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Review: Red Queen - Victoria Aveyard

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Release Date: February 10, 2015
Source: Edelweiss
Published by: Harper Teen

Red Queen - Victoria Aveyard | Goodreads

Mare Barrow's world is divided by blood—those with red and those with silver. Mare and her family are lowly Reds, destined to serve the Silver elite whose supernatural abilities make them nearly gods. Mare steals what she can to help her family survive, but when her best friend is conscripted into the army she gambles everything to win his freedom. A twist of fate leads her to the royal palace itself, where, in front of the king and all his nobles, she discovers a power of her own—an ability she didn't know she had. Except . . . her blood is Red.

To hide this impossibility, the king forces her into the role of a lost Silver princess and betroths her to one of his own sons. As Mare is drawn further into the Silver world, she risks her new position to aid the Scarlet Guard—the leaders of a Red rebellion. Her actions put into motion a deadly and violent dance, pitting prince against prince—and Mare against her own heart.

From debut author Victoria Aveyard comes a lush, vivid fantasy series where loyalty and desire can tear you apart and the only certainty is betrayal.


You can see my original thoughts on this book in this post.

Red Queen is entertaining. While reading, I was consistently reminded of other novels even while I was absorbing the details of the world that Victoria Aveyard had established. It's easy to see why this novel is predicted to go "huge."The overlay of fanbases is widespread and with the entertaining quality of the book, and its easy to read writing style, you've got potential.

The magical system is fairly easy to understand; it's like that in Shatter Me or X-men, where in Shatter Me, Juliette's powers were central to her character and the plot but the actual dynamics were not the focus. It's not really about the dynamics of the magic and how they work so much as how the magic represents the class inequality between the Reds and Silvers and how it highlights Mare's ability to act as a catalyst for change. This book has been optioned for film. Knowing that while reading about the various magical powers made me imagine how cool that will look on film, and again brought out the entertaining quality of the book. On top of this comparison, I was reminded of the plotting, class tension, and romance in Shadow and Bone. I mentioned the Red/Silver divide: this reminds me of the Grisha/King's Army divide where one clearly outnumbered the other but magic brewed fear (though in S&B, the Grisha weren't the rulers, so that's not an entirely correct comparison). Plot-wise, it has similar elements where the girl is poor and has a best friend very loyal to her but is taken away from all that she knows when her power is discovered. She is the chosen one, the catalyst for change as mentioned earlier. And her power is unique, like no one else's; yet though we never learn why Alina is the only sun summoner, we do learn why Mare has her powers and that, I suspect, will play out in interesting ways in the sequel. While learning about what is expected of her and her power, there is also girl-on-girl drama and lavish balls for the Silvers a la The Selection. This drama is exacerbated by the romantic situation that, as I said, was reminiscent of the one in Shadow and Bone (which I mention here for those wary of love triangles (i.e. I never considered S&B one)).

What I like a lot, too, about this novel is how HUGE the character cast in comparison to some other YA fantasies. I also liked the betrayals. True, other fantasies do include kind-characters-turning-evil, but I'm not sure they include that on the level of scale that Red Queen does. I also quite liked how power and the politics were described and played out. I kind of understand the YA Game of Thrones comparison, but would ultimately reject that since the worlds are so different, and to also say that this book is like GoT would make one too many comparisons. Another thing that I quite liked was Victoria's writing style and how she described the surrounding world and country dynamics. I believe, if I'm not mistaken, that her author bio says that she has screenwriting experience. This shows. I was definitely able to picture a lot of the action, and some of the elements, like the arena for fighting (with paranormal powers) a la The Hunger Games, would make for very entertaining -- if not captivating -- scenes on film. I would suggest that you try this one for yourself if any of the above comparisons, or the mash of these books, appeals to you.


Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds (72)

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Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds is a feature that will let you know about recent MG/YA/NA book related news. I'll post about articles from the publishing industry, cover reveals, discussions from fellow bloggers, the latest tv/movie news, and giveaways that you're hosting. If you would like to follow along with cover reveals during the week, see my Pinterest.



Publishing:
Rights Report
  • Ever the Hunted - Erin Summerill (Debut; a fantasy that follows 17-year-old Britta Flannery who is at ease only in the woods with her dagger and bow. Her father, a legendary bounty hunter, is murdered, and the stakes are fatal if she doesn’t find his killer. The book is slated for fall 2016; HMH).
  • Towers Falling - Jewell Parker Rhodes (It tells the story of Deja, who 15 years after the events of 9/11 grapples with the effects still felt by her community. Publication is planned for spring 2016; Little, Brown).
From Publisher’s Lunch:
  • Evelyn Skye's debut THE TSAR'S GAME, pitched as DAUGHTER OF SMOKE AND BONE meets THE NIGHT CIRCUS, in which star-crossed lovers battle in a lush, magical version of tsarist Russia in 1825, to Balzer & Bray in a two-book deal.
From last week:
  • The Mysteries of Cove - J. Scott Savage (the first volume in the Fires of Invention series, about a steam-powered city built inside a mountain, where creativity is a crime and “invention” is a curse word. Publication is set for fall 2015; Shadow Mountain).
The others were not posted yet.

You a fan of Raymond Arroyo? Turns out he sold a new MG series.

Authors: Echo - Pam Muñoz Ryan

Excerpts: Bone Gap - Laura Ruby, Ice Like Fire - Sara Raasch

Book Trailer: Red Queen - Victoria Aveyard

Awards: Y’all ought to last week’s post for awards. That was ALAYMG time. New Visions award nominees. The 2015 Amelia Bloomers list. 2015 Great Graphic Novels for Teens (+ Top Ten). 2015 Notable Children’s books. The Walter Award needs submissions! Deadline: November 1. Tomas Rivera Award Winners.

John Green gave a keynote to booksellers at Winter Institute 10 in which he said that “life would suck” without booksellers (in reference to authors).

Have you ever wondered what it’s like to be a bookseller? Here’s an interview with one who works at the Strand in NYC.

A brief summary of author and industry events last week.

I Am Malala won for best Children’s album at the Grammys.

BEA announced its author line-up last week… and guess what? They’re all white again, with only one woman author too. Bustle has something to say about that (I so agree with Kelly Jensen - WNDB panels are packed, what is wrong with BEA?)

If you wish you could’ve attended ALA and been to Diversity Day, here’s a storify so you can see for yourself via the internet.

If you’ve felt overwhelmed by WNDB and what you can do, here’s ONE THING that you can do now to help.

To celebrate Black History month, The Brown Bookshelf will be posting about a different author each week who has published in kidlit.

YAAAAAAAAS audiobooksync has released the line-up for this coming summer. Rose Under Fire is there! I loved the audiobook for Code Name Verity. Can’t wait for some more Elizabeth Wein!

If you’re a fan of the Beautiful Creatures series, guess what? There are some more e-stories headed your way.

Little, Brown has had such great success with Novl that they are turning it into an e-book imprint.

The top 12 titles that Kirkus Reviews is excited about in February are…

Soooo, DC comics is releasing a bunch of new comics under Convergence and they’ve got diverse authors to help.

Cover Reveals:

Young Adult New Adult Cover Reveals
Sanctuary - Jennifer McKissack
*May not be final cover. It had the most votes when voting closed, but Swoon Reads may choose one of the others for whatever reason.

The cover for Ice Like Fire will be revealed today. As will Second Position and Blood and Salt. And on the 13th, Dreamland and Gathering Deep. On Friday, the cover reveal for Six of Crows will also be revealed. The cover for Dumplin’ coming 02/17. This Monstrous Thing, 02/18.

Discussion/Other Blogger Posts:

The magic of storytelling.

Epic Reads has a lot of plans for this Valentine’s week.

Books before Bros. Oh yeah.

The worst things that could happen to a book lover. Yeahhh, the lending thing has definitely happened to me and unfortunately my copies of HP are also starting to look that way.

If you want to read more YA graphic novels, here’s your list. If you want to read excellent indie contemporary YA novels, here’s your list. True crime YA novels? Girl-powered YAs on the Impact of Music? Books for bibliophiles.

Book plots in 140 characters or less… with emojis? What.

More 2015 YA Debuts to have on your radar this year!

Top Ten Children’s books that deal with death and bereavement.

Oh, hey, look you can listen to 60+ classic audiobooks for free on Spotify.

Fascinating stuff for Game of Thrones fans. Are you curious about what George R.R. Martin had planned for the series originally? I read some of his previous outline and WOWWWWWWW things are so different from what that original outline had! Goes to show how much things change while you’re drafting the manuscript, huh?

Why I want more unlikable female characters.

Prime users.... Amazon is squeezing us for money o.O. Look at the infographic.

Beautiful library pics. The usual for these bookish rounds. And how to make the most of your library trip.

Why Americans Don’t Read Foreign Fiction. I don’t think it’s that simple. And I’d love to see more foreign fiction made available. (“Why are foreign authors so unknown in the U.S.?” → Also maybe some sort of arrogance on our part?).

OOO which literary heroine are you? “You’re Anne of Green Gables! You’re vivacious and your imagination gets you through good times and bad. Hard-working, loving, and always there to help out a friend, you are also likely to cause a bit of mischief. Quick tip: a bit of imagination can get a girl places but try not to let it lead you too far astray.” Harrumph. I got the heroine of the book I haven’t even read. I was hoping for Lizzie Bennett :P.

Can you guess which out of print books are most requested? I’m also surprised to see how many Stephen King novels are there - King is so common, why wouldn’t all his works be readily available?

I discussed how to respond when someone disdains Young Adult Literature. Complete with pretty infographic!

Publishing/Definitely Read These:
** Asti at Oh, The Books!: The Opinion on Blog Tours: Survey Results
** Lili at Lili’s Reflections: The Intern Diaries: The Perfect Request Email

Blogging:
Support/Advice/Tips:
** Rita at Blog Genie:From Nearly Quitting to 4x the Traffic
** Ashley at Nose Graze: How to Add a Favicon to Your Blog
** Stephanie at These Paper Hearts: Previewing Fonts with Wordmark.it

Blogging & Bloggers:
** Kel at Booked Till Tuesday:When Big Life Changes Hit
** Jenna at Rather Be Reading YA:How I Started Blogging
** Topaz at YA Asylum:Netgalley mistakes
** Ashley at Nose Graze: It’s Okay to Want to Grow Your Blog
** Nova at Out of Time: My Unpopular Opinions
** Kelley at Oh, The Books!: When Bookish Sisters Make Bookish Dares

Ratings, Reviews, Recommendations, Authors, ARCs:
** Jessi at Novel Heartbeat:Don’t Be Afraid to Be Yourself in Reviews
** Chyna at Lite-Rate-Ture:Recommendations: Fall in Love with Quotes
** Renae at Respiring Thoughts: Renae Recommends: Trilogies
** Jen at YA Romantics: What Happens When You Try to Censor Reviews
** Amber at The Mile Long Bookshelf: Tagging Authors in Negative Reviews
** Carrie at The Mad Reviewer: Further Thoughts on One Star Reviews
** Ana at Read Me Away: Interview Style

Personal + HP!:
** Nuzaifa at Say It With Books: Pinterest for the Visual Lover in You
** Kristy and Melissa at Book Nerd Reviews: Harry Potter Tour of Warner Brothers: Hogwarts
** Terri at Starlight Book Reviews: HP Moment of the Week: Worst Death in the Series

Reading:
The Experience:
** Rose at Chapter Break:Do Spoilers Have Time Limits?
** Alexa at Alexa Loves Books: Everybody’s Changing, But I Don’t Feel the Same
** Hannah at So Obsessed With: If We Ever Meet Again
** Pam at [YA]Escape From Reality: Do You Ever Intentionally Read a “Bad” Book?
** Jen at The Starry-Eyed Revue: Re-loving Books
** Josephine at Word Revel: Reading on the Go
** Mel at The Daily Prophecy: Second Chances

Books, Books, Books:
** Nicole at Feed Your Fiction Addiction:I’m a Series Failure
** Allie at Little Birdie Books:When Do You Get Down with Audiobooks?
** Bec at Readers in Wonderland: We Could Be Millionaires If It Weren’t for Books
** Bekka at Great Imaginations: Tour Bekka’s Shelves!
** Lisa at Read. Breathe. Relax.: Books You Love With All Your Heart

Romance & Vday:
** Alice-Jane at Crazy Red Pen: DIY // Valentine’s Day Cards
** Hazel at Stay Bookish: Valentine’s Day Cards for Book Nerds
** Emz at Paging Serenity: The Problems with Shipping Characters

Hey YA + Trends:
** Sophie at A Daydreamer’s World:Is Mental Illness Becoming a Trend?
** Kelly at Stacked Books: The Rise of Suicide in YA Fiction and Exploring Personal Biases in Reading
** Kimberly at Stacked Books: Get Genrified: YA Urban Fantasy

Movies/TV Shows:

Lauren Oliver was hired to adapt her own book, Panic, into a screenplay by Universal.

A new Insurgent TV spot, “I’m Not Afraid,” was released during the Grammys. Plus a ton of stills were released: Natalie Prior, Christina, Hector, Edgar, Evelyn, Marlene, Jack Kang, Max, Marcus Eaton, Uriah, Tori, Johanna, Peter. If you don’t want to click through all those links, here’s a wrap-up of those stills. Here are some other stills, like of Tris, Four, and Jeanine. Also another couple of new stills.

A sneak peak at the making of the Duff, coming to theaters on the 20th!

A new still from the 5th Wave set.
Samuel L. Jackson has joined the adaptation of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. I was excited by the THG castings, Kate Winslet… Tim Burton as director of Miss Peregrine’s… and now Samuel L. Jackson? Holy shit, yes, go YA adaptations!!!

The Dovekeepers by Alice Hoffman - trailer was released!

Just Add Magic by Cindy Callaghan is getting a TV Pilot Episode on Amazon.

No, no, no: Lionsgate confirms that it wants more Hunger Games films. Here’s the thing - Warner Brothers can expand on Harry Potter because J.K. Rowling had already made the content for it. Is Lionsgate going to move ahead without Suzanne Collins just to expand the franchise?

Giveaways:

Adventures in Children's Publishing giveaways: 02/14, 02/27.

Giveaways listed at Saturday Situation by Lori of Pure Imagination and Candace of Candace's Book Blog.

Don't forget to enter YABC's giveaways for the month.
Sci-fi and Fantasy Friday {SF/F Reviews and Giveaways}.

Hardcovers of Playlist for the Dead by Michelle Falkoff, Geek Girl by Holly Smale, City 1 by Gregg Rosenblum, and The Prey by Tom Isbell, INT, ends 02/27.

Kindle Paperwhite + Some Fine Day by Kat Ross, US only, ends 03/07.

ARC of I'll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios, INT, ends 02/13.

Other:

New Releases: Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard, The Ruby Circle (Bloodlines #6) by Richelle Mead, My Heart and Other Black Holes by Jasmine Warga, The Last Time We Say Goodbye by Cynthia Hand, The Glass Arrow by Kristen Simmons, When Reason Breaks by Cindy Rodriguez, The Shadow Cabinet (Shades of London #3) by Maureen Johnson, Promposal by Rhonda Helms, One of the Guys by Lisa Aldin, Utopia, Iowa by Brian Yansky, Rebellion by Stephanie Diaz, Temple Boys by Jamie Buxton, Best Friends Through Eternity by Sylvia McNicoll, I Remember You by Cathleen Davitt Bell, Seeker by Arwen Elys Dayton, & Inherit Midnight by Kate Kae Myers.

Recent Recommended Reads: You can read my review of Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard. Up at my booktube channel, I posted about the 15 YA TBR Books I’m Reading This Year and the 2015 YA Debut Novels That I Want to Read.

Which articles did you like best? Did I miss any news? Did you host a cover reveal or discussion that I should have posted about? A giveaway? Leave the links, and I'll either edit this post or post about 'em next week.

Review: Stone in the Sky - Cecil Castellucci

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Release Date: February 24, 2015
Source: ARC
Published by: Roaring Brook Press

Stone in the Sky - Cecil Castellucci | Goodreads

In this thrilling follow-up to Tin Star, Tula will need to rely on more than just her wits to save her only home in the sky.

After escaping death a second time, Tula Bane is now even thirstier for revenge. She spends much of her time in the Tin Star Café on the Yertina Feray—the space station she calls home. But when it's discovered that the desolate and abandoned planet near the station has high quantities of a precious resource, the once sleepy space station becomes a major player in intergalactic politics. In the spirit of the Gold Rush, aliens from all over the galaxy race to cash in—including Tula's worst enemy.


I like this duology a lot. True, I wished the books were a little faster in pace (when you read a lot of YA, you come to expect fast pacing regardless of the story's demands; or maybe that's just me) and sometimes the science fiction oriented writing style (dry and factual) prevented me from 100% sympathizing with Tula and the other characters, but I can't think of another YA series that has such fascinating political intrigue and space opera dynamics. There are so many planets and planetary systems involved in just two novels - though really, it's mostly this novel since the first novel focused more on Tula's growth, aging her from fourteen to sixteen, I believe. And establishing all the planets, their nearby stars and how that has affected plant life, etc. comes into play in examining the dystopia of the Imperium, the universal planetary government that divided all races into Major and Minor Species based on the number of colonies each race has. The world-building and thought behind the galactic struggles is really well done, and the imagination in the design behind the different races and their relationships with one another is admirable. Really, it's a shame that there are so many YA high fantasy novels with similar elements that get more attention than a YA science fiction novel like this that does similar things. I particularly like the theme of intermixing between aliens and humans because a lot of science fiction does seem to have that phobia of aliens, which to me, reads a lot like regular xenophobia as we experience it today. (Or, if you want to be cynical, you could trace "alien invasions" across the history of our world...). Also fascinating to think about are the implications behind Major/Minor Species and colonization. Feels very accurate and applicable to our own world, and yet still so well established in the one that Cecil Castellucci has made for us to enjoy. Intriguing, discussable, well developed.

On an unrelated note, when love triangles were *the thing* and some people claimed that they were feminist, providing the oft female MC with choices, I was skeptical; after all, it depended on what the choices meant, the personalities of the romantic interests - not just the choices themselves. But, Stone in the Sky made me think that this is what a feminist love triangle would look and feel like. Loved the romance and the general feel of Tula and Tournour. I'm less a fan of the other coupling, but I do like the idea behind that romance and how Tournour and the other guy don't fight over Tula. Nice character growth all around for Tula and her friends, rather than being mired in romantic angst.

Also, the plot was rather unpredictable and the elements worked together fantastically. Exploration among the stars! Looking into the mystery of the human colonies! Why was Brother Blue so cruel to Tula in the first novel? What is his story? What happened to the rest of the human race? What happened to Tula's friends? A gold rush of a previously rare but still valuable plant near to Tula's station - what will happen to her "quiet life" contemplating revenge on Brother Blue on her space station? Why is Tournour exiled on Yertina Feray? And so much more. There are a few unexplained plot events between books such as how Reza ended up in the Outer Rim, when Tula had said in the previous book that she was sending him to Earth - and the same with Trevor, who was supposed to be shipped off with the boys, but I can't begrudge the duology for that because of how everything played out in such a fascinating way. I loved that this book, even while expanding the world and including such interesting plot elements, also kept the same themes of self-discovery and transformation for character growth. A sequel definitely worthy of its predecessor, and an intriguing duology science fiction fans should much enjoy.

Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds (73)

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Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds is a feature that will let you know about recent MG/YA/NA book related news. I'll post about articles from the publishing industry, cover reveals, discussions from fellow bloggers, the latest tv/movie news, and giveaways that you're hosting. If you would like to follow along with cover reveals during the week, see my Pinterest.

Book Byte video to come!

Publishing:
Rights Report:
  • Will Wilder middle-grade adventure series - Raymond Arroyo (Book one, titled Will Wilder: The Relic of Perilous Falls, is scheduled for publication in spring 2016. Books two and three will follow in 2017 and 2018. The series follows a thrill-seeking boy with a mysterious family heritage who discovers ancient objects of rare power – relics he must protect from terrifying demons that will do anything to possess them. Random House/Crown).
  • The Thousandth Floor - Katharine McGee (Set in 2118, the trilogy follows the scandalous lives of teens in Manhattan's new 1000-story skyscraper. The first book is slated for publication in 2017... Internationally, rights have been preempted by Dogan Egmont in Turkey, Editora Rocco in Brazil, Moon in Holland, and Michel Lafon in France; and sold to Vulkan in Serbia, Piemme in Italy and Aschehoug in Norway; with auctions currently taking place in Spain, Germany and the U.K. HarperTeen).
  • Stolen Crowns YA series - Jessica Day George (in which the princesses of fairytales – grown up and living their Happily Ever After – disappear one day, leaving their daughters and sons to save them all. Publication will begin in 2016; Random House).
  • Pitch Dark - Courtney Alameda (set against a future of marauding space scavengers and deadly aliens who kill with sound. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016, Feiwel and Friends)
  • Liberty - Andrea Portes (YA spy thriller; Co-created with screenwriter Joel Silverman, the novel introduces 18-year-old Paige Nolan, caught up in her family's past dealings in international espionage and recruited by the CIA; it's due out in summer 2017. HarperTeen).
  • Saving Montgomery Sole - Mariko Tamaki (The story follows Montgomery Sole, a 15-year-old girl who forms a Mystery Club to explore paranormal phenomena, but finds that the real mystery is understanding why people suck, how she fell for the wrong guy, and why frozen yogurt solves all of life's problems. Publication is set for winter 2016; Roaring Brook Press).
  • Sunrises Get All the Hype - Josh Sundquist (about a teenage boy who was born blind but undergoes an experimental surgery that will give him sight, raising questions about the nature of perception, love, and romantic attraction. It's slated for fall 2016; Little, Brown).
  • Unidentified Suburban Object - Mike Jung (about a 12-year-old Korean-American girl who sets out to explore her heritage and comes to some startling extraterrestrial discoveries. The book is scheduled for publication in 2016; Scholastic's Arthur A. Levine Books).
  • Max and Marla - Alexandra Boiger (debut; two-book deal featuring two best friends and aspiring Olympians... will publish in fall 2015; Putnam).
Publisher’s Lunch:
  • Lauren Oliver's CURIOSITY HOUSE, a new series written in collaboration with collector of peculiar relics H.C. Chester, about four extraordinary children who band together in 1930s New York City to solve a spree of crimes that involve the museum of freaks and oddities at which they live, to Harper Children's for publication starting in Fall 2015. Rights to Hodder & Stoughton in the UK; Hachette Jeunesse in France; and Mondadori in Italy.
Nothing from last week.

Interviews: Jamie McGuire, Shadow Study - Maria Stryder, Jason Reynolds

Book Trailers: Edison’s Alley (The Accelerati trilogy), Dove Arising by Karen Bao Part I and Part II.

Awards: the 2014 Cybils Award finalists were announced. As were the Children’s Book Committee 2015 Award winners.

Lots from #WeNeedDiverseBooks this week: a message to the gatekeepers from Ellen Oh; a FANTASTIC set of posts from Malinda Lo (Perceptions of Diversity in Book Reviews Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV - and might I add that in the recent Kirkus Reviews review of Sabaa Tahir’s An Ember in the Ashes, they call adding “Arabic elements” a trend. Mind you, suicide books are not “a trend” in such eyes, and they probably OUTNUMBER the books with “Arabic elements.” So encouraging of diversity...); all the (diverse) books that won the Newberry/Honor are now NYT Bestsellers; some statistics by the CCBC on diverse books and books pubbed by diverse authors; books being published in 2015 from diverse authors; Winter Institute Booksellers discuss walking their talk about diversity; YA books from black authors.

So, now that Egmont has closed down, what’s next?

A summary of recent author and industry events.

Here’s a highlight in pictures of the Winter Institute 10 with booksellers.

Curious about what’s up and coming this fall? Here’s a sneak peak from publishers at their fall 2015 children’s books.

Tor thinks that novellas are the future of publishing. What say you?

Indie booksellers are filling the void left by Borders (YEAH WELL NOT THE HOLE IN MY HEART *melodramatic flip of hair*). Ahem. But did you know how little indie booksellers actually make? May surprise you…

ANOTHER BOOK FROM JANE AUSTEN? Jane Austen in her teens! I’m SO on it.

A cool look at the booksellers of Pakistan.

Cover Reveals:

young adult cover reveals
young and new adult cover reveals
White Cat (The Curse Workers) - Holly Black | Mass Market Paperback Edition
Red Glove (The Curse Workers 2) - Holly Black | Mass Market Paperback Edition
Black Heart (The Curse Workers 3) - Holly Black | Mass Market Paperback Edition

Walk on Earth a Stranger by Rae Carson will be revealed on the 20th. Little, Brown is asking readers to vote on the next BC book cover. The cover for Zeroes by Scott Westerfeld, Margo Lanagan and Deb Biancatti is being released tomorrow. Epic Reads is in the middle of releasing covers for its fall titles, so there will be new covers all throughout the week.

Discussion/Other Blogger Posts:

Have you read any of these popular February titles?

Don’t ever get a book wet unless you have a book recovery team.

Are you a Laurie Halse Anderson fan? Did you know these facts?

How I love Margaret Atwood. She talked to the West Point military cadets about gender, politics, and oppression.

To dear Jonathan Franzen who apparently insisted that YA is not morally complex, here are seven recommendations from Barnes and Noble.

Though maybe it’s just that we’re talking about young adult literature all wrong.

In the mood for a Peter Pan retelling? Some recs for you.

What’s your weirdest fictional crush? For me, Odysseus. I was in ninth grade, and I sorta had a crush on my English lit teacher who by proxy came to look like Odysseus. Now I’m sort of baffled because though I love the Odyssey, it’s not exactly feminist. And 10 YA authors on their biggest author crushes.

And if you’re in the mood still for romantic reads, here are YA love stories for book nerds + 5 kids books that make for great valentinesunrequited love stories (why does everyone praise Cathy + Heathcliff? THEY ARE TERRIBLE PEOPLE.)… and potentially less romantic reads: on the baddest boyfriends and girlfriends of YA lit.

Your daily Harry Potter cryfest: All of Snape’s scenes put together in one movie, eleven facts about the series.

Yaaaaaas, an article on the greatest young adult heroines of all time. I haven’t heard of quite a few of them, but it’s nice to see which ones I know were included.

The ultimate generic YA dystopian thriller … on twitter?

A Harry Potter Sorting quiz. I don’t think that this is accurate. I got Gryffindor, when I always thought I was Hufflepuff or maaaaaaaybe Ravenclaw.

And this is why it is an established fact that we will never, ever get through our TBR piles.

Library hotels! WHAT.

Blogging:
Tips/Support/Advice:
** Lili at Lili’s Reflections: The Intern Diaries: Q&A Numero Uno
** Rachel at Parajunkee: Best Free Blogging Tools
** Cassie at The Casserole: Instagram Editing
** Stephanie at These Paper Hearts:: WordPress Starter Themes

Blogging & Bloggers:
** Anya at On Starships & Dragonwings: Does that add to the community you are trying to make?
** Kat at Cuddlebuggery: The Daily Life of a Book Blogger
** Genevieve at The Reading Shelf: Book Blogger Confessions
** Beth at On a Book Bender: My Steamy Love Affair with Goodreads Groups
** Nova at Out of Time: Have I Just Been Plagiarized?

Recommendations, Ratings, ARCs, Authors:
** Guest Post at Bibliodaze:Anne Rice Is Interrogating the Industry from the Wrong Perspective
** Ceilidhann at Bibliodaze: Hate Out of Ten: The Pros & Cons of Review Scores
** Alise at Readers in Wonderland: Reading Recommendations: Lovely Couples
** Cait at Paper Fury: My Heroes Are Authors
** Ana at Read Me Away: Changes in Ratings

Personal:
** Ruby at Feed Me Books Now:On Introversion and Creativity
** Ruby at Feed Me Books Now: The Joy of Handwriting
** Terri at Starlight Book Reviews: Transmedia, PR Stunts, and Noise

Letters:
** Amy at Ten Penny Dreams: A Letter from an Uninspired Reader
** Chiara at Books for a Delicate Eternity: A Letter to the Book Blogging Community

Reading:
The Experience:
** Emz at Paging Serenity: 7 Types of Readers
** Sandra at Tea Between Books: The Problem of Being in Public
** Jenna at Rather Be Reading YA:Book Polygamy
** Carmel at Rabid Reads: Are You a Seasonal Reader?
** Alice at Of Books:Tackling my ‘to-be-read’ pile [because it’s multiplying like wet gremlins]
** Jamie at the Perpetual Page-Turner: Second Chances
** Kara at Great Imaginations: 2015 Reading Update

Books, Books, Books:
** Nicole at Feed Your Fiction Addiction:Why I Love My Library
** Alicia at a Kernel of Nonsense:Book Hype
** Kelly at Stacked Books: 7 More 2015 Books With Diversity on the Cover
** Amber at Books of Amber: Books That Should Be Adapted, Part I
** Kristy at Book Nerd Reviews: Harry Potter Tour of Warner Bros Studios: Places
** Adele at Persnickety Snark: Reading Matters 2015: Look What I’ve Been Working On (if you’re an Aussie blogger - def. check this out)
** Sydney at Utterly Bookish: Tales of a Bookseller
** Carrie at The Mad Reviewer: Does Anyone Actually Watch Book Trailers?
** Pam at [YA]Escape From Reality: Too Many Books?

Specific Topics/Trends/Genres:
** Gillian at Writer of Wrongs: Do Certain Buzzwords Make You Pick up a Book?
** Kel at Booked Till Tuesday: Travel
** Kim at YA Asylum:What’s Your Genre?
** Emz at Paging Serenity: What’s The Difference Between Young Adult and New Adult?
** Amber at The Mile Long Bookshelf: It’s a Smart Book, Considering It’s YA
** Rinn at Rinn Reads: The Influence of the Book Award
** Stormy at Book. Blog. Bake.: Tough, Luck, Man (Unlucky Characters)

Valentine’s Day And/Or Romance:
** Shannon at It Starts At Midnight: My Favorite Ships
** Rose at Chapter Break:Top 5 Love Story Reads
** Renae at Respiring Thoughts: AntiValentine: a celebration of singletude
** Sunny at Blue Shelf Sky: Valentine’s Day Tips for the Bookish Soul
** Lauren at Books, Tea, & Me: Who Was Your First Bookish Love?
** Mitchii at Aeropapers: The Great ‘OTP’ Post
** Shae at Shae Has Left the Room: If I Had a Harem - A Bloomsbury Valentine’s Day Giveaway
** Kelley/Asti at Oh, The Books!: Bookish Guides: A Heart-Shaped Box of YA Romance

Movies/TV Shows:

Ryan Gosling might join Emma Watson in the live adaptation of Beauty and the Beast :O.

New Insurgent trailer/clip: Fight Back. Some nice new stills, Be My Fourtris& running with guns at Amity. That last one might have been already released but I’ve lost track of all their images. The premiere will be on March 16th in the US. Oooh, I’m getting excited. I saw a preview from the Mars company with M&Ms making fun of movies like Insurgents and it made me lol but also EXCELLENT GRAPHICS I cannot wait.

Hey, hey, the Duff is being released on the 20th: are you ready? Robbie Arnell has some Valentine’s Day advice for you. And there’s an interview with him and with Mae Whitman.

Harvey Weinstein believes he’s found the next big hit: The Haunting of Sunshine Girl by Paige MacKenzie, with a t.v. series being pitched with the same name based off MacKenzie’s YouTube channel.

Universal has optioned Terrible Two by Mac Barnett and Jory Jon.

Curious about the 5th Wave movie? Here’s Rick Yancey.

Giveaways:

Adventures in Children's Publishing giveaways: 02/21, 02/27.

Giveaways listed at Saturday Situation by Lori of Pure Imagination and Candace of Candace's Book Blog.

Don't forget to enter YABC's giveaways for the month.

Sci-fi and Fantasy Friday {SF/F Reviews and Giveaways}.

Hardcovers of Playlist for the Dead by Michelle Falkoff, Geek Girl by Holly Smale, City 1 by Gregg Rosenblum, and The Prey by Tom Isbell, INT, ends 02/27.

Kindle Paperwhite + Some Fine Day by Kat Ross, US only, ends 03/07.

$20 worth book with kickass ladies (INT) or pbs of Throne of Glass and the Archived (US only) from Cee as a celebration of Galentine’s Day, ends 02/28.

Several ARCs from Lili to celebrate her birthday, US only, ends 03/01.

Other:

New Releases: The Distance Between Lost and Found by Kathryn Holmes; Better Than Perfect by Melissa Kantor; Since You've Been Gone by Mary Jennifer Payne; & The Bargaining by Carly Anne West.

Recent Recommended Reads: You can read my review of Stone in the Sky by Cecil Castellucci. I also recently read and LOVED and had a massive BOOK HANGOVER via Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith. You will also see a completed review for The Heart of Betrayal sometime in April.

Which articles did you like best? Did I miss any news? Did you host a cover reveal or discussion that I should have posted about? A giveaway? Leave the links, and I'll either edit this post or post about 'em next week.

Review: The Winner's Crime - Marie Rutkoski

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Release Date: March 03, 2015
Source: Netgalley
Published by: Farrar, Straus, Giroux

The Winner's Crime - Marie Rutkoski | Goodreads

Book two of the dazzling Winner's Trilogy is a fight to the death as Kestrel risks betrayal of country for love.

The engagement of Lady Kestrel to Valoria’s crown prince means one celebration after another. But to Kestrel it means living in a cage of her own making. As the wedding approaches, she aches to tell Arin the truth about her engagement…if she could only trust him. Yet can she even trust herself? For—unknown to Arin—Kestrel is becoming a skilled practitioner of deceit: an anonymous spy passing information to Herran, and close to uncovering a shocking secret.

As Arin enlists dangerous allies in the struggle to keep his country’s freedom, he can’t fight the suspicion that Kestrel knows more than she shows. In the end, it might not be a dagger in the dark that cuts him open, but the truth. And when that happens, Kestrel and Arin learn just how much their crimes will cost them.


You can see my original thoughts on this book in this post.

Those who wanted more scheming, more of the strategy over romance will find The Winner's Crime improved over its predecessor, The Winner's Curse. TWC2 has just as beautiful and purposeful of writing; every scene contributes directly to the plot/character/world in some way (and I emphasize this because not every YA book that I've read carries that sort of charge) and the layered and textured quality to the writing, character-driven and tension-filled without a hint of melodrama, reminds me of Kristin Cashore's writing. The third person alternating PoVs continues here as well.

Though I compared The Winner's Curse, and the writing above in The Winner's Crime, to Kristin Cashore's work, I was most struck by a comparison to Bitterblue. Like Bitterblue, who, once confronted with the ineptitude of her court, must decide how best to discover the horrors of her father's regime and how to help her country heal, Kestrel knows and understands the horrors of the Valorian empire and must make a choice: how much is she willing to risk to help the others most affected by Valorian greed and dominance? She traded her freedom for the limited freedom of Arin's people, but as the synopsis tells you, that is not enough. As a spy, Kestrel is sorely tested on all sides: by the emperor, her father, the Herrani spymaster, Arin himself. She enters a sticky web of deceit and intrigue that reminded me of how Bitterblue managed her nighttime strolls and her queenly duties. Her character growth is truly remarkable to behold. I loved the strength of her mind in The Winner's Curse, and here it has come to the center stage.

Arin is the new leader of his people, and he is exhausted. He continues to think of his decision to let Kestrel go, and he is sure that there was something wrong with Kestrel when she delivered her message about his people's freedom, yet more and more he grows to doubt what he felt and what he saw with his own eyes. Did Kestrel return his feelings, or did he see what he only wanted to see? Has he been doing that all along, not just as Kestrel's lover but as his people's leader? Is he good for his people if he loves a Valorian? Where Arin was the sure one in the romance in The Winner's Curse, now he is less confident, Kestrel the one who pushes forward in the trials ahead. Arin's integrity is at stake; where Kestrel's mind shines, his fortitude comes to center stage even while they deceive each other and try to figure out the emperor's plans. His character growth as a leader is just as marvelous as Kestrel's as a spy.

The plot is absolutely marvelous. It balances political intrigue against the personal considerations of Kestrel and Arin; the games and deceit of the emperor's plans for Herran and Valoria with Kestrel's and Arin's growing doubts about their relationship -- will they destroy each other before the Valorian empire has its way? While we learn more about the differences between the Herrani and the Valorian people, it never feels like too much or too little; there's a lot left to learn but we're left with the impression that it's all been mapped out, maybe to come in the last book or maybe in another series, who knows? Also this has my FAVORITE kind of intrigue and suspense with regard to the villain's plans: it makes the villain feel so well developed when the main characters have to work to understand what is coming, and even then they might be too late before the real horrors begin. I love smart villains. I love well developed villains (or shall I say, characters in general). The Winner's Crime succeeds so well in portraying both sides, the Herrani and the Valorians, in this tentative peace, with the enemies still humanized (although monstrous) in softer scenes that also reveal their cunning. The political intrigue, strategy, and world-building are amplified and come full circle, the mystery plotline running alongside the coming-of-age and romance.

The romance is a lot less prominent in this novel than in The Winner's Curse. Where we first had to understand the stakes of a relationship between Arin and Kestrel in TWC1, now we see how that relationship will further their own character development. The romance turns more into a subplot while fueling the character's motivations and yet the few scenes are just as steamy, just as tension ridden and filled with stakes. This series takes into account the personal and the overarching rebellion in a delicious tension-driven package.

Basically, mark your calendars. Find time to read this book.

Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds (74)

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Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds is a feature that will let you know about recent MG/YA/NA book related news. I'll post about articles from the publishing industry, cover reveals, discussions from fellow bloggers, the latest tv/movie news, and giveaways that you're hosting. If you would like to follow along with cover reveals during the week, see my Pinterest.


Publishing:
Rights Report:
  • Rebel of the Sands - Alwyn Hamilton (YA debut set in a mystical desert nation called Mirahin, Sands follows “a gun-slinging girl desperate to escape her past, and a handsome foreigner who harbors dangerous secrets.” The book has already sold in nine countries and is set for a winter 2016 release. Viking).
  • The Amateurs - Sara Shepard (Pitched as Veronica Mars meets Gillian Flynn – in which a group of amateur teen sleuths come together to figure out who killed one of their sisters. Disney-Hyperion. Rights have also sold in Germany, France, Brazil, and the U.K.).
  • Four-book series Commander in Cheese - Lindsey Leavitt (The stories are about a family of mice who live in the White House and whose adventures sometimes collide with the President, her family, and their cat. Publication of the first two books is scheduled for summer 2016; Random House).
  • The 57 Bus - Dashka Slater (A YA project based on the New York Times Magazine piece, "The Fire on the 57 Bus in Oakland" about two teenagers – one African-American, one agender – on both sides of an alleged hate crime. The book, entitled, is slated for fall 2017. Farrar, Straus and Giroux).
  • Dear Martin - Nic Stone (debut; a contemporary novel about race relations in 21st-century America. It's told from different perspectives before and after Justyce McAlister, a black teen, is shot by an off-duty police officer. The first novel is scheduled for publication in January 2017. Crown Books for Young Readers).
  • Condemned - Amy Brashear (debut YA; a retelling of Truman Capote's In Cold Blood from the point of view of Carly, best friend to Nancy Clutter. Publication is scheduled for winter 2017. SoHo Teen).
  • The Blood Rose Rebellion - Rosalyn Eves (debut; The romantic fantasy adventure set during the political unrest of 19th-century Europe follows a 16-year-old British socialite exiled to Hungary and swept up in a revolution to overturn world order. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016; Knopf).
  • Burn, Baby, Burn - Meg Medina (YA which follows a 17-year-old named Nora López through NYC's infamous Son of Sam summer of 1977. It's set for spring 2016; Candlewick).
  • Tyrannosaurs Ralph - Nate Evans & Vince Evans (MG graphic novel; the story of fourth-grader Ralph, whose brain is uploaded to a T-Rex body by mad scientist and then is expected to battle in an alien arena to save Earth. Publication is planned for September 2016; Andrews McMeel).
  • Varmints - Andy Hirsch (MG graphic novel; a western adventure about two siblings and their dealings with the Criminal King of the West. Publication is scheduled for 2017; First Second).
From Publisher's Lunch:

Kristin Bailey's THE SILVER GATE, the epic journey of a young boy and his developmentally disabled sister as they search for the realm of the Fairy Queen in order to find safe haven in a medieval world that holds nothing but danger, to Katherine Tegen Books for publication in beginning fall 2016.

None from last week have since been posted.

Authors: The Forgotten Sisters (Princess Academy) - Shannon Hale, Red Queen - Victoria Aveyard, Kelly Link / Cassandra Clare / Holly Black, Rainbow Rowell part I and II. Christopher Paolini with Karen Bao. Amanda Hocking.

Book Trailers: No Safety in Numbers - Dayna Lorentz, the Tapper Twins Go to War with Each Other, Wish - Matthew Cordell, Keepers of the Labyrinth - Erin Moulton

Excerpts: Curious about Penguin’s main titles for Summer 2015? Sample them. You can also read an excerpt of Leigh Bardugo’s Six of Crows here.

Awards: The Andre Norton nominees were announced, including Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future and The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows and Ava Lavender. So were the 2015 Pannell Award nominees (focused on bookstores). And the Bologna Children’s book fair winners. The CCBC announced its award finalists too. The Kids Indie Next list for Spring 2015 was also released.

New Alice in Wonderland illustrations o.O. So pretty! Perfect for book plates.

I’m trying to keep up with We Need Diverse Books. I posted about Malinda Lo’s discussion of book reviews on diverse books last week, but now she’s compiled them into one full post for y’all. I’m also reposting the CCBC book stats from last week because that’s kind of depressing. And because editors, illustrators, and authors need to continue the chat on diversity. Especially if we want the CCBC stats to shift toward diversity. Also remember Diversity League, the ALA Midwinter panel? You can now WATCH the panel here. If you are a writer of color looking for resources, here is a good list.

Good news for Egmont USA authors: Lerner has acquired about 100 of the titles.

Cover Reveals:

*technically this book is not young adult,
but since Mistborn was, I thought people might be interested.

Discussion / Other Blogger Posts:

Remember that post from a while back on Hermione Granger and the Goddamn Patriarchy? Well that’s now been made into a video.

Look at beautiful library architecture and decide what you think they’re trying to tell us.

11 Crazy Plot Twists You Never Saw Coming. Okay, now I really want to read all those novels… I mean, some of them have been on my list for years, but to make a list about plot twists and people agree they’re not cheap but thrilling? Interesting.

Whaaat. An interactive site with an iPod-inspired circle wheel for books? How to sell books in the digital age.

How reading helped Kelly Jensen (Blogger at Book Riot & Stacked Books) overcome depression.

If you’re looking for some YA novels that deal with tough topics like death, here are seven recommendations.

If you like YA novels that have an epistolary format, here are some recommendations.

If you’re a fan of YA novels set in Hollywood, moar recommendations!

And if you saw the Duff and are a newly minted fan, your last set of recommendations.

Bookish instagram accounts to follow. Hahaha, did not know there was an account taking pictures of hot boys reading.

Chuck Wendig tackles the question of why adults read YA. So does the Guardian. And Laurie Halse Anderson urges more adults to do so.

Interesting topic from Chuck Wendig: how sometimes labeling a character as “a strong female character” doesn’t always pass the bar.

Heh, would you follow this advice on how to land a date from YA novels?

And aw, 12 YA quotes that perfectly express the teen condition. I did love that quote from Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda.

Some fairy tales are different from what you’d expect. No more Prince Charming.

The Epic Reads team = my heroes. Look at this beautiful history of YA lit.

What are the pros and cons of publishing at an early age?

What do you do when you can’t find a bookmark? Me, I use a tissue.

I like the idea of this list: 22 Books Women Recommend Men Should Read. (“Why is it that we don’t think men should read books by and about women? In a canon and culture flooded with the perspectives and stories of men, men have no difficulty finding books that reaffirm their self-images and explore their masculinity. Why aren’t we encouraging men to also read great books that widen their horizons and show them life through the eyes of people unlike them?”) And while you’re at it, maybe you could also give them the books you’d slip to your best friend...

The most romantic quotes in literature… include some from Winnie the Pooh and Hamlet, apparently.

How long would it take to read all the books published in a week? Hahahahahaha okay, seriously we will never be able to read our entire TBR, I guess.

To cheer you up after that depressing fact, look at this pretty all-white bookstore.

Which of these books publishing in March are you most anticipating?

Blogging:
Support/Advice/Tips:
** Rita at Blog Genie:Launch Before You’re Ready
** Kimba at Caffeinated Book Reviewer: Contacting an Author or Publisher
** Lili at Lili’s Reflections: The Ins and Outs of Netgalley
** Rachel at Parajunkee: Blog Post Proofreading Checklist
** Stephanie at These Paper Hearts: Commenting Systems
** Ashley at Nose Graze: How to Make Your Blog Future Proof
** Ashley at Nose Graze: Moving from Blogger to WordPress
** Nova at Out of Time: Requesting ARCs

Blogging & Bloggers:
** Shannon at It Starts At Midnight: Blogger Survey Results Part I
** Amy at Ten Penny Dreams: What’s the Point in Blogging Anyway?
** Nicole at Feed Your Fiction Addiction:BEA or the Other Guys
** Kayla at The Thousand Lives:Contemporary Conversations: We’re Almost There
** Alexa at Alexa Loves Books: Book Blogger Love-a-thon 2015 {over now, but for future reference}
** Bec at Readers in Wonderland: How to Start a Blog in Five Easy Steps
** Helen at My Novel Opinion: A Mom’s PoV on Social Media
** Emz at Paging Serenity: What Are Your Favorite Types of Posts to Read & Write?
** Rachel at Parajunkee: The Life and Times of the Book Blogger Cartoon
** Mitchii at Aeropapers: Breaking Some Stereotypes
** Carrie at The Mad Reviewer: Befriending Authors

Recommendations, Reviews, Ratings, ARCs, Authors:
** Tanja at Ja čitam, a ti?: Review Requests
** Rinn at Rinn Reads: The Three Star Rating
** Ana at Read Me Away: Reviewing Series

Plagiarism:
** Jessi at Novel Heartbeat:Plagiarism and Instagram
** Ceilidhann at Bibliodaze:John Green Plagiarised: Why This Matters
** Charlotte at The Simple Tales: Copying and Plagiarising Is Never the Solution
** Nova at Out of Time: Are Discussion Posts Inspired by Others Considered Copying?

Reading:
The Experience:
** Ruby at Feed Me Books Now:My Reading Taste
** Ellen at Playing Jokers:How Should Stories End?
** Stormy at Book. Blog. Bake.: Falling Back in Love with Rereading
** Cait at Paper Fury: Do You Ever Wish Villains Had Their Own Book?

Tropes:
** Chyna at Lite-Rate-Ture:Cliches in the publishing industry: styling books!
** Carmel at Rabid Reads: What Are Your SFF Dealbreakers?
** Kim at YA Asylum:Favorite Trope
** Nara at Looking for the Panacea: Love Triangles That Actually Work

Books, Books, Books:
** Sophie at A Daydreamer’s World:10 Stages of Book Shopping
** Rose at Chapter Break:Share Your Reading Lists
** Jamie at the Perpetual Page-Turner: I Recognize the Insanity… I Do
** Genevieve at The Reading Shelf: Sometimes I Feel Like I’m Out of the Loop with Childhood Classics
** Christy at Novel Ink: I Don’t Mind Series in Different Formats

Specific Books & Movies:
** Bieke at Istyria Book Blog: Why split 1 book into 2 movies?
** Lyn at Great Imaginations: Moon Pride
** Cayce at Fighting Dreamer: Why Agatha Christie Is the Dame
** Beth at On a Book Bender: Why I Think Everyone Should Read Tana French
** Brittany at The Book Addict’s Guide: Young Adult Meets Disney

Covers:
** Emz at Paging Serenity: Do You Judge Books By Their Covers?
** Pam at [YA]Escape From Reality: How Important Are Covers?

Movies/TV Shows:

Though the Duff came in lower than expectations, it’s still earned more than its reported budget with its first week out. (50 Shades is still dominating the box office). Check out this interview with Kody Keplinger.

Universal has optioned The Princess in Black by Shannon Hale.

Sony bought the rights to The Sculptor, a MG graphic novel.

Oh, Insurgent. Insurgent is dipping into virtual reality. Insurgent tickets go on sale tomorrow and the final trailer will be released. Here’s another clip: would you risk it all? And a clip of Peter. And “Worth It” between Tris and Four. A still of the factionless community. If you’re curious about when Insurgent is premiering around the world, here’s a few dates.

Oh, look, a Paper Towns infographic for y’all to spread about who’s in the movie..

Giveaways:

Adventures in Children's Publishing giveaways: 02/27.

Giveaways listed at Saturday Situation by Lori of Pure Imagination and Candace of Candace's Book Blog.

Don't forget to enter YABC's giveaways for the month.

Sci-fi and Fantasy Friday {SF/F Reviews and Giveaways}.

Hardcovers of Playlist for the Dead by Michelle Falkoff, Geek Girl by Holly Smale, City 1 by Gregg Rosenblum, and The Prey by Tom Isbell, INT, ends 02/27.

Kindle Paperwhite + Some Fine Day by Kat Ross, US only, ends 03/07.

$20 worth book with kickass ladies (INT) or pbs of Throne of Glass and the Archived (US only) from Cee as a celebration of Galentine’s Day, ends 02/28.

Several ARCs from Lili to celebrate her birthday, US only, ends 03/01.

If you have a giveaway, you should let me know. I've looked through my Feedly account. There are so many blogs on there that undoubtedly, I'm missing some posts... soooo let me link to you!

Other:

New Releases: A Wicked Thing (Wicked Thing #1) by Rhiannon Thomas, Salt & Stone by Victoria Scott, Dove Arising by Karen Bao, Kalahari (Corpus #3) by Jessica Khoury, Sin Eater's Daughter by Melinda Salisbury, A Stone in the Sky by Cecil Castellucci, Mark of the Thief (Mark of the Thief #1) by Jennifer Nielsen, The Cipher by John C. Ford, The Third Twin by C. J. Omololu, Dreamfire by Kit Alloway, When My Heart Was Wicked by Tricia Stirling, Quake (Pulse #3) by Patrick Carman, Unleashed (Uninvited #2) by Sophie Jordan, Feral Pride by Cynthia Leitich Smith, No Parking at the End Times by Bryan Bliss, Unchanged by Jessica Brody, Zom-B Bride by Darren Shan, Breakout by Kevin Emerson, Remember by Eileen Cook, Haunted (Arnaud Legacy #1) by Lynn Carthage.

Recent Recommendations: You can read my review of The Winner’s Crime by Marie Rutkoski. Otherwise I’m kind of behind on life and this blog. I’m starting a read-along with Josephine on The Boyfriend List and I have a tally of blogs to visit and comment on from last weekend and I still haven’t linked my last two weeks (I think!) of posts from here to other social media. I need to turn in reviews to publishers. Yikes. Catch up, Christina!

I also sometimes think that hey, after four years of blogging, I'll have figured things out. Nope.

Which articles did you like best? Did I miss any news? Did you host a cover reveal or discussion that I should have posted about? A giveaway? Leave the links, and I'll either edit this post or post about 'em next week.

Review: Stone in the Sky - Cecil Castellucci

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Release Date: February 24, 2015
Source: ARC
Published by: Roaring Brook Press

Stone in the Sky - Cecil Castellucci | Goodreads

In this thrilling follow-up to Tin Star, Tula will need to rely on more than just her wits to save her only home in the sky.

After escaping death a second time, Tula Bane is now even thirstier for revenge. She spends much of her time in the Tin Star Café on the Yertina Feray—the space station she calls home. But when it's discovered that the desolate and abandoned planet near the station has high quantities of a precious resource, the once sleepy space station becomes a major player in intergalactic politics. In the spirit of the Gold Rush, aliens from all over the galaxy race to cash in—including Tula's worst enemy.


I like this duology a lot. True, I wished the books were a little faster in pace (when you read a lot of YA, you come to expect fast pacing regardless of the story's demands; or maybe that's just me) and sometimes the science fiction oriented writing style (dry and factual) prevented me from 100% sympathizing with Tula and the other characters, but I can't think of another YA series that has such fascinating political intrigue and space opera dynamics. There are so many planets and planetary systems involved in just two novels - though really, it's mostly this novel since the first novel focused more on Tula's growth, aging her from fourteen to sixteen, I believe. And establishing all the planets, their nearby stars and how that has affected plant life, etc. comes into play in examining the dystopia of the Imperium, the universal planetary government that divided all races into Major and Minor Species based on the number of colonies each race has. The world-building and thought behind the galactic struggles is really well done, and the imagination in the design behind the different races and their relationships with one another is admirable. Really, it's a shame that there are so many YA high fantasy novels with similar elements that get more attention than a YA science fiction novel like this that does similar things. I particularly like the theme of intermixing between aliens and humans because a lot of science fiction does seem to have that phobia of aliens, which to me, reads a lot like regular xenophobia as we experience it today. (Or, if you want to be cynical, you could trace "alien invasions" across the history of our world...). Also fascinating to think about are the implications behind Major/Minor Species and colonization. Feels very accurate and applicable to our own world, and yet still so well established in the one that Cecil Castellucci has made for us to enjoy. Intriguing, discussable, well developed.

On an unrelated note, when love triangles were *the thing* and some people claimed that they were feminist, providing the oft female MC with choices, I was skeptical; after all, it depended on what the choices meant, the personalities of the romantic interests - not just the choices themselves. But, Stone in the Sky made me think that this is what a feminist love triangle would look and feel like. Loved the romance and the general feel of Tula and Tournour. I'm less a fan of the other coupling, but I do like the idea behind that romance and how Tournour and the other guy don't fight over Tula. Nice character growth all around for Tula and her friends, rather than being mired in romantic angst.

Also, the plot was rather unpredictable and the elements worked together fantastically. Exploration among the stars! Looking into the mystery of the human colonies! Why was Brother Blue so cruel to Tula in the first novel? What is his story? What happened to the rest of the human race? What happened to Tula's friends? A gold rush of a previously rare but still valuable plant near to Tula's station - what will happen to her "quiet life" contemplating revenge on Brother Blue on her space station? Why is Tournour exiled on Yertina Feray? And so much more. There are a few unexplained plot events between books such as how Reza ended up in the Outer Rim, when Tula had said in the previous book that she was sending him to Earth - and the same with Trevor, who was supposed to be shipped off with the boys, but I can't begrudge the duology for that because of how everything played out in such a fascinating way. I loved that this book, even while expanding the world and including such interesting plot elements, also kept the same themes of self-discovery and transformation for character growth. A sequel definitely worthy of its predecessor, and an intriguing duology science fiction fans should much enjoy.

The Bias Against YA (+ Best Books of 2014)

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You remember all those months ago when I said that I would make a video about the reactions people at my new job had to YA? All the dearest criticism I've heard? Well, folks, here it is. Indeed this video idea was in response to an article, suggesting that people should be less judgmental about their reading...



In the above video, I tell you about:
  • a man who said "That's embarrassing" re: reading Catching Fire
  • another man who said that the Harry Potter movies were enough for him
  • a woman who stoutly REFUSED the idea of The Goldfinch ever being considered YA (despite me not even suggesting that)
  • a woman who, when I said that I read YA, admitted to only ever having read something by John Green... you know... the savior of YA.
  • another man who said that he could flip to any page of any YA novel (that he was reading) and feel like he would still understand what was going on (aka said with a wry smile, like YA is that uncomplicated)
The only solution to the bias against YA I can think of...

...is to recommend books to people on a case-by-case basis. I want to believe in those "YA Books for Adults" lists, but heck, if Catching Fire is something that doesn't "fit" within a coworker's perception of good literature and only Man Booker Prize Winners or The Goldfinch does, well, I've got to find something else up my sleeve than a casual list. (Plus those lists always rub me the wrong way. More than half the readership of YA is already adult. What exactly are you trying to imply with those lists?).

Maybe I ought to recommend something from my best books of 2014?



Or maybe my favorites are a little too young in taste in these cases? what to do, what to do :O.

Mind you, this is only MY COWORKERS. My brother was once like, "Oh, you still read all that?" *indicates large array of YA books* "I thought that you would've outgrown it." Or my mother, who doesn't like to read any speculative fiction, anything fantastical or "silly," which YA is to her. "Are you reading another one of those vampire books?"

*bangs head against desk*

What do y'all think? What's the best way to handle those situations and what books do you tend to recommend to people who are like Adult-Literature-Is-So-Superior-To-Young-Adult-Literature? How do you combat the bias against young adult literature?


Review: The Walls Around Us - Nova Ren Suma

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Release Date: March 24, 2015
Source: Netgalley
Published by: Algonquin Young Readers

The Walls Around Us - Nova Ren Suma | Goodreads

“Ori’s dead because of what happened out behind the theater, in the tunnel made out of trees. She’s dead because she got sent to that place upstate, locked up with those monsters. And she got sent there because of me.”

The Walls Around Us is a ghostly story of suspense told in two voices—one still living and one long dead. On the outside, there’s Violet, an eighteen-year-old dancer days away from the life of her dreams when something threatens to expose the shocking truth of her achievement. On the inside, within the walls of a girls’ juvenile detention center, there’s Amber, locked up for so long she can’t imagine freedom. Tying these two worlds together is Orianna, who holds the key to unlocking all the girls’ darkest mysteries.

We hear Amber’s story and Violet’s, and through them Orianna’s, first from one angle, then from another, until gradually we begin to get the whole picture—which is not necessarily the one that either Amber or Violet wants us to see.

Nova Ren Suma tells a supernatural tale of guilt and innocence, and what happens when one is mistaken for the other.

The Walls around Us is one of the most beautifully written YA novels that I've read. The first chapter is electric, probably one of the best that I've read in years. Aside from this novel, Imaginary Girls is the only other Nova Ren Suma book that I’ve read, and I liked this better than Imaginary Girls. Maybe it was the grittiness, the actual shocking violence that brought me more into the scene than the reservoir of IG, but reading The Walls around Us made me feel like Nova Ren Suma has a very distinct yet consistent voice and if you liked IG, you will like this. Still both novels are not my last from her. Nova Ren Suma’s novels are unlike any other in YA. They are an experience, and her writing a dream. If you haven’t read something from her, you really should just for the experience.

The characters in this novel are easy to sympathize with, even when you know that they’ve done terrible things. Or have they? This novel balances between innocence and guilt to build its taut web of suspense: what really happened to Ori? What was the experience of the juvenile detention center girls, and were they all really and truly guilty of their accused crimes? What is Vi hiding? So many questions, and ultimately all the answers are tied up with Ori. Although we don’t get her perspective, she is easily the easiest character to root for in this novel because Nova Ren Suma does the impossible, giving Ori a voice through the voice of others as they tell their own stories. And even in the discussion of guilt and culpability, knowing of terrible crimes, I still managed to care about all of the characters in an Orange is the New Black sort of way, especially given how Amber emphasizes the community.

"Orange is the New Black Swan" seems like an accurate descriptor. I've watched a few episodes of Orange is the New Black, haven't read the book yet, but you do get the all female inmate community togetherness and viciousness. Black Swan, I haven't watched but that also seems accurate from what I've heard. This book is bloody ballerinas + girls juvenile detention center + mystery/suspense. Also, girl hate, girl love, girl loyalty - girls, girls, girls. This book is all about the girls and I loved it just for that. It almost feels like a tribute to girls in all our complexity. This is one of the elements that makes this book so unique (and so well couched in magical realism). I’d be happy to read more books with girls at the forefront.

The beautiful writing neatly balances the sharp build-up of suspense and atmosphere. Indeed this book has become one of my favorites for the writing alone, and I know that I’ll not be forgetting this magical realism tale any time soon.

February Recap

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Hi, everyone! I have a hard time keeping up with other blogs and booktube channels so let me make it easier for you and this blog / The Lushables channel. Below the cut you'll find a list of my blog posts and booktube videos if you're so inclined. Or, you can watch the video & click on any of the pictures to be taken to the post or video in question!


This month I reviewed on the blog:
This month I also posted about...
  • There are also a few giveaways, which you see in the sidebar to your right.
I kept up with my feature, Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds, which, on Wednesdays, goes over the latest young adult, middle grade, and new adult book related news:
  • How in God's green earth am I in the 70s for bookish rounds videos? If I'd posted them EVERY Wednesday, that makes for about 17 months, but I've also skipped a few, so what, am I on more than that? Have I been doing this feature for 1.5 years? WHUT WHUT WHUT.
In the above video, I solicited advice on:
  • Time management. HOW do you manage your time? When I did my January recap (video), I had so many more links. A discussion post every week and on my blog I was posting booktube videos and I was getting ready to comment on every single booktube channel and blog. WOAH, slow down there. About halfway through February, I went to this sort of career development advising session and they were talking about how you should know at least one programming language before moving onto your post-doc or applying to grad school and read 2 articles a week outside of those you read for class and save all your time when you're at work or school for research because time at home is meant for doing homework from your classes. Science is a lifestyle. And I started freaking out because all I could think was: HOW AM I EVER GOING TO DO EVERYTHING I WANT TO IN MY LIFE? Let's face it: blogging/reading is a hobby. It is the first thing that should go when I start to narrow down on my time. But I don't want to narrow down on it; I want to find better time management skills. Do you have any advice?
Things that I read this month:
  • Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith. Here is the review I typed on Goodreads:

    I've had a book hangover for the past couple of days because of Crown Duel.

    Once upon a time, I had a feature on my blog called "Christina Reads Your Recommendations."Small recommended this book and said: "It's like a fantasy Pride and Prejudice with an imperfect main character who grows throughout the book, a swoony slow burn hate-turned-love romance, and lots and lots of political intrigue. Since you liked Grave Mercy, Graceling, and P&P, I think you'll like this. It's one of my Special Shelf books."

    Small, I want to read all your Special Shelf books now. You recommended Megan Whalen Turner's Queen's Thief series to me, which I LOVED LOVED LOVED, and you recommended this to me and yaaaaaasssssss. Meliara/Vidranic forever! What little shipper heart I have is happy.
  • The Heart of Betrayal by Mary E. Pearson. You'll hear more about this title from me come April, when I review it. For now, here is my Goodreads stand-in review:

    This one is definitely more epic than the Kiss of Deception. Epic in the stakes, since I guess Kiss of Deception covered more ground between the countries. If you liked the deception, intrigue, and political games of The Kiss of Deception - and the implications of the second half of that book - then you'll definitely like The Heart of Betrayal. Would recommend this to fans of The Girl of Fire and Thorns, the Grisha trilogy (the Komizar reminds me a little of the Darkling and how he and Alina interacted), The Winner's Crime, and Finnikin of the Rock (Finnikin + Girl because of the quest-like elements, the religious backgrounds and stories influencing the world, and political intrigue). I'd say Megan Whalen Turner fans too, but I think MWT focused more on the individual characters (Gen, Attolia, Eddis, Sophos) than their countries whereas The Heart of Betrayal goes really in depth for the Vendan culture and general dynamics between Venda, Morrighan, and Dalbreck. That's what makes me think (about this book): good epic high fantasy. Also, if you were worried about the love triangle-ish elements of the first book, I'd say don't worry. Also, Lia is badass. Love her as a heroine and getting to see her adapt to her circumstances.
I am currently reading:
  • Shadow Scale by Rachel Hartman, which was on my 2015 Books that I'm Anticipating list. I am hoping to finish before next week so that y'all will have my review by the release date, March 10th... but I am super intimidated by this 600+ page book. I'm only about 16% into the Kindle version and it feels like I'm not moving in the Kindle version (the percentage that is). Blah! But the writing and world and characters are lovely.
  • Girl at Midnight - Melissa Grey, which was on my 2015 YA Debuts that I'm Anticipating list. I'm only about 5% into the book, but I like it. It's got a distinct third person voice that reminds me of a mix between The Mortal Instruments and Daughter of Smoke and Bone. Don't take my word on that yet though - 5% is nothing; I think that's just the prologue and first chapter...


Things I bought this month
:
  • Stories and Scenes from Mount Lebanon by Mahmoud Khalil Saab. I emailed my old Lebanese college professor and asked him if he knew more about Lebanese/Middle Eastern mythology than what you'd get in, say, 1001 Nights and the Qu'ran / Bible. One of the things he mentioned was a character who I'd never heard of before, so I googled. And found that character in this book, and this book looked to be right up my alley since I love reading about folklore. Add it to the pile of books I have on Lebanon!
and from the Strand...
Whenever I'm in the Strand, I pick up ~5-10+ books that I've heard good things about or wanted to read in the past. I put them all in my basket and sit on their benches and read the first few chapters. If I mesh with the writing style and like the synopsis and what it promises well enough, I'll get the book. Sometimes I have debate between books because maybe like seven books have interested me - well, what is a "later" book? What am I more in the mood for right now? etc. All of the above books have a fantastical or magical realism element to them, which is my style.

Things I received this month:

The February YA Buzz Books from HarperCollins:
Since I was just talking about having a difficult time managing my time blogging/reading vs. doing other things in my life, it is unlikely I will reading and reviewing these books. However, I will probably hold a giveaway for them. It is my blogoversary in March (this month!) and I've been blogging for four years (whuuuuuuut !!!!), so expect to see something soon enough on that end.

I'm leaving for Japan this Friday (!!!!!!!) for vacation and I'm hoping to schedule some blog posts (and videos!) for my absences in March (many days :O). Afterwards I'll hopefully have caught up on visiting the blogs that I've neglected these past two weeks despite the very kind comments y'all have continued to leave here. Oh, look, another outtake from the above video...

So, what have you been up to this month? What did you read and/or purchase to be read? What are you currently reading? What did you post about? Let me know how the month has gone for you!

Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds (75)

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Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds is a feature that will let you know about recent MG/YA/NA book related news. I'll post about articles from the publishing industry, cover reveals, discussions from fellow bloggers, the latest tv/movie news, and giveaways that you're hosting. If you would like to follow along with cover reveals during the week, see my Pinterest.

No book byte video this week as I posted my February recap + video!

Publishing:

The big book deal this week is Veronica Roth’s new series. She talks a bit about it to the AP here. Here’s the official press release. See below for the description...

Rights Report& another:
  • A two-book deal - Veronica Roth (In the untitled first novel of a duology in the vein of Star Wars, Roth explores the story of a boy who forms an alliance with an enemy, in an attempt to escape their oppressive lives. They help each other attain what they most desire: for one, redemption, and the other, revenge. The first book is scheduled for 2017. Katherine Tegen Books).
  • Summer Days & Summer Nights: Twelve Love Stories - Stephanie Perkins (YA anthology; a collection of 12 romantic tales of young summer love, which includes contributions from Leigh Bardugo, Francesca Lia Block, Libba Bray, Cassandra Clare, Nina LaCour, Veronica Roth, Jennifer E. Smith, among others. Publication is slated for summer 2016. St. Martin's). 
  • Little & Lion - Brandy Colbert (about a black and Jewish Los Angeles native dealing with the aftermath of her stepbrother's mental health crisis while navigating unexpected love. Publication is set for spring 2017. Little, Brown).
  • January - Caleb Roehrig (YA debut mystery; a thriller featuring LGBT themes pitched as “Thirteen Reasons Why meets Gone Girl.” In the novel, 15-year-old Flynn Doherty loves his girlfriend, January, yet he thinks he might be gay; when January abruptly goes missing, Flynn finds out he wasn't the only one keeping secrets. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016. Feiwel and Friends).
  • Stef Soto, Taco Queen - Jennifer Torres (a debut coming-of-age story about a 13-year-old Mexican-American girl who, embarrassed by her family's taco truck business, hopes to break free from her overprotective parents. Publication is slated for fall 2016. Little, Brown).
  • The Tin Snail - Cameron McAllister (MG novel based on a true story, in which a boy's father has an idea for an automobile that helps win WWII. Publication is slated for spring 2016. Delacorte).
  • Fighter Girl - Kathryn James (the story of a gypsy, who by day is the maid of honor planning her sister's extravagant wedding, and by night is a champion fighter who competes in dangerous matches against older boys. Publication is set for fall 2016. Month9Books).
  • Two untitled YA novels - Andrew Smith (The books are scheduled for publication in 2016 and 2017, respectively. Dutton).
  • Dressing the Part - Courtney Stevens (examines what it means to be feminine while at the same time camouflaged among the people you love. Publication is set for fall 2016; HarperCollins). 
  • Cloud and Wallfish - Anne Nesbet (MG novel about a Cold War-era boy whose ordinary life comes apart when he moves with his parents behind the Iron Curtain in East Berlin, where secrets abound and danger mounts ever higher. Publication is slated for fall 2016; Candlewick).
  • Hair in All the Wrong Places: The Perils of Growing Up Werewolf - Andrew Buckley (In the story, a boy wonders if he can control of the wolf inside himself and find out what's really going on in his strange town. Publication is slated for fall 2016; Month9Books).
  • History Is All You Left Me - Adam Silvera (Told from the perspective of OCD-afflicted 17-year-old Griffin, it chronicles the aftermath of the tragic drowning of his ex-boyfriend and first love, Theo. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016; Soho Teen).
  • Tru and Nelle - G. Neri (MG Novel a work of fiction inspired by the friendship between Truman Capote and Harper Lee, forged while growing up together in rural Alabama. Publication is set for spring 2016; HMH).
Publisher's Lunch:
  • Harriet Reuter Hapgood's debut THE SQUARE ROOT OF SUMMER, in which a seventeen-year-old physics prodigy navigates a summer of grief, world-stopping kisses and rips in the space-time continuum, as she tries to reconcile her first heartbreak with her last, to Roaring Brook Press for publication May 2016. Rights to Pocket Jeunesse in France; to Rizzoli in Italy; to Urano in Spain; to Intrinseca in Brazil.
  • Melissa Landers's untitled companion novel to STARFLIGHT, pitched as a romantic "Firefly" for teens, in which a displaced princess and her best-friend-with-benefits must solve the mystery surrounding the mass disappearance of intergalactic settlers, to Disney-Hyperion.
From last week:
  • Four-book series Commander in Cheese - Lindsey Leavitt (The stories are about a family of mice who live in the White House and whose adventures sometimes collide with the President, her family, and their cat. Publication of the first two books is scheduled for summer 2016; Random House).
  • Varmints - Andy Hirsch (MG graphic novel; a western adventure about two siblings and their dealings with the Criminal King of the West. Publication is scheduled for 2017; First Second).
Awards: a new Margaret Wise Brown prize. The Aurealis awards shortlist was announced.

Book Trailers: Little Miss Evil - Kristy Shen, Under a Painted Sky - Stacey Lee

Excerpts: The Wicked Will Rise - Danielle Paige, The Lost Herondale - Cassandra Clare & Robin Wasserman, Keep YA Weird sampler from Penguin, My Best Everything - Sara Tomp, Shift - Karen Atkins, Bonus chapter of Open Road Summer - Emery Lord

Interviews: Avi, Matthew Cordell, Alice Hoffman, Under a Painted Sky - Stacey Lee, NBC News with Dove Arising author Karen Bao, As White As Snow - Salla Simukka, Stone in the Sky - Cecil Castellucci, Garth Nix / Leigh Bardugo, & David Levithan, The Storyspinner - Becky Wallace

If you want to know more about the making of Red Queen and it becoming a bestseller, here’s a sort-of interview with Publisher’s Weekly.

Oops, so March 2 was Read Across America day apparently, but it sounds like it must have been successful.

They announced the BEA Buzz Books. For YA, they are: Dream Things True by Marie Marquardt, Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon, Nightfall by Jake Halpern and Peter Kujawinski, The Death And Life Of Zebulon Finch, Volume 1: At The Edge Of Empire by Daniel Kraus, & This Raging Light by Estelle Laure.

A brief recap of author and industry events last week.

I love Publisher Weekly’s little feature focus on certain bookstores and what’s selling well for them.

What’s it like for an author to open up a bookstore? Something that might help indie bookstores in the future are sponsorships. For now they seem okay, but we’ve still lost a bunch over the years...

You remember the fortuitous news last week that Egmont USA’s titles would be acquired by Lerner? Here are the reactions from some Egmont authors (shame about Ilsa Bick’s Dickens Mirror situation…).

People who claim that YA is so often only for “girls” or marketed towards girls… my god, some people take this really far and choose not to allow boys at an author’s NON GENDERED school presentation because they don’t think boys would be interested in those books. SERIOUSLY?!? Blahhhh. I really have nothing to say on this front because it just makes me turn into a basket case of frustration with the world. But here’s an excellent compilation of what other authors had to say. I mean, geez, look at this other lady’s response.

Publishers are looking at Youtube. I was wondering when an article like this would come out after everything with Zoe Sugg.

What. The Polish publishers of Red Queen had a band sing a song about the book.

Not surprising when children’s publishing is still going strong and expanding.

Check out the trailer for YALLWEST. I wish it were a week earlier, when I’ll actually be in California… am now kinda considering still flying back the next weekend o.O (but that’s crazy and probably won’t happen).

If you’re a TMI fan, Jack Dalahee will be narrating the Lost Herondale by Cassandra Clare & Robin Wasserman.

What are the most popular children’s books in the UK? Some are from Cassandra Clare…

Look at the beautiful poster created by Grace Lee for Children’s Book Week (May 4-10)!

Omg. Remind me to never look at comments again, please? You remember that video last week from Hermione being the main character of Harry Potter? I just wanted to make sure this link was in fact going to the same video… And then, here’s a gem: “Feminism" is no more for equality than "Meninsm". Consider yourself corrected.Feminism is the advocation of women's rights on the basis of equality. Seeing as women LITERALLY HAVE MORE rights socially and ENSCIRBED IN LAW, the only thing feminism could do for equality is removal of women's rights.” Somebody shoot me now. But, anyway, here is the new article I was looking for: 21 Times Tumblr Knew Hermione Was The Best Character in “Harry Potter.” Plus 12 reasons why you should try to be more like Luna.

A new YA imprint from Interlude, a LGBTQ boutique.

Only seeing this now, but Scholastic a month or so back studied the most powerful predictors of what makes a frequent reader. Do the results surprise you?

If you’re curious about literary starred reviews, here’s how books being pubbed in 2015 are faring so far for # of starred reviews.

A new J.K. Rowling bibliography…. with 544 pages of Harry Potter secrets? o.O

Can I say how much I love this trend of using Storify to cover twitter chats you might have missed? Here’s one with WNDB and African-American authors in honor of Black History month.

Cool pre-order campaign going on for All the Rage. Pre-order it and receive one of Courtney Summer’s backlist titles.

A new Stephen King short story for those interested...

B&N Will Separate College from Trade, Nook Units (In a bit of a surprise move, Barnes & Noble announced today that it plans to separate its college business from its retail trade stores and Nook digital business.)

The 2015 Youth Media Awards: A Crossover Year for Diversity

Cover Reveals:
Young Adult Cover Reveals
New Adult Cover Reveals

Little, Brown is asking for help: which of these two covers for Jennifer E. Smith’s new short do you prefer?

Discussion/Other Blogger Posts:

Epic Reads has come up with another cool infographic, this time on “Royal Reads.”

Have you ever felt like this when you’ve had nothing to read?

The power of book clubs: How a book club is helping to keep ex-offenders out from going back to jail.

A map of literary genres! Looks like Epic Reads isn’t the only one coming up with amazing infographics.

The ladies of science fiction.

Bookstores, bookstores, love love love looking at these pictures. Always.

Not a piece on why print books > ebooks but on why print books matter.

22 Contemporary Writers Not to Be Missed - I fully intend on reading Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s work one day; listened to two TED talks from her and she’s brilliant.

If you’re a gamer or looking to recommend books to gamers, here are some suggestions.

Ah, so some people have commented on there having been a lot of books published about suicide in January/February… but as Cynthia Hand says, we must break the silence on mental health.

Has someone ever told you that “it’s just a book?” WELL THEY’RE WRONG.

THR reports on some of its anticipated, hot YA for the spring.

And Bustle reports on 17 of its favorite YA reads from March. (YAY for YA everywhere!)

15 YA reads that “get it right” -- on a particular topic. The Raven Boys is mentioned for its portrayal of living through abuse. Check out the other examples.

Plus 8 diverse YA fantasies. Ahhh can’t wait for Ember + Wrath. I’m now curious about Shadowshaper too...

The 8 Essential Kinds of Books Kids Should Own - I definitely like the idea of “type” books versus the usual lists trying to dictate which classics are the best, etc.

Meanwhile, lol, here’s a survey from the UK that discusses the 50 books kids should read by the time they’re 16.

On Gender, Books, and Children. Definitely mean to look at this & the YMG article in Publishing later…

Top Ten Bad Boys in YA Literature: do you agree? I don’t know that I’d ever thought of Snape as a bad boy…

Oh, look, two never before seen fairy tales! And do you think that these ten fairy tales should get more love?

If you’re a new fan of the DUFF and want a guide to how Kody’s books are organized, here’s a guide to Hamilton High School.

Oh, the charms of misfit kid lit. (I didn’t know there’d been a film of Diary of a Wimpy Kid…)

IF you’re a Neil Gaiman fan, here are six other recommendations you ought to try.

What would happen if YA books could predict the future? (#we’dallbescrewed)

Blogger discussions to come!

Movies/TV Shows:

Last week the final trailer for Insurgent, “Stand Together,” was released. They also released stills of character silhouettes: Octavia Spencer, Miles Teller, Ansel Elgort, someone, Zoe Kravitz, another someone, Four, Tris, and Max. I can’t tell who those other two are. Probably Kate Winslet and Naomi Watts.

Stone Village acquired the rights for Circus Mirandus.

New Line has optioned Gayle Forman’s latest novel, I Was Here.

And Sony has optioned the rights to Breaking Sky.

The writing duo behind The Fault in Our Stars is joining up to do the adaptation of Looking for Alaska.

The Mortal Instruments television show will be called Shadowhunters.

Giveaways:

Adventures in Children's Publishing giveaways: 03/08, 03/08, 03/30

Giveaways listed at Saturday Situation by Lori of Pure Imagination and Candace of Candace's Book Blog.

Don't forget to enter YABC's giveaways for the month.

Sci-fi and Fantasy Friday {SF/F Reviews and Giveaways}.

Kindle Paperwhite + Some Fine Day by Kat Ross, US only, ends 03/07.

Win your height in books from Harlequin Teen! Ends 03/09.

If you have a giveaway, you should let me know. NGL, this is the least important section to me.

Other:

New ReleasesThe Winner's Crime (Winner's Trilogy #2) by Marie RutkoskiMosquitoland by David ArnoldNot Otherwise Specified by Hannah MoskowitzBone Gap by Laura RubyThe Storyspinner (Keeper's Chronicle #1) by Becky WallaceDeath Marked (Sworn #2) by Leah CypressBreaking Sky by Cori McCarthyRazorhurst by Justine LarbalestierThe Dead I Know by Scot GardnerMy Best Everything by Sarah TompKin (Tales of Beauty and Madness #3) by Lili St. CrowPositively Beautiful by Wendy Mills, Dead to Me by Mary McCoyCharisma by Jeanne RyanHow to Win at High School by Owen MatthewsThe Memory Key by Liana LiuThe Dark Water (Wells End #2) by Seth FishmanDeviate (Light Key #2) by Tracy ClarkTerminal (Virals #5) by Kathy and Brendan ReichsThe Tragic Age by Stephen MetcalfeAn Uncertain Choice by Jody HedlundSeason of Fire by Lisa T Bergen.

Recent Recommended Reads: You can read my reviews of The Walls Around Us by Nova Ren Suma& Stone in the Sky by Cecil Castellucci. Or, if you’re really interested, you can look at my February recap post because that’ll have all my recommended reads, including the ones I didn’t write reviews for.

Also, I’m behind on replying to comments / visiting blogs, so don’t think I’m ignoring you. I’m not. I’m definitely planning on getting to them tonight or tomorrow.

Which articles did you like best? Did I miss any news? Did you host a cover reveal or discussion that I should have posted about? A giveaway? Leave the links, and I'll either edit this post or post about 'em next week.

Giveaway: The Cake House by Latifah Salom

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I have something special for y'all today! A giveaway of The Cake House by Latifah Salom, a loose retelling of Hamlet in Los Angeles. Having lived in Los Angeles for the majority of my life and studied Hamlet in school for quite a bit, I naturally found myself really intrigued by Latifah Salom's debut. I can't wait to read it and I'm so happy to share the opportunity to win this book with you too.

THE CAKE HOUSE by Latifah Salom (being published as a Vintage Paperback Original on March 3): hailed by Janet Finch (White Oleander) as an “accomplished, mesmerizing debut,” THE CAKE HOUSE is a charged blend of coming-of-age and mystery.

Release Date: March 3, 2015
Published by: Vintage

The Cake House - Latifah Salom | Goodreads

Part mystery, part compelling coming-of-age tale, The Cake House is a riveting debut novel that re-imagines the classic story of Hamlet amidst the hills of suburban Los Angeles.

Rosaura Douglas’s father shot himself after her mother left him . . . or at least that's the story everyone is telling. Now her mother has remarried and Rosie is trapped in “The Cake House,” a garish pink edifice in the hills of Los Angeles that's a far cry from the cramped apartment where she grew up. It’s also the house where her father died—a fact that everyone else who lives there, including her mother, Dahlia, and her mysteriously wealthy stepfather, Claude, want to forget.

Soon, however, her father’s ghost appears, sometimes in a dark window, sometimes in the house’s lush garden, but always with warnings that Claude is not to be trusted. And as the ghost becomes increasingly violent—and the secrets of her family’s past come to light—Rosie must finally face the truth behind the losses and lies that have torn her life apart.


Now, you thought that looked interesting. Wait until you read the PRAISE.

“Evocative . . . Salom’s writing is atmospheric, and her conjuring of the many shadows of Los Angeles provides the perfect backdrop.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Tense, shocking, and seductively dark, The Cake House is a brand-new twist on a classic story—an urban reinvention of a Shakespearean tale.” —Rebecca Coleman, bestselling author of The Kingdom of Childhood 

“Reading The Cake House, I vividly saw the whole edifice rising up before me, latticework covering a multitude of sins. A wonderful, chewy, complicated book that doesn't flinch from danger or pain but rejects despair.” —Naomi Novik, author of the bestselling Temeraire series

“The Cake House is a gem of a novel: a mystery wrapped in a cloak of family dysfunction with subtle Shakespearean trim. . . . Rosaura is a heroine with spunk and a vulnerability so endearing I missed her the second I closed the book. Salom has written a dazzling coming-of-age tale that will resonate long after you reach the end.” —Elizabeth Flock, New York Times bestselling author of Me & Emma and What Happened To My Sister

About the author:

Latifah Salom was born in Hollywood, California to parents of Peruvian and Mexican descent. As a teenager she attended the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, and she holds degrees from Emerson College, Hunter College, and from the University of Southern California’s Masters of Professional Writing program. She currently lives in Los Angeles.

My Reading Tastes & Experiences

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Back in December, when my book club was getting gifts for each other for the holidays, one of the members said something like, "You were the only one who chose literary type books for your list!"

For the record, my list was:

"1. Brown Girl Dreaming by Jacqueline Woodson
2. Crown Duel by Sherwood Smith
3. Isla and the Happily Ever After by Stephanie Perkins (Already read, but gave my copy to a friend, and basically I've just had it on my list to repurchase at some point).
4. The Book of Sand & Shakespeare's Memory by Jorge Luis Borges
5. The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer

If people find those too weird, Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel or Earth Girl by Janet Edwards."

But she was not wrong. My reading tastes are... dissimilar to most bloggers, it seems.

I think the first way in which I feel kind of different from most YA bloggers is that I don't fangirl.

When I love a book, I'll post about it a few times. In round-ups, books to anticipate sort of lists. But when I think of fangirling, I think of... how to explain? SO MUCH EXCITEMENT (polandbananabooks, aka Christine, is awesome to watch & one of the first people I would think of). I do use all caps but then I'll record a video and I'll still sound like me, lower case. I don't think I'm really explaining what fangirling means to me very well, but examples of this remind me of the Throne of Glass fandom and the Lunar Chronicles fandom. I really like both books and series, but I'm not in love with them in the way of many other bloggers. Can I pinpoint a specific thing that separates my love for those books and my LOVE for the Queen's Thief series?

I don't know. But I also think that it's me and my personality too. I'm a pretty happy and easy to amuse person. My baseline is pretty happy. It would probably take A LOT for me to make me uber happy and fangirl in the way of Christine (my almost name-twin). That's not a bad thing - for either of us. Just a thing. And I might not have explained that well either *wrings hands*.

And anyway, this feeds into what books I choose to read. There are some books that are fairly popular in the blogosphere. These I avoid. The more popular a book, the more I kind of want to avoid it. It's not just the hype, it's that I've grown to distrust popularity as a reason to read a book. I know people will want to shame you -- oh, I can't believe you haven't read X and X yet -- and I'll say the same thing, but on a sliding scale of factors that are most important to me, reading the books that everyone else has ranks really, really low. More and more often I feel like there are so many books out there that I've missed out on because I've only been blogging since 2011 and YA books have been around for MANY more years, of course.

But the thing that makes me feel the weirdest as a blogger is how well my tastes align with Kirkus Reviews. When Sam of Realm of Fiction used to blog, we'd have pretty similar tastes. Maybe 75%? I think that sometimes our scale of how much we liked / disliked elements differed - so while I really liked The Bone Season, she was more middling about it. But Sam stopped blogging, and I no longer had her to compare books with. And I began to rely a lot on Kirkus, and buy more "literary" books.

It's really strange for a blogger to flat out admit to trusting a literary journal's perspective (and a little disturbing, given what Malinda Lo highlighted about literary book reviews and diverse books; I sincerely hope those assumptions have not factored into my choice of books). I've seen many bloggers say that they don't understand why a book is so loved in literary journals. Often the books that get the most stars are the ones with the lowest ratings on Goodreads.

But, I don't always agree with them. Take the Made You Up review. Whoever reviewed MYU read it on a very surface level, in my opinion. I loved that book and the criticisms in that review made me really dumbfounded - like what and how did this happen? So about 90% of the time, I might agree with KR. Take the review for My Life Next Door. With that review I knew exactly what I was getting when I bought the book and I liked it just for that. It's always a combination of reading the Kirkus review, the synopsis for the book, an excerpt of the writing style, and sometimes other blogger reviews. But it always makes me feel a little guilty to look at Kirkus, because they're known to be the harshest literary journal and writers frequently complain about their Kirkus review. And thinking of the way I choose my books and what few bloggerly things I do (another post for another day) makes me feel less and less like a "true" blogger. Sometimes thinking about my reading tastes and how I choose what books to read makes me wonder whether my reviews are actually even helpful to the majority of the community. Would a teen even care about literary reviews?

Have you ever had moments when your reading tastes and experiences feel so different from the community's that you start to doubt yourself? How do you choose which books you read? Have you ever relied on literary journals or thought that your reading tastes were strange?

4 Year Blogoversary Giveaway

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Guess what?

I've been blogging for about four years now.

WHAAAAAAAT.

Okay, so I don't know the exact date because I remember deleting some of my very first posts (I mean, c'mon, who doesn't get embarrassed by their earlier work?)... buuuut I know that I started blogging in March and we're here to celebrate!


First I'd like to thank all of you for being so wonderful <3. Readers, friends. There's no doubt that I would not have continued all these years were it not for the community and you wonderful, wonderful people. Thanks!

Second let's hope it's "four years and counting." I have no plans to quit any time soon, but I do wonder whether I'll be able to keep up with blogging if I get accepted into graduate school.

Third let's not dwell on those sad things. Let's celebrate!

I posted about the February YA Buzz Books from HarperCollins in my February Recap.


All That Burns by Ryan Graudin | Goodreads
Release Date: February 10, 2015
Published by: HarperTeen

In this thrilling sequel to All That Glows, the worlds of magic and mortal are colliding as London celebrates its new king, marking an era of unity between the Faery realm and the human one. Emrys, the Faery guard to the British royal family, sacrificed her powers to be with King Richard, choosing love over immortality. But now, as Emrys struggles to navigate her place between the Faery queen’s court and London’s lavish galas, danger looms beyond the Thames.When a prisoner with dark, strange magic breaks out of Queen Titania’s labyrinthine prison, endangering Emrys's king and sparking an uprising, Emrys must make the hardest decision of all.

Will she reclaim her magic to save Richard’s life and lose him forever? Or stay powerless as the kingdom goes down in flames?

Unleashed by Sophie Jordan | Goodreads
Release Date: February 24, 2015
Published by: HarperTeen


Unleashed, the romantic, high-stakes sequel to New York Times bestselling author Sophie Jordan's Uninvited, is perfect for fans of James Patterson's Confessions of a Murder Suspect.


Davy has spent the last few months trying to come to terms with the fact that she tested positive for the kill gene HTS (also known as Homicidal Tendency Syndrome). She swore she would not let it change her, and that her DNA did not define her . . . but then she killed a man.

Now on the run, Davy must decide whether she'll be ruled by the kill gene or if she'll follow her heart and fight for her right to live free. But with her own potential for violence lying right beneath the surface, Davy doesn't even know if she can trust herself.


No Parking at the End Times by Bryan Bliss | Goodreads
Release Date: February 24, 2015
Published by: Greenwillow Books

Abigail’s parents have made mistake after mistake, and now they've lost everything. She’s left to decide: Does she still believe in them? Or is it time to believe in herself? Fans of Sara Zarr, David Levithan, and Rainbow Rowell will connect with this moving debut.

Abigail doesn't know how her dad found Brother John. Maybe it was the billboards. Or the radio. What she does know is that he never should have made that first donation. Or the next, or the next. Her parents shouldn't have sold their house. Or packed Abigail and her twin brother, Aaron, into their old van to drive across the country to San Francisco, to be there with Brother John for the "end of the world." Because of course the end didn't come. And now they're living in their van. And Aaron’s disappearing to who-knows-where every night. Their family is falling apart. All Abigail wants is to hold them together, to get them back to the place where things were right. But maybe it’s too big a task for one teenage girl. Bryan Bliss’s thoughtful, literary debut novel is about losing everything—and about what you will do for the people you love.


Better than Perfect by Melissa Kantor | Goodreads
Release Date: February 17, 2015
Published by: HarperTeen


Juliet Newman has it all. A picture-perfect family; a handsome, loving boyfriend; and a foolproof life plan: ace her SATs, get accepted into Harvard early decision, and live happily ever after.


But when her dad moves out and her mom loses it, Juliet begins questioning the rules she’s always lived by. And to make everything even more complicated there’s Declan, the gorgeous boy who makes her feel alive and spontaneous—and who’s totally off-limits. Torn between the life she always thought she wanted and one she never knew was possible, Juliet begins to wonder: What if perfect isn't all it’s cracked up to be?

Melissa Kantor once again delivers a tale that is equal parts surprising, humorous, heartbreaking, and romantic. Powerful and honest, Juliet’s story brilliantly portrays the highs and lows of life in high school and will resonate with any reader who has experienced either.


This is for US readers only.
Sorry, but with the amount of shipping I'll be doing in this post, I need to cut back somewhere.
Ends 04/15.


And we have some other ARCs.

So, funny story. In the summer or fall of 2014 (? don't remember - it was a WHILE ago), Francesca Zappia, author of Made You Up, asked me whether I wanted to be put on her ARC spreadsheet. I said sure. I was definitely going to read and purchase MYU no matter what, so why not read the ARC and post a review to help promote her novel? But the time passed and passed. I saw some other people with Chessie's physical ARCs. So I downloaded MYU from Edelweiss, read the e-ARC, and posted my very lengthy Goodreads review. I basically assumed that I wasn't going to get an ARC, and then the first week of March, this arrives.


Wait... what??? Now I'm wondering whether me being on Chessie's list was the reason why I'd received the YA Buzz Books from HarperCollins. No idea but now I've got some other ARCs to give away to y'all as well.

And yes.

You really, really, really want to read Made You Up. It's fantastic.

Which is why I'm posting about Made You Up but withholding a giveaway for that ARC until my interview with Chessie later this month :).

Conspiracy of Blood and Smoke by Anne Blankman | Goodreads
Release Date: April 21, 2015
Published by: Balzer + Bray

The girl known as Gretchen Whitestone has a secret: She used to be part of Adolf Hitler’s inner circle. More than a year after she made an enemy of her old family friend and fled Munich, she lives with a kindly English family, posing as an ordinary German immigrant, and is preparing to graduate from high school. Her love, Daniel Cohen, is a reporter in town. For the first time in her life, Gretchen is content.

But then, Daniel gets a telegram that sends him back to Germany, and Gretchen’s world turns upside-down. And when she receives word that Daniel is wanted for murder, she has to face the danger she thought she’d escaped-and return to her homeland.

Gretchen must do everything she can to avoid capture and recognition, even though saving Daniel will mean consorting with her former friends, the Nazi elite. And as they work to clear Daniel’s name, Gretchen and Daniel discover a deadly conspiracy stretching from the slums of Berlin to the Reichstag itself. Can they dig up the explosive truth and get out in time-or will Hitler discover them first?


Made You Up by Francesca Zappia | Goodreads
Release Date: May 19, 2015
Published by: Greenwillow Books


Reality, it turns out, is often not what you perceive it to be—sometimes, there really is someone out to get you. Made You Up tells the story of Alex, a high school senior unable to tell the difference between real life and delusion. This is a compelling and provoking literary debut that will appeal to fans of Wes Anderson, Silver Linings Playbook, and Liar.

Alex fights a daily battle to figure out the difference between reality and delusion. Armed with a take-no-prisoners attitude, her camera, a Magic 8-Ball, and her only ally (her little sister), Alex wages a war against her schizophrenia, determined to stay sane long enough to get into college. She’s pretty optimistic about her chances until classes begin, and she runs into Miles. Didn't she imagine him? Before she knows it, Alex is making friends, going to parties, falling in love, and experiencing all the usual rites of passage for teenagers. But Alex is used to being crazy. She’s not prepared for normal. 

Funny, provoking, and ultimately moving, this debut novel featuring the quintessential unreliable narrator will have readers turning the pages and trying to figure out what is real and what is made up.


Lies I Told by Michelle Zink | Goodreads
Release Date: April 7, 2015
Published by: HarperTeen

What if, after spending a lifetime deceiving everyone around you, you discovered the biggest lies were the ones you've told yourself?

Grace Fontaine has everything: beauty, money, confidence, and the perfect family.

But it’s all a lie.

Grace has been adopted into a family of thieves who con affluent people out of money, jewelry, art, and anything else of value. Grace has never had any difficulty pulling off a job, but when things start to go wrong on the Fontaines' biggest heist yet, Grace finds herself breaking more and more of the rules designed to keep her from getting caught...including the most important one of all: never fall for your mark.

Perfect for fans of Ally Carter, Cecily von Ziegesar, and Gail Carriger, this thrilling, high-stakes novel deftly explores the roles of identity and loyalty while offering a window into the world of the rich and fabulous.


Encore to an Empty Room by Kevin Emerson | Goodreads
Release Date: April 28, 2015
Published by: Katherine Tegen


Summer always wanted Dangerheart—the band of talented exiles she manages—to find success. Now that they've become an overnight sensation, her hard work is really starting to pay off.

So how come her life seems to be snapping like an old guitar string?

Maybe it's because part of her knows that college applications are due soon, but another part of her can't imagine leaving her life behind—especially when the band is on the verge of a record deal and her relationship is becoming something more than she ever dreamed of. And especially when there's a chance of finding another missing song written by the famous dead rocker who is also Caleb's father.

But are Caleb, the band's future, and the lost songs more important than college? Summer will have to decide. It's time to choose who she wants to be, even if that might mean kissing Caleb good-bye.

Filled with infectious music, mystery, and romance, this electrifying sequel to Kevin Emerson's Exile doesn't miss a beat.


This giveaway is for US & INT readers.
Help spread the word for these yet-to-be-released books!
Ends 04/15.


And that's it! I'd love it if you gave me feedback on my blog and booktube channel. What do y'all think? I've been considering getting rid of book byte videos. That's an extra couple of hours, and they seem to be the least popular videos on the channel... What posts do you like here? Dislike? What do you want to see more of? Same goes for videos.

Thanks again! :) :) :) have a great day.

Review: Shadow Scale - Rachel Hartman

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Release Date: March 10th, 2015
Source: Netgalley
Published by: Random House

Shadow Scale - Rachel Hartman | Goodreads

Seraphina took the literary world by storm with 8 starred reviews and numerous “Best of” lists. At last, her eagerly awaited sequel has arrived—and with it comes an epic battle between humans and dragons.

The kingdom of Goredd: a world where humans and dragons share life with an uneasy balance, and those few who are both human and dragon must hide the truth. Seraphina is one of these, part girl, part dragon, who is reluctantly drawn into the politics of her world. When war breaks out between the dragons and humans, she must travel the lands to find those like herself—for she has an inexplicable connection to all of them, and together they will be able to fight the dragons in powerful, magical ways.

As Seraphina gathers this motley crew, she is pursued by humans who want to stop her. But the most terrifying is another half dragon, who can creep into people’s minds and take them over. Until now, Seraphina has kept her mind safe from intruders, but that also means she’s held back her own gift. It is time to make a choice: Cling to the safety of her old life, or embrace a powerful new destiny?

There's no doubt that Shadow Scale is one of the best books I've read this year. It has a depth that you can sense even at the surface; while reading, I consistently found myself smiling at Rachel Hartman's use of metaphors but even if you don't read with metaphors in mind, her use and development of symbols, her themes and characters and plot arcs - they're all so wonderfully worked into the story. Essentially I know that I'm in the hands of a master storyteller and I think that reading at a surface -- or deeper -- level highlights this fact.

While reading, I also found myself enamored of the discussion between logic and emotion -- relevant to how humans and dragons govern themselves. There have been many young adult books that to me, never seem to get farther than saying something akin to "emotion is important to acknoledge," and I never quite understand why emotion crops up so frequently in YA books as a theme/discussion topic. The intensity of youth? None (to me) have transcended such discussion except for Seraphina and Shadow Scale. I LOVE what Rachel Hartman has done here and quite honestly there are no other YA books out there like hers. I was trying to think of comparisons and I couldn't come up with many. If you liked the religious elements on the Grisha trilogy and wanted them to be more expanded upon; the character focus / hero's journey epic of Kristin Cashore's novels; the older fantasy writing styles akin to Robin McKinley's The Hero and the Crown but in a first person perspective you should try out Seraphina and Shadow Scale. If you are a fan of high fantasy you should DEFINITELY read these books.

The world-building is absolutely phenomenal. This book makes the duology much more epic. Seraphina gets to travel across all the countries in the wake of pending war and Rachel Hartman does an amazing job developing the various cultures and attitudes of each country. Characters from each country we understand better because we know more of the countries; and they clearly belong to their respective cultures. The races of dragons, humans, and half-dragons are just as well developed and the characters are lovable and easy to distinguish from one another. Such a larger character cast -- and yet Rachel Hartman makes it seem effortless! Seraphina's own character development was so well woven into the various plot arcs. This book, y'all...

That's not to say Shadow Scale didn't have its flaws. I put it down several times in the beginning because I didn't feel a sense of urgency or maybe connection; that came along with the plot twists. Seraphina's voice is very dry and sometimes distant, which makes it harder for me to connect even in this first person narrative, and yet aside from my moments of silliness, I think that I'm a lot like her -- which you would think would help connect me to the story, but I wonder if that contributed to my boredom at the beginning. I also misjudged the need to reread Seraphina before reading this book. I read the Recaptains recap and Shadow Scale starts with a recap of Seraphina, but I think that rereading would have definitely helped me connect to the story more.

Despite that paragraph, there's no doubt in my mind that Shadow Scale being a wonderfully written masterpiece. Highly recommended to any and all who are interested in Seraphina / high fantasy and/or loved Seraphina.

Being Terrible at Reading Lists

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Do you make lists for what you're going to read in the upcoming year? Do you do challenges?

I must say, I try not to do challenges because I feel too pressured when I do. But I always make lists as ways of "promoting" various upcoming titles... but whenever I look more closely into how much I read of those lists...

Well, it's a little disappointing.

My first list was from a video of the 15 TBR books that I was going to read in 2015. It featured:
In two months, how many have I read from this list?

One: The Boyfriend List. If there are 15 books on that list and 12 months in a year, I have to read at least a book a month. Clearly I'm already behind here. I do have plans to read Chime by Franny Billingsley with Lyn from Great Imaginations. But I'm still behind according to this.

Another list I made was of the Top Ten / Eleven YA Debuts I Was Looking Forward to Reading.
Okay, this list I'm doing maybe a little bit better on? At the time that I'm writing this post (early March), I'm currently reading The Girl at Midnight... and an author friend said that she would lend me her copy of An Ember in the Ashes. So maybe better??? Or the exact same.

And my last list was of the 14 Books Being Released in 2015 That I Wanted to Read:
At the time that I write this, I'm currently reading Shadow Scale. I can't really fault myself for being terrible at following through with this list since so many of them have not even been released yet (whereas debuts need a lot more publicity and/or have actually have ARCs vs. say, Winter & my TBR books are definitely already out).

But, let's look at the book that is out even now. The Ruby Circle. I haven't even ordered my copy yet. With the points I earn from using my credit/debit card, I choose to get the $25 Barnes & Noble gift certificate. By using my points for that and forcing myself to wait until I have that gift card, I'm helping to curb my book buying habits (#budgettips). So, I have that card and some weeks ago, I went to the B&N site and put Ruby Circle and The Glass Sentence - which I read last year and LOVED - into my cart. I was three cents away from a $25 total, which means you get free shipping.

And then I was like: well, that's just annoying. I'll wait a few days to see if one of them increases in price. THREE CENTS PEOPLE. It was a matter of principle.

Then I forgot about the book for like two weeks.

And The Ruby Circle went down by like 3 dollars when you no longer had to pre-order it and it was available everywhere (I wonder why -- is there some law that says pre-orders are so much more expensive than when the book actually releases?). So then nothing I did was going to get to that even $25. I considered buying two books from my "saved-later" cart to reach that goal but then thought c'mon, seriously? Three books all together? Like you're going to actually read all of them right when they arrive. Apparently I have better impulse control for online buying than when I'm actually in the store (e.g. see my Instagram account and book hauls from the Strand). So then I turned to the other pre-orders in my cart (e.g. The Wrath and the Dawn, on said above list), and they fit the $25 combination requirement with The Ruby Circle, but you have to bundle your books for free shipping and that means The Ruby Circle wouldn't arrive until the release date of that other pre-order and I was like hugngggghhh I'll wait.

WHY DO I MAKE NO SENSE. I sabotage my own attempts to finish reading the books on my lists.

But, okay, let's say that I count the books I'm currently reading and I've planned a read-along for and the couple I've read. That's FIVE books out of 40. Hahahahahahahaha. And we'll assume, too, for fairness that that is my record for 3 months. At this rate, I'm looking at a 50% completion rate.

YAY! I suck at following through with reading lists.

Being a mood reader sometimes really gets in the way of having concrete plans. (*sigh* but also #firstworldproblems).

Have you made lists of books that you're going to read this year? Are you following your challenge plans? Or are you like me, making them but not great at following through?

Review: Magonia - Maria Dahvana Headley

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Release Date: April 28, 2015
Source: Edelweiss
Published by: HarperCollins

Magonia - Maria Dahvana Headley | Goodreads

Maria Dahvana Headley's soaring YA debut is a fiercely intelligent, multilayered fantasy where Neil Gaiman's Stardust meets John Green'sThe Fault in Our Stars in a story about a girl caught between two worlds . . . two races . . . and two destinies.

Aza Ray Boyle is drowning in thin air. Since she was a baby, Aza has suffered from a mysterious lung disease that makes it ever harder for her to breathe, to speak—to live. So when Aza catches a glimpse of a ship in the sky, her family chalks it up to a cruel side effect of her medication. But Aza doesn't think this is a hallucination. She can hear someone on the ship calling her name.

Only her best friend, Jason, listens. Jason, who's always been there. Jason, for whom she might have more-than-friendly feelings. But before Aza can consider that thrilling idea, something goes terribly wrong. Aza is lost to our world—and found, by another. Magonia.

Above the clouds, in a land of trading ships, Aza is not the weak and dying thing she was. In Magonia, she can breathe for the first time. Better, she has immense power—but as she navigates her new life, she discovers that war between Magonia and Earth is coming. In Aza's hands lies fate of the whole of humanity—including the boy who loves her. Where do her loyalties lie?



You can see my original thoughts on this book in this post.

Magonia is different from most YA (urban) fantasies when you consider how the story is told: through alternating first person present perspectives. Both the voices of Asa and Jason, the main characters, feel fresh -- I know, this is a common compliment for any story with a hint of contemporary realism, but I can't tell you how many novels where I've learned about random facts from the teenager MCs. Probably very few aside from Magonia. These two characters have the super intelligence that reminds me of a John Green novel; they're fascinated with knowledge and their banter is witty to boot, though they still feel realistic and down-to-earth, probably because of Asa's sickness and impending death. Both voices also have their own self-deprecating and quirky humor to liven the story, which is much appreciated with a storyline that, at least as a subplot, focuses on the main character's sickness. The writing complements the character voices because the story is told in a lyrical, easy to read style that matches Aza and Jason's quirks, and the intricacies of their friendship-maybe-romance.

Although this story is more a blend of contemporary realism and elements of high fantasy than urban fantasy, I have still dubbed it YA urban fantasy because there are pockets of the fantastical intruding upon on the real; and the plotline reminds me a lot of The Mortal Instruments in that sense, where things are not quite what they seem and the MC will have to charge through to understand her unique powers and destiny in a whole new world even while we still get to see *our* world. The very sick storyline and the self-deprecating and quirky humor remind me of The Fault in Our Stars as well as the nature of Aza and Jason's characters and their romance, which the blurb hints at. I haven't read anything by Neil Gaiman yet, so I can't comment on that comparison, but I've heard about Stardust as a film, and I'd agree that this book would look as visually stunning on film as it is to read aloud. This is, in part, due to the original world that Maria Headley has created.

If you've ever been tired of the same concepts being used (e.g. retellings of the same story, like Beauty and the Beast, without editing much of it; or paranormal creatures without an extensive backstory), Magonia is your novel. Magonia is based off a French Medieval myth about sky sailors. There are a lot of medieval myths about hybrid creatures, so there are a lot of new creatures that you'll get to read about in Magonia, too, as Maria Headley has her fun creating them. It's a really awesome world to get to picture, full of song and sky pirates and creatures like sky sharks, all of which, as I said earlier, would make for a rather cinematic movie. So, ask yourself this question: does sky pirates + lyrical writing + the plotting of Mortal Instruments/a YA urban fantasy novel + the sick storyline, humor, and intelligent, quirky characters of The Fault in Our Stars appeal to you? If yes, check out Magonia ASAP.

Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds (76)

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Christina Makes the Bookish Rounds is a feature that will let you know about recent MG/YA/NA book related news. I'll post about articles from the publishing industry, cover reveals, discussions from fellow bloggers, the latest tv/movie news, and giveaways that you're hosting. If you would like to follow along with cover reveals during the week, see my Pinterest.

Two weeks worth & long!

Publishing:
Rights Report 1, 2, 3:
  • The Epic Fail of Arturo Zamora - Pablo Cartaya (MG novel tells the story of a seventh-grader trying to save his late abuela's restaurant and win the affection of the beautiful Carmen using arroz con pollo and a little Jose Martí poetry. Epic Fail is slated for spring 2017; Viking).
  • Marcus Vega Doesn't Speak Spanish - Pablo Cartaya (MG novel follows a school bully and his special needs brother as they head to Puerto Rico over spring break to find their estranged father. Marcus Vega... to follow in spring 2018; Viking).
  • A sequel to the middle-grade adventure Loot - Judy Blundell under the name Jude Watson (It's a heist novel about a group of the world's youngest criminal masterminds. Loot was recently optioned by Will Smith's production company and is in development as a feature film. Publication of the untitled sequel is scheduled for spring 2016; Scholastic).
  • Touch Me Not - Stacey Lee (In the new contemporary YA novel, a 16-year-old aromateur with an extraordinary nose, the last in a long line of love witches, scrambles to reverse the effects of a love elixir after giving it to the wrong target – all while trying not to fall for the woman's attractive son. Publication is set for fall 2016; Katherine Tegen Books).
  • Beast - Brie Spangler (a modern YA retelling of “Beauty and the Beast” in which the tallest, hairiest boy in town meets and falls for his dream girl, who also happens to be transgender. The book is slated for fall 2016; Knopf).
  • Weaving a Net is Better Than Praying for Fish - Ki-Wing Merlin (about a first-generation Chinese-American girl navigating school and classmates while concealing secrets from friends and family, who must learn to rely on others to catch the thief when her father's store is robbed. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016; Balzer + Bray).
  • The Boy Who Knew Too Much - Romily Bernard, to be written under a pseudonym (The middle-grade story follows a boy who steals a train and is sent to reform school, only to discover that a machine in the basement is cloning students to become model citizens. Publication is slated for winter 2017; Disney-Hyperion).
  • The Imagination Box - Martyn Ford (contemporary middle-grade adventure about a boy who discovers a box that can make the things he imagines become real, and who has to keep this box from getting into the wrong hands with the help of a professor, his granddaughter, and a finger monkey named Phil. Publication is set for summer 2016; Delacorte).
  • The Evil Wizard Smallbone - Delia Sherman (a middle-grade novel about a boy who, escaping his abusive uncle, becomes the unwilling apprentice of an evil wizard in the wilds of the Maine coast. It's slated for publication in fall 2016; Candlewick).
  • Standard Operating Procedures - Erin Teagan (Debut MG in which genius-scientist-in-the-making Madeline Little starts middle school and soon learns science doesn't have all the answers – and that it's now up to her to discover the cure for her newly messed-up life. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016; HMH).
  • House of Stone - Len Vlahos (The novel explores the right-to-die issue and the voyeuristic underbelly of reality TV, seen through the lens of a family in turmoil. Publication is slated for winter 2017; Bloomsbury).
  • Worthy - Donna Cooner (about a girl and boy whose relationship is wrecked by a malicious dating app that makes them question friends, popularity, and self-image. Publication is set for 2016; Scholastic).
  • The Distance from A to Z - Natalie Blitt (a YA contemporary romance about a teen named Abby who goes to a French-language intensive summer program to escape her baseball-loving family, only to meet Zeke, the baseball-playing jock who may have more in common with her than she thinks. Publication is scheduled for winter 2015; HarperCollins).
  • The Dam Keeper - Robert Kondo (l.) and Dice Tsutsumi, who created the short (two graphic novels for young readers based on the Oscar-nominated animated short + 3rd novel. The books will pick up after the close of the film and reveal the secrets behind the dark cloud that threatens Pig and Fox's town. Publication is scheduled for 2016; First Second Books).
  • Chameleon - Ellen Hopkins (Focuses on a teen who has to come to terms with the fact that her ex-military father abducted her when she was a very small child; though she thought her mother had abandoned her, she had been searching for her the whole time. Publication is scheduled for fall 2016. McElderry Books).
  • The Secret Language of Sisters - Luanne Rice (adult author’s YA debut pitched as The Diving Bell and the Butterfly meets If I Stay. In the novel a girl enters a coma-like state after a car accident where she is “locked-in,” aware of her surroundings and realizes her sister, who was texting while driving, blames herself for the accident. Publication is slated for 2016; Scholastic).
  • #famous - Jilly Gagnon (debut about a girl who tweets a photo of a cute boy that suddenly goes viral, à la Alex from Target, setting off a chain of events that forces them both to question whether fame – and love – are worth the price. Publication is set for summer 2017; Katherine Tegen Books).
  • The Art of Scorpions - Erin Bow (In a world 400 years in the future, the UN assures world peace by keeping the children of rulers hostage. Go to war, and the kids die. And Greta's country is about to go to war. How can a hostage break all the rules and re-make her world? It's scheduled for fall 2015; S&S/McElderry).
  • Spirit Hunters - Ellen Oh (the story of a 12-year-old girl who must save her younger brother from the dangerous spirit who has possessed him, with the help of her ghost best friend and her grandmother's shaman training. Publication is slated for winter 2017; HarperCollins).
  • Die for You - Amy Fellner Dominy (about 17-year-old Emma Lorde, whose beloved may do more than just steal her heart when Emma is offered an internship in Rome. Publication is set for fall 2016; Delacorte).
  • Relic - Gretchen McNeil (which had previously sold to Egmont USA. The novel follows a group of teens who, while exploring an abandoned mine, accidentally unleash a creature that is systematically killing off everyone who knows of its existence, and cannibalizing the bodies. HarperCollins/EpicReads Impulse).
  • Blood, Bullets and Bones: The Story of Forensic Science from Sherlock Holmes to DNA - Bridget Heos (Aimed at those who are obsessed with shows like CSI and Dexter, the book offers a history of the modern science of forensics. It's scheduled for winter 2016; Balzer + Bray).
  • Such Courage: Polio and the Making of Franklin Roosevelt - James Tobin (a middle-grade biography focusing on FDR's triumph over polio. Publication is slated for fall 2016; Henry Holt's Christy Ottaviano Books).
  • Baskerville Academy - Ridley Pearson (The MG trilogy chronicles young James Moriarty's descent into evil and the origins of his rivalry with his roommate, Sherlock Holmes. The first title is scheduled for publication in September 2016; HarperCollins).
  • Magnificent Mya Tibbs - Crystal Allen (MG series about a fourth grader who defeats her best frenemy and saves the school “bully.” The first book, Spirit Week Showdown, is set for winter 2016; Balzer + Bray).
  • The Serpent's Promise - Breeana Shields (debut YA fantasy set in an alternate world based on the mythology of ancient India, in which a girl has been trained since birth as a “poison maiden” in the Raja's service. When she is ordered to kill a boy she has feelings for, she begins to question not only her role but the Raja's end game. Publication is scheduled for 2017; Random House).
  • Wildman - J.C. Geiger (Debut; the story of what happens when a valedictorian's carefully planned life goes off the rails when his car breaks down 400 miles from home, stranding him at a roadhouse where a run-in with the police, a new group of friends, and a girl cause him to confront the expectations of others. It's slated for summer 2016; Disney-Hyperion)/
  • The Loose Ends List - Carrie Firestone (a debut novel about a teenage girl's whirlwind summer of first loves, last wishes, and letting go, while traveling around the world for her grandmother's last hurrah on a cruise ship for terminally ill patients and their loved ones. Publication is set for spring 2016; Little, Brown).
  • Journey of the Iron Glory - Jaleigh Johnson (the story of an impossible journey, a mysterious stowaway, and a magical world. It's slated for 2017; Delacorte).
From two weeks ago:
  • Stef Soto, Taco Queen - Jennifer Torres (a debut coming-of-age story about a 13-year-old Mexican-American girl who, embarrassed by her family's taco truck business, hopes to break free from her overprotective parents. Publication is slated for fall 2016. Little, Brown).
Book trailers:The Start of Me and You - Emery Lord, The Honest Truth - Dan Geimenhart, Zeroboxer - Fonda Lee, Character (Laia) trailer for An Ember in the Ashes - Sabaa Tahir, The Wrong Side of Right - Jenn Thorne

Excerpts:More Happy than Not - Adam Silvera, Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda - Becky Albertalli, Fear Street: Don’t Stay up Late - R.L. Stine, Shadow Scale - Rachel Hartman, Liars Inc - Paula Stokes, The Heir - Kiera Cass

Authors:The Alex Crow - Andrew Smith, Hold Me Closer - David Levithan, Vendetta - Catherine Doyle, South by Southeast - Gail Shephard, Storyspinner - Becky Wallace, Mosquitoland - David Arnold, David Levithan, Greg Pizzoli

Awards:the Lamba Literary award finalists were announced. As were the 2015 SCWBI Golden Kite award finalists. As were the LA Times Book prize finalists. And Amazon named its top teen books of March. And the Carnegie and Kate Greenaway shortlist was announced too.

Don’t forget to vote for the teen book of the year from CCBC! Lasts until May 3rd.

To me it’s kind of interesting to look at what U.S. agencies will be taking to sell with them at the Bologna Children’s Book Fair. I actually recognized some of the titles being published this year, and for y’all international folks, these books stand the best chance (probably, I’d guess) of being translated into your languages.

So, Andrew Smith’s interview in which he said he didn’t know how to write women caused a little bit of drama. Another interview with Andrew Smith. Tessa Gratton’s response, Chuck Wendig’s response, Shannon Hale’s response, Phoebe North’s response, and many more you can find elsewhere...

Like I said, always going to try and post about diverse books in here now. How Finding a Fat YA Heroine Changed My Life (the only one who the writer forgets is Molly Weasley, who is plump but kind; but I do agree with the general sentiment that HP falls prey to the “fat” bully stereotype). How to Teach Your Kids about Diversity through Books (aka the best way!). How the 2015 ALA YMG awards are changing the landscape of recognition in kidlit (+ a piece here from SLJ on a similar topic). Don’t forget that there’s a short story contest from WNDB for an unpublished diverse author in late April. And Lee and Low discusses the diversity gap in children’s publishing.

And remember how Malinda Lo exposed the flack that diverse books get from literary journals (the series: perspectives on literary reviews of diverse books - something like that title)? There’s a series about “anonymous book reviews” at SLJ.

A brief summary of the North Texas Teen Book Festival.

Omg omg omg *drools* over YALLWEST Panel schedule.

omg omg omg *drools* over Maya Angelou Forever stamp.

Kids book sales are SOARING. Yaaaaaaaaaas. More books for us!

Sad news: Mal Peet& Terry Pratchett passed away. And an article on celebrating the legacy of Walter Dean Myers.

Seventeen Magazine and Harlequin Teen are partnering together: “Under the agreement, the Harlequin TEEN imprint will publish four original Seventeen novels in hard cover and eBook formats. Seventeen Books from Harlequin Teen will focus on multi-dimensional and empowered fictional female characters and explore topics and situations that authentically reflect the challenges and joys of being a teenager today…”

First Book and Unbound Concepts are also teaming up.

So are James Patterson and Scholastic, with the hope of saving libraries.

And Scholastic signed a deal with Universal about books and movies.

Are you enthusiastically anticipating a.) Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda or b.) An Ember in the Ashes? Check out the insider’s look articles from PW!

Kids don’t want their parents to stop reading aloud to them, according to a national survey. And hey, I wouldn’t want them to either; nor would I want these astronauts to stop reading aloud to me too. Raising kids who want to read: a Q&A.

This seems like a controversial article that I’m not sure how to interpret: Are US and UK children’s publishers getting stale? Apparently international markets are turning elsewhere for books.

BUT PROBABLY MY FAVORITE ARTICLE THIS WEEK BECAUSE THIS IS HILARIOUS…. is how J.K. Rowling’s publishers managed to keep the HP books secret. A computer with no internet among other things -- I really want this bibliography now o.O.

You remember that uproar over Shannon Hale’s post about the boys who weren’t allowed to attend her school talk - or rather, it was assumed that they would not want to. Here’s a summary of that + other times when boys have not been allowed to like girls books.

Cover Reveals:

(this was probably revealed before, but I searched my archives and didn’t find it here, so).
(this too might be an old cover, I don’t remember)

Discussion/Other Blogger Posts:

omg omg omg *drools* over beautiful libraries.

Looking to introduce feminist books to younger readers? Look no further! Some more empowering books to add to young girl’s shelves. And 12 books that will turn you into a feminist at any age& top 10 feminist icons in children’s and teens books& Teen opinion: how books turned me into a feminist. Yay, Women’s History month!

In addition to Women’s History month… Mental Health Awareness: Portraying Teenage Depression in YA, Writing about Grief, I Wrote a Book about a Sad Girl.

Have you ever wondered how to get teens more interested in politics? Maybe through these books!

This Is For Everyone Who Thinks Snape Is a Hero: yes, this article perfectly sums up my feelings about Snape and why I do not understand some of the Snape love. He was such a jerk for no reason. Don’t romanticize that, please.

But to ease that criticism… which hogwarts professor would be your mentor? D’aww, Lupin? YAY. You got: Professor Lupin (Like your mentor, you love teaching and helping others as much as you love learning. You don’t put as much value in grades as you do in the simple joy of broadening your own horizons, so you need a mentor who’s going to help you beyond the restrictions of a curriculum.).

26 Contemporary Books That Should Be Taught in High School. I like the mix of adult and YA books there - yay for lists that are actually doing that!

OMG WHUT. Yes, do this Scotland! Issue children library cards from birth!

Lol, weapons of Mass Instruction.

Bookish says these are the best Spring YA novels. You agree?

Are you excited for the Insurgent movie?!

Book Nerd Struggles: yep, yep, yep. Plus irrational fears book lovers have.

Did these books grab YOU from page one?

iTunes named its 20 best books of March, with some YA picks.

Lots of recommendations today: 7 Fairy Tales That Seriously Need YA Retellings (aka this post proves to me how few fairy tales I actually know); Find Your Happily Ever After With These 7 YA Cinderella Retellings (specific categories like this make me realize that I may not have read as many books as I thought I had); 7 Great YAs about Best Friendship (Under the Painted Sky & Open Road Summer, I’m coming for you… eventually); 7 Best YA Novels Set on Other Planets and the Moon (NGL, didn’t even realize that there were that many, or that Patrick Ness’s novel was set elsewhere); 6 Perfect Pairings of YAS with Classic Teen Movies (the breakfast club!); These Unlikable YA Heroines LOL at Your Concern, Quietly Plot Your Destruction (I loved Bleeding Violet and Cracked Up to Be); 5 Real Women Whose Lives Should Inspire YA Novels (I did not know that about J.K. Rowling and her father…); The Best Dragons in YA (one day I will read Eon/Eona); 4 Great YAs about Cults and Communes (I remember reading an excerpt of Vivian and loving it); 7 Books for T-Swift Fans: What to Read Based On Your Favorite Song From 1989 (time for me to actually listen to all of 1989); 6 of the Best YA Outsider Stories (isn’t this most of YA?); 7 Great Works of Diverse Historical Fiction (another NYE resolution: read more historical fiction); We Love These 6 YA Books Set in Outer Space (interestingly enough I’ve read 4/6, though I’d only like 1/7 on the other planets list. Hmmm…)

Which of these March books have you read?

Have you ever used weird things for bookmarks? I’m LOLing a bit at the spoon and yet I too have used tissues and various other objects… o.o

ARE YOU THE NEXT SYMBOL OF A YA REBELLION? 7 signs, people. 7 signs. Watch your backs!

The 18 Most Beautiful YA Endpapers in the World. o.o o.o why do I not have these books now! I think I vaguely remember Bitterblue looking like that…

Lol a twitter account dedicated to the Broody YA hero? Yes.

I wrote a few discussions recently: a.) that I am terrible at following through with reading lists& b.) that my reading tastes and experiences are not what I wish they were sometimes.

Blogger discussions to come!

Movies/TV Shows:

Lots and lots of Insurgent videos I missed, y’all: differences between Insurgent and Divergent, Tris gets a lesson from Octavia Spencer, “Train,” “You and Me,” “Perfect Subject,” “All Star Cast,” “Phenomenon,” “Be Different,” “Break Free,” “Go With Happiness,” and “Risk Everything.” The IMAX poster for Insurgent was revealed. An interview with VRoth on Insurgent too.

Anna Carey’s Blackbird has been optioned.

So has Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of Nimh.

The BFG movie is moving forward.

The first images from The Maze Runner: the Scorch Trials were released by People Magazine. And some more from EW. And T.S. Nowlin has been hired to write the screenplay for The Maze Runner: The Death Cure.

Allison Janney is joining the adaptation of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. And… so is Dame Judi Dench. Wowza, that movie is pulling some BIG actors.

The first Paper Towns poster was released. The movie will be pushed back to July 24th but the Alaska movie is looking like it might happen. The first PT trailer is coming to you TOMORROW.

Beauty and the Beast will be released on March 17, 2017.

Awesome perspectives on YA movies… why YA movies will never die out + how YA books have changed the meaning of teen movie. And another on the Duff, suggesting that it has the most interesting take on cyberbulling that writer has watched in a while.

And a movie called Home was apparently a kids book too.

Giveaways:

Adventures in Children's Publishing giveaways: 03/22, 03/24, 03/30, 04/06, 04/13

Giveaways listed at Saturday Situation by Lori of Pure Imagination and Candace of Candace's Book Blog.

Don't forget to enter YABC's giveaways for the month.

Sci-fi and Fantasy Friday {SF/F Reviews and Giveaways}.

The Cake House by Latifah Salom, ends 03/31.

4 Year Blogoversary giveaway, INT & US, ends 04/15.

If you have a giveaway, you should let me know. NGL, this is the least important section to me.

Other:

New Releases:

March 8 - 14: The Orphan Queen by Jodi Meadows, The Alex Crow by Andrew Smith, Burning Kingdoms (Internment Chronicles #2) by Lauren DeStefano, Vanishing Girls by Lauren Oliver, Shadow Scale (Seraphina #2) by Rachel Hartman, The Brilliant Light of Amber Sunrise by Matthew Crow, The Dickens Mirror (Dark Passage #2) by Ilsa J. Bick, Tether (Many Worlds #2) by Anna Jarzab, The Infinite (Gates of Thread and Stone #2) by Lori M. Lee, Silent Alarm by Jennifer Brash, Everybody Knows Your Name by Andrea Siegel and Brent Bradshaw, Breaking Sky by Cori McCarthy, Little Peach by Peggy Kern, Rivals in the City (The Agency #4) by Y. S. Lee, Read Between the Lines by Jo Knowles, In a Split Second by Sophie McKenzie.

March 15 - 21: Hold Me Closer: The Tiny Cooper Story by David Levithan, The Wrong Side of Right by Jenn Marie Thorne, Under a Painted Sky by Stacey Lee, A Work of Art by Melody Maysonet, Everything That Makes You by Moriah McStay, Pretty Wanted (Pretty Crooked #3) by Elisa Ludwig, This Is Shyness by Leanne Hall, Duplicity by N.K. Traver.

Recent Recommended Reads: You can read my review of Shadow Scale by Rachel Hartman or my review of Magonia by Maria Headley.

Which articles did you like best? Did I miss any news? Did you host a cover reveal or discussion that I should have posted about? A giveaway? Leave the links, and I'll either edit this post or post about 'em next week.

The Cake House & Los Angeles (+ Giveaway)

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A retelling of Hamlet in LA. Now, when you hear these words, do you get as excited and curious as I do? Today I have a special treat for y'all: Latifah Salom is here to explain the inspiration for her debut novel, The Cake House. I am currently running a giveaway for The Cake House; and I would urge you to enter if you like reading Latifah's response here today.

Release Date: March 3, 2015
Published by: Vintage

The Cake House - Latifah Salom | Goodreads

Part mystery, part compelling coming-of-age tale, The Cake House is a riveting debut novel that re-imagines the classic story of Hamlet amidst the hills of suburban Los Angeles.

Rosaura Douglas’s father shot himself after her mother left him . . . or at least that's the story everyone is telling. Now her mother has remarried and Rosie is trapped in “The Cake House,” a garish pink edifice in the hills of Los Angeles that's a far cry from the cramped apartment where she grew up. It’s also the house where her father died—a fact that everyone else who lives there, including her mother, Dahlia, and her mysteriously wealthy stepfather, Claude, want to forget.

Soon, however, her father’s ghost appears, sometimes in a dark window, sometimes in the house’s lush garden, but always with warnings that Claude is not to be trusted. And as the ghost becomes increasingly violent—and the secrets of her family’s past come to light—Rosie must finally face the truth behind the losses and lies that have torn her life apart.



The Cake House and Los Angeles
By Latifah Salom

What informs our choices when writing? What strange jumble of influences, the flotsam in our conscious or unconscious minds that leads a writer to chose not only plot and theme and genre, but also character traits, history, and of course, setting?

Like in chemistry, sometimes all you need is that right mixture of elements to start a chain reaction. Every writer starts somewhere – an idea, a theme, a small kernel of story, a line of text – whatever it is that sparks that impulse to sit down and start writing. For my novel THE CAKE HOUSE, it started with Hamlet. That was my base, stripped down to its bones: a murder, a ghost, heartbreak, revenge.

As I began writing, I asked the sort of questions most writers ask: What do I want to say with this story? Who are my characters and what are their wants and desires? Where do they live, and why?

I am fond of questions. The beauty of asking a question when writing is that it doesn’t always matter what the answer is, as long as you do answer it. Case in point: Why Los Angeles? Well, the quick and easy answer is I live in Los Angeles and grew up here. But, in truth, familiarity only goes so far.

I knew this story needed to be set in a real place and not in an imagined town or city, to balance against the heightened drama of the story and to give credence to the ghost.

Los Angeles is big and vast and even though there are actual city limits, the perception is that it stretches across Southern California like a blanket of smog, from ocean to desert. But even choosing Los Angeles, I was still faced with deciding where: Beverly Hills or Hollywood? Westside or the Valley?

When I was in junior high I knew someone who came from Canyon Country, a place that is actually located outside Los Angeles, and I remembered how she used to speak about it, like a far off kingdom. I wanted that sense of isolation, of loneliness and seclusion.

I called upon those years as a young girl, living outside of Los Angeles – the way the asphalt almost melted in the September, the way I felt surrounded by hills. These were the flavors I wanted for my novel.

As soon as I decided to write a story based on Hamlet, I turned my back on the play. I didn’t want to be overly influenced by it. It was there of course, but under the surface, like a ghost. There is universality to Shakespeare’ that make them infinitely adaptable to any culture or setting. This is like magic.
IF YOU LIKED Latifah's post and find yourself interested by The Cake House, don't forget to enter the giveaway for a copy of the book.

Also don't forget to read the PRAISE for The Cake House!

“Evocative . . . Salom’s writing is atmospheric, and her conjuring of the many shadows of Los Angeles provides the perfect backdrop.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Tense, shocking, and seductively dark, The Cake House is a brand-new twist on a classic story—an urban reinvention of a Shakespearean tale.” —Rebecca Coleman, bestselling author of The Kingdom of Childhood 

“Reading The Cake House, I vividly saw the whole edifice rising up before me, latticework covering a multitude of sins. A wonderful, chewy, complicated book that doesn't flinch from danger or pain but rejects despair.” —Naomi Novik, author of the bestselling Temeraire series

copyright: Shannon Keast
“The Cake House is a gem of a novel: a mystery wrapped in a cloak of family dysfunction with subtle Shakespearean trim. . . . Rosaura is a heroine with spunk and a vulnerability so endearing I missed her the second I closed the book. Salom has written a dazzling coming-of-age tale that will resonate long after you reach the end.” —Elizabeth Flock, New York Times bestselling author of Me & Emma and What Happened To My Sister

About the author:

Latifah Salom was born in Hollywood, California to parents of Peruvian and Mexican descent. As a teenager she attended the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, and she holds degrees from Emerson College, Hunter College, and from the University of Southern California’s Masters of Professional Writing program. She currently lives in Los Angeles.

What do you think? Does the Los Angeles setting sound fascinating to you or what? I particularly love how Latifah described "the way the asphalt almost melted in the September, the way I felt surrounded by hills" as flavors for her novel. As someone who grew up in Los Angeles, I can definitely identify with this sentiment. 

Blogging Milestones I've Missed

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Since I'm celebrating my blogoversary this month, I thought that it would be appropriate to talk about my experience blogging... and all the blogging "milestones" I've missed. Writing out this post has made me realize just how different all of our experiences are. Of course I knew that already, but I could probably come up with so many "milestones" I've missed -- and are the milestones I've chosen milestones you would choose yourself? What really are blogging "milestones?"


When I think of blogging milestones, I think of the things that are talked about the most. Publishing contacts, ARCs, statistics, relationships with authors. I can't seem to remember a single blogger mentioning how many posts they've made over the years, but I can still remember Mundie Moms announcing that they'd reached a million views (and now I keep eyeing my view count; almost to half a million o.O). So, I guess I'll just go through the typical milestones for now.

The first ARC I had wasn't one I'd gotten by email request. I'd volunteered at the Romantic Book Lovers Convention in Los Angeles, and the workers there allowed my friend and I to take a few bags with us as a gift for our hard work. One of them had Sarah Dessen's latest book, What Happened to Goodbye. I devoured it as I've devoured other Sarah Dessen novels and then I hosted one of my first ever giveaways. Because that was completely unexpected -- getting books -- I wonder if I've devalued ARCs over the years. Having them in my hands matters less to me than the privilege of getting to read a book before its release date anyway, which was why sites like Around the World tours were so awesome in my beginning years.

I've never sent in an email request for an ARC. I'm sure if I had, I wouldn't done that great of a job or followed Lili's guidelines on email requests. For me blogging -- I hope -- has always been a side thing. The last barrier I set myself was the email request. If I sent one in, I was in much too deep. There's always something to read... and nowadays if I do want to read and review something early, I go for the easy so-little-effort-required click-a-button e-requests on Netgalley and Edelweiss. I do wonder sometimes what it'd be like to send in those requests and actually have someone respond. The first time I was randomly included on a MacMillan email, it felt like I was more a part of the community -- even though I hadn't known such catalogs existed. It's a little ridiculous, right?

In fact I try to avoid making contacts -- or so it seems like. When I went to BEA this past year, I didn't really make an official "I'm-going-to-BEA" post and reach out to blogger friends. I didn't really try and network with publicists. I knew I could've done better on many counts, but it felt so much like my aversion to sending in email requests. I complain about how much time blogging takes up -- if I start making contacts and actually try to get on lists, I'll never dig myself out of the hole that I will make myself fall into! Because I would get sucked in. As for not letting people know I was there, that was more because I was with my friend and wanted it to be "our" time for the most part. Still I could improve a lot on my friend-making networking -- but again time o.O. But then comes the question: why do this at all???? I keep struggling with that question. Post more, read and review more, or try and be more socially active?

Going to author and industry events sometimes bores me and so I don't really feel like I've had a milestone with these events (note: I never went to these events). Maybe this isn't really a milestone, but it feels like as a blogger, you can get really excited about the author events that happen nearby. I mean the people who know about these events are the ones who are either really INTO that author's books or are active online enough to have seen the information somewhere. I've gone to maybe three. And half of it is that I don't actually care whether an author signs a book. The book is like the author and an author's signature, no? And so much information is available online that Q&As sometimes seem pointless. The main attraction is the presentation bit -- which sometimes gets repeated -- and potentially meeting up with people. But despite making blogosphere friends, I'm terrible at knowing people in the area I live in (generally). Now I'm better, but even now exerting the effort... hm.

Part of that "meh" feeling is because I'd been following author blogs long before I'd joined the blogging community. That was the first step for me. Read the books and then follow what it says on the author flap - find them online, see when their next book released. In fact, before I even joined the community, I sent one of my favorite authors a fan letter. I asked for her advice. I was in a bad place then -- sophomore year of college, I hadn't yet admitted to myself that pre-med was not my thing and getting worse grades than I was used to in a selective college didn't mean I was a failure -- and that author had consistently posted about self-love. I was not loving myself much then. She was so nice and posted her response for others to see, and so in some sense, my first interaction with an author came much before even becoming a blogger. And thinking about how she responded almost makes me think that though other authors would probably respond in similar ways, there's no beating that sort of response. No other interaction -- I know bloggers count being acknowledged by authors as milestones -- could beat out the time that she cheered me (a little - I mean, I needed a lot of work that year) during a less than happy day/month/year.

And when I first started blogging, I was really into looking at my follower counts. But the actual number means so little. I could host so many giveaways and build up that number and not have people actually care about this blog. Learning about that has been its own milestone. It also makes me want to be more involved in the community. I have SO MANY IDEAS. New posts and things that I want to do -- but then I remember the rules I've set for email ARC requests and it's like, well, you can't do those things unless you want to spend A LOT more time blogging. And do you? Maybe, but there are other things that need to get done first.

What blogging milestones have you missed? Have there been times when you've felt like you put in too much time blogging or you've cared less about ARCs/contacts/author interactions/etc.?

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