Showing posts with label YA books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA books. Show all posts

Friday, September 4, 2015

Promo Post and Giveaway: The Next Together by Lauren James




The Next Together (The Next Together #1)
by Lauren James
Publisher: Walker
Release Date: September 3rd 2015
Genre: Young Adult, Romance, Historial Fiction, Contemporary, Fantasy, Time Travel

Synopsis:

How many times can you lose the person you love? 

Katherine and Matthew are destined to be born again and again, century after century. Each time, their presence changes history for the better, and each time, they fall hopelessly in love, only to be tragically separated. 

Spanning the Crimean War, the Siege of Carlisle and the near-future of 2019 and 2039 they find themselves sacrificing their lives to save the world. But why do they keep coming back? What else must they achieve before they can be left to live and love in peace? 

Maybe the next together will be different...

A powerful and epic debut novel for teenagers about time-travel, fate and the timelessness of first love. The Next Together is told through a mixture of regular prose, diary entries, letters, "original" historical documents, news reports and internet articles.




shine/anna nalick 
love story/taylor swift
tired of waiting for you/the kinks
i will wait/mumford & sons
rattlin’ bones/kasey chambers
back to where i was/eric hutchinson
pompeii/bastille
radioactive/imagine dragons
young volcanoes/fall out boy
when the war came/the decemberists
to the dog or whoever/josh ritter
la meme historie/feist
centuries/fall out boy
man o’ war/eric bachmann
maybe/ingrid michaelson
brand new day/joshua radin
 first day of my life/bright eyes


http://8tracks.com/flossiepots/soulmates-incarnate?_banjos=1


 photo addtogoodreadssmall_zpsa2a6cf28.png photo B6096376-6C81-4465-8935-CE890C777EB9-1855-000001A1E900B890_zps5affbed6.jpg


Follow the The Next Together by Lauren James Blog Tour and don't miss anything! Click on the banner to see the tour schedule.



Lauren James is a scientist by day, writer by early hours of the morning. She graduated in 2014 with a first class Masters degree in Natural Sciences from the University of Nottingham, where she studied Chemistry and Physics. 
She now lives in the village of Berkswell in the UK.

You can find her on Twitter at @Lauren_E_James, which she mainly uses to fancast actors as her characters and panic about all of the overly ambitious plans she has for her PhD, or her website at http://lauren-e-james.tumblr.com

She likes strong, intelligent women, Dylan O’Brien, and things with plants on them. These are her favourite books: http://www.myindependentbookshop.co.uk/Laurenelizjames.


UK ONLY





Monday, July 6, 2015

Book Tour and Review: We Are Watching (Mindshare #1) by M. Stephan Stewart (giveaway)



Book and Author details:

We Are Watching by M. Stephen Stewart
(Mindshare #1)
Publication date: December 16th 2014
Genres: Dystopia, Young Adult

Synopsis:
Henry Malone’s childhood was shattered by the unexplained suicide of his father. Now a teenager, his days are spent studying to become a Neural Implant Technician for Planetary Link Corporation, helping them maintain an iron grip over his walled country and every iota of knowledge contained within—but he leads a double life. Henry’s nights are spent helping his mother wage a cyber war against them in her quest to find the truth behind his father’s death.

He’s managed to keep his two lives separate, a delicate balance that’s endangered after he repairs the neural implant of a stranger. He finds she’s in possession of illegal memories from the outside world, unauthorized knowledge of his father, and a message: speak to me later and tell no one. Henry has a choice to make—ignore the message and maintain his double-life, or answer and risk everything to uncover secrets Planetary Link would kill to keep buried.

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25402802-we-are-watching?ac=1

Purchase:
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00PG8QP1O


AUTHOR BIO:
M. Stephen Stewart is a graduate of Indiana University with a Bachelor’s Degree in Journalism. He makes his home in Indianapolis with his wife and two dogs. In his spare time, Matt is an avid sports fan, gamer, and reader, who loves to connect with new people. You can usually find him around town with his wife, exercising, or in front of his computer working on a new project.




Author links:
Website:  http://www.mstephenstewart.com/
Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/9595675.M_Stephen_Stewart
Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/mstephenstewart
Twitter:  https://twitter.com/mstephenstewart

Review:

The main character as you see in the synopsis above is Harry Malone.  His father was a famous astronaut that died, or disappeared depending who you talk to, in a mysterious accident aboard a shuttle.  In this future, everyone has a sort of computer in their brain, along with it being connected to a main source.  In other words, people are constantly connected to the internet, but this also means that they are constantly  under surveillance by the corporation that put the implants in.   Harry is famous because of what happened to his father.  And his mother spends all her time kind of chasing any rumor or conspiracy theory that might give her answers to what happened to her husband.  Up until this time, Harry has been helping his mother, using types of drugs to kind of block or short out the implant for short amounts of time when things are needed to be kept off the radar. But as he gets close to finishing his training to become some kind of worker for the company, maybe even a pilot like his father, things start to happen.  A building named after his father blows up.  He loses his mother, and he also learns things about a rebel group, and someone else who has been close to him.  A girl comes into his life, and says he is needed to help the people who are trying to get things fair for everyone, and he must decide if she is worth trusting, or someone else that is out to get something from his family and their fame.

I liked the idea of a kind of Big Brother society, especially where people can be hooked into the "Internet" at all times.  I mean how many of us couldn't survive these days without our cell phone and being able to check Facebook whenever and wherever we are?  It definitely leads into the Big Brother theme in a very close way to where we are today.  I'm not quite done with the story, but am really enjoying it and can't wait to see how it all ends, or ends for this book.  My only complaint so far has to do with kind of a way of writing.  Sometimes a character will be referred to by their name, Harry Malone.  Sometimes they might be called "Trainee Malone."  And then other times they might be called by a nickname, Hank.  This would be okay if it was when people were speaking, so that you knew a trainer called them "Trainee", and a family member used the nickname, etc.  But often it is how the author refers to them, and within one page, and that is confusing at times.  Other than that, I am really enjoying this book.

Tour Schedulehttp://xpressobooktours.com/2015/05/06/tour-sign-up-we-are-watching-by-m-stephen-stewart/

 Giveaway:
Tour-wide giveaway (INTL) (ends July 16th)

  • Signed copies of We Are Watching and A Conduit for Man (book 2)
  a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

Friday, May 22, 2015

Book Blitz: Aftermath by Tom Lewis


Book & Author Details:
Aftermath by Tom Lewis
(After the Fall #1)
Publication date: March 28th 2015
Genres: Dystopia, Young Adult

Synopsis:
The end of the world came fast. Between the time the warning had sounded on the TV, till when 16-year-old Paige O’Connor awakened sometime later, civilization had been crushed.

The attacks had come by “them” – those things in the ships in the sky that had appeared suddenly, and without warning.

And as Paige would soon discover, the attacks had only been the beginning.

Aftermath is the first book in the new After the Fall dystopian action series, which follows a young girl’s struggle for survival in the wake of civilization’s collapse, and humanity’s domination by an alien race of beings.

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25245425-aftermath?ac=1

Purchase:
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00VD66QYO/ref=x_gr_w_bb?ie=UTF8&tag=x_gr_w_bb_ca-20&linkCode=as2&camp=15121&creative=330641


AUTHOR BIO:
Tom Lewis served in the United States Marines, before attending college, and then law school. He currently practices entertainment law from his office in Santa Monica, California.

Mr. Lewis has written and sold several screenplays, and is currently in post-production on a motion picture he wrote, directed, and produced.

His novel, "Aftermath," is loosely based on one of his screenplays. In writing "Aftermath," his goal was to take his readers through a post-apocalyptic America, where civilization had been crushed in an alien attack. The reader is taken on this journey through the eyes of his protagonist, 16-year-old Paige O'Connor, and encounters this hostile new world as she does.

"Aftermath" is the first book in the "After the Fall Dystopian Series," which will continue to chronicle the adventures of Paige and the remnants of humanity in their struggle to survive, and ultimately reclaim our planet from the invaders.


Tell us about your debut novel:
The book’s called “Aftermath”.  It’s a fast-paced, dystopian sci fi actioner that follows a teenage girl’s struggles for survival in the increasingly hostile wake of civilization’s collapse, and humanity’s domination by an alien race of beings.  I’m calling it a “Hunger Games” with aliens.

“Aftermath” is the first novel in the “After the Fall” dystopian series, which will follow my heroine, Paige, and the remnants of humanity in their efforts to both survive, and reclaim our world.

Author Interview:
How did you get into writing?
I started writing screenplays in 1999, and had my first screenplay optioned that year.  I followed that up with several other screenplays, a few of which were optioned by production companies and ended up getting me hired for writing assignments.  Two of those scripts were made into movies which I produced and directed.  The first of those movies was picked up by Lionsgate for distribution, and we’re in negotiations with distributors on the second film, a spooky ghost story called “The Chanel”.  It’s about a teenage girl, who after surviving a near-death experience in a car crash, finds herself haunted by a shadowy figure she sees from the corner of her eye – something that followed her back from the other side of death.

You’re also an attorney?
Yes.  I practice entertainment law from my office in Santa Monica.  My clients are mainly producers, so that’s helped with getting my screenplays out there.  Before that, I served in the Marines.

Where did your interest in post-apocalyptic and dystopian fiction come from?
My first exposure to the dystopian genre came about 4 years ago, when I was negotiating movie rights to a best-selling novel for one of my clients.  I read that novel, and then read the “Hunger Games” trilogy, and then I was hooked.  Dystopian, YA, NA, sci fi action, survival, and post-apocalyptic stories are far and away my favorites.

Where did the inspiration for Aftermath come from?
I came up with the idea for Aftermath about a year ago.  I was searching Amazon for something post-apocalyptic and dystopian, but with ordinary people thrown into that upside-down world. Most of the books I was finding had either elite commandos, or the threat wasn’t big enough, or there just wasn’t enough action, thrills, or scares.  So basically I wrote Aftermath as the story I wanted to read.  I originally started drafting it as a screenplay, but then I saw the potential of it as a series of novels.  The story is epic in scope – it follows the survivors through the end of civilization, and its conquest by this alien race.  And by doing it through novels, I wasn’t limited to budget considerations you have when writing screenplays.  But I did have the fun of shooting the trailer I made for the book.  You can see that trailer here:  https://vimeo.com/124008432

What's next for you?
I’m about halfway finished with the second installment in the series, and hope to publish it later this summer.  The working title is “The Whisperers.”

About Tom Lewis
Tom Lewis grew up in Phoenix, Arizona, where his family still resides.  He served in the Marines, before returning to Arizona, where he attended Arizona State University, receiving his BS in Business Management.  After ASU, he moved to San Diego, where he attended law school at the University of San Diego.  He graduated in 1996, and was admitted to the State Bar of California the same year.  Shortly after that, he moved to Santa Monica, where he practices law as an entertainment attorney.

When he’s not writing, or handling the legal work for his clients’ films, Tom enjoys working out, hanging out at the beach, bike riding, reading, and movies.

Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE
The Birds

            Destiny can be defined as a series of events that will necessarily happen to us. As inevitable as it is unpredictable, it’s a journey we’re all thrown into. Along the way it defines us, and shows us what we’re made of. And when we reach the end, we often find that it’s taken us in a direction we never could have imagined. This is one girl’s journey.
***
            It started on a crisp spring day in the foothills of Los Angeles. The Westwood High Panthers’ girls soccer team took the field to a small audience of students and family members scattered throughout the wooden bleachers.
            In the back row, as far away as possible from the other spectators, sat Paige O’Connor and Shelby Johnson. To anyone watching them, it was pretty obvious they weren’t there for the game. It was just an excuse to get out of their houses, soak up some sunshine, and get drunk on the rum Paige was pouring into a giant Big Gulp cup.
            Paige had just turned sixteen, the legal driving age in California, but at the rate she got into trouble, it would be a long time before her parents let her get her license. Riding a bike everywhere sucked, but then so did listening to parents and teachers.
            She was strikingly pretty and petite, and hated that things were expected of her because of that. She was going to hang out with who she wanted, dress the way she wanted, and look the way she wanted. So midway through her freshman year, she had chopped her long brunette hair down to shoulder length, and painted several blue streaks through it. Her mom nearly fainted, and of course it got her grounded, but then what else was new.
            As for clothes, don’t even get her started. It was usually cargo pants, and a t-shirt, or sweatshirt on those rare cold days. And the more people complained, or rolled their eyes at her, the more dingy were the clothes she sought out.
            Shelby had been her BFF since they were kids, and they shared everything together. Movies, gossip, sleepovers, secrets, clothes… you name it, and they shared it. And that’s what they were doing today.
            Paige steadied her hand, as she emptied the rest of the rum into the cup. Shelby kept watch, while going on about her favorite topic - boys. And at the moment, that boy happened to be Paige’s older brother.
            “I’m just saying, pretend for a minute Brad’s not your brother,” Shelby went on.
            “We’re not having this conversation, Shelbs,” Paige replied, trying not to spill the rum.
            “But he’s cute.”
            “He’s my brother,” Paige grumbled back, capping the cup. “No hitting on him.” She took a deep swig through the straw, shuddering at the taste.
            “That good?” Shelby smiled.
            Paige nodded, passing her the cup.
            “So who do you think is cute?” Shelby asked, ready to get the conversation back on track.
            “Nobody.”
            “Oh, come on,” nagged Shelby. “If you had to pick someone.”
            “Okay, fine. Liam Hemsworth.”
            “Someone you could actually meet,” Shelby clarified.
            “Then we’re back to nobody,” Paige grinned, taking back the cup.
            “Seriously?”
            “Yup.”
            “You, Paige O’Connor, are going to make such a pretty little spinster,” Shelby teased.
            “I’m sixteen, Shelbs,” Paige laughed. “I don’t think they let you become a spinster till you’re at least like sixty.”
            Shelby just shook her head. “Better start practicing those knitting skills, girl.”
            Paige had to laugh. She loved Shelby to death, but man that girl could get annoying at times.
            “Okay, new topic,” Paige jumped in. “What would you rather have during a zombie apocalypse? A gun, or a cross bow?” The topic of zombie apocalypse planning was always a favorite with the two girls.
            Several rows down, a group of five girls glanced back at Paige and Shelby. Paige caught them staring. The girls turned back to each other, giggling in that way where they want you to know they’re giggling.
            “Hands down, a gun,” Shelby replied, ignoring the girls.
            “So you want every zombie in the area to hear you?”
            “I wanna make sure they’re dead. Plus, it doesn’t take forever to reload,” Shelby responded.
            “But a cross bow just looks so bad ass,” Paige countered, catching the group of girls staring again. This was getting old.
            “You just wanna look like Jennifer Lawrence,” Shelby continued.
            “I wanna look like Norman Reedus,” Paige grinned back.
            Then that group of mean girls was at it again. Glancing back, then turning to each other in annoying giggles. Paige had had it.
            “You got a problem?” Paige hollered at them.
            Cindy Willis was the tallest of the girls. Captain of the girl’s volleyball team, and at least seven inches taller than Paige, she shot Paige a glare. “Yeah. You, O’Connor,” Cindy snorted.
            “Screw you!” Paige shot back.
            “What was that?” Cindy was on her feet, stalking up the steps towards Paige and Shelby. Cindy’s minions followed behind.
            Paige rose to her feet, followed by Shelby. Both stood their ground. “You heard me,” Paige responded.
            “Yeah,” said Cindy, “I heard you trying to be tough in front of your girlfriend here.”
            “Fuck off,” Paige snorted.
            Cindy shoved Paige in the chest, knocking her back on the row behind her. Paige hopped to her feet, and lunged at the tall volleyball player, tackling her onto the bench, and pummeling her. Cindy squirmed and struggled beneath the blows, but Paige was just too quick.
            “Break it up!” came a shout from the field. It was an all too familiar voice for Paige. She backed off of Cindy, and looked towards the field. The school’s principal was storming their way. Several of the girls grumbled beneath their breaths.
            “What the hell’s going on?” demanded the principal as he reached the girls.
            “This freak attacked me for no reason!” Said Cindy, wiping a trickle of blood from beneath her nose.
            “She did not! You pushed her first,” Shelby jumped in.
            “Is that alcohol on your breath?” asked the principal. Shelby and Paige both closed their mouths, looking more than a bit suspicious.
            “Check their cup,” said Cindy’s minion, Stacy.
            “You five, get back to your seats,” said the principal, turning to Cindy and her friends. “I’ll see you all on Monday.” The mean girls grumbled beneath their breaths, but knew better than to argue. They stomped back to their seats. The principal turned back to Paige and Shelby.
            “What the hell’s your problem, O’Connor,” he asked, more out of disappointment than anger.
            Paige just shrugged. “Nothing.”
            But he wasn’t going to let it rest. “No, I’m serious,” he continued. “How is it that your brother’s an honor student, class president, and actually has a future. And here you are, this… mess?”
            “Maybe I just don’t feel like sucking up to people,” she replied.
            “Or maybe you’re too scared to even try. Afraid you might not cut it.” He knew he was hitting a nerve with this one, but he also knew he had to go there.
            “Go to hell!” she shot back.
            “You’re coming with me. Both of you,” he demanded, motioning to Shelby as well.
            “I’m not going anywhere,” Paige replied, folding her arms across her chest.
            “Oh, yes you are,” he insisted. “We’re calling your parents.”
            “They’re not home.”
            “Then I’ll call their cells.”
            That’s when a loud groan filled the air. Like an enormous metal object bending under stress. The principal and girls barely had time to look around, when suddenly the ground shook with a violent jolt. The principal stumbled, trying to maintain his balance. Down on the soccer field everyone had stopped, waiting to see if more jolts would follow.
            “What was that?” asked Shelby, a startled look on her face.
            “Look!” Paige shouted, pointing to a transformer mounted to a nearby telephone pole. Sparks showered from the side of it down onto the dirt track circling the field.
            Then a static charge filled the air, causing their skin to tingle. The girls brushed their hands down their arms.
            Suddenly something large and black dropped to the bleachers beside them. The girls leaped back with a startled yelp. A dead raven lay there, its feathers sizzling with smoke.
            “Look out!” the principal shouted, seconds before another bird crashed down. This one also sizzled with smoke. Then came another, and another. They were raining down on the bleachers and field.
            Then came a loud crack! The transformer broke off the telephone pole, and crashed down onto the dirt track in a shower of sparks.
            “Keith! Get everyone in the locker room!” shouted the principal, as he hurried down the bleachers towards the sidelines.
            Paige turned to Shelby. “Let’s go!” she said, hopping to her feet. The girls raced down the bleachers, and over to their bikes parked along the track.

 

Saturday, April 18, 2015

A to Z April: P Reviews - Past Midnight by Mara Purnhagen/The Pride of the Peacock by Victoria Holt





For the last post this week I've got an old romance novel and a YA paranormal story.  Both are books I really enjoyed, and remember well.


The first book I want to talk about is one that I did actually review on my blog. But it is a series that I don't think gets enough attention.  So I want to bring it back by linking you to my reviews of the first two books in the Past Midnight series by Mara Purnhagen HERE.  And then I'll share the blurb from Goodreads below.  I just loved the ghost story, the characters, the mystery, such a great story!
Let me set the record straight. My name is Charlotte Silver and I'm not one of those paranormal-obsessed freaks you see on TV…no, those would be my parents, who have their own ghost-hunting reality show. And while I'm usually roped into the behind-the-scenes work, it turns out that I haven't gone unnoticed. Something happened on my parents' research trip in Charleston—and now I'm being stalked by some truly frightening other beings. Trying to fit into a new school and keeping my parents' creepy occupation a secret from my friends—and potential boyfriends—is hard enough without having angry spirits whispering in my ear.

All I ever wanted was to be normal, but with ghosts of my past and present colliding, now I just want to make it out of high school alive….



The second book is one that I happened upon by chance.  I had been hanging out with my aunt and cousins for the day because my parents were busy for something I can't remember now. We'd gone over to her grandmother-in-law's house.  I was bored, it was before I always remembered to bring a book with me.  So I saw a book sitting on a table and asked if I could read it.  Or maybe I picked it up and started reading, and the lady who it belonged to actually told me I could take it with me when we left. I'd always thought peacocks were cool, so that is one thing that got my attention. The other thing is that opals were my birthstone, and in this book I first learned about black opals, and probably became really obsessed with all types of opals.   Here is the blurb for it from Goodreads:
Victoria Holt demonstrates her mastery once again in her most exciting novel set in turn-of-the-century England where a young woman grows up in the shadow of the great estate - and privileged way of life - that was once her family's birthright. But a unique inheritance compels Jessica Clavering to marry the owner of a fabled opal mine and leads her to faraway Australia. There she will discover the mysteries - and evil - surrounding the greatest opal ever found. There she must confront the danger that lust for the stone has aroused even in her own husband - and there she must find love.

Actually both books I've chosen today have ghosts in them!  Or seem to maybe have ghosts.  And romance. Have you read either of these?  I am friends with the author of the first one, Mara Purnhagen, on Facebook.  And I've asked her what book is next. Nothing so far.  But I enjoy her writing so hope there will be more soon.  I've tried other books from the 2nd author, but haven't found any I loved as much as this one.

While you're here, enter my giveaway below!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Armchair BEA Day 5: Genre: Children's Literature

So up until now I've only been following others posts on Armchair BEA, which is kind of a virtual convention for those of us who really wish we could be there but are unable to attend for whatever reason. After winning a prize through the Twitter party yesterday, I decided to get more involved.  So today's topic is about children's literature, which I find an appropriate topic considering my blog tends to be mostly YA.
I'm a 40 year old teacher, so why am I almost exclusively reading and reviewing YA?  I like to think back and figure out how did I get started on this.  I mean about 4 or 5 years ago, I occasionally read YA, but was still mostly reading adult authors like Stephen King, Dean Koontz, and lots of what I call Chick Lit.  But then, I started getting involved in my state library association, partly trying to help get myself a library job, and partly to be involved with my students were reading.  And I discovered just how great YA books truly are these days!  I've even gone back to some of my favorite authors, Dean Koontz to be specific, and had trouble getting through the book.  I think maybe what is so great about YA is that the stories usually move pretty fast.  And when you're really busy, it is nice to not always have to read through tons of character background and development, sometimes when it all seems a bit too much or unnecessary for the story.

Okay, let me share a list of my favorite YA books:

1.  Twilight
2.  Harry Potter
3.  Divergent
4.  Rot & Ruin
5.  Hunger Games
6.  The Lightning Thief

As a kid, some of my favorite books/series included:

1.  The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe
2.  A Wrinkle in Time
3.  Nancy Drew
4.  The Giver
5.  The Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

What about you?  Are you a YA book fan?  I assume many or most of my followers are, as that is mostly what I post about.  But do you, like I do, also read adult fiction?  And how would you compare them?

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Stacking the Shelves - 2013 RT Convention Edition




This week my Stacking the Shelves post hosted by Tynga's Reviews will be not only about all the books I got the past two days at the Romantic Times Convention, but also some stories about the convention itself.  I'll share the books first, then the stories after.


The picture above shows the books I was shocked and delighted to get for free at the Red Slipper Party put on by Avon Books.  From what I'd heard about past conventions, you were limited to how many free books you could get in different events like this.  But, it wasn't that way!  Here's what you see in the picture:

Possess by Gretchen McNeil, Wings by Aprilynne Pike, Everneath by Brodi Ashton, Slide by Jill Hathaway, Team Human by Sarah Rees Brennan and Justine Larbalestier, So Close to You by Rachel Carter, Die for Me by Amy Plum, Sweet Venom by Tera Lynn Childs, Hereafter by Tara Hudson, The Body Finder by Kimberly Derting, and Mila 2.0 by Debra Driza.

I actually got a few more books than  you see here, they were ones I'd already read, so didn't put them in the picture, they were:  The Selection by Kiera Cass, Eve by Anna Carey, Invisible Sun by David Macinnis Gill, and not sure why I didn't put it in the picture but a new one by Melissa Marr:  The Arrivals.


This next picture shows the books that I bought at the Giant Book Fair on Saturday morning.  I had hoped to buy a few, 5 was my limit, but I wish more of these had been available in paperback.  Once by Anna Carey was in paperback, and I had to buy it because I loved Eve, and have been waiting to read on.  Dirty Little Secrets by CJ Omololu was one I planned to buy after hearing her talk about it in a panel on Friday, but I had expected it to be in paper back as well.  Now, I totally fell in love with Sarah Rees Brennan during all the panels I saw her during the convention, and I had already been a fan due to getting to read Unspoken as an egalley from Netgalley a while back.  So, I gave in and bought the book, even though it was hardcover.  Plus, she gave me a necklace like the one in the book, so how could I not?  Ten by Gretchen McNeil was the one I'd really wanted a lot, and while I had wanted to read Possession that I got for free the night before, I gave in and bought this too.  And finally, Shades of Earth by Beth Revis.  The 2nd book in the series, A Million Suns, left off with such a cliffhanger I couldn't wait to read this.  But, I'd been trying to win it so I wouldn't have to buy it.  I gave in and bought it.  So I stuck to my 5 book rule, but price-wise, it wasn't the paperback price I'd hoped for.  


I need to crop my pictures next time, sorry about the vacuum cleaner you see in the back.  These are the books that I got at the Teen Day Party Saturday night.  At first didn't think I'd get any because it was supposed to be "only" for the teens.  And maybe if anything was left over, the adults could have some, well, soon that changed, and we got to get some too!  The ones you see in the picture above are Lost Sun by Tessa Gratton, and I've been a fan of hers with her Blood Journals series, so am excited to see something new by her, even if it's not in the same series.  Then Anna and the French Kiss by Stephanie Perkins.  I've heard so much about this, but it doesn't seem my kind of book, but for free, well, I guess I can give it a try this summer.  Transcendence by CJ Omololu is one I've already read, and loved, and if you remember my posts from BEA last summer, it was one I'd really wanted, and I was kind of given a raw deal on getting a copy of it, which made me irritated.  Not to the author, but to the publisher.  So I was very excited to get a copy of it Saturday!  And then I now have all the books in the Eve series by Anna Carey because I got the final book, Rise!  One of the teens sitting at the table we were at gave it to me, so that was very nice!  I also got a copy of Firelight by Sophie Jordan, I figured I would give it a shot as I'd heard such great things about it. And if it doesn't turn out to be my favorite, it can be on my shelf for students at school, or I can have a giveaway here for it.  The one book that was sought after the most I think last night, and I felt a little bad because I wouldn't trade with a teen for it (because I wanted it!) was an ARC of 3:59 Gretchen McNeil.  Another book I've been curious about for awhile was Crewel by Gennifer Albin, so I picked that up.  And finally, The Beautiful and the Cursed by Page Morgan.  I have been interested in reading more gargoyle stories and this seems as if it is one.  I also got a paperback copy of Across the Universe by Beth Revis that I can leave in my classroom for my students to read.

It was soooooo awesome!  I recommend if you ever get the chance, definitely go to this convention!  If you're like me and are a YA fan, just choose to go to the Teen day, and possibly the day before like I did, where there were a lot of teen authors there.  I also got books I already had signed while I was there, got to meet Veronica Roth, and several other authors.  Authors I saw but didn't buy or get free books from were:  Carrie Ryan, Victoria Scott, Margaret Stohl and Kami Garcia, Nancy Holder, Heather Brewer, and Ally Carter.
I also got to meet some great fellow book bloggers who were attending, and I don't know about you guys, but meeting fellow bloggers is almost as cool as meeting favorite authors!!  I got to meet The Book Nympho,  The Jeep Diva, The Book Savvy Babe, Kelly from Demon Lover's Books and More, The Bawdy Book Blog, Carmel from Rabid Reads, and Amber I from AwesomeSauce Book Club, and I know I'm forgetting someone!  I met up with them for dinner Wednesday night, even though I wasn't attending until Friday.  And then I ran into them on Friday and Saturday throughout the day as we passed on our way to panels and the book fair, etc.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Why I Love YA


While it's not really so strange these days for a woman of my age to be a fan of YA books, I do still sometimes have to explain it to people when they ask what I've read that is good lately, and I really can only tell them about YA books.  As a middle school teacher, reading the same books as my students is important, just to know what is going on in their world.  Plus, when I went back to school and got my Master's Degree in Library Science, I had to start getting more involved in this age group.  I also had awesome librarians that pointed me to some great series, and got me stuck back in the YA world.  I would have to say that Twilight and Harry Potter really got me back into this age level.  Along with my involvement with the Missouri Association of School Librarians and their book awards.  I must admit that really there are so many good books in YA.  There are new, fresh story ideas.  And often they are so much better than what is available as adult books.
Another thing, since this is November, is why I am thankful for YA.  First, I love what books like the Twilight series have done for books.  Say what you will about the series if you don't like it, the number of people coming in and reading went up thanks to them.  Even the girls and older women who wouldn't normally be big readers seemed to flock to the bookstore, inhaling the series, and then asking us for similar types of reads.  I think Twilight led more people to the Sookie Stackhouse series, and probably even helped get it a show on HBO.  I'm also thankful for all the awesome people I've met because of this foray into the YA world.  Such neat authors that are so willing to talk to their fans, awesome fellow bloggers that I've met online and also at times in person.  And I think my knowledge of this type of book has really helped me with certain students.  Some of my favorite moments as a teacher have been seeing kids who fought every step of the way to get reading at school, seeing them fall in love with a book, The Lightning Thief, Twilight, The Maze Runner, etc.  
Now, if you too love YA, you need to look at the image in this post, and click the link to go visit an awesome author, Beth Revis, author of the Across the Universe series.  She is offering all the books you see in the image.  Books I would love to win to read, and share with my students at school.  So while I want to publicize her giveaway, I'm also hoping to win myself!  So go now, what are you waiting for?