July 14, 2014

ReReadathon Update


So we're almost halfway through the month of July, and I've so far been very lucky in demolishing my Summer of Rereads list.  Before July started, I reread Open Road Summer by Emery Lord, The Things You Kiss Goodbye by Leslie Connor, and Since You've Been Gone by Morgan Matson.  In the last two weeks I've read...

This is a fun, fluffy, squee-worthy read that I actually didn't enjoy a ton my first time around.  Crazy, right?  Especially since I now adore Kasie's books.  Then I bought it back in January, reread it, and loved it.  It's still not a 5-star read, but it's something I'll reread time and time again.  I ended up starting and finishing this on July 1st.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
I should've reread this before seeing the movie, but I didn't (and I remembered everything that happened anyways).  But it was nice to reread it after so I can see what lines made it into the film. (Except now I can't get Shailene Woodley as Hazel out of my head.  And I want to know why more of Gus and Isaac's jokes weren't included.)  I got busy with Independence Day and college stuff, so it took me a little longer to read TFIOS than it did TDBU (July 2-5).

Better off Friends by Elizabeth Eulberg
Like with The Distance Between Us, I wanted a fun, squee-worthy summer read, particularly since I planned to reread Second Chance Summer next and reading that right after The Fault in Our Stars would be too hard on my feels.  I finished this one in last than 24 hours, like with TDBU.

Second Chance Summer by Morgan Matson
I don't know what it was (maybe it was the combination of songs that make me cry + a late night + this being a sad book), but I cried harder during my reread than I did the first time around.  And that's very rare for me.  Usually I only cry the first time I read a book.  But I loved revisiting Taylor and her family.  This is a great summer read but one you'll probably want to save for indoors; don't read it by the pool or at the beach!

On the Fence by Kasie West
Just like TDBU, this is sweet and fun.  Braden and Charlie are adorable together.  I finally got my copy on the 8th, and I reread it in a matter of hours.

Cress by Marissa Meyer
*sigh* Such a delight to reread the latest book in one of my favorite series.  Haven't quite finished it yet (it's been a busy weekend), but I think I'll likely finish it tomorrow, which is the more official halfway point of RRSS14.

So that's it for the first half of July!  Stay tuned later this month for my final progress report.

July 13, 2014

Linh Cinder

So, this past spring, I had to write a description of someone for writing club.  I was required to use primarily verbs, adverbs, adverbial clauses, and so forth, and as few adjectives as possible.  I chose Linh Cinder from The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer.  Since Cinder grows such much throughout the entire series, I decided to focus on her character growth through Cinder.  So this is both a description of her and a summary of the book.  Please do not share without my permission, as I worked rather hard on this.


Linh Cinder
by Emma S.


Fixing, building, inventing.
Grease and oil running through her veins.
Meek as a mouse.
Caring for Iko and Peony.
Fighting back.
Enigmatic.
Falling for the prince.
 Outcast.
Learning the truth.
Keeping secrets.
Losing a sister.
Beauty hurts.
Stronger than one
Stronger than ten
Stronger than a hundred men.
As fragile as china.
Lone foot like a glass slipper.
Fighting for the prince.
As traitorous as the Patriots.
Rebel.
Truth that is a bombshell.
Escaping.
Vanished like a ghost.

July 12, 2014

Review: Just Like the Movies

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Just Like the Movies by Kelly Fiore
Grade: C+
Release date: July 22, 2014
This e-galley was provided by NetGalley and Walker Books for Young Readers in exchange for an honest review.
Summary: Pretty and popular track star Marijke Monti is confident about almost everything – she’s got great friends, a great family, and she’s on her way to the State Track Championship. In fact, the only thing Marijke isn’t confident about is her relationship with Tommy Lawson. 

Lily Spencer has spent her entire high school career preparing for the future – she’s participated in every extracurricular activity and volunteer committee she could. But, at home, she watches her mother go on date after date with dud-dudes, still searching for “the one.” Lily realizes that she’s about to graduate and still hasn’t even had a boyfriend. 

While they live on each other’s periphery at school, Lily and Marijke never seemed to have much in common; but, after a coincidental meeting at the movie theater, Lily gets an idea – why can’t life be like a movie? Why can’t they set up their perfect romantic situations, just in time for their senior prom, using movie techniques?

Once the girls come up with the perfect plans, they commit themselves to being secret cohorts and, just like in the movies, drama ensues.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: I'm not sure Just Like the Movies lived up to my expectations.  Everything about this book, particularly its ending, just seemed to be a bit too perfect...just like in movies.  While I thought Marijke and Lily were both awesome characters, I didn't connect with Marijke and Tommy's romance.  I enjoyed every scene with Lily and her crush a lot more.  I was expecting more scenes involving popular rom-coms, I suppose, and we didn't get those.  I also wanted to see more about Marijke's parents.  She mentioned how they were some epic high school romance, and I never really felt like they had been.  In contrast, we saw a lot of Lily's home life, and its resolution was just a little too perfect.
Everything about this book was fairly tame and definitely cleaner than a lot of popular rom-coms, so that's a plus at least?

The Verdict: Honestly didn't live up to what I hoped it would be.  However, Just Like the Movies might be good for fans of Wish You Were Italian, This Is What Happy Looks Like, and How Zoe Made Her Dreams (Mostly) Come True.


July 10, 2014

Interview with Paula Stokes, Author of The Art of Lainey

Meet Paula Stokes.

Paula Stokes is half writer, half RN, and totally thrilled to be part of the world of YA literature. She grew up in St. Louis, Missouri where she graduated from Washington University and the Goldfarb School of Nursing. When she's not writing, she's kayaking, hiking, reading, or seeking out new adventures in faraway lands. Paula loves interacting with readers! Find her online atwww.authorpaulastokes.com or on twitter as @pstokesbooks.

She's the author of this book:
Soccer-star Lainey Mitchell is gearing up to spend an epic summer with her amazing boyfriend, Jason, when he suddenly breaks up with her—no reasons, no warning, and in public no less! Lainey is more than crushed, but with help from her friend Bianca, she resolves to do whatever it takes to get Jason back.

And that’s when the girls stumble across a copy of The Art of War. With just one glance, they're sure they can use the book to lure Jason back into Lainey’s arms. So Lainey channels her inner warlord, recruiting spies to gather intel and persuading her coworker Micah to pose as her new boyfriend to make Jason jealous. After a few "dates", it looks like her plan is going to work!  But now her relationship with Micah is starting to feel like more than just a game.

What's a girl to do when what she wants is totally different from what she needs? How do you figure out the person you're meant to be with, if you're still figuring out the person you're meant to be? 

And I had the honor of interviewing her recently.  Check out what she had to say!

Emma: Your first three books were published under a pen name.  How does it feel to now have a book published under your own name?
Paula: It feels so amazing :-) LAINEY, LIARS, INC., and the four other books I've sold for 2015-2017 are completely my stories, whereas the Eternal Rose trilogy are books that were created in collaboration with Paper Lantern Lit. I think that work-for-hire is a model that can help writers learn to be disciplined and develop their craft, but the feeling of having your own stories out in the world is completely different - scarier, but more rewarding too.

Emma: I know you've said Bianca and Trinity are the characters most like you. Have you ever known someone who was more like Lainey?
Paula: Oh, absolutely. So many of the girls on my soccer team when I was growing up were these gorgeous popular girls and I've known all kinds of people who prioritized superficial things in relationships. I'll be the first to admit that I've dated some guys in the past and stuck it out a little longer than I should have because they were super-attractive or the adult version of popular varsity athletes. There's something really flattering about a guy who I think could date any girl choosing to date me. Like Lainey says--it does make you feel powerful and it is hard to give it up. One thing that always fascinated me is that it was always my most beautiful and popular friends who seemed the most insecure. That's what I was trying to explore with Lainey's character--how even people who appear to be living charmed lives still worry about all the same things as everyone else. When we label people as "jocks" or "mean girls" or even "popular" we risk forgetting about the common threads we all share.

Emma: What do you think readers will find to be Lainey's best quality, despite how polarizing she is?
Paula: Oh, man. I don't think there will be a consensus, or if there is it'll have to be her self-awareness. I guess that's imported from me--I'm very in touch with my faults ;-) One thing that's difficult is that I prefer to write in 1st-person present tense and that creates a narrative closeness where a lot of readers want the POV character to be someone they can emulate from page one. I'm all about the flawed characters so this might continue to be a problem for me--we shall see. Max (in LIARS, INC) isn't nearly as clueless as Lainey, but he's got his own demons and issues to work through so he's definitely flawed too.

Emma: Micah was such an awesome character, and I'm so excited we're getting a novella about him.  What can you say about his novella, INFINITE REPEAT?
Paula: Micah, Micah, Micah! ;-) I'm proud of the novella because it has come so far in just a few drafts. My editor basically wanted a story that took place before THE ART OF LAINEY and filled in some of Micah's backstory. I prefer to write stories that happen over a week or two, not six years, so I incorporated a lot of Micah's past via flashbacks linked to the narrative. I intended for this to be the story of Micah and Amber's breakup, and it is, but it really turned out to be more about Micah and Trinity and how the Foster family tried to heal themselves after Micah's dad was killed. Still not convinced you want to read it? You should know that Micah bakes in this story *swoon* and that it'll be over 100 pages long (27,000+ words) before Harper adds on a LAINEY sampler. That means you're getting fine Micah POV at a rate of less than $.02 per page ;-)

Emma: Would you rather have a soccer match with Lainey or a bake-off with Micah?
Paula: A bake-off with Micah because he is hot  I am better at baking than I am at soccer, and afterward we'd have delicious things to eat.

Emma: So I'll be meeting you in a few weeks on the Mighty Mississippi Book Blast tour. Where did the idea for such a tour come from?
Paula: My braaaaaaaaaaaaaaaain ;-) No, okay, so when I did an author tour for my work-for-hire books, it was set up as East Coast and West Coast and I was kind of like "But, but, what about the middle?" It seems like the middle of the country misses out on stuff because so many authors live in places like NYC or LA, and then many of the big conferences end up in those areas too. My author-friend Philip Siegel and I had talked about doing events together in Chicago and St. Louis for our Spring 2014 contemps, and then the events grew into a tour and then we both decided to see how many other authors we could get to join us. [Spoiler: lots! Check out our current lineup at mmbbyatour.tumblr.com.]

Emma: What's your favorite recent YA read?  And on the flip side, are there any upcoming YA books you're excited for?
Paula: I have not been reading nearly as much as I should. I keep buying people's books to support them and then not reading them! #BadPaula The last book that really stands out is DREAMS OF GODS AND MONSTERS by Laini Taylor. In fairness to all other books, that's a really tough act to follow. I'm looking forward to SALT & STONE by Victoria Scott and BLOOD OF MY BLOOD by Barry Lyga.

Emma: Signature question time: what's your favorite fairytale?
Paula: THIS IS SUCH A GOOD QUESTION! I feel like this response should reveal a guarded secret about me and I'm wondering what it means that no immediate answer pops into my brain. #GuardedPaula Okay, after thinking about it, I've decided the fairytales I mostly know of are very traditional "handsome prince saves damsel and they go get married" stories. Not to say all fairytales are like this, of course. Just that I have only a limited exposure to them and none of the ones I know really appeal to me. So instead I will pick my fave Disney movie: Lilo and Stitch. I saw that on a plane a few years back and bawled like a baby!

Thanks so much for the interview, Paula!  Can't wait to see you in a few weeks!  And if any of you are in the Midwest, definitely check to see if one of the Mighty Mississippi Book Blast stops is near you!  You can learn more about Paula at the following links:

July 9, 2014

What Should Be on Your TBR List

So this post is to highlight all the debut books releasing this fall.  I love reading an author's first book.  It's probably exciting and nerve-wracking for them, and definitely exciting and a bit intimidating for me.  It's fun to find a new author, but I'm always worried I won't like their book or connect with their characters or whatever.  So here's hoping I enjoy these 10 fall 2014 debuts!  I'm going to let their covers and synopses speak for themselves because, otherwise, I'd be biased and be overexcited for only a few titles (*cough*Falling into Place*cough*Don't Touch*cough*Snow Like Ashes*cough*Not in the Script*hacks up a lung from all the coughing*).

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Don't Touch by Rachel M. Wilson
A powerful story of a girl who is afraid to touch another person’s skin, until the boy auditioning for Hamlet opposite her Ophelia gives her a reason to overcome her fears.

Step on a crack, break your mother’s back. Touch another person’s skin, and Dad’s gone for good.

Caddie can’t stop thinking that if she keeps from touching another person’s skin, her parents might get back together…which is why she wears full-length gloves to school and covers every inch of her skin.

It seems harmless at first, but Caddie’s obsession soon threatens her ambitions as an actress. She desperately wants to play Ophelia in her school’s production of Hamlet. But that would mean touching Peter, who’s auditioning for the title role—and kissing him. Part of Caddie would love nothing more than to kiss Peter—but the other part isn't sure she's brave enough to let herself fall.


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Falling into Place by Amy Zhang
On the day Liz Emerson tries to die, they had reviewed Newton’s laws of motion in physics class. Then, after school, she put them into practice by running her Mercedes off the road. 

Why? Why did Liz Emerson decide that the world would be better off without her? Why did she give up? Vividly told by an unexpected and surprising narrator, this heartbreaking and nonlinear novel pieces together the short and devastating life of Meridian High’s most popular junior girl. Mass, acceleration, momentum, force—Liz didn’t understand it in physics, and even as her Mercedes hurtles toward the tree, she doesn’t understand it now. How do we impact one another? How do our actions reverberate? What does it mean to be a friend? To love someone? To be a daughter? Or a mother? Is life truly more than cause and effect? Amy Zhang’s haunting and universal story will appeal to fans of Lauren Oliver, Gayle Forman, and Jay Asher.

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Hook's Revenge by Heidi Schulz
Captain Hook's feisty daughter hits the high seas to avenge her father's death at the jaws of the Neverland crocodile in Heidi Schulz's spirited middle-grade debut.

Twelve-year-old Jocelyn dreams of becoming every bit as daring as her infamous father, Captain James Hook. Her grandfather, on the other hand, intends to see her starched and pressed into a fine society lady. When she's sent to Miss Eliza Crumb-Biddlecomb's Finishing School for Young Ladies, Jocelyn's hopes of following in her father's fearsome footsteps are lost in a heap of dance lessons, white gloves, and way too much pink.

So when Jocelyn receives a letter from her father challenging her to avenge his untimely demise at the jaws of the Neverland crocodile, she doesn't hesitate-here at last is the adventure she has been waiting for. But Jocelyn finds that being a pirate is a bit more difficult than she'd bargained for. As if attempting to defeat the Neverland's most fearsome beast isn't enough to deal with, she's tasked with captaining a crew of woefully untrained pirates, outwitting cannibals wild for English cuisine, and rescuing her best friend from a certain pack of lost children, not to mention that pesky Peter Pan who keeps barging in uninvited.

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Falls the Shadow by Stefanie Gaither
When Cate Benson was twelve, her sister died. 

Two hours after the funeral, they picked up Violet’s replacement, and it was like nothing had ever happened. Because Cate’s parents are among those who decided to grant their children a sort of immortality—by cloning them at birth. So this new Violet has the same smile. The same laugh. That same perfect face. Thanks to advancements in mind-uploading technology, she even has all the same memories as the girl she replaced. 

She also might have murdered the most popular girl in school. 

Or at least, that’s what the paparazzi and crazy anti-cloning protesters want everyone to think: that clones are violent, unpredictable monsters. Cate is used to hearing all that, though. She’s used to standing up for her sister too, and she’s determined to prove her innocence now—at whatever the cost. But the deeper she digs for the truth, the further Cate's carefully-constructed life begins to unravel, unveiling a world filled with copies and lies, where nothing and no one—not even her sister— is completely what they seem. 

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Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley
In 1959 Virginia, the lives of two girls on opposite sides of the battle for civil rights will be changed forever.

Sarah Dunbar is one of the first black students to attend the previously all-white Jefferson High School. An honors student at her old school, she is put into remedial classes, spit on and tormented daily.

Linda Hairston is the daughter of one of the town’s most vocal opponents of school integration. She has been taught all her life that the races should be kept “separate but equal.”

Forced to work together on a school project, Sarah and Linda must confront harsh truths about race, power and how they really feel about one another.

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Not in the Script by Amy Finnegan
Millions of people witnessed Emma Taylor’s first kiss—a kiss that needed twelve takes and four camera angles to get right. After spending nearly all of her teen years performing on cue, Emma can’t help but wonder if any part of her life is real anymore . . . particularly her relationships. But her new costar, Jake Elliott, couldn’t care less about how many scenes he has to fake his way through; he needs the money. Toss in a reckless heartthrob, desperate for a comeback, and a resident diva who may or may not be as evil as she seems, and the production of Coyote Hills heats up in unexpected—and romantic—ways. Along with offering front row seats to the real life drama that often unfolds within the entertainment industry, NOT IN THE SCRIPT is a story about two not-so-typical teens who are searching for themselves, and just happen to find each other.

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Stray by Elissa Sussman
Princess Aislynn knows all about the curse. Its magic is a part of her, like her awkward nose and thin fingers. It’s also something she can’t control. And girls who can’t control their abilities have a tendency to disappear. So for her own protection, Aislynn is sworn into the Order of Fairy Godmothers where she must spend the rest of her life chaste and devoted to serving another royal family.

Tasked with tending to the sweet, but sheltered Princess Linnea, Aislynn also finds a reluctant friend in the palace gardener, Thackery, who makes no secret of his disdain for her former life. The more time they spend together, though, the more she begins to doubt the rules she has observed so obediently. As Aislynn’s feelings threaten to undo the sacred vows she has taken, she risks not only her own life but Linnea’s as well. With the princess engaged to a devoted follower of The Path, there are some who would do anything to keep Aislynn from straying.

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Even in Paradise by Chelsey Philpot
When Julia Buchanan enrolls at St. Anne’s at the beginning of junior year, Charlotte Ryder already knows all about the former senator’s daughter. Most people do... or think they do.

Charlotte certainly never expects she’ll be Julia’s friend. But almost immediately, she is drawn into the larger than-life-new girl’s world—a world of midnight rendezvous, dazzling parties, palatial vacation homes, and fizzy champagne cocktails. And then Charlotte meets, and begins falling for, Julia’s handsome older brother, Sebastian.

But behind her self-assured smiles and toasts to the future, Charlotte soon realizes that Julia is still suffering from a tragedy. A tragedy that the Buchanan family has kept hidden … until now.

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Snow Like Ashes by Sara Raasch
A heartbroken girl. A fierce warrior. A hero in the making.

Sixteen years ago the Kingdom of Winter was conquered and its citizens enslaved, leaving them without magic or a monarch. Now, the Winterians’ only hope for freedom is the eight survivors who managed to escape, and who have been waiting for the opportunity to steal back Winter’s magic and rebuild the kingdom ever since.

Orphaned as an infant during Winter’s defeat, Meira has lived her whole life as a refugee, raised by the Winterians’ general, Sir. Training to be a warrior—and desperately in love with her best friend, and future king, Mather — she would do anything to help her kingdom rise to power again.

So when scouts discover the location of the ancient locket that can restore Winter’s magic, Meira decides to go after it herself. Finally, she’s scaling towers, fighting enemy soldiers, and serving her kingdom just as she’s always dreamed she would. But the mission doesn’t go as planned, and Meira soon finds herself thrust into a world of evil magic and dangerous politics – and ultimately comes to realize that her destiny is not, never has been, her own.

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No Place to Fall by Jaye Robin Brown
Amber Vaughn is a good girl. She sings solos at church, babysits her nephew after school, and spends every Friday night hanging out at her best friend Devon’s house. It’s only when Amber goes exploring in the woods near her home, singing camp songs with the hikers she meets on the Appalachian Trail, that she feels free—and when the bigger world feels just a little bit more in reach.

When Amber learns about an audition at the North Carolina School of the Arts, she decides that her dream—to sing on bigger stages—could also be her ticket to a new life. Devon’s older (and unavailable) brother, Will, helps Amber prepare for her one chance to try out for the hypercompetitive arts school. But the more time Will and Amber spend together, the more complicated their relationship becomes . . . and Amber starts to wonder if she’s such a good girl, after all.

Then, in an afternoon, the bottom drops out of her family’s world—and Amber is faced with an impossible choice between her promise as an artist and the people she loves. Amber always thought she knew what a good girl would do. But between “right” and “wrong,” there’s a whole world of possibilities.

So what do you think? Are any of these already on your to-be-read, or are you now rushing to add them?

July 7, 2014

Review: One Past Midnight

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One Past Midnight by Jessica Shirvington
Grade: B+
Release date: July 22, 2014
This e-galley was provided by NetGalley and Bloomsbury USA Children's in exchange for an honest review.
Summary: For as long as she can remember, Sabine has lived two lives. Every 24 hours she Shifts to her ′other′ life - a life where she is exactly the same, but absolutely everything else is different: different family, different friends, different social expectations. In one life she has a sister, in the other she does not. In one life she′s a straight-A student with the perfect boyfriend, in the other she′s considered a reckless delinquent. Nothing about her situation has ever changed, until the day when she discovers a glitch: the arm she breaks in one life is perfectly fine in the other.

With this new knowledge, Sabine begins a series of increasingly risky experiments which bring her dangerously close to the life she′s always wanted... But just what - and who - is she really risking?

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: One Past Midnight was a gripping tale that had me on the edge of my seat, always wondering what would happen next.  If you're looking for an explanation of why Sabine shifts between her two lives, you won't get it.  But I think the book was complete without it.  Would I have liked to know?  Sure, but it didn't completely ruin the story.  At times it was hard to keep some of the different details straight, and towards the end, when the jumps between the two lives happened almost every paragraph, it got confusing.  I was able to keep most everything straight, though, although it might've helped, had Sabine lived in places with less similar names (Roxbury and Wellesley).  One romance moved a bit too quickly for my tastes, but I did enjoy it and (no spoilers) I enjoyed how it ended.  Also, I loved the moment where Sabine had to translate something in Finnish. (Proud Finn, y'all!)
Language had its foul moments, romance was fairly clean and not too descriptive (although much was discussed about it being Sabine's first time), and there were incidents with alcohol and drugs, although most were never treated in a positive light.  Finally, I do have a bit of a trigger warning.  Someone gets very violent with their significant other to the point of beating them.  If you can't read about moments like that, then you might want to avoid One Past Midnight.

The Verdict: Overall, I enjoyed this book immensely.  It's definitely worth a read!


July 6, 2014

Rewind & Review #17

Rewind and review

Not a lot of bookish news from these past two weeks.  The good stuff is: my dad is currently working a temp position, so yay!  It's not permanent, but at least he's working.  Second, Asbury gave me the financial aid I'll need, so we're praising God for that.  And third, I was emailed my housing assignment; I now know what dorm I'll be in and who my roommate is.  I don't expect us to be BFFs (I've read enough books and know from others that that would be incredibly unrealistic), but I hope we'll become friends and I really hope we get along.  We've started talking on Facebook, and she is so nice. Plus she loves books and Disney, so I have a feeling we will get along just fine.  Also, I am taking this opportunity to apologize to anyone who follows me on Goodreads.  I added about 50-ish books to my TBR list in the last few weeks, and your timeline must've been full (I do hope you found new books for your own TBR lists, though...).
Now onto the bookish happenings.

Books I Received
A Little Something Different by Sandy Hall (via Macmillan/Swoon Reads)
The Kiss of Deception by Mary E. Pearson (via Macmillan/NetGalley; I'm on the street team so watch my Tumblr July 6-12!)
Let's Get Lost by Adi Alsaid (via Harlequin Teen/Edelweiss)

Books I Bought
Only the Good Spy Young by Ally Carter
Across a Star-Swept Sea by Diana Peterfreund
The Nightmare Dilemma by Mindee Arnett
Sixteenth Summer by Michelle Dalton
Don't Call Me Baby by Gwendolyn Heasley
The Secret Diary of Lizzie Bennet by Bernie Su and Kate Rorick

Books I Won
Haven't received any in the mail, although I won a prize pack from Fierce Reads (so I'm waiting for that to arrive...) and an e-book of my choice from the Pandora's Wonderland month-long blogoversary event.

Books I Read
Heir of Fire by Sarah J. Maas
Time After Time by Tamara Ireland Stone (reread)
The Falconer by Elizabeth May (4 stars)
Open Road Summer by Emery Lord (reread)
The Jewel by Amy Ewing (reread)
Midnight Thief by Livia Blackburne
Defiance by C.J. Redwine (3.5 stars)
The Things You Kiss Goodbye by Leslie Connor (reread)
A Little Something Different by Sandy Hall
The School for Good and Evil by Soman Chainani (3 stars)
Since You've Been Gone by Morgan Matson (reread)
The Kiss of Deception by Mary E. Pearson (5 stars)
The Distance Between Us by Kasie West (reread for RRSS14)
A World Without Princes by Soman Chainani (DNF)
In a Handful of Dust by Mindy McGinnis (2 stars; Hannah will be reading and reviewing this book for y'all!)
Royally Lost by Angie Stanton (2 stars)
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green (reread for RRSS14)

Currently Reading
The Nightmare Dilemma by Mindee Arnett
Better off Friends by Elizabeth Eulberg (for RRSS14)
The Secret Diary of Lizzie Bennet by Bernie Su and Kate Rorick (reread)

Blog Posts You Might've Missed
   (From 6/23-6/28)
   (From 6/29-7/5)
Upcoming Blog Posts in the Next Few Weeks (subject to change)
  • Review: One Past Midnight by Jessica Shirvington
  • What Should Be on Your TBR List
  • Interview with Paula Stokes
  • Review: Just Like the Movies by Kelly Fiore
  • Linh Cinder
  • ReReadathon Update
  • Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Movies
  • Birthdays, Blogoversaries, and Giveaways
  • Mighty Mississippi Book Blast Recap
  • Random Friday: Literary Kindred Spirits

July 4, 2014

Random Friday: Favorite Moments in History


Want to participate in Random Fridays? Just do the following: 
  • Include the above image in your post and link back to my post.
  • Blog about this week's topic.
  • Add the link to your Random Friday at the bottom of this post.
Happy Fourth of July to all my American readers!  Today's Random Friday topic was definitely chosen with the holiday in mind.  I also invited a couple friends to share their favorite moments in history, too, so let's get started.

Rose from Searching the Clouds's Favorite Moments (@rose_reading)
1. 1940s - 1950s
While this time period was not exactly the most peaceful, the culture and fashion in America are my favorite through the 40s and 50s.

2. When this happened
I love how this was such a living-in-the-moment moment that was actually captured on camera.

Maura from The Whimsical Mama's Favorite Moments (@armywife2310)
1. Battle of Yorktown 1781 - This should be a favorite moment for every American! The last major land battle for American independence is one to always be remembered.

2. John F. Kennedy assassination 1963 - This forever changed the course of American history & I love this time period. I also love the conspiracies surrounding the assassination.

3. Battle of Bosworth Field 1485 - I'm a HUGE English history nerd and this was a huge moment. The end of the Plantagenets and rise of the Tudors. I love the mystery surrounding Richard III & the Tudors are my favorite royal family!

Emma's Favorite Moments
It was actually really hard choosing my moments in history!  I'm more of a "whose your favorite historical person" girl.  Since it's my blog, I think I can get away with listing those. ;)

1. Ronald Reagan - I regard him as one of our best presidents (and even the best have moments where they mess up).
2. Coco Chanel - She forever changed fashion as we know it (along with Paul Poiret and a few others).

And now a favorite period:
I love the 1910s because Victorian fashion was still trending, but also because hemlines were starting to creep up.  Plus, I love British society during that time (thanks to Cinders & Sapphires, and my mother who got me into Downton Abbey).

So what do you consider to be your favorite moments in history?


July 2, 2014

Interview with Sara Raasch, Author of Snow Like Ashes

There's this one book releasing this fall that I'm very (and I mean very) excited for.  The concept sounds awesome, and I'm planning to preorder it.  What book am I talking about?


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Game of Thrones meets Graceling in this striking fantasy tale of dark magic, dangerous politics, and discovering your true self.  Sara Raasch’s debut fantasy is a lightning-fast story of loyalty, love, and controlling one’s destiny.

Sixteen years ago the Kingdom of Winter was conquered and its citizens enslaved, leaving them without magic or a monarch. The Winterians’ only hope for freedom is the eight survivors who managed to escape, and who have been searching for the opportunity to steal back Winter’s magic and rebuild their kingdom ever since.

Orphaned as an infant during Winter’s defeat, Meira has lived her whole life as a refugee. Training to be a warrior—and desperately in love with her best friend, Winter’s future king—she would do anything to help Winter rise to power again. So when scouts discover the location of half of the ancient locket that can restore their magic, Meira decides to go after it herself—only to find herself thrust into a world of evil magic and dangerous politics, and to realize that her destiny is not, never has been, her own.

Snow Like Ashes which is written by the lovely and very fun Sara Raasch.
Sara Raasch has known she was destined for bookish things since the age of five, when her friends had a lemonade stand and she tagged along to sell her hand-drawn picture books too. Not much has changed since then — her friends still cock concerned eyebrows when she attempts to draw things and her enthusiasm for the written word still drives her to extreme measures. Her debut YA fantasy, SNOW LIKE ASHES, the first in a trilogy, comes out October 14, 2014 from Balzer + Bray. It does not feature her hand-drawn pictures.

And I had the honor of interviewing her recently.

Emma: I know on your website that it says you knew you were “destined for bookish things since the age of five,” when you brought hand-drawn picture books to sell at your friends’ lemonade stand.  I also read in another interview that you’ve been working on Snow Like Ashes for years.  So when did you officially start writing novels and think of it as your career path?
Sara: I "seriously" started writing/working toward getting published in my preteen year -- around the time I started writing the first draft of what would become SNOW LIKE ASHES. I say "seriously" because I had no idea what I was doing -- I stalked/harassed publishers at school visits, tried to get my very very rough first draft agented, etc. But I'm eternally glad my tenacity was blind to my shortcomings, because it let me figure out this industry on my own through trial and many, many errors!

Emma: What drew you to write YA fiction?
Sara: I love the sense of hope and possibility that comes with YA. The stories are all about people on the cusp of becoming -- teens on the brink of adulthood, making decisions that will mold their futures. Such possibility is ripe with stories to be told!

Emma: Who are your favorite heroes/heroines in other books?
Sara: Oh my! Tough question. Well, one of my absolute favorite books is POISON by Bridget Zinn -- I LOVE everything about her book, but especially her MC, Kyra. She's spunky and independent and flawed and so, so endearing. She's everything I want my own MCs to be!

Emma: What’s something that couldn’t be included in Snow Like Ashes that you wish could have been?
Sara: I spent way too much time last year working on a prologue for SLA that, sadly, was cut in the end. BUT it may or may not be making its debut into the world anyway, sometime before SLA's release. *wink wink*

Emma: What’s the craziest/funniest/coolest thing you found while researching for this book?
Sara: Each kingdom in SLA has an artifact, a conduit, that stores the magic for their monarch. I had a lot of fun figuring out what that object would be for each kingdom, but especially in the case of Autumn's conduit. It's a ring, but not just any ring -- a special cut called a Thai Princess ring, based on a ring my grandmother passed on to us grandkids. Every time I wear it I like to imagine it's my own personal conduit, and it helps me feel more connected to both SLA and to my grandmother.

Emma: Anything you can say about the sequel to Snow Like Ashes?
Sara: Be prepared for hearts to break. (Yours? Meira's? An entirely new character's?? Hmmm...#EvilAuthorIsEvil) 

Emma: Do you have any concrete ideas for what you might be writing after you finish the SLA trilogy?
Sara: I have a few ideas rolling around -- a YA pirate fantasy and a YA sci-fi. The sci-fi has been particularly loud lately (it involves multi-planet war, magic powers, sisters, politics, and some really really gritty things I am ridiculously excited for), so it might win out in the end!

Lightning round!  What is your favorite…
Fairytale?
Gotta go with the Little Mermaid. Particularly the Disney version, of course; apparently I watched that movie so much as a kid that my dad caught himself humming "Under the Sea" at work on more than one occasion. 
TV show?
At the moment, Raising Hope. Everyone in that show is maddeningly adorable in totally quirky/slightly creepy ways.
Season?
Winter. Of course.
Song?
Again, at the moment (these things change daily), Raging Fire by Phillip Phillips. It perfectly encapsulates one of the relationships I'm working on in Book 3. SO MANY FEELS.

Thanks for letting me interview you, Sara!
Thanks for having me, Emma! I can't wait to hear what you think of SLA :D

If you want to learn more about Sara, you can visit her at the following sites:

July 1, 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Classics


As I was working on this post, I realized that a lot of the books I read when I was little were classics.  Here are my favorites!

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1. Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen
2. Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

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3. Emma by Jane Austen
4. Daddy-Long-Legs by Jean Webster

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5. To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee

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7. Hamlet by William Shakespeare
8. The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis (except The Horse and His Boy)

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9. Betsy-Tacy series by Maud Hart Lovelace
10. The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare