October 10, 2016

Review: My Unscripted Life

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My Unscripted Life by Lauren Morrill
Grade: C
Release date: October 11, 2016
An e-galley was provided by the publisher in exchange for review consideration.
Summary: Sometimes love stories go off script.

Another sultry Georgia summer is about to get a lot hotter. Dee Wilkie is still licking her wounds after getting rejected by the precollege fine arts program of her dreams. But if she'd gone away, she wouldn't have been around to say yes to an unbelievable opportunity: working on the set of a movie filming in her small Southern town that just happens to be starring Milo Ritter, the famous pop star Dee (along with the rest of the world) has had a crush since eighth grade.

It's not like Dee will be sharing any screen time with Milo—she's just a lowly PA. And Milo is so disappointingly rude that Dee is eager to stay far away from him. Except after a few chance meetings, she begins to wonder if just maybe there's a reason for his offensive attitude, and if there's more to Milo than his good looks and above-it-all Hollywood pedigree. Can a relationship with a guy like Milo ever work out for a girl like Dee? Never say never. . .

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: Dee Wilkie is one of the luckiest characters in the world. She stumbles into a job on a movie set, and then a pop star falls in love with her. The unlikelihood of that happening to any real girl is enormous. However, as someone who's never seen a movie set, I felt like Lauren described that extremely well. I could picture where the characters were and it seemed realistic.
However, there was so much unnecessary drama with Milo's ex, and the book was a big cliche about small town life being boring. (If anyone's seen Gilmore Girls, you know that's not always the case.) I never fully connected with Dee, and she and Milo seemed to be the only characters important to the narrative. 
Language was pretty mild; I caught half a dozen s-words at most.

The Verdict: I think this is going to be my last Lauren Morrill book. There's nothing special about them anymore, and nothing can surpass Being Sloane Jacobs.


Will I be adding this book to my library?: No.

October 9, 2016

Sunday Street Team: Becky Allen Guest Post


The Book
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Bound by Blood and Sand by Becky Allen
Release date: October 11, 2016

Jae is a slave in a dying desert world. 

Once verdant with water from a magical Well, the land is drying up, and no one remembers the magic needed to keep the water flowing. If a new source isn’t found soon, the people will perish. Jae doesn’t mind, in a way. By law, she is bound by a curse to obey every order given her, no matter how vile. At least in death, she’ll be free. 

Elan’s family rules the fading realm. He comes to the estate where Jae works, searching for the hidden magic needed to replenish the Well, but it’s Jae who finds it, and she who must wield it. Desperate to save his realm, Elan begs her to use it to locate the Well. 

But why would a slave—abused, beaten, and treated as less than human—want to save the system that shackles her? Jae would rather see the world burn. 

Though revenge clouds her vision, she agrees to help if the realm’s slaves are freed. Then Elan’s father arrives. The ruler’s cruelty knows no limits. He is determined that the class system will not change—and that Jae will remain a slave forever.

The Author

Becky Allen grew up in a tiny town outside Ithaca, New York, and graduated from Brandeis University with a major in American studies and a minor in journalism. She is the website director of TheBody.com, an online HIV resource, and loves New York, brunch, and feminism. Becky lives in New York City.

The Guest Post: The World-Building of Bound by Blood and Sand

Way back in middle school, one of my favorite fantasy series was David and Leigh Eddings’ THE BELGARIAD. Think: farmboy turns out to be a lost king, epic clash of nations, the villain is a full-fledged dark god. This, my middle school brain said, is fantasy. So I was absolutely thrilled to death when, a few years later, the writers released all of their worldbuilding notes in a giant tome -- almost 500 pages! It was full of histories (thousands of years worth), religious texts, notes on the economies, government, etc, of dozens of countries. It was amazing. I was utterly overwhelmed.

This, my high school brain said, is how you build a world. I proceeded to spend the next few years trying to do exactly that for a few fantasy projects I was noodling around with -- writing out histories, making up holidays, creating an index of important historical characters. But it never really worked. Sure, I came up with a lot of stuff, but none of it felt very organic -- none of it had much of anything to do with my actual characters or the stories I was trying to tell. I just thought that was what you were supposed to do when you wanted to write fantasy.

That is not what I did for BBB&S.

The very first thing I knew about BBB&S was that it was going to take place in a desert that was losing its water -- the conflict, and thus the whole story, hinged on that. So yes, I started with some pragmatic stuff, like what the temperature would be, what plants and animals there would be. I made a couple of quick lists as I wrote, and in my draft I noted places where I wanted to come back and fill in more details… once I knew what the details were.

One thing about BBB&S is that it hinges a lot on the backstory, events that happened generations before my characters. That wasn’t something I knew going in, though, so when I realized it as I wrote… well, I just kept writing. The first version didn’t make a lot of sense, but it gave me a beginning. I knew that the Well (the magic that keeps the desert’s water in place) and the Curse (the horrible magic placed over my protagonist) were somehow tangled up together, but not how. So after that draft, I spent some time figuring that out. I may have jotted that down in a document somewhere, but the most important place it lived was on the page, in the next draft.

The thing that worked for me about building up world that way, inside out instead of outside in, is that it gave everything I built context within the story. There wasn’t history for the sake of history; there was history that directly affected the characters.

The same thing carried through in other ways. One thing my editor asked me about in revisions was art and culture -- there are four castes in the book, though really only the Closest (bottom caste) and Highest (guess which one they are) were all that important. She asked if I could differentiate the two by showing more of their differing cultures, such as their art and music. So I thought about it -- what kind of art would the Closest have?

The Closest are slaves, who don’t have much in the way of possessions, or free time. So I gave them art that was subtle -- simple drawings in the dirt or done with ashes on a wall. They are easy to overlook, and easy to erase and start again. Nothing permanent, because these characters have nothing. Once I knew that, it was easy to build up a contrast among the Highest: since the Closest worked only with muted, dark colors, everything the Highest do is bright and flashy. Brilliant colors all over the place! So what had been a sort of generically beige-y stone house where most of the story takes place was suddenly covered in brightly colored mosaics all over the place.


Once again, the worldbuilding details were all things that came from what the story needed. Pieces I discovered as I wrote, that wove themselves into the story I was creating. And I’ve realized, this is the method that works for me. Building up too much ahead of time makes me feel like I need to to shape a story to fit a world -- when the truth is that the worldbuilding should serve the story.


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October 8, 2016

Review: Empire of Storms

WARNING: SPOILERS FOR EVERY THRONE OF GLASS BOOK, INCLUDING EMPIRE OF STORMS, ABOUND IN THE FOLLOWING REVIEW. PROCEED WITH CAUTION.

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Empire of Storms by Sarah J. Maas
Grade: A
Summary: The long path to the throne has only just begun for Aelin Galathynius. Loyalties have been broken and bought, friends have been lost and gained, and those who possess magic find themselves at odds with those who don't.

As the kingdoms of Erilea fracture around her, enemies must become allies if Aelin is to keep those she loves from falling to the dark forces poised to claim her world. With war looming on all horizons, the only chance for salvation lies in a desperate quest that may mark the end of everything Aelin holds dear.

Aelin's journey from assassin to queen has entranced millions across the globe, and this fifth installment will leave fans breathless. Will Aelin succeed in keeping her world from splintering, or will it all come crashing down?

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: I'm going to write this review so as to make sense of my numerous feelings about book five in the Throne of Glass series.
I left Heir of Fire feeling good about where Celaena/Aelin was. She was in such a dark place after the loss of Nehemia that she needed that time to recover and find herself. I didn't like where she was in Queen of Shadows at all, and I was actually thankful for the presence of Lysandra and Manon, because they both meant there were female characters I could root for. There are many things I love about this series...and things I hate, too. I'm going to try and do a bullet-point list to make this easier (for me to write and you to read).


What I Liked
  • I actually did like Aelin in this book. She still felt, in a lot of ways, like the young woman I was disgusted by in Queen of Shadows but she sacrifices so much in Empire of Storms. I just wish there was some whisper left of the girl that Sam loved.
  • Manon. Oh my word. I took a long time to warm to her, but she is probably my favorite character in this series, outside of Chaol and Dorian. I love how conflicted she is, and how she actually does have a heart and a moral compass. I read some of the book when I was with my best friend, and she said I was making audible noises during the scene where everything hits the fan with Manon, her grandmother, and Asterin.
  • Nehemia. Her influence is still breaking my heart.
  • The way it all comes together at the end, how all those people were willing to fight for Terrasen and Aelin. It broke my heart and I did cry. 
  • Elide. My goodness, she is such a cinnamon roll with a streak of iron. Her reunion with Aelin and Aedion broke my heart.
  • How all the other characters besides Manon described Abraxos. I laughed.
  • Lysandra. I am rooting for her so much. I really hope she survives and gets to raise Evangeline.
  • The plot twists. Well, all of them except one I'll mention in the next section.
  • Dorian. Sweet princeling. (Well, kingling now.) I think I'm on board with his personality changes, because the poor sweet boy has been through so much, but I miss who he was. At least his humor seems to be intact...
  • How everything from the previous books (including the novellas) really comes together. Still waiting for the healer to show up, though. Sarah wouldn't have included that novella if it wasn't important. But Ansel and Ilias and Rolfe are all back, and it's pretty epic.
What I Didn't Like
  • This is totally personal preference, but I do not like my YA books to be that steamy. If I wanted anything beyond fade-to-black, I would read adult romance novels. Which I won't.
  • The lack of Chaol was devastating. He mattered so much in the first three books and now he's just...gone. I would've loved even one chapter from his point-of-view.
  • There's a lot of blood, y'all. Which I actually prefer to the steamy scenes. It just...it felt like a lot of numbing carnage and even though this is a fantasy series, I'm not sure how realistic some of the healing abilities are. There are things that these characters should not be coming back from (especially Aelin at the end).
  • Still can't get behind Rowan and Aelin. That guy switches personalities so much. He is Sarah J. Maas's one writing flaw - the way he treated Aelin in HoF and even QoS was not okay. It reminded me a lot of how Tamlin treated Feyre, and I'm so glad Sarah didn't excuse Tamlin's actions, but I feel she's let Rowan off because he's favored. Then he feels like a completely different person in EoS (well, except for the territorial-ness), and it was like she was trying to write him so Chaolaena fans would like him.
  • At the end of the day, I felt like there were a few too many plot twists even though I liked most of them. That's a weird thing to complain about, but there were just SO many things Aelin kept from those she trusts most and were therefore kept from the reader. But, not gonna lie, I really hate that Rowan is now king of Terrasen and he's Aelin's husband. Not on board with that at all. 


The Verdict: I feel like it looks like I didn't like Empire of Storms, and I promise I did. I liked it a heck of a lot more than Queen of Shadows.


Will I be adding this book to my library?: Already did.

October 7, 2016

So You Like... #35

Time for another post in my special So You Like... series! This one goes out to one of my dearest friends who, although she got Gryffindor when she retook the Pottermore test, will always be a Ravenclaw to me.


RAVENCLAW

I tried to choose books with smart, resourceful characters, and I also tried to choose a few with curious characters (which is harder with YA than you think). As always, book covers link to the Goodreads pages!


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What do you think? Are these books good fits for Ravenclaws? What else would you recommend for the house that thirsts for knowledge?

October 5, 2016

Review: This Adventure Ends

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This Adventure Ends by Emma Mills
Grade: B-
An ARC was provided by the publisher via ALA in exchange for an honest review.
Summary: Sloane isn't expecting to fall in with a group of friends when she moves from New York to Florida—especially not a group of friends so intense, so in love, so all-consuming. Yet that's exactly what happens.

Sloane becomes closest to Vera, a social-media star who lights up any room, and Gabe, Vera's twin brother and the most serious person Sloane's ever met. When a beloved painting by the twins' late mother goes missing, Sloane takes on the responsibility of tracking it down, a journey that takes her across state lines—and ever deeper into the twins' lives.

Filled with intense and important friendships, a wonderful warts-and-all family, shiveringly good romantic developments, and sharp, witty dialogue, this story is about finding the people you never knew you needed.
 

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: That cover, though.
Ahem. I'll try to make this review semi-professional instead of drooling over the cover for the entire post. So I had semi-high expectations for This Adventure Ends. Mills's debut novel, First & Then, was full of perfect banter and a romance I rooted for. While TAE had some good bits, I found it a bit lacking.
I liked that Sloane's family was happy but imperfect. They're going through growing pains, but I liked that they endured. Some of the friend group dynamics worked, but a lot of it felt off to me. I think there was a connection lacking - I didn't understand why they had become friends with Sloane, beyond Vera. I expected Sloane and Gabe to fall for each other, but the chemistry wasn't there for me either. The way Mills wrote Devon and Ezra in F&T felt right to me, and I believed in their romance. Not so with Sloane and Gabe.
I did like the quest for the painting. That plotline drove most of the story and I was glad for that. It was fun and interesting.
Plenty of foul language and underage drinking round out why TAE wasn't perfect for me.

The Verdict: Pretty good, but I think This Adventure Ends, while not a sequel, suffers from the same problem that many sequels do - it's just not as good as the book before it.
(P.S. Is it just me or does the song "Bundle of Joy" from Inside Out really fit with TAE's cover? It's probably just me.)


Will I be adding this book to my library?: Not sure.

October 3, 2016

The Great British Bake Off Tag


There's a GBBO tag circulating the blogosphere. A fellow blogger (don't remember who, sorry!) sent me the link on Twitter, and I knew I had to do it. Heart Full of Books is where I got the list, and the tag was apparently created by ReadingWithJack.

1. CAKE - a book that didn't rise to your expectations
I could name a lot of 2016 releases but ultimately my choice is Scarlett Epstein Hates It Here by Anna Breslaw.


2. BISCUITS - book series or trilogy that got progressively better
There's a few of these, but the one that always comes to mind when I get a question like this is...
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3. BREAD - a book you put off reading for ages, and you needed a lot of determination to pick it up
Definitely Victoria Schwab's A Darker Shade of Magic. I really liked her The Archived duology, but I didn't like Vicious so I was wary of ADSOM.


4. DESSERTS - a book set in a foreign country
I'll give you two foreign countries, England and China, courtesy of Sharon Biggs Waller's The Forbidden Orchid.


5. ALTERNATIVE INGREDIENTS - a book from a genre you wouldn't normally read but ended up loving
I have never read much magical realism, but The Weight of Feathers by Anna-Marie McLemore was a win for the genre.


6. PASTRY - a character you initially liked, but as you read more and more, your relationship with them crumbled
Celaena Sardothien. 
This one was a given. I adored her in Throne of Glass and Crown of Midnight, and I understood where she was in Heir of Fire, but I didn't like her at all in Queen of Shadows and Empire of Storms.


7. VICTORIAN/OLD-FASHIONED BAKES - favorite classic novel
I love most of Jane Austen's novels, but Emma is probably my favorite.
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8. PATISSERIE - a book that lacked substance and fell flat
I've read several of these, but for this tag, I'll go with Being Audrey Hepburn by Mitchell Kriegman


9. CHOCOLATE - a book I could read again and again and still find comforting
*looks at entire We Never Go Out of Style Goodreads shelf*
Well, if I had to pick just one... I'll say Since You've Been Gone by Morgan Matson.


10. THE GRAND FINALE - favorite book of the year
It's a tie between three books. And look at that, they're all contemporary YA.
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The Unexpected Everything by Morgan Matson
P.S. I Like You by Kasie West

Feel free to do this book tag yourself!

October 2, 2016

Rewind & Review #70


~It finally started cooling off this week!
~We celebrated my friend's birthday last Friday; we went to downtown Lexington and walked around and had a little adventure.
~I'm joining my university's branch of a national history honors society.
~Niall Horan released a new song, and it is everything I didn't know I wanted.
~Way too much homework.

Books I Received for Review
Piecing Me Together by Renee Watson (from Bloomsbury)

Books I Won/Traded for/was Gifted
Wait for Me by Caroline Leech
Literally by Lucy Keating (via trade with @pickyreadin)
The Only Thing Worse Than Me Is You by Lily Anderson (via trade with @miss_melissalee)
The Sound of Us by Julie Hammerle (gifted by Secret Sister)
Like a River Glorious by Rae Carson (gifted by HarperCollins for participating in the blog tour)
The Geek's Guide to Unrequited Love by Sarvenaz Tash (via trade with @coffeelvnmom)

Books I Bought
Frost Like Night by Sara Raasch
Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo

Books I Read
A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab (3 stars)
The Midwife's Apprentice by Karen Cushman (2.5 stars)
This Adventure Ends by Emma Mills
The Anatomical Shape of a Heart by Jenn Bennett (reread)
Train Dreams by Denis Johnson (1 star)
Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key by Jack Gantos (2 stars)
Tell Me Three Things by Julie Buxbaum (reread)
Defending Taylor by Miranda Kenneally (3 stars)
What You Always Wanted by Kristin Rae (reread)
Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo (5 stars)
The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (3 stars)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone by J.K. Rowling (4 stars)

Blog Posts You Might've Missed in the Last Few Weeks
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October 1, 2016

Wind's in the East


(Well, the last five seconds of that video aren't exactly applicable, but that's nit-picking.)

I've mentioned a few times in my Rewind & Review posts that junior year has been a bit more stressful and busy than I was anticipating. And here's the thing - I haven't been as motivated to blog as I once was. 

I'm not quitting my blog, I promise. But I've gotta make some changes, or I'm not going to be happy.

First of all, I'm going to try and share more of my writing (short stories, personal essays, and poems), just because those are quick, easy posts and I also want to get feedback and share my creative words.

Second, I've vowed I'm going to stress less if I don't have a post every single day (or even five to six days out of the week). If I only post four or five days a week (baby steps, y'all), it'll be okay. 

Finally - and this is going to be the biggest change, and it's related to my last one - I'm going to designate one day a week that'll be the same every week when I'll never post. Unless it's my assigned day on a blog tour or some other special occasion. I think this'll help my stress levels and help me to take a step back and breathe and find my groove again. I think I'm going to make it Thursdays for the rest of the semester, and I'm giving myself the freedom to change the day. Tuesdays and Thursdays are my busiest days, though, so I decided it would be Thursday since I won't have as much time to promote the post and Tuesdays are usually Top Ten days, which are easy to type up.

I think that's all the changes I'm making for now. I'm still on the lookout for a co-blogger, if anyone is interested. Thank you for sticking with me these last few years as so much of my life has changed. *sends hugs and baked goods*

September 30, 2016

Random Friday: Favorite Class


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I'm going to talk about my favorite class this semester. Going into this semester, I had a feeling it would be one of two classes - and I was right.

Intermediate creative writing fiction is my favorite class of this semester by far. I'm a creative writing major, after all, and fiction is my specialty. The intermediate level class has been even better than the beginner level. We have so much more writing freedom; we still can't write a lot of science fiction and fantasy, but prompts are more open-ended, and the assignments due so far have been tailored so they work with each of our individual projects.

My prof is very big on free-write time in class (she was in beginning fiction too), and the last two classes, she's let us write on whatever we want related to our project for the semester, which means I've been working on my new book idea.

Speaking of our semester project, we have a final portfolio that has to be at least 75 pages of whatever fiction we want to work on - various short stories, part of a novel or novella, etc. So now I've got this goal of getting my new story to 75 pages, which may happen. Otherwise, I'll include some other shorter pieces I've written over the semester. I'm just glad that I feel like writing these days.

So do you have a favorite class this year/semester?


September 29, 2016

Review: When the Moon Was Ours

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When the Moon Was Ours by Anna-Marie McLemore
Grade: B-
Release date: October 4, 2016
An ARC was provided by St. Martin's Griffin via a Goodreads giveaway in exchange for review consideration.
Summary: To everyone who knows them, best friends Miel and Sam are as strange as they are inseparable. Roses grow out of Miel’s wrist, and rumors say that she spilled out of a water tower when she was five. Sam is known for the moons he paints and hangs in the trees, and for how little anyone knows about his life before he and his mother moved to town. 

But as odd as everyone considers Miel and Sam, even they stay away from the Bonner girls, four beautiful sisters rumored to be witches. Now they want the roses that grow from Miel’s skin, convinced that their scent can make anyone fall in love. And they’re willing to use every secret Miel has fought to protect to make sure she gives them up.

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly: I got to be on the blog tour for Anna-Marie's debut, The Weight of Feathers, last year, and I fell in love with her words. I didn't realize how much I'd missed her way with words until I started reading When the Moon Was Ours earlier this month. 
I'm not sure I liked WtMWO as much as TWoF. There was something about the Bonner sisters that rubbed me the wrong way. I'm also not into fiction with witches (or implied witches). I know magic is a big part of magical realism, but it felt different in this book in a way that I didn't love. (So it's probably nothing wrong with the book; it's just personal taste.) I liked Aracely and her relationship with Miel; it's not a mother-daughter situation, and it makes a lot more sense once you find out certain things that I won't spoil. Sam's mom is a quiet gem. I was a bit wary of her for a while, but she's great. 
There's a bit of swearing (some s-words and at least one f-word), and some descriptions of foreplay. Nothing terribly explicit. There is a triggering scene if you're sensitive to potentially suicidal thoughts.

The Verdict: Absolutely gorgeous cover. Lovely words. I'm iffy on the rest.


Buy: Read Between the Lynes  Barnes & Noble
Will I be adding this book to my library?: Not sure yet.