Saturday, July 13, 2013

New Shelf Goodies & The Weekly Nutshell {53}

For New Shelf Goodies, I'll be showing you what lovely books I acquired this week, whether from publishers, or the library, or from whatever half-crazed book-buying binge I happened to go on. :D (Inspired by Tynga's Stacking the Shelves) The Weekly Nutshell will be just that...my week here at Stories & Sweeties, in a nutshell. (inspired by Ginger @ GReads and her recaps at the end of the TGIF posts)

A few pretties came through my mailbox this week! 
 For review: 
More Than This by Patrick Ness
I've heard amazing things about this author, so I'm very excited about this afterlife story. 
Black Spring by Alison Croggon
This looks really good---love this cover. I don't know if I could have read it if they'd kept the aussie cover for it. It was too creeeepy for me!
The Kingdom of Little Wounds by Susann Cokal
OK, with an epically gorgeous cover like this, I will be very sad if the story within is any less than...well, epic

Gifted:
Witches in Tudor England!! SO very excited for this one!

Many thanks to Candlewick and my lovely Amy for these!

The Weekly Nutshell:

Hope everyone got lots of lovely bookish things this week! :D

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Amy's View: Doll Bones by Holly Black


Doll Bones by Holly Black
♦publisher: Margaret K. McElderry
♦release date: May 7th, 2013
♦hardcover, 244 pages
♦intended audience: Middle grade
♦source: ALA
Zach, Poppy and Alice have been friends for ever. They love playing with their action figure toys, imagining a magical world of adventure and heroism. But disaster strikes when, without warning, Zach’s father throws out all his toys, declaring he’s too old for them. Zach is furious, confused and embarrassed, deciding that the only way to cope is to stop playing . . . and stop being friends with Poppy and Alice. But one night the girls pay Zach a visit, and tell him about a series of mysterious occurrences. Poppy swears that she is now being haunted by a china doll – who claims that it is made from the ground-up bones of a murdered girl. They must return the doll to where the girl lived, and bury it. Otherwise the three children will be cursed for eternity . . .

Review:  A doll, a murder and a mystery to be solved.  When Captain William the Blade, of the Neptune Pearl and Lady Jayne, a thief who began her travels with the captain after a misfortunate pick pocketing incident, set out on an epic adventure, they had no idea it would be their last. 

With dolls purchased at goodwill, blacktop that represents the sea, a boat shaped piece of paper and an incredible imagination, Zach, Poppy and Alice make a story come to life. Each child creating a character of their own to take their place on the Neptune Pearl, full of thieves, pirates and even a mermaids curse. The Neptune Pearl is perfectly hidden in a world that only they know about. The game is hidden from friends at school and even their parents, they all secretly know that they are too old to play with dolls. Unable to give up the allure of the game and despite their reservations, the game continues, quickly turning into an epic journey that spills into their real lives.

When Zach, Poppy and Alice decide to bring the "Queen" doll into their game, their make believe adventure suddenly becomes real. The children know to never touch the priceless old porcelain doll in the china cabinet but they never knew why. The Queen represented an ancient honor and time that has gone by.  Wasting away in a china cabinet, the doll beckoned to be played with. So when a tragic and a seemingly ordinary event happened, the Queen doll and her ghostly tale soon unfolds before the children. Once they remove her from her cabinet something sinister starts to happen.  The children need to quickly figure out if the doll is just a doll, or if it contains the ghost of a murdered girl.

One thing is clear, the Queen doll has a motive and that is to lay her to rest. As they set out on the journey to fulfill her request an epic adventure ensues. Although soon enough, Zach, Poppy and Alice realize adventuring wasn’t what they thought it would be.  In story books, real adventurers didn’t need supplies, a chartered path, or a plan.  Instead, the children quickly find themselves cold and exposed to the elements, with adults chasing them at every stop and quickly running out of money on a stolen boat sailing for their lives.  But the Queen doll won’t let them stop until they have done what she wants them to do.

Holly Black, author of The Spiderwick Chronicles once again captures her reader’s hearts in a classic ghost story for readers of all ages. A great way to introduce  young readers to a ghost story.
Find Holly Black online:  Website  •  Twitter  •  Facebook

Purchase Doll Bones:  Amazon  •  BookDepository  •  Indiebound

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

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.

Timebound
by Rysa Walker

hitting shelves October 22nd, 2013 from Amazon Children's Publishing

description: When Kate Pierce-Keller’s grandmother gives her a strange blue medallion and speaks of time travel, sixteen-year-old Kate assumes the old woman is delusional. But it all becomes horrifyingly real when a murder in the past destroys the foundation of Kate’s present-day life. Suddenly, that medallion is the only thing protecting Kate from blinking out of existence.

Kate learns that the 1893 killing is part of something much more sinister, and Kate’s genetic ability to time-travel makes her the only one who can stop him. Risking everything, she travels to the Chicago World’s Fair to try to prevent the killing and the chain of events that follows.

Changing the timeline comes with a personal cost, however—if Kate succeeds, the boy she loves will have no memory of her existence. And regardless of her motives, does she have the right to manipulate the fate of the entire world?


My thoughts: Ok, another time travel pick from me this week.  I really need to find a good one to read,...it must be what I'm in the mood for lately! This one looks spectacular!  I love when the supposed crazy old grandmother is involved and also love that she goes back to the Chicago World's Fair! So many cool things going on in one place just lends so may possibilities for this story! I truly can't wait.

Monday, July 8, 2013

Becky's View: Dead Jealous by Sharon Jones


Dead Jealous by Sharon Jones
♦publisher: Orchard Books
♦release date: July 4th, 2013
♦paperback, 320 pages
♦intended audience: Young adult
♦series: The Poppy Sinclair thrillers, book 1
♦source: from publisher for honest review
People think of Mother Nature as a gentle lady. They forget that she's also Death...Sixteen-year-old Poppy Sinclair believes in quantum particles, not tarot cards, in Dawkins, not druids. Last summer, in a boating accident in the Lake District, Poppy had a brush with death. But the girl she finds face down in Scariswater hasn't been so lucky. As she fights to discover the truth behind what she believes is murder, Poppy is forced to concede that people and things are not always what they seem and, slipping ever deeper into a web of lies, jealousy and heart-stopping danger, she comes to realise - too late - that the one thing that can save her has been right there, all the time.


Review: Dead Jealous kicks off a great new mystery series, and introduces us to Poppy Sinclair, a veritable Nancy Drew for the modern age.  It's a perfect blend of crime thriller, YA contemporary romance, with just an inkling of something ghostly going on to keep readers on their toes.

This fun story boasts all kind of uniqueness, starting with a setting that I've never come across before.  The entire story takes place amidst all the curiousity and mysticism of a pagan festival.  Poppy, who was raised surrounded by paganism, is no longer into it, but she's come this year to attend her mother's handfasting to her new stepdad.  On her first night, she escapes the crowd and meets Beth---a somewhat enigmatic girl who's come to the festival in search of her missing girlfriend.  Though they just have a short but meaningful conversation, they immediately connect.  The next morning, Poppy discovers Beth dead in the lake and is compelled to find out how she ended up there.

Poppy is a great conflicted, flawed protagonist that you just can't help rooting for.  She is facing down a few fears of her own, which include her own recent brush with nearly drowning and the fact that she is completely in love with her best friend since childhood, Michael.  I know I've said this a million times, but I love a good romance with tons of history behind it, so all the building tension and mixed signals that happen between Michael and Poppy were just perfect. It even gave me that lovely little ache in my own heart as I was reading. The story actually alternates third-person POV between Poppy and Michael, and I admit that did get a little confusing at times, but also gave a wider perspective that worked for the story.  

When it comes to solving the mystery, Poppy is persistent to a fault (as any sleuth worth her salt will absolutely be!) and not afraid to get her hands dirty or go head to head with the creepiest of suspects. There were only a few silly-thriller-cliche moments where the heroine foolishly wanders right into the claws of the villain, but I easily enjoyed the story enough to overlook those.  The whole situation calls into question her own beliefs and her trust of even those closest to her.  It digs her deeper and deeper into danger, and leads up to a truly heart-pounding twist ending!

I definitely look forward to many more mystery-solving adventures with Poppy Sinclair!
Find Sharon Jones onlines:  Website  •  Twitter  •  Facebook

Purchase Dead Jealous:  Amazon.uk  •  BookDepository

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Sweetness on Sunday: Blueberry White Chocolate Almond Cookies

Mmmm...these are yummy. I made these lovelies for 4th of July this year and my whole family made them magically disappear.  I almost didn't get a chance to photograph them LOL.
Blueberry White Chocolate Almond Cookies

Prep:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Prepare cookie sheet with parchment paper.

Indredients: 
 2 cups all-purpose flour
 1 tsp baking powder
 1/2 tsp salt
 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
 1 cup packed light brown sugar
 1/2 cup sugar
 2 eggs
 1-1/2 tsp vanilla extract
 1 tsp almond extract (I loooove almond extract, so I might have used a little extra)
 1/2 tsp lemon juice
 1 cup white chocolate chips
 3/4 cup chopped almonds
 4 ounces dried blueberries

~Whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt in medium bowl and set aside. 
~With a mixer (I used a handheld), beat together butter and both sugars.  Add in eggs one at a time and beat until creamy.
~Add vanilla, almond extract, and lemon juice; beat until combined. 
~Slowly add in flour mixture and  mix just until combined.  Fold in blueberries, white chocolate  chips, and almonds. 
~Drop by generous tablespoonfuls onto parchment-line cookie sheet, spacing about 2 inches apart.  Bake for 9-11 minutes, until they just start to lightly brown on the bottoms.  Let cool slightly before moving to a wire rack to cool completely...or to your mouth while they are still warm :) I highly suggest the latter.

Hope you try these and love them.  They are healthy, right? Blueberries? Antioxidants? Riiiight. ;)

Until next time...


Saturday, July 6, 2013

New Shelf Goodies & The Weekly Nutshell {52}

For New Shelf Goodies, I'll be showing you what lovely books I acquired this week, whether from publishers, or the library, or from whatever half-crazed book-buying binge I happened to go on. :D (Inspired by Tynga's Stacking the Shelves) The Weekly Nutshell will be just that...my week here at Stories & Sweeties, in a nutshell. (inspired by Ginger @ GReads and her recaps at the end of the TGIF posts)

A nice little haul for me this week, but I'm definitely excited for all three! 
 For review:
This story sounds so fun! I'm hoping to have found another self-pubbed gem!
Read this synopsis. It sounds crazy good and spooky. Marketed as adult, but I think it will be a perfect YA cross-over. 
Could not resist this amazingly bizarre cover. Story sounds bizarre and unique, too!

Many thanks to JudyAnn McCole, William Morrow, and Hodder for these! 

The Weekly Nutshell:
 {Friday} Becky's View: ONE by Leigh Ann Kopans

Hope all my US friends had a safe and happy 4th of July! :D 
Happy reading, everyone!

Friday, July 5, 2013

Becky's View: One by Leigh Ann Kopans


One by Leigh Ann Kopans
♦release date: June 11, 2013
♦paperback, 374 pages
♦intended audience: Young adult
♦series: One Universe, book 1
♦source: from author for honest review
When having two powers makes you a Super and having none makes you a Normal, having only one makes you a sad half-superpowered freak.

It makes you a One.

Sixteen-year-old Merrin Grey would love to be able to fly – too bad all she can do is hover.

If she could just land an internship at the Biotech Hub, she might finally figure out how to fix herself. She busts her butt in AP Chem and salivates over the Hub’s research on the manifestation of superpowers, all in hopes of boosting her chances.

Then she meets Elias VanDyne, another One, and all her carefully crafted plans fly out the window. Literally. When the two of them touch, their Ones combine to make them fly, and when they’re not soaring over the Nebraska cornfields, they’re busy falling for each other.

Merrin's mad chemistry skills land her a spot on the Hub's internship short list, but as she gets closer to the life she always wanted, she discovers that the Hub’s purpose is more sinister than it has always seemed. Now it’s up to her to decide if it's more important to fly solo, or to save everything - and everyone - she loves.


Review: In the ever-growing world of self-pubbed books, I've been lucky enough (and picky enough) to really find some outstanding gems. One is definitely one of those.  There are things I look for: an author who puts herself through all the same unending and hellish rewrites and edits that a traditionally published author would go through, one that goes through the trouble to get test readers and fellow authors and mentors to read it before letting her work go out into the world, and yes, one that gives us a gorgeous cover to draw us right in.  Yes, I'm shallow like that, but lets face it, lots of us YA readers (not all, of course) are suckers for some pretty cover eye-candy and when an author puts together a cover that looks like it came out of one of the Big 6, it shows she's done her homework as to what sells.  I found all this and a really intriguing synopsis with Leigh Ann Kopans' book and I couldn't wait to read it.

I blew through One; the story is immediately engaging, the main character's voice is easy-going and real, like talking to a friend. She has an inner dialogue that is hilariously honest (her first encounter with the character Leni is a perfect example!).  Merrin is bright and determined, something you know right away by her refusal to give up on the development of her powers. She's being sent to a "normal" high school because her superpower never fully developed and after a few rough first days, she meets Elias and his group. I love that she doesn't immediately fall all over him, but keeps her guard up, and slowly discovers that she can trust and connect with these three new friends.  Another thing I loved were the sibling relationships, both with Merrin and her younger twin brothers and Elias and his two older twin sisters.  I'm always drawn in by close but realistically-written bro and sis ties and in this case, they were actually an integral part of the story, which made it even better.

Superpowers can often strike me as cheesy, especially flying, but I was really happy with the way the author wrote them, almost as an extension of the character.  Merrin has this great inner struggle: she loves flying with Elias but she has an intense need to someday, somehow develop her own powers so that she didn't need to depend on him to fly---I felt this really defined her character and her actions throughout the story and kept this from really revolving solely around a love story, which is refreshing. It gave her character a good dose of stubbornness and back-bone. :)  Still, the love story was good and romantic, but I did find that somewhere in the middle, it was what slowed the pacing for me just a bit.

A great series-starter, full of action, betrayal, discovery, and heroic rescues.  I'm excited to see where this story goes next!
Find Leigh Ann Kopans online: Website  •  Twitter  •  Facebook

Purchase ONE: Amazon  •  BookDepository  •  Indiebound