spoilt birthday-girl Gwen, out of trouble. No chance. Trouble finds Gwen and drags her through the mist. Only Nell guesses who’s behind the kidnap - the boy she hoped was her friend, the cute but mysterious Evan River.

All those fairy stories Nell’s grandmother told her about girls being stolen by fairy folk are true. The Elven are beautiful as starlight, fierce as wolves, and cold as ice. And they want their world back. The fight has been raging for centuries. Nell’s grandmother should know, she’s a Watcher, the ones responsible for imprisoning the Elven in isolated iron-bound camps in Siberia. Only Evan, his fanatical older brother Fen, and a handful of Elven children are still free.

Fen, hellbent on revenge, keeps Gwen in their wolf-guarded stronghold deep in the mist. The price for her safe return? The release of all the Elven – but the Watchers will never agree. Only Nell can save Gwen.

Time is twisted through the mist: if Nell stops longer than a night and day, a hundred years will hit her as soon as she returns and she’ll be old and withered before she’s even lived. The clock is ticking.

My thoughts: Looks like this one will be UK released---thank goodness for BookDepository! :) Mist sounds amazing...Elves, sisters, a century-old war. Lots of good stuff coming in September!

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Review: The Girl in the Steel Corset

The Girl in the Steel Corset by Kady Cross

publisher: Harlequin Teen

release date: May 24th, 2011


hardcover, 480 pages


intended audience: Young adult

rating:




source: from publisher for honest review

description: In 1897 England, sixteen-year-old Finley Jayne has no one…except the "thing" inside her.

When a young lord tries to take advantage of Finley, she fights back. And wins. But no normal Victorian girl has a darker side that makes her capable of knocking out a full-grown man with one punch….

Only Griffin King sees the magical darkness inside her that says she's special, says she's one of them. The orphaned duke takes her in from the gaslit streets against the wishes of his band of misfits: Emily, who has her own special abilities and an unrequited love for Sam, who is part robot; and Jasper, an American cowboy with a shadowy secret.

Griffin's investigating a criminal called The Machinist, the mastermind behind several recent crimes by automatons. Finley thinks she can help—and finally be a part of something, finally fit in.

But The Machinist wants to tear Griff's little company of strays apart, and it isn't long before trust is tested on all sides. At least Finley knows whose side she's on—even if it seems no one believes her.

Review: Here's how this one went for me: The first 150 pages---amazing stuff. We meet Finlay in a sticky situation, she is a servant girl in the August-Raynes house, notorious because the masters son has a habit of making unwanted advances on the prettier servants. Finlay, who hasn't quite figured out why she has an uncontrollable dark side that likes to come out and play when she is threatened, quickly "puts him in his place" (in other words, she beats him within an inch of his life) and flees. I liked her immediately. :) In fleeing, she runs into (literally) one of the richest (and sweetest, and most humble---yes, we like him!) men in England, the Duke of Greythorne. Griffin is no ordinary man, and he houses an little band of unusually gifted characters. I loved Emily, she was sweet but tough, almost motherly, and absolutely brilliant. Sam is a dark character, very angry---but more than once he brought some good logic to the table. Jasper was a charmer...as most good cowboys are. The story was intriguing and moved along perfectly for the first 150 pages.

The last 100 pages: Fantastic! Exciting, action-packed, the mystery is somewhat solved, our hero's are victorious, and it was very satisfying while still reeling the reader in enough to pick up the second book.

Everything in between: I don't know what happened, but in between the amazing beginning and the fantastic ending...for about 200 pages, I frequently put the book down with very little intention of picking it back up. It just didn't hold my interest. Once they discovered the secret behind Finlay's abilities, there was a lot of floundering around for clues to finding The Machinist, Finlay being indecisive about where she belonged, some awkward fight/training scenes, but not a lot moving the story along.

The plot was good, but one of the main plot lines was a little too familiar to me. In trying not to spoil anything, I won't go into specifics, but the Queen Victoria storyline was very similar to an older Disney movie that most people might not have even heard of, but one that is very well-loved in our house. So eerily similar, in fact, that if I told the name of the movie, the readers who have seen the movie would know most of the ending of this book. Purely coincidental, I'm sure, but I admit it took away some of my enjoyment.

While I just barely made it to the end on this one, I am very glad I did because like I said, I really enjoyed the delivery of the ending. I also really like how the Steampunk aspect was written. With other "steampunk" books I've read, the machinery is so vividly described that it gets overwhelming and leaves no room for the reader to build their own picture. The automatons, the machinery, the Aether, and Emily's cool inventions like the velocycles and her robotic cat were all perfectly described while still leaving room for the reader's imagination. I really loved that.

It wasn't as wonderful as I'd hoped it would be, but it certainly wasn't so awful that I won't at least give the follow-up books a try. I liked the characters enough to be curious where their next adventure will take them.

Visit Kady Cross's website here.

Purchase Girl in the Steel Corset: AmazonBN.comBookDepositoryIndiebound

Monday, May 23, 2011

Cover Story: Sacrifice (Crave #2)

It's been a while since I've been on Goodreads scoping out recently revealed covers, and look what I found!! So excited to see this one, I've been waiting and waiting to hear news of a sequel to Crave by Melinda Metz and Laura J. Burns. I loved book 1 (see my review here), but it ended on such a breakneck cliffhanger!

Here's the cover of the second book, Sacrifice, and the synopsis---but be forewarned, if you haven't read the first one and plan to, don't read the description! :)
Gabriel and Shay are convinced that they can make their relationship work. Knowing that Shay is half-vampire, Gabriel thinks that his coven will embrace her as one of their own, but instead they view her as an abomination, a thing that doesn’t belong in either world. And they want her dead. Now Gabriel must make the ultimate decision - watch his love be killed by his coven or defy the people closest to him, the people he has spent centuries with to save her.

Sacrifice
hits shelves September 20th, 2011 from Simon & Schuster.

Sunday, May 22, 2011

In My Mailbox {67}


In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by The Story Siren, where we all share what we got during the week!

Some cool stuff this week :)

For Review:
Texas Gothic by Rosemary Clement-Moore
Can't wait to start this one--ghosts, witches, and cowboys. Can't wait.

All These Things I've Done by Gabrielle Zevin
I read a really bizarre adult book by this author a few years ago, so I'm excited to get a taste of her YA work. No pun intended (see note below).

From the Library:
The Radleys by Matt Haig
I've seen mixed reviews of this one so we'll see what I think---that's the beauty of the library: nothing to lose! :D

Many thanks to Random House and Macmillan for the books for review. Macmillan especially won my heart by sending me this pretty little box that contained two of my favorite things: books and chocolate. :) Really, is there anything better??


New on My Nook!


Wildefire by Karsten Knight
I have an print copy of this as well, but I grabbed this from S & S Galley Grab---I love having both so I can read the book at home and the e-galley when I'm out and about. Take my Nook with me everywhere :)

Raven by Suzy Turner
I came across this when the author visited my blog. :) It looks great---family secrets, witchcraft..my kind of story! Immediately bought this from Smashwords.


Well, that's all for me! To all you lucky ducks going to BEA this week, have a blast!! I am completely jealous and can't wait to see all your loot!!