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Monday, August 29

A Must Read Preview: Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley

So, I started this book last night and finished it this afternoon. I’ve written my full review for it already. (Aren’t you proud!?)

The problem I’m having is that IT WAS SO FREAKING GOOD! I have to share it with you now. A little bit any way. The other problem is that it doesn’t come out until Valentine’s Day 2012!

So, read this little bit of my review that’ll post in full on Feb. 13, 2012. You will love this book if you love YA Romance at all. Think Simone Elkeles.

Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley

272 pages, Knopf Books for Young Readers, (2012-02-14)

$11.46 (Amazon.com)

Overall

So much swoon I nearly died by heart bursting! An epic tale of finding love, acceptance, painting, and broken noses.

Summary (Goodreads)

Senior year is over, and Lucy has the perfect way to celebrate: tonight, she's going to find Shadow, the mysterious graffiti artist whose work appears all over the city. He's out there somewhere—spraying color, spraying birds and blue sky on the night—and Lucy knows a guy who paints like Shadow is someone she could fall for. Really fall for. Instead, Lucy's stuck at a party with Ed, the guy she's managed to avoid since the most awkward date of her life. But when Ed tells her he knows where to find Shadow, they're suddenly on an all-night search around the city. And what Lucy can't see is the one thing that's right before her eyes.

Most Memorable Scene

Goodness me! There are way too many. The scene where Malcolm finds Ed and Lucy in the park is one of the best! Lucy sure knows how to handle herself.

"Why don't you give it to Leo? Wait, I know, it's because you're scared of him, you cockroach-eating-coward motherfucker."

I look at her. "Motherfucker?"

"Motherfucker," she says.

"The next one to call me a motherfucker takes the message," Malcolm says.

"Motherfucker", Lucy and I say together.

Romance

Gah! This book is so packed with so much swoon it's not even funny! I thought for sure my heart was going to burst a few times with the amount of "Awwww" that came pouring out of some of these scenes! I was a giddy teenaged girl all afternoon! Yes, I read this in only one afternoon! It's amazing and you have to know what happens and it's so easy to read the words just flow into you and fill you with pure joy.

Preorder this book. I promise you won’t regret it!

Sunday, August 21

In My Mailbox: Week 33

A few wonderful surprises this week!

Thanks to Kristi at The Story Siren for hosting, as always.

Review

Bloodlines (Bloodlines (Mead)) by Richelle Mead

432 pages, Razorbill, (2011-08-23)

$9.48 (Amazon.com)

This beautiful finished copy arrived with a plastic rose and some Bloodlines tattoos!

The Future of Us by Carolyn Mackler & Jay Asher 

368 pages, Razorbill, (2011-11-21)

$11.16 (Amazon.com)

I’m a big Jay Asher fan, although I haven’t read any of Carolyn’s work but I’m super excited to read this one!

NetGalley

The Butterfly Clues by Kate Ellison

336 pages, EgmontUSA, (2012-02-14)

$12.14 (Amazon.com)

Every Other Day by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

pages, EgmontUSA, (2011-12-27)

$11.85 (Amazon.com)

Life Eternal (A Dead Beautiful Novel) by Yvonne Woon

416 pages, Hyperion Book CH, (2012-01-24)

$11.43 (Amazon.com)

The Way We Fall by Megan Crewe

320 pages, Hyperion Book CH, (2012-01-24)

$10.48 (Amazon.com)

You Are My Only by Beth Kephart

256 pages, EgmontUSA, (2011-10-25)

$10.39 (Amazon.com)

Crave (Harlequin Teen) by Melissa Darnell

304 pages, Harlequin, (2011-10-25)

$9.99 (Amazon.com)

Free Kindle Editions

Haunting the Night by Mara Purnhagen

pages, Harlequin Teen, (2011-08-01)

(Amazon.com)

Sunday, August 14

In My Mailbox: Week 31 and 32

Here’s what I got in my mailbox the last two weeks!

Thanks to Kristi at The Story Siren for hosting!

Review

The Space Between by Brenna Yovanoff

352 pages, Razorbill, (2011-11-15)

$10.58 (Amazon.com)

Thank you Razorbill!

NetGalley

The Juliet Spell (Harlequin Teen) by Douglas Rees

272 pages, Harlequin, (2011-09-27)

$9.99 (Amazon.com)

Wanderlove by Kirsten Hubbard

352 pages, Delacorte Books for Young Readers, (2012-03-13)

$12.14 (Amazon.com)

Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley

272 pages, Knopf Books for Young Readers, (2012-02-14)

$11.46 (Amazon.com)

Won

Blood Bound (Unbound Novel) by Rachel Vincent

400 pages, Mira, (2011-08-23)

$7.99 (Amazon.com)

I won this from the author! Signed! It was supposed to be an ARC but she mistook the finished copies as ARCs!

Thank you Rachel! I’m loving this new series.

Dark Parties by Sara Grant

320 pages, Little, Brown Books for Young Readers, (2011-08-03)

$12.23 (Amazon.com)

Thank you Tynga @ Tynga’s Reviews!

The Magician King: A Novel by Lev Grossman

416 pages, Viking Adult, (2011-08-09)

$14.82 (Amazon.com)

Thank you Janicu @ Janicu’s Book Blog!

FREE Kindle Editions

Survivors by Sophie Littlefield

pages, Luna, (2011-07-01)

(Amazon.com)

What did you get this week!?

Do Spoilers Really Spoil?

A great topic that peaked my interest today from the Reader's edition of Shelf Awareness today.

"Spoilers Don't Spoil Anything". Do you agree with this? Go read the article if you'd like more information. If you haven't read Harry Potter or seen the last two movies AVOID THAT SITE!

To an extent I guess I can agree. But am I happy that I've stumbled upon a spoiler? NO! I actually do not want to know what happens in anything really. Trailers and summaries make me nervous; especially when it comes to a book I want and or plan to read. This also goes for movies.

For example, I'm currently reading BLOOD BOUND by Rachel Vincent. I went to Goodreads to update my reading progress and just decided to go ahead and read the summary. I was on page 172. 172. I thought for sure I was safe from finding out anything too terribly spoilery but NO! The summary told me what was going to happen in the next 20 pages or so. There are 463 pages in this book so that's approximately half way through the book and the back summary of the book is disclosing information that happens beyond the half way mark! That to me is way too much information into the story to be putting it right out there.

The summary spoiled that plot point for me. Of course it wasn't a huge plot point but it was a pretty big one that I hadn't figured out yet and I was quite upset because this book has some serious tension! And I was just given some relief and then MORE tension because of the summary. Now, if I had read the summary before I started the book I would have been like, when the hell is that going to happen? I'm nearly half way done with this book. Needless to say I stopped reading the summary once I stumbled upon that bit of spoilery information. Yes, I didn't even finish reading a stinking summary to avoid spoilers!

I tweeted about that summary to Rachel and she responded back saying sorry, she didn't write the blurb. I say to her, it's okay, but really, whom ever did write it should be hung. There's no reason why that much information would have to be disclosed to get a reader to pick up the book. There are ways to say something to grab a reader's attention without giving out specific information. GAH! To say I'm a bit upset is putting it lightly. I may never read another summary again. I usually don't but like I said I thought I was safe! YOU ARE NEVER SAFE! Unless you've already read the book or seen the movie of course.

Two other times I have come across spoilers that affected me personally.

One was when I received my hardcopy of BREAKING DAWN, I started it in Kindle Version, and flipped to the back of the book because I'd heard there was a cool cheat sheet to the vampires and their respective abilities. I got to one name and was like, who the hell is Reneesme(highlight to see spoilery name)? DUN DUN DUN.... SPOILER ALERT! OMFG!

And lastly, I received several emails or Goodreads messages from readers who had seen that I had received an early copy of the last book in Rachel Vincent's Shifter series, ALPHA. They begged me to know if Marc and Faythe ended up together or if Jace win over Faythe. I did reply but I did not give them what they wanted to know. I just can't support spoilers!

I guess when it comes to the last book in a series you're almost dying of anticipation that you may be okay with finding out that must know piece of information. Me? Not so much. I want to harness that lust for the next word and the next piece of information while I'm reading. Finding out a spoiler takes that reaction away from me. I want to feel the suspense. I want to feel the anxiety that the character is feeling. I don't want to know whether or not they end up  together before I find out with the characters! A great example of this very thing is SHADOWFEVER by Karen Marie Moning. DREAMFEVER left off on a MASSIVE cliffhanger. I mean gigantic! I did not peruse the internets to find leaked spoilers. Instead I used my love for the books (characters) to fuel my need to read it for myself.

What about you? Do you avoid spoilers at all costs like me? Not even reading summaries?

I write my reviews with the point to not disclose even the smallest piece of spoilery information. I do post the summaries though, so it's your choice of whether you read them or not!

Author Guest Post and Giveaway: Anna Sheehan

Today I have the pleasure of having debut author, Anna Sheehan, of A Long, Long Sleep guest post. Her debut releases today! See below for information on how to win a copy!

Anna Sheehan

Says Jessica, The Cozy Reader blogger, "You're not readily accessible on the internet ie blog, twitter, website. Why is that? From the technology in your book I thought for sure I'd find you on the web!"

Oh no, I think. I’m going to have to try and explain this.

It's probably best to show a little bit of what my life is actually like.

I’m going to send a letter. I go over to my desk, where there are a dozen goose and turkey feathers. I slice the end off of a right wing feather, carve it to a flattened point, and slice a slit up the middle. I then dip it into walnut ink from Italy, and address my envelope in copperplate script. (If I’m feeling lazy, I will use a metal nib in an oblique pen holder.)

We’re running out of milk. I do not hop into my car and drive to the store. Instead I go down the hill and collect my cow, whose name is Rosie. I take her up to the handmade stanchion, plunk myself on a crate, wash her teats, and milk her into a stainless steel bucket. I don’t use that new-fangled milking machine we have, because I’m faster and more efficient.

When someone asks me what my relationship is to technology, my first impulse is to say, "Are you kidding?" I only have a cell-phone because my family insisted, and it mostly stays forgotten in the bottom of my car. I write using WordPerfect, a computer program that has not been supported for nearly a decade (and boy does it drive my agent nuts!) I am an intelligent and educated person, but when it comes to technology, I tend to take the slow path.

We live already in a culture which makes the most outlandish science-fiction seem passĂ©. We’ve already gone far beyond the technology needed for the constant surveillance and strict media control of Orwell’s 1984. But instead of Big Brother Watching Us, we cry our doings voluntarily into an empty sea of tweets and status updates. Instead of "altering" the facts to suit the propaganda, we focus on partisan minutiae and forget that the facts even exist. Even Star Trek, the futuristic focal point for two generations, seems almost quaint. Apart from aliens, warp travel and teleporters, I can think of very little technology in any given Star Trek episode that we don’t already have, in some form or another – communicators, unmanned drones, medical miracles.

Where does this leave the average science fiction writer? What else is there to invent that hasn’t already been invented, usually in the real world?

When it comes to science fiction, we have come to the point where the technology has to become secondary to the story one is trying to tell. In a world where we have glow-in-the-dark cats and I-Pads, the weird technology of the "future" can no longer be the focal point. 1984 is still relevant because the mental oppression and social stagnation of perpetual war is a story that still resonates. Star Trek, though dated, uses stories of aliens to tell stories of human interaction – and those are always timeless.

In writing A Long, Long Sleep, I used technology in two ways. The first was pure window-dressing, and I’m more than willing to admit that. Hover-cars, standard garbage incinerators and automatic retinal scans are nothing new. Despite the fact that most of these technologies are already out and about in the world, people still see them as "futuristic". Having them as prevalent as I do is the only thing that makes the world of A Long, Long Sleep any different from our own.

However I did focus on one unconventional technology: stasis. Easy, reliable suspended animation is not a technology we currently possess. My intention was to explore all of the ramifications of a technology – the use and abuse of a technology – in order to tell a story of human interaction in the best and strongest way possible.

When it comes to our day-to-day interaction with technology, I often wonder if we’re moving too fast. In focusing on our instant text messaging and interactive sports games, many people have forgotten how to actually write, and no longer bother to go outside and play. It has been statistically proven that people read e-books slower than they read traditional bound and printed books. They buy more books, but actually read fewer of them, often failing to finish. Does this mean that we shouldn’t have e-books? No. There’s no reason to reject a benign technology – I’m no Luddite. But I do feel we need to keep in touch with traditional, well-established methods before those methods are lost forever. The printed page has been the repository of all knowledge since the invention of papyrus. Internet and e-books notwithstanding, I don’t think that’s going to change any time soon.

In 1984, Orwell writes of a concerted effort to curb thought by diminishing language; a double-plus ungood practice. Well, plz. Can no1 C the FX ths haz on R thought process? Intelligent teenagers who read often are still handing in school reports with words like, "munny" (instead of money) and no punctuation. I fear if we turn entirely from paper to the screen to hold our knowledge, we will lose a great deal of it. At the same time, I doubt this article will ever be seen on a printed page. Does that mean I shouldn’t write it?

How silly is that idea?

Technology can give us both the good and the bad. When it comes to science-fiction, it is the writers’ job to explore the implications of both. When it comes to life, in my opinion, the same should apply.

Anna Sheehan DOES in fact have a website – annasheehan.com – and you can find her on Amazon and Facebook, where she loves to interact with fans. Just don’t expect hourly updates on minutiae.

Thank you Anna!

I hope the use of today's technology helps you sell more books because your book is worthy of any attention to get it into the hands of readers.

More from Anna

Author Interview by Book Reviews and More

An odd interview of sorts of Xavier over at The Mod Podge Bookshelf

Giveaway

Candlewick has graciously provided a finished copy of A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan to one of my readers. Plus, Anna will sign and mail you a bookplate!

Complete the Rafflecopter widget below.

Please read the Terms & Conditions at the bottom of the entry form before completing any entries!

NOTE: Since this widget relies on Cookies, you may have issues doing the daily Tweet. If so please just put TWEET in the mandatory entry field. Questions? Email me!

Review: A Long, Long Sleep by Anna Sheehan

A Long, Long Sleepby Anna Sheehan
352 pages, Candlewick, (2011-08-09)
$9.99 (Amazon.com)

Procurement

eBook from Candlewick via NetGalley.

My Grade

Plot: 5

Setting: 5

Writing: 5

Originality: 5

Characters: 5

Romance: 5

Overall: 30/30!

Title/Cover Bonus: 2

Overall

An emotionally charged sci-fi of a young girl traumatized by her unfit parents who left her in stasis for 62 years; awoken to a new, unknown world full of technology and unending traumatic stress.

Book Related Cool Stuff

A few things I’ve seen recently that I wanted to share!

If only my budget wasn’t so tight I’d be buying a few of these awesome things!

Apparel

 

Bookworm socks. Awesome. Available from ThinkGeek for $10.99 a pair.

A Woot T-shirt for the Harry Potter fans. $15.

Reading Accessories

There are 3 other designs but this is my favorite! A pad of 25 bookmarks for $6 is available from Knock Knock. I love most of their products!

A Fred product, another one of my favorite quirky companies, this the Fingerprint bookmark band. It’s $7 on MoMA Store but is readily available at other sites for just slightly more. I love that you can point it to the exact line that you leave off on.

Have you seen any cool and unusual bookish things? Link me to them in the comments!

In My Mailbox: Week 29 and 30

Thanks to Kristi of The Story Siren for hosting this!

Here’s what I got this week and last week.

Review

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi

352 pages, HarperCollins, (2011-11-15)

$11.21 (Amazon.com)

I devoured this. It was AMAZING. I will probably read it again and soon.

NetGalley

A Beautiful Dark by Jocelyn Davies

400 pages, HarperTeen, (2011-09-27)

$11.21 (Amazon.com)

The Girl of Fire and Thorns by Rae Carson

432 pages, Greenwillow Books, (2011-09-20)

$10.65 (Amazon.com)

Eve by Anna Carey

336 pages, HarperCollins, (2011-10-04)

$11.21 (Amazon.com)

Variant by Robison Wells

384 pages, HarperTeen, (2011-10-04)

$11.21 (Amazon.com)

 

Won

Cut by Patricia McCormick

176 pages, Push, (2011-05-01)

$8.99 (Amazon.com)

Thanks Lauren @ Lauren’s Crammed Bookshelf!

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: The Classic Regency Romance - Now with Ultraviolent Zombie Mayhem! by Jane Austen

320 pages, Quirk Books, (2009-04-04)

$7.19 (Amazon.com)

Thanks Kara @ Reading Cause I’m Addicted!

 

Bought

I went to Borders and got a measly 10% off these books. I shouldn’t have gone but it was nice to say goodbye.

Burn the Night: The Final Dark Days Novel by Jocelynn Drake

432 pages, Harper Voyager, (2011-06-28)

$7.99 (Amazon.com)

Secrets and Shadows: A 13 to Life Novel by Shannon Delany

320 pages, St. Martin's Griffin, (2011-02-15)

$9.99 (Amazon.com)

Original Sin (A Personal Demons Novel) by Lisa Desrochers

400 pages, Tor Teen, (2011-07-05)

$9.99 (Amazon.com)

Skippyjon Jones, Class Action by Judy Schachner

32 pages, Dutton Juvenile, (2011-07-12)

$9.89 (Amazon.com)

FREE Kindle Editions

First Frost by Jennifer Estep

pages, Kensington Books, (2011-07-01)

(Amazon.com)

Fallen from Grace: A Bonus Dark Mirror Short Story by M.J. Putney

pages, St. Martin's Griffin, (2011-03-15)

(Amazon.com)

BlogFest 2011 winner!

Yes, I know. BlogFest was over a long time ago. Sorry for the delay. I’ve been busy.

Thanks so much to all my new followers and my old followers! There were a total of 1,015 entries.

I wasn’t expecting to get too many new followers because I didn’t make it a requirement to enter my giveaway. I’m not a fan of that as a requirement. I understand wanting new followers but I want followers to follow because they want to. I want my followers to come back. I do not follow any blog because I have to, only because I want to.

Without further ado, the winner is….

MISS LAUREN

Congrats Miss Lauren! I’ve emailed you and expect a reply by 1:30 Monday or a new winner will be chosen! I can’t wait to see what she wants. I’ll update here once she lets me know.

Laruen picked:

Before I Go to Sleep: A Novel by S. J. Watson

368 pages, Harper, (2011-06-14)

$14.27 (Amazon.com)

I sure did love using Rafflecopter to help me organize my giveaway. It was super easy to create the form and to pick a winner was a click of a button. Couldn’t have asked for anything easier. I hope you enjoyed the experience and if you have a blog of your own I’d recommend signing up for Rafflecopter!

Bookperk is at it AGAIN!

Have you checked out Bookperk yet? Why not? Seriously, you need to sign up and see these super cool combo deals!

It’s completely free to sign up and see what offers are available. They usually have something of interest to everyone.

bookperkbutton_original

Free Stuff & Prizes

They're also giving away some cool prizes! Join my team (Team Code: 5KP4VO) and you may be eligible!

 

 

Current offers as of today

(first and last image are FREE entries to win something cool!)

Saturday, August 13

Trailer: The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater

Maggie revealed the trailer for her upcoming October release, The Scorpio Races!

I love how talented Maggie is! Her trailers are amazing and beautiful. Spread the trailer around and enter to win an ARC of The Scorpio Races! Go to Maggie’s blog for more information.

The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater

416 pages, Scholastic Press, (2011-10-18)

$11.00 (Amazon.com)

You can also order signed, DOODLED in copy from Fountain Bookstore.