Thursday, December 13, 2012

End of the World Giveaway Hop



Thank you, I am a Reader, not a Writer and My Life with Books for hosting such an awesome giveaway! To see all the other blogs participating and to have more chances to win free books, keep scrolling down to the bottom of this post to see the list of other blogs or just click on this lovely image above.
There were a lot of fun ways to go with this contest. I could giveaway books worth preserving at the end of the world or I could giveaway books about the end of the world. Personally, deciding what to hold on to would be such a hard thing for me…And I absolutely love books that deal with the end of the world. So I’m offering up 2 books to one winner that involve the world ending in some way, physically or metaphorically (like zombies, disease, souls dying, harsh circumstances/little water, etc.).
This giveaway is open to my international followers as well as my US followers (as long as The Book Depository or Barnes and Noble can ship to your address). The winner will have 48 hours to respond to my email with their shipping address and book choices, or I will have to randomly pick a different winner.
What’s up for grabs:











The Maze Runner by James Dashner
Masque of the Red Death by Emily Griffin
Incarnate by Jodi Meadows
Blood Red Road by Moira Young
Defiance by C.J. Redwine
For Darkness Shows the Stars by Diana Peterfreund
Under the Never Sky by Veronica Rossi
The Pledge by Kimberly Derting
Delirium by Lauren Oliver
Partials by Dan Wells
Bumped by Megan McCafferty
Divergent by Veronica Roth
Thanks for stopping by, and good luck! 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday (24)


Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly meme hosted by Breaking the Spine that allows bloggers to share which books we are most anticipating.
This week, I am waiting on Battle Magic by Tamora Pierce (10/1/13):

Description on GoodReads:
NEW YORK TIMES bestselling author Tamora Pierce returns to the magical world of Winding Circle.

On their way to the first Circle temple in Gyongxi, mages Briar, Rosethorn, and Evvy pay a visit to the emperor's summer palace. Although treated like royalty when they first arrive, the mages soon discover that the emperor plans to invade Gyongxi, posing a fatal threat to the home temple of the Living Circle religion. Accompanied by one of the emperor's prize captives, the three mages rush to Gyongxi to warn its citizens of the impending attack. With the imperials hot on their trail, Briar, Rosethorn, and Evvy must quickly help the country prepare for battle. But even with the help of new allies, will their combined forces be enough to fight the imperial army and win the war?
So, I never enjoyed these books as much the Tortall ones. Or, I guess the more appropriate way of putting it is: I’ve reread all of Pierce’s books that take place in the Tortall universe, possibly hundreds of times. I’ve only read the Circle of Magic books all once. However, I will continue to read, purchase, and own all things written by Tamora Pierce. This author is a large reason for why I love reading as much as I do. I remember taking her books with me to school, and reading them instead of paying attention in class. Okay, so this was probably not the best idea, but still. Pierce’s characters feel like old friends. And my favorite character in this particular series is Briar, so a book all about Briar is a book I’m anxiously anticipating! It doesn’t have my favorite cover, mostly because I love the other new covers in this series and this one strays from the commonalities completely. However, I do not care. Tamora Pierce is one of the best YA fantasy writers out there, and I will always be waiting on her newest book!
What are you waiting on this week?

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Books to Mark Your Calendar for: What the Beginning of 2013 Brings for YA


So, I like to make these posts twice a year. My only problem this time is there is no way I can bring my list down to the 10 books I’m most excited for at the beginning of 2013. There are a total of nine books I’m excited for that are just coming out in January…So, I think I’m going to change things up a bit for this post, and list the books I have already marked in my calendar, by month! If a book I’m waiting on comes out after June of 2013, I will include it my next Books to Mark Your Calendar for post.
Note that I most likely am missing some books, and I might come back later to add them. There might be a little overlap with books I’ve already mentioned in my Waiting on Wednesday posts. My big plan: I will list books, authors, and publication dates, and I will attach links to their summaries on GoodReads. If there is a cover already, I will show that too! Also, note that sometimes dates change. I will try to update any changes I come across.
Here we go:
January:







The Essence by Kimberly Derting, 1/1/13, Summary
Crash by Lisa McMann, 1/8/13, Summary
Through the Evernight by Veronica Rossi, 1/8/13, Summary
Shades of Earth by Beth Revis, 1/15/13, Summary
Gates of Paradise by Melissa De La Cruz, 1/15/13, Summary
Linked by Imogen Howson, 1/11/13, Summary
Everbound by Brodi Ashton, 1/22/13, Summary
Asunder by Jodi Meadows, 1/29/13, Summary
Prodigy by Marie Lu, 1/29/13, Summary

February:







Scarlet by Marissa Meyer, 2/5/13, Summary
Unravel Me by Tahereh Mafi, 2/5/13, Summary
Perfect Scoundrels by Ally Carter, 2/5/13, Summary
Etiquette and Espionage by Gail Carriger, 2/5/13, Summary
The Indigo Spell by Richelle Mead, 2/12/13, Summary
Sever by Lauren DeStefano, 2/12/13, Summary
Mind Games by Kiersten White, 2/19/13, Summary
Fragments by Dan Wells, 2/26/13, Summary

March:

Requiem by Lauren Oliver, 3/5/13, Summary
Frozen by Mellissa De La Cruz, 3/12/13, Summary (no cover yet)
Loki’s Wolves by Kelley Armstrong and Melissa Marr, 3/7/13, Summary
Clockwork Princess by Cassandra Clare, 3/19/13, Summary

April:







Dark Triumph by Robin LaFevers, 4/2/13, Summary
This is What Happy Looks Like by Jennifer E. Smith, 4/2/13, Summary
Dead Silence by Kimberly Derting, 4/16/13, Summary
The Rising by Kellley Armstrong, 4/19/13, Summary
The Elite by Kiera Cass, 4/23/13, Summary
Dance of the Red Death by Bethany Griffin, 4/23/13, Summary
Chosen at Nightfall by C.C.Hunter, 4/30/13, Summary

May:

Icons by Margaret Stohl, 5/7/13, Summary
Invisibility by Andrea Cremer and David Levithan, 5/7/13, Summary
Isla and the Happily Ever After by Stephenie Perkins, 5/7/13, Summary (no cover yet)
Dare you to by Katie McGarry, 5/28/13, Summary

June:

The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen, 6/4/13, Summary
Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo, 6/4/13, Summary (cover not final)
Spies and Prejudice by Talia Vance, 6/11/13, Summary

Monday, December 10, 2012

Masque of the Red Death by Bethany Griffin


This was one of those books I read a summary for, months before its release, and I knew I absolutely must get my hands on it. I was an English major in college, and I love Edgar Allen Poe! So, when I read about a YA/dystopian retelling of Poe’s, I was all for it! I also apparently met this author, because I have it signed to me…is it weird that is has gotten to the point where I don’t remember where/when I meet authors, but am just really thankful that I have?
Any way, I was not disappointed with this one. It had all the creepy, vague mysteriousness of Poe, and all the terrifying, depressing ingredients of a great dystopia. Araby is not the most up-beat main character. There are a lot of things she wishes she had never experienced, never witnessed, and never survived. But, losing her twin brother to the plague is not something that really makes her stand out in her society. Everyone has lost someone, everyone has seen the bodies, heard the shots of the chaos, and if you’re alive, you’ve witnessed burning buildings, starving children, and a hopeless society.
Araby and her best friend, April choose to forget as much of their world as possible by going to the night club, the Debauchery Club, and drinking their memories away. The drugs they take at the club even allow Araby some nights of rest (with no nightmares). Going in, the girls are always tested for the plague, and part of the reason Araby likes to go so much is because she likes the guy who does the testing.
And while there seems to be very little Araby is afraid of, she never gets involved with any guys because of a vow she made to herself about not letting herself experience things her twin brother would never get the chance to.  Everything seems to change though when Araby meets April’s brother, Elliott.  With him, comes ideas of hope and revolution. He’s the cocky nephew of Prince Prospero, the terrible dictator who has prevented the poor from attaining masks that can prevent the spread of the plague. Only the wealthy have the masks that Araby’s scientist father created.
With a messed up childhood that puts Araby’s to shame, (with the physical scars to prove it) Elliott gets Araby to make some serious risks. She steals invention plans, goes against the wishes of her surviving family, and risks her life to help save April’s. Her best friend disappears one night after they go to the club. And when it seems obvious that Prince Prospero has April, Araby risks everything to go with Elliott to save her. She also makes friends with Will, the plague-tester from the club, after he saves her from having the same fate as April. Though, it gets harder and harder to remain friends both with Elliott and Will, and also hold on to her depressing vow, Araby holds strong to her beliefs.
It also becomes clear early on that there is more to her twin brother’s death than Araby lets on. She definitely blames herself for it. And all of the main characters in this book end up saving each other at some point. Araby and April first became friends when Araby was considering jumping off the roof of her apartment building. Between all the escapes and rescue missions, the pages overflow with grief, depression, and above all, survival.
There’s a love triangle, tough decisions (like who should I rescue: my siblings or my girl friend?), disease, separation of the classes, bombings, riots, dungeons, scientific experiments, life-saving masks, children who only know darkness (literally), night clubs, revolutions, religious zealots, and lots of murder in this one! This is definitely a dark read. Araby lives in a place where not even the rich have it well off. If you’re wealthy enough to have a mask, chances are you are mentally ill enough from all that you have been through to need drugs to survive.
I don’t actually think Poe would mind having this book written in his homage. I mean, it is seriously dark, mysterious, and just as depressing as Poe’s words were. I love how Araby never became as stuck up as the rest of her class. She bought apples for children living on the street and went to old bookstores with her father. She read poetry and genuinely seemed to care a lot more for disease-ridden strangers than her best friend did. It probably helped that she new what living in the dark was like. Griffin seriously surprised me with her characters. I was expecting to hate April and all of her selfishness, but I ended up loving her and being shocked by some of her brave decisions. Both of the guys surprised me. I literally put the book down in shock in one moment. And I loved that this happened! The boys will surprise you.
The scene where the prince decided to flood the river and Araby and April had to escape from underground was so good! I loved everything with the hot air balloon too. And all the scenes that took place at the prince’s castle were so terrifying that I know I wouldn’t be able to read this book at nighttime. The book felt like it was part Poe, part dystopia, part steam punk, and part zombie movie (minus the zombies…).
There were two little things that bothered me though. One, was not being able to decide the time period. The women wore corsets, but they used working elevators. There were no cars even before the plague, but there are nightclubs with crazy sounding drugs. Is it supposed to be in a fantasy world? Or is it supposed to be a certain time period, but with a twist? I love when authors combine elements like this, but I don’t like when I am given nothing about these elements. It got me a little lost and frustrated at times; I just needed a tiny one-sentence explanation somewhere and I would have been less frustrated.
Also, Araby’s vow was kind of stupid. Obviously, her brother never would have gone to a night club, drunk himself unconscious, drugged up enough to wake up in a stranger’s home, stolen important documents from his father, contemplated suicide, or many more of the other things Araby did. So why, was it so important not to find true love? I feel like this was a weak explanation for something that could have made the story much stronger. I think her vow could have been about so much more (and maybe it was), and I wish other explanations could have been given for it.
Regardless of these two missing explanations, I was still way beyond impressed with this book. It was dark, depressing, romantic, and un-put-downable. I give it a 10/10, if anything for its uniqueness, its retelling of a classic in such a wonderful way, and its darkness. I will definitely be looking forward to book 2.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

A Good Week in Books (34)

 

I had a fantastic book week! My black Friday treat for myself just came in. My wonderful friend Heather (at Coffee-Stained Pages) has recently brought my attention to a fantastic bargain book website that is having a massive sale…For just under forty dollars, I purchased ten books! I may or may not have gone back to the website already and purchased more discounted books…I have a problem. I received one new title on Net Galley. I also picked out five freebies from my volunteer library!
My extremely discounted present to myself:

Always a Witch
by Carolyn MacCullough (I loved the first one!)
The Edumacation of Jay Baker by Jay Clark
Die for Me by Amy Plum
Until I Die by Amy Plum (why have I not read these yet?)
The Realm of Possibility by David Levithan (I didn’t even know this existed)
When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead (I read/borrowed it from a friend before, but seriously I loved it too much not to own it myself)
The Demon’s Lexicon by Sarah Rees Brennan (I need to own all of her books)
The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky (I’ve read and loved it since I was in middle school, and now I most definitely think it’s time I owned it)
Sisters Red by Jackson Pearce (first book I’ll read by this author who I hear so many good things about!)
Hunt by Andrew Fukuda

From Net Galley (Thank you, BenBella Books, Inc.):
 
Shadowhunters and Downworlders
edited by Cassanrda Clare (1/29/13) –This book already has so much discussion following it online and I know I need to just dive in!

Free books from my library:

Wrapped by Jennifer Bradbury
The Catastrophic History of You and Me by Jess Rothenberg
Deadly by Julie Chibbaro
The Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily M. Danforth
Bloodrose by Andrea Cremer ( I haven’t read these yet, but I already own the first two!)
How was your book week?