Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Blog Tour and Giveaway: Summer at Paradise Ranch by R. Barri Flowers


While this isn't my normal type of book, and I haven't actually read it yet, I am helping out the YA Reads Blog Tours by posting an interview with the author, R. Barri Flowers.  The giveaway is at the end of this post, right before the excerpt of the first two chapters in the book.

INTERVIEW:


1.  When you write, do you just sit down and write from start to finish, or do you plan out ahead?  If you plan out ahead, how do you plan?  Notecards?  Outline?


I typically type a brief outline of the plot and short character sketches, then plow through the novel from start to finish--essentially letting the story tell itself once I get going. As a prolific author, it typically takes more around three months to complete a novel, including editing.
2.  How do you come up with your story ideas?

I tend to have an overactive imagination, so I am always coming up with ideas in everyday life, through dreams, real life events, even from conversations with my wife. I write down many of the best ideas for stories, so as not to forget; while keeping others in my head for future use.

3.  How long have you been writing?

For the better part of three decades now. Very long time and yet, in many respects, I feel as if I am starting fresh with each new book I write.
4.  What do you do if you get stuck in a story?  Do you start at a new scene, or do you have writer's block tips?

Fortunately, I never get stuck in a story. Once I have the premise in my mind, I essentially let the story tell itself and I just keep typing until it is finished.
As for tips for writer’s block, my advice would be to step away when that happens, taking your mind in a different direction and then come back to your book more refreshed and open to new thoughts on plot and characters. Another tip is to go back through previously written material in book, allowing you to touch base with the direction you’re heading in, helping to push through the writer’s block.



About the Author:


R. Barri Flowers is the bestselling author of young adult novels, including OUT FOR BLOOD, COUNT DRACULA’S TEENAGE DAUGHTER, TEEN GHOST AT DEAD LAKE, GHOST GIRL IN SHADOW BAY, DANGER IN TIME, andCHRISTMAS WISHES: Laura’s Story. His novels can be found in print, eBook, and audio. In addition to bookstores, many of the titles can be found at public libraries across the country.
The author has also written a number of bestselling teen and young adult related nonfiction books as well, including RUNAWAY KIDS AND TEENAGE PROSTITUTION, KIDS WHO COMMIT ADULT CRIMES, and CHILDREN AND CRIMINALITY.
Follow R. Barri Flowers on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest Goodreads, Google+, LinkedIn, YouTube, LibraryThing,Flickr,and www.rbarriflowers.net. And learn more about the author in Wikipedia.

Book Synopsis:

From R. Barri Flowers, author of the bestselling teen novels, COUNT DRACULA’S TEENAGE DAUGHTER, TEEN GHOST AT DEAD LAKE, and OUT FOR BLOOD, come the start of an exciting new young adult adventure series, SUMMER AT PARADISE RANCH.
Four months shy of turning sixteen, Lexi Montoya was still trying to come to terms with her parents’ divorce and her mom’s remarriage to a man she met online, relocating to Maui, Hawaii.
Choosing to remain with her dad in Seattle, Lexi had planned to spend her first summer since the divorce hanging out with her boyfriend, Matt, and best friend, Robin. But her dad had other plans, insisting she spend the summer visiting her mom and stepdad at his ranch called Paradise Ranch in Wailuku, in west Maui.
Lexi went there with an attitude. Then she meets a cute Hawaiian guy named Mitsuo, is thrown into a love triangle, become friends with a teen girl living on a ranch next door, April; rides her first horse– an Arabian mare named Poppy– learns to hula dance and surf, and finds herself embroiled in a dangerous rescue mission when Poppy and another horse named Casper go missing from her stepfather’s ranch.
By the time her tropical summer adventure comes to an end, Lexi hates to leave Maui and say goodbye to Mitsuo. But can she stay when Matt is waiting for her back at home to pick up where they left off? Or will he lose her to a summer romance?
SUMMER AT PARADISE RANCH is a great coming of age adventure with young romance and mystery in paradise. Now in eBook, print, and audio.
Book Trailer:


Purchase Links:


Amazon USA:
Amazon UK:
Amazon Canada:
Amazon Australia:
Smashwords:
Barnes and Noble:
Google Books:
iTunes:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/summer-at-paradise-ranch/id874595106?mt=11


GIVEAWAY

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It was the last day of school before summer break and Lexi Montoya was leaning against her locker facing her boyfriend, Matt Holloway. Next to Lexi was her best friend, Robin Forrester, who was facing her boyfriend, Dirk Watson. Just four months shy of her sixteenth birthday, Lexi hated the thought that instead of spending summer vacation in Seattle, where she lived and had her friends to hang out with, she was being forced by her dad to go visit her mother in Hawaii.
The same mother who had abandoned her nearly a year ago, divorced her dad, and married a man she'd met on the Internet. In Lexi's way of thinking, she was in no hurry to see her mother again—certainly not anytime soon. But her father had other ideas, believing it would be good for her to try to repair the relationship with her mother. Lexi suspected that he had an ulterior motive for sending her packing to Maui. Her dad had a new girlfriend, whom she believed he wanted to spend more time with—minus the presence of a teenage daughter to mess things up.
The notion of being an ocean way from Matt for an entire summer annoyed Lexi. But she had no choice in the matter.
It didn't set well with Matt either. "That sucks!" he complained as she broke the news to him, gazing down at her with deep blue eyes.
"I know, right," Lexi told him, flipping her long brown hair over her shoulder.
"What am I going to do without my best friend?" Robin complained, her forehead creasing above thin brows.
Dirk rolled his eyes. "Are you kidding me? Who wouldn't want to go to Hawaii for an all-expense paid trip to paradise?"
"Uh me," Lexi said. "Especially when my life is right here."
"And it'll be here when you get back," he said. "But going to Maui...wow. Maybe my mom should try to hook up with someone there. My dad probably wouldn't care too much, since she's always complaining that he never pays attention to her anyway."
Robin frowned. "That's not very nice."
Dirk shrugged. "Hey, I'm just saying."
"Maybe I should give you the ticket then," Lexi suggested. "You can go in my place and I'll stay at your house, with my dad totally clueless."
Dirk laughed. "I think Matt would probably have a problem with that."
Matt ran a hand through his thick brown hair. "I'd have more of a problem if she met some surfer dude in Hawaii and decided to kick me to the curb and never come back."
Lexi met his eyes in earnest. "That's not going to happen," she promised. "No surfer dude could ever take your place with me."
"You sure about that?"
"Positive. I'll just be going through the motions and putting up with my mom until the summer ends and then I'm back here where I belong."
That seemed to pacify him. "Cool," he said, grinning, before giving her a kiss.
Lexi was only too happy to kiss him back, loving the feel of his lips on hers. Besides, she wanted the kiss to be enough for both of them to last through the entire summer.
"Get a room," Robin joked.
Blushing, Lexi broke the lip lock. "We'll pick it up later," she promised Matt.
"Sounds good to me," he said.
"I just hope that in between all that fun in the sun you find the time to text your best friend and boyfriend—like every day!" Robin said.
"Definitely," Lexi promised, even though the last thing she expected was much fun while on the island, where she was headed against her wishes.
* * *
That evening, Lexi was packing and wishing she didn't have to, when her father came into her room.
"Can I help with anything?" he asked.
She faced him and frowned. "Yes, you can tell me I can stay home for the summer."
"We've already been through this, Lexi," he said. "You need to spend some time with your mother."
"Why should I?" she challenged him. "She walked out on us."
"I know and I'm not excusing that. But she's still your mother."
"I wish she wasn't!"
Lowell Montoya stepped closer to his daughter, his brow furrowed. "You don't mean that."
"Yes, I do," Lexi insisted, or at least she did on some level. "How can you just pretend what she did to you when she ran off to be with another man is okay?"
"It's not okay," he said. "What she did was unforgivable. Except, at some point, you have to forgive, if not forget, and move on."
"You mean move on to Rebecca?" Lexi shot him a cold stare. "Isn't that really what this is about—shoving me aside so you can pretend I don't exist, just like mom did?"
"No, honey, that's not what this is about. I would never shove you aside for anyone, and I don't think that's what your mother was doing—not intentionally anyway." He paused. "This will always be your home. My relationship with Rebecca has nothing to do with how I feel about you as my only child and someone I love dearly. You've always told me I need to get a life. So now I'm trying to take you up on that and see where it goes."
"Yeah, well I'd like to do the same thing with my relationship with Matt," she said.
"And you will have plenty of time for that," he assured her. "Your mother's not perfect and neither am I. She's reached out to you. Just give her a chance."
Lexi fixed him with teary eyes. "And what if I hate it there?"
"Then you can come home. But I'm pretty sure that, in spite of your beef with your mother and desire to stay in Seattle, there will be plenty of things in Maui to keep you occupied."
"I hope so," Lexi muttered, though all she could really think about at the moment was being forced to face the mother who had turned her back on her.
He wrapped his arms around her and Lexi rested her head against his chest. I know I have to do this, she told herself reluctantly. Otherwise, she might never find out why her parents' marriage failed when she hadn't seen it coming. Or would her mother not even bother to tell her side of the story?



The following morning, Lexi was on the long flight to Maui reading a novel. Or at least she was trying to. She had trouble concentrating, as she found herself thinking about Matt, whom she was already starting to miss. Also weighing on her mind was what to say to her mother. Very little had been said when she just up and left for Hawaii to start a new life, minus her husband and daughter. Lexi wondered how she could get past that now that her mom was hoping to reconnect with this visit.
I can never forgive her for what she did, Lexi thought, even if her dad seemed to have done just that now that someone else had come into his life. But if she was going to get through this summer, she just needed to keep her cool somehow and deal with it until it was time to go back home.
The plane touched down at Kahului Airport right on time. After grabbing her bag, Lexi made her way into the terminal, before spotting the familiar face.
Lexi was approached by her mother, who looked like her, with long brown hair and blue eyes, but was a little taller and a lot tanner. Standing beside her was a tall Hawaiian man in his late thirties with black hair in a short ponytail and a mustache.
"Hello, Lexi," her mother said.
She did not respond while her mom gave her a brief hug.
"This is my husband, Ernesto Estrella."
Lexi gazed up at him as he said, "Aloha, Lexi."
"Hi," she said tonelessly.
"How was your flight?" he asked.
"It was okay."
Joyce Estrella smiled weakly at her daughter. "I'm sure you must be tired and hungry."
"Kind of," she admitted.
"Well, we'll take care of that," her mother said. "Let's go get the rest of your bags and get out of here."
Lexi, still in no mood to be too hospitable, rolled her eyes and said, "Whatever."
When she stepped outside, the warm, muggy air hit her face and Lexi took a moment to survey the surroundings. She saw some palm trees and other Hawaiian scenery. She couldn't believe she was in Hawaii on the island of Maui, which made her the envy of many of her friends. Then she came back down to earth when she remembered she was there under protest.
The drive in Ernesto's Ford Bronco was mostly silent other than a few words by Ernesto, seemingly for effect. That was fine with her. Since she really didn't have anything nice to say, she figured it was best not to say anything.
Soon she saw them pass by the sign to Wailuku, the place in west Maui, located in Maui County, where her mother and Ernesto lived. It was there that Ernesto operated a working ranch. Lexi had seen livestock at the State Fair and zoo, but never on an actual ranch. But she was more interested in going to the beach and swimming while in Hawaii.
They passed by a red-haired girl around Lexi's age, who was riding a horse in a meadow. Lexi felt a little envious, since she had never been on a horse before. Maybe she would get the chance during this trip.
"Welcome to Paradise Ranch," Ernesto announced, as they drove up a winding road and through some gates onto the property.
Once out of the car, Lexi took in the ranch with its rolling hills, grazing horses, goats, ducks, chickens, and more.
Ernesto chuckled. "It's probably not what you're used to back in Seattle."
"No, not quite," she admitted, carrying one of her bags.
"Don't worry," he said, holding her other bags. "You'll feel at home in no time at all."
Lexi wasn't so sure about that, but gave him a tiny smile anyway. It left her when she looked at her mother.
A couple of men walked up to them in full cowboy attire.
"Well, who do have we here?" said the darker skinned lanky one with black hair.
"This is Lexi," Ernesto said, "Joyce's daughter. Yoshito is one of our ranch hands."
"Aloha," he said, tipping his hat.
"And that's Doug, our ranch foreman."
"Howdy," he said with a nod.
"Hi," Lexi told them, noting that the ranch foreman was shorter and older than the other one and had gray hair.
"Why don't we go inside and show you around," Ernesto said.
She nodded at the man who was now her stepfather, something that would take a lot of getting used to.
They headed for the main house, which was surrounded by swaying palm trees. It was huge with lots of windows and a wraparound lanai. Inside, it looked just as spectacular with high ceilings, hardwood floors, and nice furnishings. Lexi noted that the windows in the Great Room had amazing ocean views.
"This is your room," Ernesto said on the second floor, as she followed him and her mother into it.
It was spacious, bright, and had a ceiling fan in motion.
Ernesto put her bags down. "I'll leave you two alone and whip up something to eat," he said, and gave Lexi's mom a kiss on the mouth.
"We'll be down soon," she told him. When they were by themselves, her mother said, "I'm glad you came."
Lexi curled her lip at the corner. "As if I had a choice."
Joyce frowned. "Look, I know you're angry, but I want to try to make it up to you, if you'll let me."
"I don't see how you can," Lexi told her honestly. "You left dad and you left me so you could hook up with a man you met on the Internet."
"It wasn't like that," she said.
"So what was it like, Mom?" Lexi demanded. "What was so wrong with the life you had that you gave it all up for this?"
Joyce sucked in a deep breath. "It's a long story."
Lexi pursed her lips. "Yeah, right. You can't possibly justify what you did. And forcing me to come here won't make up for it."
"Look, whether you like it or not, I'm still your mother."
"No—you stopped being my mother the moment you abandoned me," Lexi retorted.
Joyce sighed. "I'm sorry you feel that way."
"Just leave me alone."
She glared at her mother and watched as she left the room.
Lexi took a moment to calm down, while wondering if she had reacted too strongly without really giving her mother a chance to explain.
How did she expect me to act? Lexi asked herself, having had months for her feelings to fester.
She took out her cell phone and texted her dad, Matt, and Robin to let them know she had arrived safe and sound.
* * *
Lexi sat at a long dining room table eating Hawaiian barbecued chicken, corn on the cob, and pineapple coleslaw. She admitted to herself that it was good, while remaining silent as her mother and Ernesto chatted as if they were one big, happy family.
"So I'm sure you don't know too much about me," her stepfather said.
"Not really," Lexi said, trying to remember the few things her mother had offered to share about the man she had married.
"Well, maybe I can fill in the blanks," he said. "I lost my first wife nine years ago in a tragic accident. Back then, we had both hoped to run this ranch and have a family. Once Gloria was gone, I thought I'd never meet anyone to share my life with again. Then your mother stepped into it and, what do you know, we turned out to be a perfect fit. I couldn't be happier, especially now that I've been given the opportunity to meet her beautiful daughter."
"We're not a family," Lexi blurted out, even if she appreciated the compliment. "You're not my father and she's barely my mother." She shot her mom a cold stare and stood up from the table.
"Sit back down right now, young lady!" Joyce ordered her.
"I need to get some air," Lexi snapped back, and stormed off. She heard her mother say, "I'll talk to her."
Ernesto responded, "Let her go. Give her some time to cool off and adjust."
Lexi didn't know if either was possible. Why had her father made her come here anyway? Did he seriously believe that seeing her mother and another man play house and pretend everything was all right would make it so?
She went outside and saw the red-haired girl she noticed riding earlier approaching the house.
"You must be Lexi," she said. "I'm April Ashbrook. I live next door, even though the houses around here are pretty spread out."
Lexi walked up to her. They were about the same height and slender build. April's hair was long, with bangs and was pulled back into a ponytail. She had aquamarine eyes.
"Hi," Lexi said. "How did you know?"
"Your mom has practically been singing about her daughter coming to spend the summer," April said.
Lexi cocked a brow. "Seriously?"
April smiled. "She and my mom have become good friends since your mother moved in with Ernesto. Joyce talks about you all the time, and how much she misses you. Does that surprise you?"
"Uh, yeah," admitted Lexi. "My mom and I aren't exactly on the best of terms right now."
"Oh." April eyed her. "Want to take a walk with me?"
Since Lexi wasn't eager to go back into the house yet, this was a no brainer. "Okay."
"So you're from Seattle?"
"Yep."
"Cool. I was there once a long time ago, but I can't remember much about it."
"It's a nice place to live," Lexi said, proud to be from the Pacific Northwest.
"That's great," April told her. "Hawaii is pretty nice to call home, too."
Lexi smiled as she thought about all the things Hawaii had to offer. "So how long have you lived in Maui?"
April grinned. "Pretty much my entire life. My dad is a retired member of the U.S. Coast Guard. He was stationed in Maui at Maalaea Harbor just a year after I was born and remained with the Coast Guard until five years ago."
"So he's now a farmer?"
April chuckled. "Actually, he's a rancher, like Ernesto."
"Is there really a difference?" Lexi asked.
"Not always. Farmers mostly cultivate land to produce food. Ranchers raise livestock, like cattle and horses. Some people are ranchers and farmers."
Lexi blushed. "Thanks for the lesson for a city girl."
April smiled. "Anytime." She paused. "So what's with you and your mom, if you don't mind me asking?"
Actually, she did mind, since she barely even knew her. But she also felt comfortable around April, as though they were longtime friends.
"My mom met Ernesto online while she was still married to my dad."
"Ouch!" April made a face. "I can see how that might piss you off."
"Exactly."
"Still, there are usually two sides to every story," April said.
"Meaning...?"
"Meaning that maybe she had a good reason for doing what she did."
Lexi frowned. "Hey, my dad never cheated on my mom and he wasn't abusive or like a mass murderer or anything."
April chuckled. "That's good to know—especially on those last two points. Neither was mine. But that didn't stop my parents from separating for a while, before deciding to get back together. It's been cool since then, but it doesn't always work out that way for every married couple."
"Yeah, I suppose you're right," Lexi conceded, and thought about Matt's parents getting a divorce. It had taken him time to accept it, but it seemed like he had. Maybe she should too, since it was pretty obvious her parents weren't ever getting back together. "It still hurts, though," she told April.
"I know," she said. "Maybe now that you'll be spending the summer with your mom, you can get past that."
Lexi nodded thoughtfully, while keeping her options open. "I saw you riding a horse when we drove in."
"Yeah, I love riding horses," April said. "I've been riding since I was nine. Do you ride?"
"Not yet," Lexi admitted. "But I plan to learn."
"It's easy as pie. We should go riding together sometime."
"Cool," Lexi said, though preferring she had a little practice first, so she could keep up without falling on her butt.
"Well, I better get back home," April said. "I have to feed the chickens."
"Wow," Lexi said. "Sounds like fun."
April laughed. "Not really, but I like helping out around the ranch, especially during summer break. You're welcome to join me anytime you want, though I'm guessing that your mom and Ernesto will probably be putting you to work at Paradise Ranch before you know it."
Lexi chuckled uneasily. "Maybe. Right now, I just want to see how things go between me and my mom." And Ernesto too, she thought, realizing he was part of the picture, whether she liked it or not.
 

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: Top 10 Favorite TV Shows





Top Ten Tuesday is sponsored by The Broke and The Bookish.  This week's theme:


Let's talk about other types of stories! Top Ten Favorite Movies or TV Shows! (can break it down to top ten favorite romance movies or comedy shows etc. etc.)

So here are my top 10, there are more shows that I love, but I narrowed it down to these.  Once again, I'm not putting them in any particular order, just sharing them!

1.  The Big Bang Theory


  

2.  Buffy the Vampire Slayer




3.  The X-Files






4.  The Walking Dead




5.  The Young and the Restless






6.  Survivor





7.  The Amazing Race





8.  Supernatural





9. Glee




10.  Eureka





Some of these shows are no longer on, but will always be my favorites.  Love the stories in them, some I even read the books that are based on them!  So they do tie into reading for me.

If you had to pick your top 10 tv shows, would they include any of these? 

Monday, July 14, 2014

Review: Welcome to the Dark House by Laurie Faria Stolarz

First, thanks to Netgalley and Disney-Hyperion for allowing me to read an e-galley of this title.  I've only read one other title by this author, Deadly Little Secret, and I really enjoyed that one (which reminds me I need to finish that series!).  So when I saw this available, and read the synopsis, I was really excited to read it.  For the most part I was pretty satisfied and enjoyed this book.  I had one or two issues, but they weren't anything big enough to make it not a good read.

The story is about 7 people teens, who have entered a contest to share their worst nightmare, and then go be part of a show with a popular horror director and have him help them "face" their nightmares.  Maybe even helping them to get over it.  First is Ivy, who has a nightmare based on a real event in her life, her parents' murder.  She even came almost face to face with their killer, who only left her alive because they could hear the sirens of emergency vehicles arriving thanks to her 911 call.  Compared to her nightmare, you have the fake dream of Parker, who wants to be a film maker, and so he makes up a dream that he thinks will help him win the spot to get to meet a great director.  The others all seem to have real nightmares though, Shayla, who found her best friend dead after committing suicide.  Natalie, who had a twin brother that was born dead.  And ever since then she's been obsessed that he is still around, and her parents have treated her horribly, of course we don't know how much of that was based on how she was already.  But she mutilates herself, by pulling her hair out, as well as getting tattoos of things from these horror movies.  And then there is Frankie, who had his nightmares start with the death of his uncle, right about the same time his mother left him and his father.  The name that is immediately one to laugh at, Garth Vader.  His father called him a baby for having nightmares and being scared of horror movies, since his father was such a huge fan.  For Garth, it became a love of his, all the horror movies, just something he did to overcome his fears.  And finally there is Taylor.  Although she is gone from the house as soon as the others start showing up.  So we really don't get to know much about her, other than we do get her nightmare at the end of the book.  And it has something to do with her taking off on a hike in the woods, kind of. 

The bed and breakfast they are all staying at is designed just like the house in one of the horror movies, and there are characters and other things plucked from the scenes.  For most of them, it is easy to point out. For Ivy who is only there to try to rid herself of her nightmares, most of it is new, as she's never watched those movies.  They will all end up at a place where they must each go in and face their nightmares, and then be part of the next movie, as well as getting to meet the director.  But if they go in to anyone else's nightmare, they will be cut from the movie.  One of them will find that out the hard way.  And as their nightmares seem to be coming true, and in deadly ways, it seems that maybe this isn't actually done by the famous director.  This movie is actually going to be filmed with what happens to them.  Who will survive, and who will succumb to their nightmare?

Really, I love the idea of this, and I can totally see it as a movie, or maybe a tv show where they could do a different group of people each season?  My biggest complaint is probably with the formatting of the Kindle copy I downloaded from Netgalley.  It was hard to tell when a new person was narrating.  Because other than Taylor, we do get to see this through each person's view at some point in the story.  The narrator's voices were different enough once you got a few lines in, but it would have been nice to have something else to point out it was changing.  Otherwise it was a bit confusing until you got that identifier.  I'll be interested to look at a finished copy and see if they do differentiate in some way.  And I do agree with one point that I saw another reviewer make on Goodreads.  What about Taylor?  I'd like to know more about what happened to her.  Maybe they found her somewhere when they were facing their own nightmares?  I don't know.  But I did read that there is going to be a 2nd book, so maybe it will be in that one?  When I said I could see this as a movie, I almost feel this story might lend itself better to something more visual like that.  I think that all the ideas were really good, and the description of things was also great, but I'd love to actually see it somewhere besides in my head. 

A fun, easy (depending on formatting) horror story read.  Anyone looking for anything "deeper" should consider that it is about a B movie type of horror film maker, so the way it was told was really just about perfect!!!  It fit that format perfectly.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

Review: City of Heavenly Fire (The Mortal Instruments #6) by Cassandra Clare

Wow is what I have to say after finishing this book.  Still very pleased that I am able to check books out from the bookstore where I work, since I can't afford this one at the moment.  And since I own all the others in paperback, I kind of want to wait and get this one that way. Although I had to take the jacket off in order to check it out, and it does have a pretty cool picture on the inside of the jacket, making me almost want to go ahead and spend the extra money for the hardback.  But I kind of want to tell all authors that this is how you end a series. I want so bad to name a specific author that I'm thinking about, but I feel that the author I'm thinking about, well, her series was dystopian, so not necessarily going to be a happy ending.  Whereas even with heartbreak in a book like this, there is always magic around to save the day for some things and some people.  If you aren't this far in the series, there will of course be some spoilers in this.  Just can't help it!

So when we left book 5, which I reviewed HERE, Jace was finally separated from Sebastian in a way that didn't kill him.  But, he also now had the fire of heaven inside him.  And he had to learn how to control it in order to not kill or hurt people.  Sebastian had disappeared, but not without leaving his warning that he would be back.  And not without having a horrible plan to turn all the Shadowhunters into his own evil army.  The people changed are called the Endarkened.  And it seems that once they are changed it is final.  There is no way to change them back.  Of course Sebastian wants his sister Clary to come and rule by his side.  It seems to be all he has ever wanted.  He hates their mother, Jocelyn.  He will even let Jace live because that is what Clary wants.  But while he sets out by attacking almost all the Institutes around the world, either killing or changing the Shadowhunters at each one, he seems to be completely off the radar when it comes to trying to find him.  And we find out that there is one group of the Downworlders that have decided to ally themselves with Sebastian.  Because they have had a long history of not wanting to be a part of the Clave and the Accords for all that have been harsh to their people. 

Magnus is feeling the absence of Alec so much that he feels he might want to get back with him, but Alec is still unsure if it can ever work if Magnus refuses to share his past with him.  Everyone keeps telling Simon that he needs to DTR - Define the relationship, with Isabelle.  And Jace and Clary, well the two of them have never been closer, except for the heavenly fire inside Jace that keeps them somewhat cautious and apart until he can learn to control it.  As you would expect, all will have to come to head with a battle of some sort, and there are two big ones in this book.  And the final one will take place in a demon realm.  One that it seems Magnus has a bit of a connection to.  We also learn that this other realm had its own Jonathan Shadowhunter and Nephilim, and it seems as if they didn't make it with fighting off the demons, which is why it is now a demon realm.  And Sebastian hopes to make it his kingdom to rule, with Clary.  Our 5 main characters from the beginning:  Clary, Simon, Jace, Alec, and Isabelle, must try to rescue some very important people:  Jocelyn, Luke, Magnus, and Raphael, as well as try to save the world they know.  And so the series kind of ends up back where it started in that way.  Of course someone will have to sacrifice something to save them all.  Will it be Clary who will give her world up to save it, as well as the people she loves, by taking the throne beside her brother Sebastian?  Will it be Magnus calling on his demon father for help, but having a price to pay?  You will have to read to find out.

One other important storyline.  We have some kind of new characters, if not introduced exactly for the first time, we get to know them better this time, as it is their Institute in Los Angeles that we begin the story with.  With Sebastian coming in and killing or turning all but a group of children, who are able to escape to Idris.  And it will be those children, Emma Carstairs, and the Blackthorns:  Julian, Tavvy, Livvy, Ty, and Dru, who will be the next chapter in this series when The Dark Artifices series begins fall of 2015.

Again, just love, love, LOVED the way this one ended.  I closed the book with a smile on my face, satisfied, yet still wanting more with these characters that I'd grown to love.

Saturday, July 12, 2014

Stacking the Shelves July 12th, 2014





Stacking the Shelves is hosted by Tynga's Reviews.  It is a way for us to share the new books we have collected.  I'm doing this a day earlier this week than I  normally do because I'm reading a very long book, over 700 pages, and hoping to get it done for a review tomorrow.  And as you may have seen me mention before, I'm not a fan of doing more than one post a day if I can help it.  That's just me.  


ARC from Publisher:

Now, I received this in the mail directly from the publisher, Random House.  I'm not sure if I requested it through the Shelf Awareness email newsletter, but I don't remember doing that.  So, not sure if they just sent it to me, which is cool if I'm finally on a publisher's list to just send ARCs to. 

E-galley from Publisher:

This is one that I know I requested.  The author asked if there was anyone that would like to get on a list with their publisher to get a copy, and I did, because I love the author's Night Walkers series.  It isn't coming out until next year, so I need to find out if the publisher wants me to go ahead and review it as soon as I read it, or if the review needs to wait until a month before publishing date, like they often say on Netgalley or Edelweiss.

Free e-books from Amazon:




 
Okay, the first one, what a beautiful cover, right?!  The 2nd one is by an author that I've heard a lot of good things about, so I had to get a copy of it, especially for free, right?

Checked out from bookstore where I work part-time:


One cool perk from the bookstore where I work part-time is that we can check out the hardcover books that have jackets.  So I checked this out earlier this week, and am now actually in the midst of reading it!  It is the book I'm hoping to get done by tomorrow.  I've already read over half, but that was two days I think, so by tomorrow hopefully I can get it done!  It's not hard, I can barely put it down once I pick it up.  Unfortunately life keeps getting in the way, such as my dogs that seem to want to go outside to potty about every hour, and in the hottest hours of the day!

Anyway, what did you add to your shelves this week?

Friday, July 11, 2014

Review: The Burnouts (Quarantine #3) by Lex Thomas

As with the 2nd book, thanks to Egmont and Edelweiss for allowing me to read an e-galley of this.  Although when I thought I had downloaded it, I went to find it on my Nook, and I couldn't.  So I was sad and thinking that maybe it had expired already, or like some other titles, I can't seem to get them to download for some reason.  It's rare.  And when it does happen, I just move on, because it's not as if I don't have many other e-galleys already downloaded to read.  But, for some reason I noticed my Nook was doing a bunch of updating, so I went to my Bluefire Reader App, and searched the title, and I found it!  So now I've been able to read it and finish this series.  If you haven't read book 2, or books 1, you should probably not read much further in case I give away something.

So we ended book 2 with Will graduating and getting out of the high school and all the gangs and violence.  But what also happened is that he saw David, his brother, who Gates and the other Saints had told him was dead.  We learn why people thought he was dead.  And on the outside, David shows Will how he is helping the parents out, as they hang out around the school, protecting it from the adults who want to go in and just kill the rest of the kids to protect themselves.  So Will decides to stay and help, and wait for Lucy to graduate. 

Lucy is still stuck inside, but things are not good for her.  When she went after Gates in order to try to protect Will, she made a lot of enemies.  The gang she belonged to, the Sluts, had to jump in when she did this, that's how the gangs work. But because of this, their leader, Violent, was fatally hurt.  And while Violent lasts a few days, and even tells Lucy how much she admires her for what she did, once she dies, the Sluts end up kicking Lucy out.  She's now on her own.  And none of the other gangs will take her in because they all liked Gates.  And some gangs would even kill her if they could.  Then you have Hilary, who is not happy with Lucy for taking her tooth, and being the only one who knows that she is missing a tooth.  Hilary is also getting close to graduation as her nose bleeds and hallucinations start.  She finds a gun, and decides to take back the gangs that once belonged to her, as well as using it to command all the gangs to create a prom for her before she graduates.  Lucy finds some unlikely protection with one of the burnouts, who she knows as Bile.  After all the things she is going through, Lucy even tries out the different drugs the burnouts have figured out how to make in order to keep their highs going. 

Once Will finds out something is going on with Lucy, and the trouble she is in, he decides he is going back in to save her.  Even though now that he's graduated the other students would kill him if he didn't wear a gas mask.  So he takes his gas mask and goes.  David has to follow, he refuses to lose his brother again now that they've been reunited.  Once in, it will be a fight to save Lucy, let alone to get back out.  The ending is pretty exciting, is there a cure?  And who will get it, and will it work?  You'll have to read this to find out.

It was really interesting to me to get to learn about other gangs we hadn't really read about in the other books.  To see what was going on from the outside, how the world was doing, and what the parents had to do to protect their children.  We got to really be inside the mind of someone who was on the verge of graduating, Hilary, and see just how it all affected them.  And then the tragedy of who would die, and who would live, and if the students would be able to survive outside the school if ever they needed to get out before they graduated.  A good conclusion.  My only issue is the way it ended.  It kind of seems like we need another book.  I need to know what happens next with the people and situation we're left with.  I saw another person on Goodreads felt this same way.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Review: Summer on the Short Bus by Bethany Crandell

This is another book that I was lucky to get from a publisher's booth at BEA, in fact it was the same one, Running Press Teens.  Again I saw it sitting on the counter, and had seen it around the blogosphere, so asked if there was any chance I could have a copy of it.  And they happily obliged me.  And as I just finished it, and loved it, I'm so glad I spoke up and asked for it!

Now, the reviews I've seen on Goodreads are almost all either love it or hate it. And while I can kind of see the haters' side, I just don't understand why they couldn't get past their issues and love it.  But hey, as I say all the time, it is a good thing there are so many books out there, because there are so many different people with different tastes and issues.  Maybe it is my experience as a classroom teacher, and knowing the truth about how kids will act that helped me be able to see past the things people complained about.  I don't know.  Although one of those bad reviews did strike a tiny chord with me, and I'll mention that at the end of my review.

The main character is Cricket Montgomery.  And basically Cricket is a spoiled brat.  A rich girl who is in trouble with her father, and now gets sent to work at a summer camp for special needs kids, instead of getting to go to Hawaii with her best friend as planned.  She gets there and is immediately repulsed by the woman in charge, Rainbow.  Not to mention there is something weird about how this woman seems to know things about her that only someone in her real life would know.  Then she meets the other counselors.  And they all seem pretty nice, although the other female, who will be her bunkmate, is a little rude with her at first.  And then there is Quinn, the co-counselor that looks like a movie star.  Zac Efron to be exact.  (Which I'm totally down with that hottie!)  At first she seems to only be able to talk to Quinn.  She is freaked out that she has two of the campers that are basically paired with her.  Meredith, who is in a wheelchair, and Claire, who I believe has Down's Syndrome.  She's never really been around kids like that, and you can tell from the way she acts, and even talks about them.  But she tries not to be that way around the kids, or the other counselors.  Especially Quinn who she is trying to impress.  But one day when she goes to the top of a nearby tower to try to get cell phone signal, she is overheard saying some rude things, and must deal with that.  Of course the longer she is there, the more she gets to know and like the kids, and even becomes a better person herself.

One thing that people complained about is that the author mentions this novel is in no way politically correct.  And it isn't.  Sadly, it was definitely realistic.  While it did use the words we are not supposed to use when talking about these types of kids, they are the words that kids do use, every day.  Like it or not, it's reality.  And one post said that Cricket only changed to prove it to the boy she was in love with.  I didn't feel that way.  Yeah, she definitely wanted him to see that she wasn't the way he thought, but I didn't get the feeling that was all it was at the end.  She really had grown to like her campers. 

I have to say again that I just LOVED this!  It had me smiling at the really sarcastic bits.  I was really disappointed in some things, but still was glad to see how things changed for Cricket.  Oh yeah, one other complaint was about overweight people being picked on.  I can see the point the reviewer was making, and as an overweight person myself at the moment, I would feel bad.  Except, once again, it's reality.  Nice, or not nice, it is real.  And there was one line about being a lesbian that I'm not sure would be appropriate in this day and age of PC, but AGAIN, this book is real.  Really, really, really, real.  That's how kids are, those are the things they say and do.  Maybe one day we'll all be perfect humans and not pick on people or use words that hurt people's feelings.  I doubt it, but it's a nice dream.  For now, I'm going to continue to enjoy books that I find realistic, and that make me laugh. 

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Waiting on Wednesday - The Infinite Sea (The 5th Wave #2) by Rick Yancey

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine where we spotlight upcoming releases that we're eagerly awaiting.  This week I've chosen a book that I FINALLY got around to reading the first one in the series, one that I've been hearing so much about, and been told over and over that I must read.  Well, I finally read The 5th Wave, and you can go back and read my review HERE.  

How do you rid the Earth of seven billion humans? Rid the humans of their humanity.

Surviving the first four waves was nearly impossible. Now Cassie Sullivan finds herself in a new world, a world in which the fundamental trust that binds us together is gone. As the 5th Wave rolls across the landscape, Cassie, Ben, and Ringer are forced to confront the Others’ ultimate goal: the extermination of the human race.

Cassie and her friends haven’t seen the depths to which the Others will sink, nor have the Others seen the heights to which humanity will rise, in the ultimate battle between life and death, hope and despair, love and hate.



Have you read the first one yet?  What did you think of it?  And are you as eager for it as I am?  If not, what book are you eagerly awaiting this week?

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Review: The White Glove War (Magnolia League #2) by Katie Crouch and Grady Hendrix

I got ahold of an ARC of this book from the YA Book Exchange.  It's been out for about 2 years now, but I haven't had a chance to get a copy of it until I found it there. When I first started reading it I was a bit confused.  What I remembered from the fist book, The Magnolia League, was Alex's story.  And this book actually is told from two viewpoints.  It doesn't start with Alex though, and that is what got me confused I think.  It started with her friend Hayes.  But once I got into the book, I really was glad to get two sides of the story.  And it looks as if there should be a third book, that would follow Hayes, or at least trying to find and save her.  Again, if you haven't read the first book, go click on my link to it above and read that.  My review below might spoil it for you.

So Hayes is ready to be a part of the Magnolia League with her mother and grandmother.  Turns out though that her family and Alex's family haven't really ever gotten along. There has been a rivalry since the beginning.  Alex only wants to get her mother back.  And so she is trying to get in good with her grandmother in order to learn the things she would need to try to bring her mother back to life.  Never mind that this is against the three types of magic the Magnolia girls are not supposed to try.  Not only that, but her grandmother has trapped her mother in the blue room of her house, another type of magic not supposed to be done.  Someone has called on an evil spirit, The Gray Man, to hurt Alex, the same person who wanted her mother dead.  There are lots of secrets in the League.  And Alex has made a deal with Sina to get her mother back, in exchange for helping Sina bring down the Magnolia League.  The Gray Man takes over Alex and causes her to be hateful to her friends, not to mention almost making her drive head on into oncoming traffic, which would have killed her, but also Hayes who was in the car at the time.  Hayes's brother is still in love with Alex it seems, even after what happened in the last book.  And of course there is the third friend in the book, Madison.  Who may be able to help as an outside party between the two girls.  But her grandmother will also break one of the three spell rules.  All of these things could bring down the League if their hoodoo supplier, Doc, were to find out. 

There is lots of suspense.  So many moments of what next!  It was hard to put down, and as good a read as the first one, once I kind of figured out where I was.  I mean, you have to give me a bit of a break, I read the first one summer of 2011.  There is no 3rd one listed on Goodreads, at least not under the first author's name.  So I had to tweet her and ask if there was a third one in the works!  Because it definitely didn't end with this book. 

Monday, July 7, 2014

Review: Paranoia (The Night Walkers #2) by J.R. Johansson

Thanks to Flux Books and Netgalley for allowing me to read an e-galley of this book.  I thought it had never downloaded, but then I had an update on my Nook and it showed up again!  So I was very glad to get a chance to read the sequel to Insomnia, a book that I really enjoyed.  Now I am really big on following authors on Facebook and Twitter.  And so I saw that the author was going to be at BEA the last day.  Unfortunately, if you saw my post about that last day, I was unable to find her and meet her.  One day though I hope to!  So, if you haven't read the first one, you might not want to read much further.

We're back in Parker's life.  And he seems to be able to control his dream watching, or maybe at least able to deal with it better.  When his friends that usually help him go out of town, he hopes to just go into his mom's dreams every night, to save himself from anything else.  One night he decides he needs something different, and he ends up at the movie theater, planning to look in the eyes of a girl who he thinks will have pretty tame dreams.  Outside he gets attacked by one of Jeff's friends.  Jeff is the guy that was actually doing the stalking in the first book, that died in the fire.  And at first his last eye match is Thor, the friend.  But a guy pulls Thor off of Parker, and then his eyes are the last ones Parker looks into.  At first it seems to be okay.  But then Parker goes into a black space.  When he wakes up he is in jail.  He is bailed out by Jack.  The mysterious guy in the last book who seemed to know what Parker was going through.  And now who seems to know Parker's dad.  He teams up with Jack to try to figure out not only how to control this evil or bad side of himself that is taking over, but also to help find and save his dad from people called Takers.  These Takers are not only going after Watchers like Parker, but they seem to be behind other mysterious disappearances and strange happenings in the town.

This was a very good sequel.  We learn some things about Parker's dad, and we also learn that there are so many things Parker should have been able to do the whole time, that would have made his life so much easier.  There is another kind of person, one that can't go into others dreams, but is good for Watchers, they can help them get the sleep and rest that they need to live and be healthy.  And the one in Parker's life isn't who you would expect.  I liked all the background, I kind of guessed the little secret about Jack a bit before it was revealed.  I like when I can do that.  We also learn that things that happened in the first book weren't all as they seemed.  And maybe some of the guilty parties may not have been working on their own in the way that it was thought. 

Sunday, July 6, 2014

Stacking the Shelves July 6th, 2014





Stacking the Shelves is hosted by Tynga's Reviews.  It is a way for us to share the new books we have collected.   Not a lot this week, but a few!


E-galleys from Edelweiss:





Received for Review on Blog Tour:


Purchased e-book for Nook:


Free e-book from Amazon:

 
 
 So those are the books, all e-books, that I've added to my e-shelves this past week.  I do have a book on order, hoping it comes sometime this week!  What did you add to your libraries this week?

Saturday, July 5, 2014

Review: How I Got Skinny, Famous, and Fell Madly in Love

Remember how I told you that the people in the booths at BEA seemed much friendlier this year?  At least compared to when I was there two years ago that is.  Well, this is a book that I saw sitting in a publisher's booth and asked if I could have a copy of, and they were nice enough to let me have it!  The publisher was Running Press Teens, a part of the Perseus Books Group. 

This book intrigued me because it was about a girl who was overweight, and ended up going on a reality tv show to lose weight.  She had to lose 50 pounds in 50 days.  Now, she wasn't unhappy, not completely, with how she was.  She lived in a family of skinny people.  Her dad was a former athlete turned motivational speaker.  Her sister was an underwear model.  And her mother was a former Laker Girl.  So she really didn't fit in.  But her boyfriend, who was large himself, over 300 pounds, loved her, and she loved him.  But one day she found that her family was behind on their mortgage payments, and she knew that she had to agree to the show so they could win the million dollars.  As the show goes on, she does learn good habits, but things keep setting her back.  Finding out her family may not actually believe in her, or at least some of her family.  The stress of eating so much less than she was used to could lead to sneaking food.  The fame, going to the movies she sees that she has fans.  And then maybe learning things about her family and boyfriend that are shocking, whether they are true or not.  And finally, even picking up some bad weight loss habits in order to try to win the show when things seemed to get behind.

This book is really  a good look into what goes on in the mind of overweight girls.  As someone who has been in that state many times in my life, including at the present time, I definitely identified with things that she may have said or done.  I really liked how the show had her do video posts as the show was going on.  Her posts were very insightful.  I liked how she would realize the things that she did weren't always healthy, either way.  My one complaint is the ending.  While I think what happens is a good way to end it, I feel the book did it very abruptly, and I was left wanting to know more details about how all of it came out, and what happened to everyone.  That's just me. 

Overall it was a really good read, and I will be donating my free copy to the high school library where I work.

Friday, July 4, 2014

The Friday 56 #8





This week I'm going to participate once again in Friday 56, sponsored by Freda's Voice.  Here are the rules:



Rules:

*Grab a book, any book.
*Turn to page 56 or 56% in your eReader
 *Find any sentence, (or few, just don't spoil it) that grabs you.
*Post it.
*Add your (url) post below in Linky. Add the post url, not your blog url. It's that simple.





"The black thing in side the globe pulsed and twitched like a beating heart.  It seemed to become more animated the longer we stared at it.  It was almost like a gelatinous cauliflower.  Here and there on its velvet surface, a mound would rise up, like a mosquito bite, a black pimple, and then burst open at its peak." 

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Review: The 5th Wave by Rick Yancey

I won a copy of this as an e-book a few months ago.  I decided I needed to read it, finally.  And it was definitely a good book!  Now I am very eager for part two.  I like how it took into consideration all the past books/movie theories about what aliens would do when they came.  I did have one little issue, and maybe it's because I read too fast and missed something, but I'll talk about that at the end o my review.

So as you probably know, this is about an alien spaceship coming to Earth.  And the waves have to do with how they attack humans.  The first wave is an EMP, basically shutting down all electricity.  The second wave was something striking one of the tectonic plates and causing huge tidal waves that killed people on the coasts of all continents.  The third wave was disease.  And the 4th wave was the silencers.  I won't go into a lot of detail about the 4th wave really.  It is basically what it sounds like. 

The main character is Cassie, who as we start with her, she takes us back through all the waves, to where we know that she feels she is the last human on Earth, mainly because she hasn't seen anyone else.  But, the last thing she remembers is her brother being taken to a camp supposedly to save all the children.  And while the soldiers told those kids on the bus that they would be going back for their parents and other family members, once the buses were out of sight, the soldiers killed everyone.  Cassie was able to escape, even after seeing her father killed.  Eventually she decides to keep her promise to her brother and go find him. 

But Cassie isn't our only main character it turns out.  One of the silencers gets a bit of a voice after he runs into Cassie, and shoots her.  You see, he isn't human, at least not completely, he has an alien inside him.  And even though he did shoot Cassie, he can't kill or silence her, as he is supposed to.  He has been following her for awhile, and has read her diary when she is sleeping, and he thinks he has fallen in love with her. 

There is also a boy, who is called Zombie by the soldiers training him to fight the aliens.  Although his name before was Ben Parrish.  Which will sound familiar from things Cassie has said.  He has learned from the soldiers at the base where he is that there is a way to tell who are the aliens in human bodies, and who are regular humans.  And so he is learning to fight in order to help defeat them.  They are using technology somehow stolen from the aliens to determine who is who.  Zombie/Ben wants to avenge his family, especially his younger sister who he had promised to protect, and at the end he feels he didn't do all that he was able.  Cassie's brother Sam is soon brought here.  And Ben feels he has his chance to kind of make up for his sister by helping this young boy, about his sister's age.  Sam is called Nugget.  Everyone here gets a new name. 

After Cassie gets shot, she tries to crawl away, to still go after her brother.  But of course she doesn't make it far before she passes out.  When she comes to she is in a bedroom inside a house, and her wounds have been dressed and she has been cleaned up.  There is a farm boy who is helping her.  His name is Evan.  He is very handsome, but Cassie just feels like there is something off about him.  Of course that could just be because of the main rule she has since all of this, trust no one.  As much as he proclaims that his new thing in life, something to keep him going, is helping her, she just isn't sure if she can trust him. 

All these characters will have to interconnect, and they do, at the end, in a very spectacular battle.  Some will be betrayed by who they learn is really an alien, and some of those aliens may actually be on our side, not agreeing with what is being done.  In the end they come together in a definitely real way.  And now they must make the decision on what they will do next.

A great story, hard to put down, so interesting, I could have just sat and read in one sitting if I'd had the time/energy.  The one thing I wonder about though, is exactly what the aliens need the planet for.  When you find out what form they take, I don't understand why they would need to kill all the humans.  If they are like we would be as we are now if we went to take over a planet, it would make sense. But I'm not quite sure I get it, other than to give the story great suspense and reason for it to be the way it is.  I know that's vague, but I don't want to give too much away.  If you haven't picked this up yet, you definitely should.

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

May/June Prequel ad Sequel Challenge Wrap Up





It just seems like it is easier for me to do these posts every other month as the in between months just seem to be too busy at the end.  So let's see how I did on my challenge the past two months.


May:
  1. Beautiful Darkness (Caster Chronicles #2) 2 points
  2. The One (Selection #3) 12 points (final book in series) Book 1, Book 2
  3. The Liberator (Dante Walker #2) 2 points
  4. The Warrior (Dante Walker #3) 12 points (final book in series) Book 1
  5. Savage Drift (Monument 14 #3) 12 points (final book in series) Book 1, Book 2
  6. Divided (Dualed #2) 2 points
June:
  1. City of Lost Souls (Mortal Instruments #5) 2 points
  2. Erased (Altered #2) 2 points
Wow, just like the last update I did, the 2nd month of my challenge update was not that good!  And I was doing some recovery from my surgery in June.  Weird.  Guess I'd better get back on track this coming month!  So last time I was at  59 points.  Add the 46 points, and that puts me at 100 points overall.  And now I'm up to the Professional level in the challenge.  One more point and I'll be at the top level.  Okay, let's hope I get more of what I planned to read done over the next two months.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Review: Arianna's Honor by Michelle Sodaro

This is another book by a really good friend of mine, Michelle Sodaro, who also wrote the book Whatever You Make Of It.  You can read my review of that one HERE.  This book is a bit different than that.  It is a fantasy book.  Now, I know I keep saying over and over that fantasy isn't really my number one genre.  But, I just had to read my friend's book!  And to read all that she posts about her stories on Facebook and on her blog, Sodaro's Stories, really got me interested to see just what she'd written.  So about a year or so ago, she had a presentation and signing for this book especially, and I went and bought it, as well as getting an extra copy to giveaway here on my blog.  You can look for that giveaway in August, when I will be celebrating my 5th Blogoversary with a bunch of prizes! 

The main character of Arianna's Honor is, of course, Arianna.  She takes care of her younger brothers since her parents are both dead.  Her father was killed because he supported the king.  And on the day she tried to save him, she was also attacked.  While she had grown up with lessons on fighting, the number of men that day were too many for her by herself.  Since that time she has just lived with her brothers and tried to take care of them, especially as one of them is sickly.  The book starts off when she hears someone screaming for help in the forest.  It turns out it is the Prince, Prince Nicholas.  She takes him to her home until she can get him back to the castle.  But when she goes into town to try to get her carriage back for the trip, she overhears an assassination plot.  One being lead by the very man who has been trying to court her for years.  So she decides she must protect him, because even though she blames the king for her father's death, she also knows that her father died supporting him, so she can't do something that would negate his sacrifice.  Along the way the Prince and Arianna get to know each other.  There is a bit of a romantic/friendship that grows through the stress and danger.  When she first meets him, the Prince is a bit of a blowhard, a womanizer, with no respect for what the real world and real people do every day.  Being with Arianna and her family will change him though.  For the better.  there are gypsies in the story, for the most part they are helpful to Arianna, but she must know which ones to trust. 

One thing I really liked is a description for this that I read that this is the girl saving the Prince, instead of the normal fairy tale which is the other way around.  It leaves a bit of a cliffhanger, a happier ending, but still not out of the woods.  The 2nd book is out this month, so will have to get ahold of that and read on!  If you like a quick fantasy read with a bit of humor in the relationships, then you will enjoy this book. 

Freedom to Read Giveaway Hop 2014


This hop is hosted by I Am a Reader, Not a Writer and Bookhounds.   I haven't really done a giveaway hop in awhile, what with BEA and then my surgery a couple weeks ago.  Plus, I've been kind of broke with air conditioning issues and all the costs leading up to my surgery, etc. But you don't care about that, right?  You're just here to win something!  In the spirit of the giveaway name, I'm giving you a choice in what you win.  I am giving away either a $15 gift card to Amazon or Barnes and Noble, or if you are International and can't use those, you may choose a book up to $15 from The Book Depository, as long as they deliver to your country.  Sound good?  Then enter in the Rafflecopter below, then go hop along to all the other sites in the Linky list below that.


a Rafflecopter giveaway