Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Monthly Recap: April 2013

 
Can you guys believe it's already the end of April? This month has gone by SO fast. I hope you've all had a great month and that you're having fun getting up for summer (or winter if you're on the other side of the world). Here's what happened on the blog in April: 

  • I reviewed Darklight by Lesley Livingston and gave it 4 stars
  • I reviewed White Lines by Jennifer Banash and gave it 5 stars
  • I reviewed Chemistry by Jodi Lamm and gave it 4 stars
  • I reviewed Ultraviolet by RJ Anderson and gave it 4 stars
  • I reviewed Quicksilver by RJ Anderson and gave it 3.5 stars
 
 
  • I posted Excerpt #2 from my third novel, Waiting for the Storm
  • I posted a book haul of the ebooks I’d received for review, bought, and won

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  • Closer (in which I talk about having a back injury for the last three months)
How was April for you? What was the best book you read? The worst? Do you have a favourite post from the month you'd like to share? What are you looking forward to most in May?
 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Review: Entanglement by Dan Rix

Entanglement by Dan Rix
Series: Standalone
Published: November 16th, 2012
Publisher: Self-published
171 pages (ebook)
Genre: Young adult science fiction/dystopian/alternative history
Acquired this book: From the author in exchange for an honest review
Warning: May contain spoilers
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Amazon }

"...the scientific explanation is quantum entanglement, whereby the boy and girl—even when separated by great distances—react instantaneously to changes in each other's states..." —Dr. Casler Selavio, on the entanglement of halves.

In a world like ours, humans are born in pairs. When a newborn boy takes his first breath in the coastal town of Tularosa, the exact time is noted, recorded in the Registry, and later compared to the birth times of other newborns around the globe. There will be one identical match—his half. They will meet on their eighteenth birthday and they will spend their lives together. Except this time, there is no match.

Hotheaded heartthrob Aaron Harper is scheduled to meet his half in twenty-nine days, and he doesn’t buy a word of that entanglement crap. So what if he and his half were born the same day and share a spooky psychic connection? Big deal. After breaking one too many teenage girls’ hearts, he’ll stick to brawling with the douchebag rugby players any day.

Until the day a new girl arrives at school and threatens everything he takes for granted.

Cold and unapproachable, Amber Lilian hates the growing list of similarities between her and the one boy she can’t read, Aaron: born the same day, both stubborn, both terrified of meeting their halves. . . . All the more reason not to trust him. That she would rather die than surrender herself as her half’s property is none of his damn business. But once lost in Aaron’s dangerous, jet black eyes, she’s already surrendered more than she cares to admit.

Tangled in each other’s self-destructive lives, Aaron and Amber learn the secret behind their linked births and why they feel like halves—but unless they can prove it before they turn eighteen, Aaron faces a lifetime alone in a world where everyone else has a soul mate . . . and he’ll have to watch Amber give herself to a boy who intends to possess not only her body but also a chunk of her soul.


Entanglement is unlike anything I’ve ever read. When I first read the synopsis, I thought it would be set in a post-apocalyptic world where everything has changed, but it’s not - it’s set in our world, our time, but in an alternate reality. The concept of ‘halves’ was discovered several decades ago, and since then every person has been born with a half: their soul mate, who they can’t live without - literally.

As Aaron’s eighteenth birthday draws closer, he’s afraid of what his future will hold. His clairvoyance channel - the part of his brain that recognizes his half - has been damaged, and he worries what they might mean. When he meets Amber and convinces himself that she might just be his half, despite the fact that she’s been told her whole life that Clive is her half, Aaron becomes embroiled in drama, danger, and secrets surrounding the Brotherhood - an organization that believes a man’s half should be submissive. 

This book is full of action, tension, and mystery. The concept was absolutely brilliant, and I thought it was well executed. The villains were great and believable. Their motivations were clear - obsession and power. Casler was a tricky one because he was so charming and charismatic, it was hard to decide where he stood and whether to trust him or not. There were moments when I thought one thing about him and was sure I knew how things were going to play out, but then it would take a completely different turn. I liked that the story kept me on my toes and kept me constantly guessing what would happen next.

The story felt a bit hectic at times - there was so much happening at once, it was hard to keep up. Other times…I don’t want to say it dragged, because that’s not the case, but it felt a bit long - and at only 171 pages on my Kobo, it’s obviously not a long book, but it took me several days to read, and I kept thinking ‘I’m halfway through or three-quarters of the way through, how much more can there be?’

There was also a whole lot of testosterone and teenage boy antics - fights (both physical and verbal), threats, swearing (which doesn’t bother me, but would likely bother some people), and other hormone-fuelled scenes. I still can’t decide whether I liked Aaron’s best friend, Buff, or whether he just annoyed me. He was a good friend to Aaron, which I liked, but he seemed like such a meathead, and a lot of the things he said, particularly his ‘catch phrase’ left me rolling my eyes. Not that the testosterone-fest was necessarily a bad thing - the main characters were mostly male, after all - it’s just something that stood out to me that seems worth mentioning.

Overall, Entanglement is a well-written, creative story that captivated my attention and kept me guessing until the very end. I would recommend it to people who enjoy stories that are a good mixture of both plot-driven and character driven, with lots of tension and action. 

 

Have you read Entanglement? What did you think? Have you read any other alternate history books?

Saturday, April 27, 2013

What's Happening & Stacking the Shelves April 27th


Hi guys! I hope you've all had a great week full of awesomely bookish things. Here's what's been happening around here this week:


Quicksilver by RJ Anderson {GoodReads}
The Forgotten Ones by Laura Howard {GoodReads}

 
Game. Set. Match. by Jennifer Iacopelli {GoodReads}

  • I reviewed Ultraviolet by RJ Anderson and gave it 4 stars
  • I reviewed The Winter Sea by Susannah Kearsley and gave it 4.5 stars
  • I reviewed Quicksilver by RJ Anderson and gave it 3.5 stars


Not much to report here. It's been another quiet week. Every day I've promised myself I'll get started on my next writing project, but instead I get caught up in blog stuff. Next week I go to a heart clinic to have an electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, and get hooked up for a 48-hour heart monitor to determine why I've been having flutters in my chest. Not really looking forward to that, but I'll be glad to get it over with!

I've been watching a lot of Doctor Who lately. For those of you who don't know, I'm a newbie to the show - it seemed like half the people I know watch it, so I decided to see what it was all about. I zoomed through series one and now I'm halfway through series two. I'm so hooked! Speaking of TV...Molli and I have decided to have a Gilmore Girls rewatch marathon in June. It's one of our mutual favourite TV shows and neither of us has watched it in awhile, so we thought it was time, and that it would be a lot of fun to watch it together and discuss it. Any other Gilmore Girls fans want to join us? Tweet us and let us know! @SweetMarie83 and @courageousgrace

Around the Blogosphere:

  • Molli wrote a letter to her 14-year-old self, talking about how reading saved her during a really difficult time in her life.
  • White Lines by Jennifer Banash is one of my favourite books of 2013 so far. Jennifer talked about her life as a club kid and shares the playlist for the book on Forever Young Adult. This post made me want to go reread the book!
  • Jamie introduced a new feature called Beyond the Pages and opened up about what she wants to do with her one wild and precious life.
  • And finally…this has absolutely nothing to do with books but I thought I’d share it because who doesn’t need a laugh by the end of the week? If you have kids/nieces/nephews or simply just like kids, this is good for a giggle: 26 Reasons Kids Are Pretty Much Just Tiny Drunk Adults

Stacking the Shelves is hosted by Tynga's Reviews

WON/BOUGHT
Also Known As by Robin Benway {GoodReads}
Along for the Ride by Sarah Dessen {GoodReads}

FOR REVIEW
 Click: An Online Love Story by Lisa Becker {GoodReads}
Double Click by Lisa Becker {GoodReads}

*A big thank you to the incomparable Molli from Once Upon aPrologue - I won Also Known As from her in her super-awesome Contemporary Month; thank you also to Lisa Becker for sending me e-copies of her two novels for review*

What books did you get this week? Tell me in the comments below or post a link to your Stacking the Shelves/Book Haul/In My Mailbox/Showcase Sunday, etc. Happy reading! <3

Friday, April 26, 2013

Review: Quicksilver by RJ Anderson


Quicksilver by RJ Anderson
Series: Ultraviolet, Book #2
Published: May 2nd, 2013
Publisher: Orchard Books
314 pages (hardcover)
Genre: Young adult science fiction
Acquired this book: From the publisher in exchange for an honest review
Warning: Will contain spoilers if you haven’t read Ultraviolet
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Book Depository || Amazon || Chapters/Indigo}

Back in her hometown, Tori Beaugrand had everything a teenaged girl could want—popularity, money, beauty. But she also had a secret. A secret that could change her life in an instant, or destroy it.

Now she’s left everything from her old life behind,
including her real name and Alison, the one friend who truly understood her. She can’t escape who and what she is. But if she wants to have anything like a normal life, she has to blend in and hide her unusual...talents.

Plans change when the enigmatic Sebastian Faraday reappears and gives Tori some bad news: she hasn’t escaped her past. In fact, she’s attracted new interest in the form of an obsessed ex-cop turned investigator for a genetics lab.

She has one last shot at getting her enemies off her trail and winning the security and independence she’s always longed for. But saving herself will take every ounce of Tori’s incredible electronics and engineering skills—and even then, she may need to sacrifice more than she could possibly imagine if she wants to be free.

 
Quicksilver picks up where Ultraviolet left off, but instead of getting Alison’s point of view, we now get Tori’s perspective. She and her family have left Sudbury and changed their names (Tori is now Niki) and Niki has to keep a low profile to avoid being found not only by the police and doctors who would like to test her strange DNA, but also from Mathis, the villain in Ultraviolet.

After really enjoying Ultraviolet, I had high hopes for Quicksilver, and while I won’t go so far as to say I was disappointed, I didn’t enjoy it as much as I did its companion. I found Alison’s story more compelling and mysterious, and I was fascinated as we learned about her synesthesia. There was something about Alison that drew me in, even though I couldn’t really relate to her, and I didn’t feel that as much with Niki.

That being said, I thought Niki was a great character. She was tough and brave, and, like Alison, she learned a lot about herself and the people around her through the course of the book. Anderson has a knack for writing very well developed, original characters. Neither Alison nor Niki were your typical heroines, and I loved that. The secondary characters are also well fleshed-out and unique. I was glad to see Faraday return, even though I spent most of the book trying to figure out whether to trust him or loathe him (but I loved that - the not knowing; it kept me on my toes). The little bits of Alison we saw made me very happy, and it was nice to see her get some closure after the hell she went through.

I guess my main issue with this book was the pacing. It’s not necessarily that it’s slow, I think it’s more the content that made it a slow read for me personally. I’m not the least bit scientifically-inclined and I know next to nothing about engineering, so those parts (which make up a good portion of the book) were kind of tedious for me, and my attention would start to wonder, and then I’d get confused because I didn’t really understand what Niki was trying to do.

The last quarter of the book, however, was anything but slow. There’s a certain incident that really kick-starts the action, and from that moment on, I was captivated. It was a shame that it came so late in the book, but it ended up changing my overall feelings toward the book (for the better), and I finally became invested in what was going to happen. I’m talking edge-of-your-seat, nail-biting tension that alternately makes you want to scream in horror and squeeze Niki tight for being so incredibly brave and selfless and stupid and brilliant all at once.

Ultraviolet and Quicksilver are unlike anything I’ve ever read. I suppose you could say they were both a step outside my comfort zone, and I’m glad I took that step. Even though I didn’t enjoy Quicksilver as much as Ultraviolet, they’re both books I won’t soon forget. And you know what? Most of the people I know who have read this book have nothing but glowing things to say about it, so don’t take my word just because I didn’t love it. If you’re a fan of very original, well-thought-out stories with plots that keep you guessing, and kick-ass heroines paired with other fantastically three-dimensional characters, give Quicksilver a try. I’m sure you won’t regret it. 

 
 
{Read my review of Ultraviolet}

Have you read Ultraviolet or Quicksilver? What did you think? Do you have any recommendations for books that you would consider genre-bending?


Thursday, April 25, 2013

Review: The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley


The Winter Sea by Susanna Kearsley
Series: Standalone
Published: September 22nd, 2008
Publisher: Allison & Busby
527 pages (paperback)
Genre: Contemporary/Historic fiction
Acquired this book: From the library
Warning: May contain spoilers
{GoodReads || Buy this book: Book Depository || Amazon || Chapters/Indigo}

The past won’t let you forget…

When bestselling author Carrie McClelland visits the ruins of Slains Castle in Scotland to research her new book, she is unprepared for the magnetic pull the local area has on her. Enchanted by the stark and beautiful Scottish landscape, she rents an old stone cottage near the windswept ruins and decides to set her new historical novel at the castle itself.

History has all but forgotten the spring of 1708, when an invasion fleet of French and Scottish soldiers nearly succeeded in landing their exiled James Stewart in Scotland to reclaim his crown. Realizing one of her own ancestors, Sophia Paterson, lived around the same time, Carrie creates a fictional life for Sophia and places her at Slains to be a narrator for the events leading to the Jacobite uprising. It is a time seething with political unrest and there is no shortage of spies and clandestine meetings at Slains. Soon, the characters in her book come alive with almost frightening intensity and Carrie is shocked when she learns that Sophia was indeed a resident at the castle at the time. When further coincidences confirm her fiction is closer to fact, Carrie realizes that this story is not entirely her own. As Sophia’s memories draw Carrie more deeply into the intrigue of 1708, she comes to understand that a hitherto unrealized bond with her ancestor is providing her with an immediate window into the true events of the time - and the two women have more in common than one might think.

Mesmerizing and rich in historical detail, The Winter Sea is a haunting tale of two women’s experiences of love and personal betrayal in two very different times. 

 

Susanna Kearsley’s The Winter Sea has single-handedly rekindled my love of historic fiction. This book is unlike anything I’ve ever read. It skillfully weaves the past and present into a story of intrigue, romance, and danger, and will keep you guessing and hoping, while falling in love with the characters. 

The story starts off with Carrie, an author of historic fiction, who had been in France attempting to write her next novel. When she visits Scotland, she’s drawn to Slains Castle, and decides to stay in Scotland and work on her story because it just wasn’t happening in France. When she realizes the story needs to be told from a woman’s perspective, she decides to create a fictional life for her ancestor, Sophia Paterson. The story comes with such ease, and in such a vivid manner, Carrie wonders if Sophia’s story is fact rather than fiction, and if her memories have somehow been awakened in Carrie.

What follows is a story so rich in detail and so intricately woven, it nearly took my breath away. Set against a harsh winter background on the Scottish seaside, the story goes back and forth between Carrie in the present day and Sophia in the early 1700s. In a time of political and religious turmoil, Sophia’s life at Slains is surrounded by clandestine meetings, spies, and plans to bring James Stewart back to Scotland from France to take the throne. Things are further complicated when Sophia falls in love with a man marked with a price on his head.

This novel is full of wonderful, three-dimensional characters. Every character has a purpose, and I found myself getting very attached to them. I related easily to both Carrie and Sophia, and was eager to see where their stories led. At times it felt like Carrie’s side of the story was simply there to move things along, and there was less development on her end, and while I enjoyed it very much, I was always eager to get back to Sophia’s story. 

Quite possibly my favourite part of each woman’s story was the romance. Neither love story came easily, and it was especially hard to believe Sophia would get a happily ever after, but with the swoonworthy Scots Kearsley created, I think it would be hard not to fall in love with them. I was especially enamored of Sophia and John’s romance. John had this quiet, understated way about him, and he didn’t say much but when he did, he made his words count. I just wish we’d seen more of him throughout the story!

I wasn’t familiar with the history of the Franco-Scottish plans of 1708, so I found the history aspect of it fascinating (even though it was a bit hard to keep up with at times). It was clearly well-researched, and laid out in a way that was both interesting and entertaining. While the overall pacing of the book was a bit slow at times, I never lost interest.

The Winter Sea is a beautiful, gripping story about fate and the power of enduring love. I was so invested in the story that towards the end, even though I had a feeling I knew what was coming, I was on the edge of my seat, turning pages as fast as possible with tears building in my eyes. I was so enthralled with it, I didn’t want it to end. It made me laugh, it made me cry, and it made me certain that this will be the first of many books by Susanna Kearsley I will read.


“Ye were mine from the moment I first saw ye.” ~ John Moray, page 305

“Ye told me once I had your heart…And ye have mine…It does not travel with me, lass, across the water. Where you are, it will remain. Ye’ll not be on your own…And I’ll no more be whole again till I return.” ~ John Moray, page 307-8

Whatever might become of them, she knew that there was nothing that could rob them of that happiness. For they had lived their winter, and the spring had finally come. ~ page 513


Have you read The Winter Sea? What did you think? Have you read any of Kearsley's other books? How about books set both in present day and the past? Do you enjoy historic fiction? I want to hear from you!


Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Showers of Books Giveaway Hop


The Showers of Books Giveaway Hop is hosted by Books a la Mode and I Am a Reader, Not a Writer

Since my two young adult novels both have weather-related titles and minor themes (I didn't plan it that way, it just sot of happened), I thought they'd be perfect for this giveaway.

One winner will have a chance to win an ebook of either BLUE SKY DAYS and/or WAITING FOR THE STORM.


A year after graduating from high school, nineteen-year-old Emma Ward feels lost. She has spent most of her life trying to please her frigid, miserable mother - studying hard, getting good grades, avoiding the whole teenage rebellion thing - and now she feels she has no identity beyond that. Because she spent so many years working hard and planning every moment of her life, she doesn't have any friends, has never had a boyfriend, and basically doesn't know who she is or what she really wants from life.
Working two part-time jobs to save money for college hasn't helped her make decisions about her future, so she decides it's time for a change. She leaves home to live with her free-spirited, slightly eccentric Aunt Daisy in a small town that makes Emma feel like she's stepped back in time.

When Emma meets Nicholas Shaw, everything changes - he's unlike anyone she's ever met before, the kind of guy she didn't even know existed in the 21st century. Carefree and spirited like Daisy, Nicholas teaches Emma to appreciate life, the beauty around her, and to just let go and live. Between Daisy and Nicholas, Emma feels like she belongs somewhere for the first time in her life, and realizes that you don't always need a plan - sometimes life steers you where you're meant to be.

Life is wonderful, an endless string of blue sky days, until Nicholas is diagnosed with cancer, and life changes once again for Emma in ways she never thought possible. Now it's time for her to help Nicholas the way he's helped her. Emma will have to use her newfound strength, and discover along the way if love really is enough to get you through.
 
Charlotte O’Dell knows this summer is going to suck. Her beloved mother just died, her sister hates her, and her dad has completely checked out. Fulfilling her mother’s final wish, the family heads to Angel Island for the summer to stay in a beach house her mother once loved.

After a year of being shut away taking care of her mother, Charlotte is numb and practically afraid of her own shadow; she hopes going to the island will give her the time and space she needs to begin healing, and an opportunity to bring her family back together. When she meets her mysterious neighbor, Ezra, it doesn’t take long for Charlotte to confess the issues she’s developed. Ezra begins giving Charlotte assignments to get over her fears, and although she accepts his tasks, all she really wants is to be with him. When she’s with Ezra, she’s able to forget the hollow ache in her heart and the fact that her family is falling apart. But Ezra has secrets…

Can Charlotte pull what’s left of her family together, mend her broken heart, and allow herself to fall for Ezra? Or is it all just a storm waiting to happen?


  • Open internationally
  • One winner will get their choice of an ebook of BLUE SKY DAYS or WAITING FOR THE STORM, or they can have both if they like. I have all e-formats, so the winner can choose which format they'd prefer.
  • Must be 16 or older, or have parental permission to enter
  • Winner will be contacted via email within 24 hours of giveaway closing, and will have 48 hours to respond before another winner is chosen 
  • Only entries in the Rafflecopter will count. You're welcome to leave a comment below (I do love comments!) but it doesn't count as an entry. Please don't leave personal information like your email address in the comments.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thank you for stopping by my post on this hop, and good luck! Be sure to check out the other great giveaways happening during the Showers of Books Giveaway Hop. 



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