30.4.09

Plus by Veronica Chambers

Summary:

“This is the unbelievable story of how I went to college, gained twenty-five pounds, got dumped by my boyfriend, failed physics and became a worldfamous supermodel.”

So begins the Cinderella story of Beatrice Wilson, whose life changes overnight when she’s discovered by a scout for the oldest, most prestigious modeling agency in America—for their plus-sized division.

Now she must find the confidence to vanquish skinny rivals, fend off sleazy photographers, and banish scheming frenemies in her rise to superstardom, all while trying to get her ex-boyfriend back. But Bea learns that to win prince charming, you first have to find a way to love yourself.

Review:

Plus is the perfect breezy read for a lazy day in summer. Since, it's a funny and well written novel, while still having a serious under tone.

Bee was a decent main character, though she had several faults that made her quite annoying at times. Her outlook on life and modeling was realistic, but I hated how at times she would dump her best friend, Chela, just to go hang out with her modeling friends. Also, don't even get me started on her whole relationship with Brian! He was a awful guy who got on my nerves constantly. I couldn't stand how even when he had hurt her with several words, she would go crawling right back to him. It was like, " Grow a back bone already!" Though, when Brian wasn't included in the scenes, Plus was quite the enjoyable of reads.

One of my favorite parts of Plus was the inside look to the modeling world. It was cool to see the different types of trips you would go on and the people you would meet if you were a model. Plus, Veronica Chambers writing added a bit to the plot- with the twists and turns to the story.

Overall, Plus was a okay book with a great message of " Be yourself no matter what people think" This definitely will be a must read on many girl's summer To Be Read Lists!

Grade: B-

Plus was suppused to be released on April 16th. Though, I have looked on Amazon.com where it's listed as to be released in 2025?!? Then, it's not even on Barnes and Noble's website. So, I don't know what's up with all of this.

* Much thanks to JL, once again, for sending me a great book! :)

29.4.09

Waiting On Wednesday: Week 24

My Pick This Week Is:

Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl

There were no surprises in Gatlin County.
We were pretty much the epicenter of the middle of nowhere.
At least, that’s what I thought.
Turns out, I couldn’t have been more wrong.

There was a curse.
There was a girl.
And in the end, there was a grave.

Lena Duchannes is unlike anyone the small Southern town of Gatlin has ever seen, and she’s struggling to conceal her power, and a curse that has haunted her family for generations. But even within the overgrown gardens, murky swamps, and crumbling graveyards of the forgotten South, a secret cannot stay hidden forever.

Ethan Wate, who has been counting the months until he can escape from Gatlin, is haunted by dreams of a beautiful girl he has never met. When Lena moves into the town’s oldest and most infamous plantation, Ethan is inexplicably drawn to her and determined to uncover the connection between them.

In a town with no surprises, one secret could change everything.

My thoughts/ Why I Want This:

All I can say is that this looks absolutely fantastic! I can't wait until December.

Beautiful Creatures
by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl will be released December 1, 2009.

28.4.09

The Awakening by Kelley Armstrong

Summary:

If you had met me a few weeks ago, you probably would have described me as an average teenage girl—someone normal. Now my life has changed forever and I'm as far away from normal as it gets. A living science experiment—not only can I see ghosts, but I was genetically altered by a sinister organization called the Edison Group. What does that mean? For starters, I'm a teenage necromancer whose powers are out of control; I raise the dead without even trying. Trust me, that is not a power you want to have. Ever.

Now I'm running for my life with three of my supernatural friends—a charming sorcerer, a cynical werewolf, and a disgruntled witch—and we have to find someone who can help us before the Edison Group finds us first. Or die trying. (from Amazon)

Review:

I remember finishing the The Summoning, the prequel to The Awakening, last summer and thinking, " I doubt Kelley will be able to top this." Though, apparently she can, as she has proven it with The Awakening.

In The Awakening more action and intense drama occurs. As well as major character development. Since, Tori, Chloe, Derek, and Simon's powers began to involve steadily in the book. Also, there was more information told and found out about the Edison Group and werewolves which was fascinating in any case.

Derek and Chloe? Yep, their relationship defiantly grew throughout The Awakening and made it one of my favorite parts. I swear I will scream if they don't get together by the end of this series. Since, they are so cute with their bickering and how they always protect each other.

Overall, The Awakening will have any fan of the Darkest Powers Trilogy begging for a sequel by the end. I look forward to reading the next book, tremendously. I wish Spring 2010 would come faster.

Grade: A+

The Awakening
will be released April 28, 2009. Also, be sure to check out the dates for the Supernatural Summer Tour which will include Kelley as well as Aprilynne Pike, Claudia Gray, and Kim Harrison.

* Much thanks goes to EM, as well as Kelley's awesome assistant Allison, for helping me get a copy.

27.4.09

Because I Am Furniture by Thalia Chaltas

Summary:

Anke’s father is abusive. But not to her. He attacks her brother and sister, but she’s just an invisible witness in a house of horrors, on the brink of disappearing altogether. Until she makes the volleyball team at school. At first just being exhausted after practice feels good, but as Anke becomes part of the team, her confidence builds. When she learns to yell “Mine!” to call a ball, she finds a voice she didn’t know existed. For the first time, Anke is seen and heard. Soon, she’s imagining a day that her voice will be loud enough to rescue everyone at home—including herself.

Review:

Because I Am Furniture
is a book that tackles many hard subjects such as rape, verbal and physical abuse. Thalia defiantly doesn't shy away from the hard parts with these topics, making this a gripping and startling novel told in verse style.

Normally, I'm not a huge fan of verse, with the exception of Ellen Hopkins and Sonya Sones, because of the lack of character and plot development that they usually have. With Because I Am Furniture it worked perfectly with the story, because both were ragged and intense. Also, Thalia Chaltas created a excellent lead character in this, her name being Anke. Anke was someone that you could only hope to be in a situation like this; brave and strong. Throughout the novel, I was rooting for her and her loved ones to overcome the hate and abuse her father put on them.

(Minor spoiler alert) One of my favorite parts of this novel was when Anke finally stood up to her father, leaving her family with the feeling of hope. Hope that they would be all right. Hope that her father would never hurt or see them again. Since, with these types of novels you don't really experience that feeling or strength. (end of spoiler)

Overall, Because I Am Furniture was defintly an incredible book with little faults. I hope that whatever Thalia comes up with next is just as great.

Grade: B+

Because I Am Furniture
is now out in harcover. Also, be sure to check out Thalia's website.

* Much thanks, once again, goest to JL for sending me this fantastic book. :)

26.4.09

In My Mailbox ( 4/20 to 4/25)

I am "stealing" this from The Story Siren. If you want to find out more about it click here. Anyway, these are books I got this week at the bookstore, library, and in the mail, of course. All summaries are from either Barnes and Noble, Amazon or Goodreads.

The Received:

Post Grad by Emily Cassel ( ARC/ June 2009/ St. Martin's Griffin)

What happens when your life doesn’t go according to plan?

Ryden Malby had a plan. Step One: do well in high school, thereby achieving Step Two: get a kick-butt college scholarship. Step Three – limit her beer pong in order to keep said scholarship – wasn’t always easy. Now that she’s finally graduated, it’s time for Step Four: moving to LA to land her dream job at the city’s best publishing house. So far, Ryden’s three-for-three, but she’s about to stumble on Step Four….

When Jessica Bard, Ryden’s college nemesis—the prettiest, smartest, most ambitious girl at school—steals her perfect job, Ryden’s forced to move back to her childhood home in the Valley. Stuck with her eccentric family – a karate-obsessed dad, a politically incorrect grandma, a spoiled-brat little brother – and a growing stack of rejected job applications, Ryden starts to feel like she’s going nowhere. The only upside is spending time with her best friend Adam—and running into her hot next-door neighbor David. But if Ryden’s going to survive life as a post-grad, it may be time to come up with a new plan…

Dork Diaries: Tales from a Not So Fabulous Life by Rachel Renee Russell

Dork Diaries follows eighth grader Nikki Maxwell as she chronicles through text and sketches her move to a snooty new school; her epic battle wither her mom for an iPhone; her enthusiasm for drawing and art; and a love/hate fascination with the new school's queen bee, a girl named Mackenzie, who becomes Nikki's rival a school wide art competition. Nikki writes about friendships, crushes, popularity, and family with a unique and fresh voice that still conveys a universal authenticity. Nikki's sketches throughout her diary and add humor and spunk to the book, a surefire hit with tween girls.

With this I also got " Nikki Maxwell's Purse" , from the author, filled with Tic Tacs, Orbit Gum, perfume, nail polish and other similar items. Isn't that a cool marketing idea? I'll have to upload a picture of it when I post my review! :)

How To Buy A Love Of Reading by Tanya Egan Gibson ( Hardcover/ May 2009/ Dutton)

To Carley Wells, words are the enemy: the countless SAT lists from her tutor, the “fifty-seven pounds overweight” assessment from her personal trainer, and most of all, the “confidential” Getting To Know You assignment from her insane English teacher (whose literary terminology lessons include “Backstory is Afterbirth” and “Setting is Nobody’s Slut”). When he tells her parents that she’s answered “What is your favorite book?” with “Never met one I liked,” they become determined to fix what he calls her “intellectual impoverishment.” They will commission a book to be written for Carley that she’ll have to love—one that will impress her teacher and the whole town of Fox Glen with their family’s devotion to the arts. They will be patrons—the Medicis of Long Island. They will buy their daughter The Love Of Reading.

Impossible though it is for Carley to imagine ever loving words, she is in love with a young bibliophile who cares about them more than anything. Anything, that is, but a good bottle of scotch. Hunter Cay, Carley’s best friend and Fox Glen’s resident golden boy, is becoming a stranger to her as he drowns himself in F. Scott Fitzgerald, booze, and Vicodin.

When the Wellses move writer Bree McEnroy—author of a failed meta-novel about Odysseus’s voyages through the Internet—into their mansion to write Carley’s book, Carley’s sole interest in the project is its potential to distract Hunter from drinking and give them something to share. Instead, as Hunter’s behavior becomes erratic and dangerous, she finds herself drawn into the fictional world Bree has created and begins to understand for the first time the power of stories—those we read, those we want to believe in, and most of all, those we tell ourselves about ourselves. Stories powerful enough to destroy a person.

Or save her.



The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams ( ARC/ May 2009/ St. Martin's Griffin)

Thirteen-year-old Kyra has grown up in an isolated polygamous community without questioning her father’s three wives and her twenty brothers and sisters. Or at least without questioning them much—if you don’t count her secret visits to the Mobile Library on Wheels to read forbidden books, or her meetings with the boy she hopes to choose for herself instead of having a man chosen for her. But when the Prophet decrees that Kyra must marry her 60-year-old uncle—who already has six wives—Kyra must make a desperate choice in the face of violence and her own fears of losing her family.



After by Amy Efaw ( ARC/ August 2009/Viking)

Who would do something so terrible?

Certainly not someone like Devon—straight-A student, soccer player with Olympic dreams, more mature than her own mother. But desperation and panic drove her to do what most people can’t even imagine. Now Devon ’s in a juvenile detention center charged with attempted murder. If she’s tried as an adult, she faces life in prison. Does Devon deserve that punishment? Your answer depends on whether you believe her story.



The Borrowed:



Jane’s big sister, Lizzie, has always been the center of attention. No one ever pays attention to boring, plain Jane. But when Jane’s twelfth birthday marks the beginning of Lizzie’s fi nal descent into a fatal eating disorder, Jane discovers that the only thing harder than living in her big sister’s shadow is living without her.

In the wake of tragedy, Jane learns to look through her camera lens and frame life differently, embracing her broken family and understanding that every girl has her season to blossom. Spare and vulnerable prose marks this beautiful debut that is at once heartbreaking and uplifting.

Side Note:
Yes, that is Alexis Bledel on the cover of Post Grad. She's staring in the movie addation of it. You can find out more about it here.

25.4.09

Sophomore Switch by Abby Mcdonald


Summary:

Can a Sophomore Switch make all the difference?

California girl Tasha's Sophomore year was supposed to be great. She had cool film classes, fun roommates, and a steady line of possible guys to date. Though, when the "Hot-Tub Incident" occurs, she only wants to do one thing, pack her bags, quickly.

Meanwhile, across the country, Emily's life isn't going that peachy either. Her boyfriend of five months has just broken up with her because she wouldn't go "all the way." Also, it seems like she can't fit it in at stuffy Oxford anymore.

So, when they are offered to switch places- houses, schools, friends- for a semester, both jump at the chance. But will this make their lives better or just plain worse?

Review:

Sophomore Switch was a fast paced novel filled with funny situations, well developed characters, and a question of what it means to be a feminist. I quickly devoured this novel in two short days, thanks to Abby McDonald's writing and her two lead characters: Emily and Tasha. I felt that both were realistic and quirky teenagers, making them extremely fun to read about. I loved how they each had traits that any type of girl could relate to. Emily was the up tight overachiever, while Tasha was the go with the flow party girl. My only problem with this novel was that the minor characters such as Morgan, Will, and Ryan were a tad under developed.

Overall, Sophomore Switch was a well written book that I suggest to fans of Meg Cabot and Sarah Dessen. I look forward to reading more by Abby Mcdonald in the future.

Grade: B+

Sophomore Switch is now out in hardcover.

*Reviewed For Flamingnet

24.4.09

Contest for Rules for Life by Darlene Ryan

Darlene has been nice enough to donate her first book, Rules For Life, to be given away to one lucky person.

Here's the summary from Amazon:

Rules # 41: If it’s dirty, wash it. If it’s hungry, feed it. If it’s broke, it’s Jason.

Izzy’s mother had a rule for every circumstance, and since
her death Izzy has used those rules to get by. But now her dad is planning to get married—to a woman Izzy barely knows, her friend, Mrs. Mac, is sneaking contraband sausage and her big brother Jason is…well, being Jason. As Izzy tries to fix things she discovers that sometimes you have to make up the rules as you go along.

A touching, often funny story of love an acceptance, Rules for
Life is a reminder that while we can’t choose the family we were born with, we
can choose the people we take along for the ride.


To enter, just leave a comment on this post.

For extra entries:

-Put a link to this on your sidebar ( +3)
- If you become a follower/add me on Google Reader( +3)
- If you are a follower/ subscribe to my blog on Google Reader (+6)
- If you send out bulletins (Myspace), send an email to friends (make sure to include my email address) or anything else. (+1 for each one that you do)
- Leave a comment on Darlene's Inspired Friday post below (+2)

So, you could possibly end up with 12 or 9 entries. Also, this will end on May 8- which is two weeks away!

Good Luck!

Inspired Friday with Darlene Ryan

Darlene Ryan is the author of many fiction/ non fiction books for young adults, including her newest release, Five Minutes More.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Five Minutes More is the book that wouldn’t go away. I could never get the story written the way that I wanted it to read, so I’d work on the manuscript, get stuck, get discouraged, and put it away. But I couldn’t get the idea out of my head. Finally I decided I would finish the book—no matter how awful it was. Well, the finished story wasn’t awful, but it wasn’t very good, either.

I knew something was wrong with the plotting, but I had been working on that book on and off for years and I’d lost my perspective. At first I thought of doing something melodramatic with the manuscript, like putting it through the shredder or having a bonfire in the driveway.

Well, the shredder sounds like a senior citizen with asthma if I try to feed more than two pages at a time through it, and the city frowns on bonfires in the driveway so close to the well water field. So, I asked my friend Susan, who is also a writer and an excellent editor, to read the whole thing.

She liked some parts, she found some dumb mistakes I’d made, and she said, “Could you _______.” I can’t tell you what goes in the blank because it’s a major story point.

It was an “aha” moment. I realized Susan was right. I rewrote like a maniac. When I was finished, Five Minutes More was finally the story I’d been trying to write for years. I hope everyone enjoys reading it.

Thank you Lauren for inviting me to be part of Inspired Fridays.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thanks so much, Darlene! :)

23.4.09

A Map Of The Known World by Lisa Ann Sundell


Summary:

Cora Bradley dreams of escape. Ever since her reckless older brother, Nate, died in a car crash, Cora has felt suffocated by her small town and high school. She seeks solace in drawing beautiful maps, envisioning herself in exotic locales. When Cora begins to fall for Damian, the handsome, brooding boy who was in the car with Nate the night he died, she uncovers her brother's secret artistic life and realizes she had more in common with him than she ever imagined. With stunning lyricism, Sandell weaves a tale of one girl's journey through the redemptive powers of art, friendship, and love.

They say no land remains to be discovered, no continent is left unexplored. But the whole world is out there, waiting, just waiting for me. I want to do things-I want to walk the rain-soaked streets of London, and drink mint tea in Casablanca. I want to wander the wastelands of the Gobi desert and see a yak. I think my life's ambition is to see a yak. I want to bargain for trinkets in an Arab market in some distant, dusty land. There's so much. But, most of all, I want to do things that will mean something. ( from Amazon)

Review:

Before starting, A Map of The Known World, I had high exceptions. Since, the cover was stunning and I had been hearing great things about it. Luckily, it was a decent book, but it could have been a lot better.

First off, I loved Cora, she had just the right amount of sadness over her brother's death while not going overboard with it. One of her best traits was her ability to see the world as a beautiful place even if she would rather not sometimes. Also, I liked how her drawing of maps was a big part of the story, because it was fun to read her descriptions of them. The other characters, though, were lacking majorly, with the exception of Damien, Cora, and Nate. Since, they never really had much development, leaving their actions to sometimes come out in a negative way.

The plot was interesting, at times. Though, I thought, that Lisa Ann Sundell could go a bit overboard with her page long descriptions of things that would happen. I did admire how she could easily describe something in such great detail and lyricism, but I would rather have more action and dialogue.

Overall, A Map Of The Known World was a stunning and beautiful book, even with it's faults. I look forward to reading more by Lisa, since it seems that she has major talent with words.

Grade: B+

22.4.09

Waiting On Wednesday: Week 23

My Pick This Week is:

Confessions of a First Daughter by Cassidy Calloway

Morgan Abbott has no social life and no privacy, and her every screwup makes front page news. That’s what happens when your mom’s the president of the United States—and Morgan is sooo over it. But now her mom needs a presidential stand-in! With the help of Morgan’s cute new secret service agent, a little makeup, and a lot of family resemblance, she’s soon seeing things from the other side of the desk.

On the heels of a historic election, books about girls in politics are more popular than ever. Readers won’t be able to resist the smart, spunky, klutzy-yet-lovable heroine in this fresh and fun new teen novel!

Why I Want This:

This book looks like a cute and fun read. I can't wait until it's released!

Confessions of a First Daughter will be released September 1, 2009 by Harper Collins.

21.4.09

Quick Q and A's with Katie Alender

Katie Alender is the author of Bad Girl's Don't Die which was realeased today, April 21st!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1) Bad Girl’s Don’t Die is your first novel. Can you tell us a little bit about it and what your road to publication was like for it?

Bad Girls is the story of Alexis Warren, a fifteen-year-old, who’s a bit of a self-made loner. Her only real connection is with her little sister, Kasey, who seems to be coming unhinged. One night, Alexis makes up a story to make Kasey feel better, and after that, strange things start happening around the house. Kasey and her creepy doll collection seem to be at the center of everything, and Alexis has to learn how to play nicely with others in order to get everything sorted out!

I worked on Bad Girls on and off for a few years. I would work really hard on it for a few months, then let it sit for six months. Then I would work really hard again… then let it sit. And so on. It was only when I decided to get serious about trying to get it published that I became more consistent and really buckled down.

When it went out to editors, there was one editor who really liked it and connected with it right away. She had some notes, which I thought were great, and when I made those changes and the book went back out on submission, she bought it! It was really exciting. And the whole process since then has been a blast. Everybody at my publisher (Hyperion) is just amazing to work with, from the editors to the designers to the publicists.

2) What inspired you to write Bad Girl’s Don’t Die? Did something similar to what happened between Alexis and Kasey happen to you?

Well, none of the scary parts. I do have sisters I feel really connected to. And I remember being in high school and being occasionally rebellious and worrying about the effect it was having on my little sister, to feel like she was in the middle and having to choose between siding with me or with my parents. As it happens, my little sister is a much tougher cookie than Kasey, so she never turned to a creepy doll collection to deal with the pressure. Thank goodness. She did have about four hundred billion Beanie Babies at one point.

But at the core, the relationship of the sisters is something I probably took from my own past. Even when they’re at their most disconnected, Alexis still feels pulled to try to help her little sister.

As for what inspired me, I was daydreaming one day (a very important thing for aspiring authors to do!) and I got this image of a scene with two sisters who don’t know anything about their family’s history, so they make up a history for themselves, which one of the sisters takes way more seriously than the other one. That evolved into the current version, where it’s just a kind of fairy tale as opposed to family history.

3) Bad Girl’s Don’t Die is described as being a compelling and creepy ghost story. Was it always meant to be a ghost story or did it involve into one as you were writing it?

It was always a ghost story, from the very beginning. What I didn’t always know was exactly what role the ghost was going to play. In one of my revisions, the ghost had a very different motive than it has in the current book. But in the end, that didn’t support the story as well, so I changed it up.

4) What made you want to write in the Young Adult genre? Do you ever see yourself writing for say adults or children?

I think I was meant to write YA. I hope adults enjoy my books, but the voice that seems to come out of me is always a teenager. (And I’m sure my parents would have something to say about that!)

In my aspiring-writer days, I would come up with ideas about adults, but they always fell flat and failed to inspire me beyond the original concept. But once I turned those adult stories into YA, my brain exploded with possibilities. And that kept happening, and that’s how I figured out that this is my category. My current work in progress is an idea that used to be about adults, but now it’s teen-centered—and so much better this way!

At some point, I may change. But right now, I don’t have any plans to do so.

5) I’m always looking for new books to read. So, do you have any favorite authors or books?

I like so much of what’s out there right now for teens. There’s a great selection of original, fun fiction. I especially like Scott Westerfeld’s Uglies series. I also read a ton of non-fiction. There’s a book called “Fair and Tender Ladies” by Lee Smith, who’s a Southern writer, that I just love and it features a strong, independent heroine that I think a lot of young women could appreciate. The writing is just beautiful, too.

I also wish that I had been exposed to more non-fiction when I was young. I think it might have given me a chance to consider interests beyond just film school. I was very focused as a teen, but as I get older, I wonder if that focus is necessarily a good thing. If I had read books like “Animal, Vegetable, Miracle” by Barbara Kingsolver or “Animals in Translation” by Temple Grandin, I might have expanded the possibilities for future careers.

It’s not that I regret the choices I’ve made. But I’m a huge player of the “what if” game, and some of my biggest “what ifs” relate to different life paths. I love books that give me a real appreciation for other lifestyles and viewpoints, and I wish I’d read more when I was younger.

6) What's next for you? Another ghost story or something a bit different?

My current work in progress is not a ghost story, but it’s definitely a story where a normal girl ends up in completely abnormal circumstances (as is everything I write, pretty much). That’s all I’m saying about it right now!

7) Lastly, is there anything else you would like to add?

Just “thank you” for your interest and support! Being a debut author is scary and a little uncertain, and being so graciously and enthusiastically received by the book blogging community means the world to me.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thanks so much, Katie! :)

19.4.09

In My Mailbox ( 4/13 to 4/18)

I am "stealing" this from The Story Siren. If you want to find out more about it click here. Anyway, these are books I got this week at the bookstore, library, and in the mail, of course. All summaries are from either Barnes and Noble, Amazon or Goodreads.

The Received:

Secrets of Truth and Beauty by Megan Frazer ( ARC/ July 7th/ Hyperion)

And the first runner up is...When Dara Cohen was little, she was a bright, shiny star. She was the cutest seven-year-old who ever sang Ella Fitzgerald, and it was no wonder she was crowned Little Miss Maine.

That was then. Now Dara's seventeen and she's not so little anymore. So not little, that when her classmates find out about her illustrious resume, their jaws drop. That's just one of her many problems. Another is that her control-freak mom won't get off her case about anything. Yet the one that hurts the most is the family secret: Dara has an older sister her parents tried to erase from their lives.

When a disastrously misinterpreted English project lands her in the counselor's office--and her parents pull her out of school to save face--Dara realizes she has a decision to make. She can keep following the rules and being misunderstood, or she can finally reach out to the sister she's never met--a sister who lives on a collective goat farm in Massachusetts. Dara chooses B. What follows is a summer of revelations, some heartbreaking, some joyous; of friendship, romance, a local beauty pageant; and choices. And as autumn approaches, Dara finds she may have to let go of everything she's taken for granted in order to figure out who she really is, and what family really means.

The Everafter by Amy Huntley ( ARC/ September 29, 2009/ Harper Teen)

Madison Stanton doesn't know where she is or how she got there. But she does know this--she is dead. And alone, in a vast, dark space. The only company she has in this place are luminescent objects that turn out to be all the things Maddy lost while she was alive. And soon she discovers that with these artifacts, she can re-experience--and sometimes even change--moments from her life: Her first kiss. A trip to Disney World. Her sister's wedding. A disastrous sleepover.

In reliving these moments, Maddy learns illuminating and sometimes frightening truths about her life--and death.



Project Sweet Life by Brent Hartinger ( Hardcover/ February 2009/ Harper Teen)

For most kids, fifteen is the year of the optional summer job: Sure, you can get a job if you really want one, but it isn't required or anything. Too bad Dave's dad doesn't agree! Instead of enjoying long days of biking, swimming, and sitting around, Dave and his two best friends are being forced by their fathers into a summer of hard labor.

The friends have something else in mind, though: Not only will they not work over the summer, but they're determined to trick everyone into believing they really do have jobs. So what if the lifeguard doesn't have a tan or the fast-food worker isn't bringing home buckets of free chicken? There's only one problem: Dave's dad wants evidence that his son is actually bringing in money. And that means Dave, Curtis, and Victor will have to get some . . . without breaking the law and without doing any work!

Project Sweet Life is designed for the funny and lazy bone in all of us—a true comedy of errors (without any effort!) from seasoned storyteller Brent Hartinger.


Heavenly by Jennifer Laurens ( Paperback/ Now Out/Grove Creek Publishing)

I met someone who changed everything.
Matthias.
My autistic sister's guardian angel. Honest. Inspiring. Funny.
Hot.
And immortal.
That was the problem.
What could I do?
I did what any other girl would do-I fell in love with him.

Zoë's sister darts in front of cars. Her brother's a pothead. Her parents are so overwhelmed; they don't see Zoë lost in her broken life. Zoë escapes the only way she knows how: partying.

Matthias, a guardian sent from Heaven, watches over Zoë's autistic sister. After Zoë is convinced he's legit, angel and lost girl come together in a love that changes destiny.

But Heaven on Earth can't last forever

I got a lot of great books this week! I can't wait to start them. By the way, I finished The Secrets of Truth and Beauty on Thursday and it was one word- fantastic!!

17.4.09

Inspired Friday with Cheryl Renne Herbsman

Chery Renne Herbsman is the author of the newly released Breathing ( you can check out my review here).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

I first met Savannah during a writing group exercise. On that particular night, a woman came to the group who had never been there before. I immediately recognized her strong Southern accent as Carolinian. You might think all Southern accents sound the same, but they’re actually quite different. I grew up in North Carolina, but hadn’t been back in a while, and the way this woman spoke just sounded like home. Somehow, that opened a window in my mind for Savannah to jump in. She appeared full-blown and began telling me her story.

When I write, I don’t use outlines. I just put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard and see where it leads. Whenever I sat down to write, Savannah kept showing up, kept telling me what was going on with her. I could hear her voice more clearly than I’d ever heard a character’s voice before, which is why I wrote the dialect. I wanted to stay true to the person she presented herself as. I really like Savannah. She was a fun character to spend time with.

Even though she seems so real and separate, I know that she had to have come from within me. So, of course, there are parts of me that inspired who she is. Like Savannah, I fell in love with an older boy when I was a teenager and our relationship was long-distance at times. We hung in there with it and the challenges we faced strengthened what we shared. He and I got married the summer before my senior year in college. This June we will be celebrating our 20th wedding anniversary. So I really do believe in true love and the possibility of finding it when you’re young.

I was always a dreamer and a hopeless romantic (Savannah prefers to call it a hopeful romantic). I still am. So there’s definitely some of me in Savannah. And there’s even some of my husband in Jackson, although they are also very different. I think characters are inspired by parts of us, then take on lives of their own.

This book was great fun to write. I love Savannah’s spunk and all her funny little sayings and her absolute refusal to be talked out of her dreamer/romantic tendencies. I hope readers will enjoy her story as much as I did.

Thanks so much, Lauren, for having me!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Thanks, Cheryl!

16.4.09

TMI by Sarah Quigley

Summary:

Becca has always been know as the overshare queen of her high school. Since, when anything happens to her, no matter how gross, she always has to tell someone, pronto.

Though, when her oversharing habits go behind the limit, hurting someone she loves dearly, she knows she has to stop. So, instead of oversharing with her friends and classmates, she starts up a blog with an alter ego name Bella, telling all of the glory details of her life. Since, no one is going to read it, right?

Review:

I simply adored TMI. Though, why wouldn't I? Since, it did have a cute cover and an interesting premise.

Becca was the classic main character. She was funny, wise, and a bit awkward, making her someone any teenage girl can relate to. I loved how she had a problem with oversharing, since it made for several laugh out loud occasions and made me come to love her. Then, there was Katie, the typical shy but stunning best friend. She was another well developed character. Lastly, Jai, he was the flamboyant boy with a love of all things related to musicals at Becca's high school and one of my favorite characters. I did see the whole plot twist with him coming, though.

The plot was well thought out and original, making this a quick read. I liked how what happened in TMI- Becca telling too much about her relationship with her boyfriend hence loosing him- could happen in any school, which added a big reality to it. Also, other situations had the same kind of feeling. One of my favorite parts of the book was how it centred around Becca's schools reproduction of the musical Grease. Since, I'm a huge sucker for musicals.

Also, Sarah Quigly's writing was another main factor in my liking of this book. It was fast paced and hilarious, making if often seem similar to Meg Cabot's style.

My only problem with TMI was the times when Becca would write her alter ego blog entries. Before, starting this I thought I would love how one of the main focus would be Becca's blog, because of my blog. Though, as the story went on, I felt that the blog entries were lacking majorly. Since, most of the time they were not funny at all and always seemed a bit over dramatized. I did end up skipping a big portion of them, though I still enjoyed TMI just the same.

Overall, TMI is a darling book. I suggest this to teens looking for a light and funny read. I look forward to reading Sarah's next book.

Grade: B+

TMI
will be released April 16, 2009.

* Much thanks to the lovely people at Dutton for sending me this. :)

15.4.09

Waiting On Wednesday: Week 22

My pick this week is:



Secret Society by Tom Dolby


Do you ever wonder how some people have it so easy? The best schools, the hottest parties, the priciest clothes, the easiest jobs?

Maybe it’s not because they work hard or get a lucky break every once in a while.

Maybe it’s because they’re part of a secret club. A secret society.

Phoebe and Nick and Lauren didn’t ask to be society members. They already had it pretty good at New York’s exclusive Chadwick Prep. But after they heard—were assured—of success and ease beyond belief, they say yes to everything. Even to the harrowing initiation ceremony in a gritty warehouse downtown. And the ankh-shaped tattoo they’re forced to get on the nape of their necks.

The instant they become members, everything falls into place. Nick gets a club gig. Lauren’s jewelry designs are a hit. Phoebe has her own gallery show. It’s all perfect—until a body is found in Central Park. With no distinguishing marks...except for an ankh-shaped tattoo.


Why I Want This:

  • I simply love books about secret socites, because they are full of secrets :)
  • The cover is extremely pretty


Secret Societies will be released September 29, 2009 by Harper Collins.

14.4.09

Bad Girls Don't Die by Katie Alender


Summary:

Alexis thought she led a typically dysfunctional high school existence. Dysfunctional like her parents' marriage; her doll-crazy twelve-year-old sister, Kasey; and even her own anti-social, anti-cheerleader attitude.

When a family fight results in some tearful sisterly bonding, Alexis realizes that her life is creeping from dysfunction into danger. Kasey is acting stranger than ever: her blue eyes go green sometimes; she uses old-fashioned language; and she even loses track of chunks of time, claiming to know nothing about her strange behavior. Their old house is changing, too. Doors open and close by themselves; water boils on the unlit stove; and an unplugged air conditioner turns the house cold enough to see their breath in.

Alexis wants to think that it's all in her head, but soon, what she liked to think of as silly parlor tricks are becoming life-threatening--to her, her family, and to her budding relationship with the class president. Alexis knows she's the only person who can stop Kasey -- but what if that green-eyed girl isn't even Kasey anymore?
(from Amazon)


Review:

Bad Girls Don't Die was a gripping ghost thriller that had me on the tips of my toes the whole time.

I loved the plot. It was well written and always provided a surprise or twist that you never saw coming. For instance, I thought I had figured the whole thing out with Kasey several times, though every time I was proved wrong with a new detail that had popped up.

Alexis was a great lead character since she was one all girls can relate to with her feeling of never fitting in and how she worried that she was falling for the wrong guy. Then, there was Kasey who had just the right type of creepiness to her. Lastly, all of the other characters such as Megan and Carter(who I liked a ton) were presented in a three dimensional way and fun to read about.

Alender's writing was amazing, I personally thought. She truly knows how to craft an awesome story. I'm looking forward to reading more by her.

Overall, Bad Girls Don't Die is one of my favorite releases of April. I defiantly suggest you go pick this up from your local book store on the 21st.

Grade: A+

Bad Girls Don't Die will be released April 21st. Also, be sure to check out the awesome book trailer.

* Much thanks goes to the people at Hyperion and Katie Alender for helping me get a copy of this fantastic book. :)

13.4.09

Five More Minutes by Darlene Ryan


Summary:

“I play the Five Minutes More game. Five minutes. I can stand anything for five minutes. Even my father being dead.”

D’Arcy’s desperately wants her father’s death to have been an accident. Then she learns the truth. Why would her father choose suicide? Why didn’t she see the signs? How will she manage alone? Then D’Arcy becomes friends with Seth. Now will things get back to normal or will she have to call on strengths she didn’t know she had to make a new kind of normal, five minutes at a time?

Review:

I remember seeing this at Thao's blog a while back and going " That book looks great!" So, when the chance came up to review this I immediately agreed. Unfortunately, Five More Minutes wasn't as good as I had hoped it would be.

First off, I felt that the plot was extremely over dramatized. Everything had to have a bang to it, leaving it to come out in an unrealistic way. Such as, when D'Arcy decided that her half sister, Clara, didn't deserve their Father's watch, she tipped over one of Clara's boxes full of irreplaceable china. Come on, what 16 or 17 year old would do that? I get that she was mad, but it was blown out of proportion, I personally thought.

Though, I did come to love the characters. Each had a layer to them filled with regret and sadness over the situation that made you relate to them in someway or another. D'Arcy was my personal favorite, even if she did sometimes bring messes upon herself. I felt sorry for her for loosing her dad and how her mom didn't want to be a "real" family anymore. Also, Seth, another main character, was a great add to the story

One of my absolute favorite parts of the story was how Darlene Ryan included the game "Five More Minutes." It fit into the story perfectly. Also, it made you come to a conclusion, that even though D'Arcy's dad left his family, he was still a wonderful father. Lastly, a lot of people can relate to this, since when hasn't there been a time, when you went "Just five more minutes."

My only other problem, was that the ending was rushed and felt like just a two page summary. Since, instead of showing what had happened, Darlene just told what had happened, in a quick way. Plus, some of the added detail was once again over dramatized.

Overall, Five More Minutes is the perfect book for a rainy day. Since, it moves in a fast pace and always has you on your toes with the drama.

Grade: C+

Five More Minutes
is now out in paperback. Also, be sure to check out Darelene's website.

* Much thanks goes to Darlene and the people at Orca for helping me get a copy. :)

12.4.09

In My Mailbox ( 4/6 to 4/11)

I am "stealing" this from The Story Siren. If you want to find out more about it click here. Anyway, these are books I got this week at the bookstore, library, and in the mail, of course. All summaries are from either Barnes and Noble, Amazon or Goodreads.

The Received:

Bad Girls Don't Die by Katie Alender (ARC, Hyperion, April 2009)

Alexis thought she led a typically dysfunctional high school existence. Dysfunctional like her parents' marriage; her doll-crazy twelve-year-old sister, Kasey; and even her own anti-social, anti-cheerleader attitude.

When a family fight results in some tearful sisterly bonding, Alexis realizes that her life is creeping from dysfunction into danger. Kasey is acting stranger than ever: her blue eyes go green sometimes; she uses old-fashioned language; and she even loses track of chunks of time, claiming to know nothing about her strange behavior. Their old house is changing, too. Doors open and close by themselves; water boils on the unlit stove; and an unplugged air conditioner turns the house cold enough to see their breath in.


Alexis wants to think that it's all in her head, but soon, what she liked to think of as silly parlor tricks are becoming life-threatening--to her, her family, and to her budding relationship with the class president. Alexis knows she's the only person who can stop Kasey -- but what if that green-eyed girl isn't even Kasey anymore?


Five More Minutes by Darelene Ryan (Paperback, Orca Book Publishers, April 2009)

“I play the Five Minutes More game. Five minutes. I can stand anything for five minutes. Even my father being dead.”

D’Arcy’s desperately wants her father’s death to have been an accident. Then she learns the truth. Why would her father choose suicide? Why didn’t she see the signs? How will she manage alone? Then D’Arcy becomes friends with Seth. Now will things get back to normal or will she have to call on strengths she didn’t know she had to make a new kind of normal, five minutes at a time?



The Bought:

Raven by Allison Van Diepen ( Hardcover/ Simon Pulse/ Febuary 2009)

Zin dances with fire in every step, speaks in a honey-sweet voice, and sees with eyes that can peer into your soul. Nicole's friendship with him is the only thing that saves her from the boredom of school and the turmoil of her family life. It's no wonder she is madly in love with him. But she can't understand why he keeps her at a distance, even though she can feel his soul reaching out for hers.

Zin is like no man Nicole has ever met, and he carries with him a very old secret. When Nicole uncovers the truth, her love may be the only thing that can save him from it
.

I have already read and written the reviews for Bad Girls Don't Die, which was fabulous, and Five More Minutes, so expect the reviews to be posted sometime this week. :)

11.4.09

What I Got At The Strand

So, if you read my Waiting On Wednesday post you would have saw that I was planning to go The Strand on Wednesday. I did end up going to it and it was the coolest place ever. The amount of the books they have is amazing. One of the things I liked best in their YA section was that I could find books that I usually don't see at Barnes and Noble. Plus, they have an ARC section which was awesome.

As you can see above I ended up getting:

Goldengrove by Francine Prose
The Otherworldlies by Jennifer Anne Kogler
Psych Major Syndrome by Alicia Thompson ( the book I'm most excited to read out of all of them!)
The Comeback Season by Jennifer E. Smith
This Book Isn't Fat, It's Fabulous by Nina Beck

They all look great. I wish I could have found some more of the current ARCs, though. I blame Sharon for that. Since, did you see her post on what she got the day before me at The Strand? I wanted like all the books she got. :(

Though, it's all good, because my mom's already planning to go back to NYC again this Summer for some shopping and to see a broadway show. So, that means another trip to The Strand!! :)

10.4.09

I've Been Interviewed!!

You can check out the interview I did with Steph at Hey Teenager Of The Year here. Also, I was interviewed by Ashely at Books Make Great Lovers a couple of weeks ago. You can check that one out here. Wow, I feel special. lol :)

Inspired Friday with Gayle Forman

Gayle Forman is the author of several books for young adults including her most recent one, If I Stay.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The file name for the first draft of If I Stay was Why Not? It’s not that Why Not? was ever a title I had in mind for the book. It was more that when I first started writing, I was not sure if what I was writing was a novel, a young-adult novel, a viable anything. Also, at that point, even though I’d published a couple of books, including a YA novel (Sisters in Sanity, which I think about twelve people had read) and a travel memoir (You Can’t Get There From Here: A Year On The Fringes of a Shrinking World, read by slightly more than twelve), I did not have a literary agent (mine had quit agenting) and my editor had left her job, which meant I really didn’t have a publisher either. I had a half-written novel, which was being re-written as a YA novel, and that was not working in YA any better than it had been working in adult form. So basically, I felt like I was starting from square one in the publishing business, even though I’d been working as a journalist and author for ten years.

So this is where I was when I got the idea for
If I Stay, and the idea really came as a question (semi spoiler alert): What would you do if you knew that your family had died and you’d been left behind? It’s something I’d thought about a lot, for years. But suddenly, this character, Mia—this 17-year-old cello player popped into my head, fully formed, even though I knew nada about cello—and demanded my attention. She was here to answer that question for me.

When I started writing, I had no idea where she would take me, what the answer would be, what her decision would be. I also had no idea if what I was doing was for my own gratification or edification, or if it was meant to be a book that people might read. Because really? A young-adult novel, about an out-of-body teen cello player having to decide between life and death? This did not seem like a Good Idea. And I did not have all the usual people—agent, editor, etc.—to run it past.

Instead, I didn’t do any of that. I mentioned the idea to one friend. She started to cry. I started to cry. A day or two later, I started writing. I saved the file as Why Not? I did not tell anybody what I was doing, not my friends, not my usual group of writer pals who read my works in progress, not even my husband for a while. Nobody. I just kept going, which is hugely uncharacteristic for a blabbermouth like me.

I got so completely swept up in the story that the question of whether or not the book was a book or who it was meant for or whether it was too heavy or depressing to be YA, none of that mattered. I just wrote. And wrote. And wrote. I figured I would worry about the other stuff later. And in a weird way, it didn’t matter. Writing it was such an emotional experience, such a—and I know this sound cheesy—transcendent one, that it was gratification and reward enough.

So given all that uncertainty and secrecy and not even thinking of this as novel, it has made what’s happened to it all the more surreal. This thing that started as Why Not? in total privacy is being published in the far corners of the world and I get emails from people responding to it in the most personal of ways, which both blows my mind and fills my heart.

Maybe there’s some lesson in that. Something about following a path with no obvious outcome, about it being okay to ask questions that you might not have answers to. Hey, why not?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thanks so much, Gayle! :)

9.4.09

If I Stay by Gayle Forman


Summary:

In a single moment, everything changes. Seventeen year- old Mia has no memory of the accident; she can only recall riding along the snow-wet Oregon road with her family. Then, in a blink, she finds herself watching as her own damaged body is taken from the wreck...

A sophisticated, layered, and heartachingly beautiful story about the power of family and friends, the choices we all make—and the ultimate choice Mia commands. (from Amazon)


Review:

Before starting If I Stay, I had high exceptions. Since, I had heard some great things about it. Though, I wondered, in the back of my mind, if this could possibly be as good as people were saying, and it was, but even better!

If I Stay was a heartfelt, amazing, and thought provoking novel that I quickly devoured in two days. Between breaks at school, during study hall, basically any time I had free time, I would always be caught reading this. It was just that EXCELLENT!

I loved the characters, especially Mia. She was presented in such a way that you could feel her pain and anger at the world while still understanding why she would want to stay or leave. Also, I liked how the novel would flash back between present and past, because you got to see how excellent of relationships she had with her parents, best friend, boyfriend, and grandparents. Lastly, I enjoyed reading about the other characters, such as Kim, Adam, and Willow, since even their emotions and fight for Mia to stay jumped off the page from the start.

The plot and writing was also interesting and well done. Some of the twists and turns to the story were predictable, while still being interesting. Plus, the writing just flowed in this lyrical way making this one of my favorite books of ‘09.

My Only Problem? It seemed too short. I would have loved for it to be longer, since as soon as you got into Mia’s head completely, it was coming to a quick close. Plus, the ending I just couldn’t understand what had happened. Maybe I’m dense or missing something big, I don’t know. So, my questions to those of you have read this, do you understand what happened at the end? I would love to read some of your opinions.

Overall, If I Stay was one magical journey that will defiantly bring a tear or two to your eyes several times. I can’t wait to read more by Gayle!

Grade: A+

* Much thanks goes to JL for sending me this lovely book!

8.4.09

Waiting On Wednesday: Week 21

My pick this week is:


Madison Stanton doesn't know where she is or how she got there. But she does know this--she is dead. And alone, in a vast, dark space. The only company she has in this place are luminescent objects that turn out to be all the things Maddy lost while she was alive. And soon she discovers that with these artifacts, she can re-experience--and sometimes even change--moments from her life: Her first kiss. A trip to Disney World. Her sister's wedding. A disastrous sleepover.

In reliving these moments, Maddy learns illuminating and sometimes frightening truths about her life--and death.

Why I want this:

Um, since it looks AMAZING! Plus, the cover is stunning. Sadly, it's not going to be released till September 29, 2009. :(

Side Note: I'm going to NYC with my family today! I'm so excited. And I might even get to go to The Strand! :)

7.4.09

Winner of This Is What I Want To Tell You


The winner of This Is What I Want To Tell You is........




Congrats, Bri. You have 72 hours to respond to that email I just sent you.
Didn't win? Well, I have two more contests planned for this month so be on the look out. :)

6.4.09

Breathing by Cheryl Renee Herbsman


Summary:

What if the boy who took your breath away was the one who could help you breathe?

Savannah would be happy to spend the summer in her coastal Carolina town working at the library and lying in a hammock reading her beloved romance novels. But then she meets Jackson. Once they lock eyes, she’s convinced he’s the one—her true love, her soul mate, a boy different from all the rest. And at first it looks like Savannah is right. Jackson abides by her mama’s strict rules, and stays by her side during a hospitalization for severe asthma, which Savannah becomes convinced is only improving because Jackson is there. But when he’s called away to help his family—and seems uncertain about returning—Savannah has to learn to breathe on her own, both literally and figuratively.
(from Amazon)


Review:

You know a book is going to be fabulous when it's tag line is "What if the boy who took your breath away was the one who could help you breathe?" Luckily, Breathing was that and even more.

The whole plot and problems in Breathing were extremely basic and sometimes predictable. Though, it felt like Cheryl Renne Herbsman just added a whole new feeling to it because of the southern charm and the interesting characters. Savannah was defiantly one of my favorites because, for one, she loved books and lived in an small town just like me. Though, I felt that Savannah could get a bit annoying at times because of her wining over Jackson not visiting and how he didn't care about her anymore. Also, other characters like Jackson and Dog were great adds and ,once again, fun to read about.

Cheryl's writing in this was probably my favorite part of the story, though. Since, I loved how she would spice up the writing with southern slang words. Also, she just made the characters jump off the page from the start.

Once again, a 2009 Debutante has proved that she has talent and has great potential in the writing business. I'm really looking forward to reading more by Cheryl. I highly suggest you go pick up Breathing when it's released on April 16.

Grade: A-

Breathing will be released on April 16 in Hardcover. You can find out more about it here. Also, be sure to check out Cheryl's website and blog.

5.4.09

In My Mailbox ( 3/30 to 4/4)

I am "stealing" this from The Story Siren. If you want to find out more about it click here. Anyway, these are books I got this week at the bookstore, library, and in the mail, of course. All summaries are from either Barnes and Noble, Amazon or Goodreads.

The Received:

Hate List by Jennifer Brown (ARC/September '09/ Little Brown)

Five months ago, Valerie Leftman’s boyfriend, Nick, opened fire on their school cafeteria. Shot trying to stop him, Valerie inadvertently saves the life of a classmate, but is implicated in the shootings because of the list she helped create. A list of people and things they hated. The list her boyfriend used to pick his targets.

Now, after a summer of seclusion, Val is forced to confront her guilt as she returns to school to complete her senior year. Haunted by the memory of the boyfriend she still loves and navigating rocky relationships with her family, former friends and the girl whose life she saved, Val must come to grips with the tragedy that took place and her role in it, in order to make amends and move on with her life.

This looks so GOOD! Though, I'm not a big fan of the cover, for some reason.


Sleepaway Girls by Jen Calonita ( ARC/ May 5, 2009/ Little Brown)

When Sam's best friend gets her first boyfriend, she's not ready to spend the summer listening to the two of them call each other "pookie." Sick of being a third wheel, Sam applies to be a counselor-in-training at Whispering Pines camp in the New York Catskills. But what she doesn't realize is that it's not going to be all Kumbaya sing-alongs and gooey s'mores. If Ashley, the alpha queen of Whispering Pines, doesn't ruin Sam's summer, then her raging crush on the surfer-blond and flirtatious Hunter just might. At least she has playful Cole, who's always teasing her, but is oh-so-comfortable to hang out with, and the singular gang of girls that become fast friends with Sam-they call themselves the Sleepaway Girls.
Looks cute!

Prophecy of the Sisters by Michelle Zink ( ARC/August 2009/ Little Brown)

Sixteen-year-old Lia Milthorpe and her twin sister Alice have just become orphans, and, as Lia discovers, they have also become enemies. The twins are part of an ancient prophecy that has turned generations of sisters against each other. To escape from a dark fate and to remain in the arms of her beloved boyfriend James, Lia must end the prophecy before her sister does. Only then will she understand the mysterious circumstances of her parents' deaths, the true meaning of the strange mark branded on her wrist, and the lengths to which her sister will go to defeat her. Debut novelist Michelle Zink takes readers on an unforgettable journey where one sister's fateful decision could have an impact of Biblical proportions. Prophecy of the Sisters is the first of three books.

I started jumping up and down when I saw this book in the package from Little Brown!


Geektastic: Stories from the Nerd Herd edited by Holly Black and Cecil Castellucci ( ARC/ August 2009/ Little Brown)

Acclaimed authors Holly Black (Ironside)and Cecil Castellucci (Boy Proof) have united in geekdom to edit short stories from some of the best selling and most promising geeks in young adult literature: M.T. Anderson, Libba Bray, Cassandra Clare, Tracy Lynn, Cynthia and Greg Leitich Smith, David Levithan, Kelly Link, Barry Lyga, Wendy Mass, Garth Nix, Scott Westerfield, Lisa Yee, and Sara Zarr.

With illustrated interstitials from comic book artists Hope Larson and Bryan Lee O'Malley, Geektastic covers all things geeky, from Klingons and Jedi Knights to fan fiction, theater geeks, and cosplayers. Whether you're a former, current, or future geek, or if you just want to get in touch with your inner geek, Geektastic will help you get your geek on!

Another book I'm extremely excited to read!

A Sweet Disorder by Jacueline Kolosov ( ARC/June 2009/Hyperion)

*No Cover Available*

Sixteen-year old Miranda has no idea how much her life is going to change upon hearing the news of her father's death. Left with little dowry to offer, Miranda faces a broken engagement, and is sent to live with her father's cousin, the Count John Hardwood, and his wife whose primary goal is to take her to Court and marry her off to the insufferable Lord Seagrave for their own profit. At Queen Elizabeth's court, Miranda soon learns that a large part of her survival will depend on her knowing who to trust. All the maidens at Court dream of being one of the Queen's ladies in waiting. When Miranda distinguishes herself from the rest with her exquisite sewing and embroidery skills, she gets the attention of the Queen, much to the anger and jealousy of the courtiers, ladies in waiting, and even a trusted "friend." As Miranda begins to win the Queen's favor, she is given the ultimate test-to recreate Elizabeth's mother's (Ann Boleyn) coronation gown. Miranda knows this is her opportunity to escape the shackles of convention and get out of a marriage to Lord Seagrave and instead establish an independent life at Court as the Queen's seamstress. But how will she reunite with Henry Raleigh, the man to whom she was once promised, and has always loved?With sophisticated writing, an eye for historically accurate detail, and a flair for suspense, Jacqueline Kolosov re-creates the intrigues of Elizabethan society with a vividness and immediacy that will make teen readers recall the pleasures and tensions of their own lives.

This look great, too. Plus, the cover on the ARC is extremely pretty.

Going Bovine by Libba Bray (ARC/September '09/Random House)

A dark comedy about a 16 year old boy named Cameron who has mad cow disease and a 16 year dwarf named Gonzo who he met in the hospital. Gonzo is a video gamer who thinks that everything is trying to kill him. Cameron has visitation from a punkish angel named Dulcie who has a propensity for spray-painting her wings. They are all on a mission to get to Disneyworld.

Libba Bray is one of my favorite authors! So, you can just image the lovely happy dance I did when I got this. lol. I think my mom was extremely freighted.


The Treasure Map Of Boys by E. Lockhart ( ARC/ July '09/ Random House)

Ruby is back at Tate Prep, and it's her thirty-seventh week in the state of Noboyfriend. Her panic attacks are bad, her love life is even worse, and what's more: Noel is writing her notes, Jackson is giving her frogs, Gideon is helping her cook, and Finn is making her brownies. Rumors are flying, and Ruby's already-sucky reputation is heading downhill. Not only that, she's also: running a bake sale, learning the secrets of heavymetal therapy, encountering some seriously smelly feet, defending the rights of pygmy goats, and bodyguarding Noel from unwanted advances. In this companion novel to The Boyfriend List and The Boy Book, Ruby struggles to secure some sort of mental health, to understand what constitutes a real friendship, and to find true love--if such a thing exists.

I LOVE Ruby Oliver novels!

Being Nikki by Meg Cabot (ARC/ May '09/ Point)

Things aren't pretty for Emerson Watts.

Em was sure there couldn't be anything worse than being a brainiac the body of a teenaged supermodel.

But it turned out she was wrong. Because that supermodel could turn out to have a mother who's gone mysteriously missing, a brother who's shown up on her doorstep demanding answers, a former best friend who's intent on destroying Stark Enterprises to avenge the death of his lost love, and a British heartthrob who's written a song about her that's topping the charts.

How can Em balance all that with school, runway shows, and weekend jaunts to St. Johns - especially when she's got ex-boyfriends crawling out of the woodwork who want more than just a photo op; a sister who is headed to the high school cheerleading championships; a company she represents that seems to be turning to the dark side...

Not to mention trying to convince the love of her life that models aren't really airheads after all...especially one model in particular.

But then, nobody said it was going to be easy being Nikki.


Sooooooooooooo excited about this! I even got an extremely cute book mark in the package.

I also got:

(Re) Cycler by Lauren Mclaughlin ( ARC/ August '09/ Random House) which looks interesting, though I haven't read the first one yet

Fat Cat (ARC/ October '09/ Random House) by Robin Brande which looks good, too.

Castration Celebration by Jake Wizner ( ARC/ May '09/ Random House) which dosen't look like something I would ever read, but I'll give it a try.

Overall:
An AMAZING week!
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