Review: Just One Day by Gayle Forman

Written By: Kellie - May• 13•13

just one day

Publisher: Dutton Juvenile
Publish Date: January 8th, 2013
Source: Purchased
Goodreads

Synopsis: When sheltered American good girl Allyson “LuLu” Healey first meets laid-back Dutch actor Willem De Ruiter at an underground performance of Twelfth Night in England, there’s an undeniable spark. After just one day together, that spark bursts into a flame, or so it seems to Allyson, until the following morning, when she wakes up after a whirlwind day in Paris to discover that Willem has left. Over the next year, Allyson embarks on a journey to come to terms with the narrow confines of her life, and through Shakespeare, travel, and a quest for her almost-true-love, to break free of those confines. -Goodreads

Thoughts: Whoa, Gayle Forman! How did you DO that?! Just One Day is a simple story about being a person trying to figure out the whos and whats, that somehow manages to be so much more.

Allyson is a character I’m sure a lot of readers can relate to. There’s a little bit of Allyson in everyone, and a little bit of Lulu (her spontaneous alter-ego), which is why this book works so well. Gayle Forman managed to make “finding yourself” seem not at all cheesy or over done. It’s just something we all have to go through, and Allyson does it beautifully/disastrously/just-want-to-hug-that-girl-ly.

While both the character and plot could have carried this book on their own, the surprise treat for me was all the travel. This book brought back a lot of the fantastic feelings that came with my own European travels, and it also brought back the ones that make me facepalm. Also, Paris is amazing.

Here’s the part where I wish I could talk about the ending. I’m not sure I agree with it, but I loved it all the same. And… sequel!! (sort of) Overall, GREAT book, that I’ll be purchasing a second copy of for my reluctant-reader sister.

My only problem with this book is that every time I see it mentioned on Twitter One Day More from Les Mis get stuck in my head for a few hours, but that’s something I can live with.

Purchase Just One Day
@Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions
@Dear Author
@Never Ending Stories
@Mostly Reading YA

Bout of Books 7.0- Goals & Updates

Written By: Kellie - May• 12•13

BoBAnd so it begins (or at least it will tomorrow)! Today is Bout of Books Eve and readers everywhere are getting ready for a week of bookish insanity. You can get up-to-date on the Bout of Books blog that has all the nitty-gritty details of what to expect.

My Goals

This week is going to be pure madness! It’s the last week before my next book release, and I still have A LOT to do. More than I care to admit. But I’m going to break that up with a lot of reading because I have a lot to do. Snarky Books has a lot of tours coming up that I have to read up for. I also have a stack of MUST READS that I somehow haven’t managed to read yet. Fingers crossed, I’m hoping to cross six books off my list this week. I’ll be working from the following pool of books…

MOST EXCITED FOR
– Oath Bound by Rachel Vincent
– Kitty Steals the Show by Carrie Vaughn

STILL INSANELY EXCITED FOR
– Finishing Scarlet by Marissa Meyer
– Poison by Bridget Zinn
– Finishing Partials by Dan Wells
– Finishing Prophecy of the Sisters by Michelle Zink
– Stars in Her Eyes by Clare C. Marshall
– Runes by Ednah Walters
– Siege & Storm by Leigh Bardugo
– Sky on Fire by Emmy Laybourne
– Something off my Kindle collection

How epic would it be if I could read all of those books this week? I also want to participate in the twitter chats when I can!

And finally… next Sunday I will be hosting the final Bout of Books challenge for 7.0, and it’s going to be epic. Be sure to check back for the chance to win A LOT of AWESOME books.

UPDATES
Monday- I finished a short story from my Kindle collection, started Kitty Steals the Show, and still cannot find where I put my copy of Scarlet. I did however get to participate in the Twitter chat.

Friday- This week has not gone according to plan! I haven’t had nearly as much time to read as I wanted (ain’t that always the case), so I may give myself an unofficial bout of books next week. On the bright side… my next book is ready to release next week! Woop!

Promo: Over the Rainbow by

Written By: Kellie - May• 11•13

rainbow

I just wanted to take a minute today to point everyone in the direction of a Kickstarter project that you should all check out. Author, Brian Rowe has been publishing books for awhile now, but he’s got something new in the works that is worth having a look at.

Also, I don’t think that’s the real cover. Are those pterodactylus? Anyways, details! Click the cover to check out the campaign.

Over the Rainbow is a love story, a fantasy, an action adventure. And it’s a modern day update of The Wizard of Oz!

16-year-old Zippy Green never meant to fall in love with a girl, but when she does, her ultra-conservative father tries to send her to anti-gay camp. At the Kansas City airport, however, she hides inside a giant suitcase and sneaks onto an airplane headed not to the camp, but to Seattle, where her online love Mira lives. Halfway through the flight, the plane barrels out of control and crashes into the ground, knocking her unconscious.

When Zippy awakens, she finds that most of the passengers have vanished. She doesn’t know what’s happened, but she’s determined to find out. She begins a quest on foot toward Seattle, and along the way, she meets an exchange student with a concussion, a homeless man with a heart condition, a child without a shred of bravery, and a terrier named Judy. Together the group discovers that more than two-thirds of the world’s population has mysteriously disappeared. But that’s only the beginning…

All Zippy wants is to find her Mira, but before she can she has to contend with two outside forces. The first is her homophobic father, who does everything in his power to keep her from the girl she loves. And the second is extinct creatures of all shapes and sizes, including living, breathing dinosaurs, which have replaced the missing population.

Over the Rainbow is unlike any novel you’ve ever read. It mixes romance and comedy and action like you’ve never seen before. And at the heart of it is a love story between two teenage girls that will inspire readers all the world over!

Click here to read the first scene!

Review: For Darkness Shows the Stars by Diana Peterfreund

Written By: Kellie - May• 10•13

for darkness shows the stars

Series: For Darkness Shows the Stars, #1
Publisher: Balzer + Bray
Publish Date: June 12th, 2012
Source: Purchased
Goodreads

Rating: 5/5 -ZOMG! AMAZING!

Review: LOOOVVVEEEDDD ITTTTT!

I should probably say more. But really, I loved this book! It was simple, the worldbuilding was beautiful, and the characters were genuine. It read like a classic (without being boring), and well… I just really enjoyed this book.

If you’re just stumbling on my blog for the first time, I promise my reviews aren’t always this short. Actually, let’s say succinct. But all that you can really say about For Darkness Shows the Stars, is that everyone needs to read it.

Counting down the days until book two!

Annnnd, I’ve just realized how far away that is.

Sad, Kellie.

Purchase For Darkness Shows the Stars:
@Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@Young Adult Anonymous
@Writing My Own Fairytale
@Tumbling Books

Cover Reveal: Maverick by Anna Cruise + Giveaway

Written By: Kellie - May• 09•13

maverick_cover

Maverick by Anna Cruise
Publication date: May 21st 2013
Genre: New Adult Contemporary
Synopsis:

Kellen Handler is in deep.

Ever since he can remember, he’s wanted to be a professional surfer. And he made it, rising to the top of the ranks, traveling the world and riding every break he’s ever dreamed of. His good looks and reputation for living on the edge—both in and out of the water—have made him an international superstar. But when his best friend dies in a tragic accident, Kellen wipes out big time, spiraling so badly that everything he’s worked for starts to disintegrate.

Tour officials scramble to do damage control and demand he work with a public relations company to clean up his bad boy image. It doesn’t help that the person assigned to him, Gina Bellori, has her own demons associated with the surfing world.

Against her better judgement Gina accepts the job and concentrates on repairing Kellen’s tattered reputation, despite his protests and despite the pain it causes her. With her past colliding with her present—and Kellen in the thick of it—she begins to realize that some secrets can’t stay hidden.

And suddenly, Kellen Handler is no longer worried about losing his career.

He’s more worried about losing his heart.

Review: The Elite by Kiera Cass

Written By: Kellie - May• 07•13

the elite

Series: The Selection, #2
Publisher: Harper Teen
Publish Date: April 23rd, 2013
Source: Purchased
Goodreads

Rating: 4/5 – I need to know what happens next!

Synopsis: Thirty-five girls came to the palace to compete in the Selection. All but six have been sent home. And only one will get to marry Prince Maxon and be crowned princess of Illea.

America still isn’t sure where her heart lies. When she’s with Maxon, she’s swept up in their new and breathless romance, and can’t dream of being with anyone else. But whenever she sees Aspen standing guard around the palace, and is overcome with memories of the life they planned to share. With the group narrowed down to the Elite, the other girls are even more determined to win Maxon over—and time is running out for America to decide.

Just when America is sure she’s made her choice, a devastating loss makes her question everything again. And while she’s struggling to imagine her future, the violent rebels that are determined to overthrow the monarchy are growing stronger and their plans could destroy her chance at any kind of happy ending.
-Goodreads

Review: Ahhhhh, I love this series! The Elite was one of my most highly anticipated 2013 titles. I reread The Selection a month ago, and was ready to go as soon as I could get my hands on the sequel. So, what was the result? I really enjoyed it. Loved it even. Not quite jumping up and down, sleeping with it under my pillow until the next one comes out, but it was everything I hoped it would be, and managed to live up to the first book… so that’s saying a lot.

Where book one kind of had a slow build, the drama in this one just kept coming. There were a few moments that fell a little flat of expectations, but others that will absolutely rip your heart out. The love triangle is one of those “not quite there” elements, as I still can’t bring myself to root for Aspen even a little, so it was a little frustrating watching America hem and haw over something that seems pretty obvious, but I guess that’s to be expected with these kinds of romance stories.

Where the book really shone was in America’s other relationships. There are a lot of ups and downs with her and the other selected girls, as well as some big revelations about the royal family. There are also some bits and pieces thrown in about her own family, but not enough to be truly satisfying. I hope all the tidbits Kiera Cass has given us about them will come together with the last book.

Overall The Elite was a fun, fast read that I didn’t want to put down. The world-building and characters remain on par with book one, and the story won’t leave you disappointed.

Also, I’m really hoping the pilot gets green-lit  Although, after reading this book, having Anthony Steward Head play the King will basically break my heart.

Purchase The Elite
@Amazon (US) @Amazon (CA) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@Books With Bite
@Narratively Speaking
@The Bawdy Book Blog

Guest Post: The Challenges of Writing a Series by Debbie Dee

Written By: Kellie - May• 03•13

undergroundWhen I was about seven years old my friends and I decided to put on a play for our parents. We set out lawn chairs, gathered props and costumes, and came up with a script we thought was pretty amazing. We had a packed house on opening night (all 10 lawn chairs were filled!) and the crowd eagerly watched as our play unfolded before their eyes. I’m pretty sure we rocked it. In fact, I was so certain of our awesomeness that near the end of the play I pulled my friends aside and suggested we do another one. Right then. I was so sure of our amazing seven-year-old improvisational skills that I had no doubt we would continue dazzling our captive audience with whatever we came up with. My friends agreed and we continued on, shouting out whatever popped into our minds. We even expanded our “stage area” to include the sides of the house and behind the porch. Never mind that our audience couldn’t see us in these locations, we were actors and we were putting on the best play EVER!

I’m not sure how long this lasted, but I remember my mother pulling me aside and, after kneeling down to my level, saying, “I think it’s time to finish the show. You started out great, but things are getting out of hand.”

She was so kind, and her voice was gentle, but I was devastated. How could they not love the second play when they loved the first one so much? Didn’t they see how much passion I was putting into my acting? (I had just completed a drama scene with a stray cat and I was pretty sure I was on the road to the Academy Awards.)

My friends and I took our bows, our parents clapped, and then the chairs were put away and the “curtain” closed. I forgot about that day until I sat down to write the sequel to The Last Witch. My mother’s words flooded back to me. “You started out great, but things are getting out of hand.” Fresh waves of terror washed over me as I recalled my younger humiliation. What if people didn’t like my second effort? What if they packed up their chairs and left in the middle of my most heartfelt endeavor? Granted, I knew I would put in a little more planning for a second book than my younger self had put into a second play, but doubt still hung over me.

Fortunately, while writing The Underground Witch, I was swept away into the story. My mind had no room for doubt because it was having too much fun with all the action, love, and adventure! When I finished the first draft of The Underground Witch, I was on a creative high, one that had me skipping through my house with glee. I’d done it! I’d written the best sequel EVER!

And then the editing started.

Without my imagination to carry me off into new lands, self-doubt crept in. Every sentence sounded like complete crap, ever paragraph a total waste of space. I wanted to toss the entire manuscript out a dozen times, or at least throw my computer across the room. Instead, I worked hard and went over the manuscript until I was sick of it. And then I went over it again. There were days when I never thought I’d be able to get it right, and then I’d have days where everything seemed to fall into place. And somewhere along the way I fell in love with it again.

I’m glad I didn’t give in to my self-doubt, or throw my computer across the room (phew!), but I’m especially glad I didn’t give up on Emmeline’s story. Not only because she had barely begun to discover her power in the first book, but because she totally kicks butt in The Underground Witch and I loved writing every second of it!!

debbie dee

About Debbie Dee

Debbie Dee recently moved to southern Idaho with her husband and three children where

In addition to writing, she plays the piano, harp, violin, and gets in frequent fights with her cello. She loves to read and play board games – when she is winning. she is learning how to be a country girl in her favorite pair of blue heels. She adores fairy tales and happy endings, but secretly crushes on the bad guy now and then.

Debbie is the author of young adult novels, The Last Witch and The Underground Witch. Her first middle-grade novel, Tiy and the Prince of Egypt, is due out Fall 2013.

You can visit Debbie online, on her website.

Purchase The Last Witch@Amazon, @Barnes & Noble

Already read The Last Witch? Purchase The Underground Witch@Amazon, Barnes & Noble

Review: Dare You To by Katie McGarry

Written By: Kellie - May• 02•13

dare you to

Series: Pushing the Limits, #2
Publisher: Harlequin Teen
Publish Date: May 28th, 2013
Source: ARC via NetGalley
Goodreads

Rating: 4/5 – Another great love story from Katie McGarry!

Synopsis: If anyone knew the truth about Beth Risk’s home life, they’d send her mother to jail and seventeen-year-old Beth who knows where. So she protects her mom at all costs. Until the day her uncle swoops in and forces Beth to choose between her mom’s freedom and her own happiness. That’s how Beth finds herself living with an aunt who doesn’t want her and going to a school that doesn’t understand her. At all. Except for the one guy who shouldn’t get her, but does….

Ryan Stone is the town golden boy, a popular baseball star jock-with secrets he can’t tell anyone. Not even the friends he shares everything with, including the constant dares to do crazy things. The craziest? Asking out the Skater girl who couldn’t be less interested in him.

But what begins as a dare becomes an intense attraction neither Ryan nor Beth expected. Suddenly, the boy with the flawless image risks his dreams-and his life-for the girl he loves, and the girl who won’t let anyone get too close is daring herself to want it all... -Goodreads

Thoughts: I was so thrilled to be approved to read Dare You To after absolutely inhaling Pushing the Limits late last year. When it comes to topnotch teen dramatic romance, you really can’t go wrong with Katie McGarry.

Like Pushing the Limits, this book focuses on characters who haven’t exactly had it easy. While Beth’s home life definitely leaves a lot to be desired, even golden boy Ryan has a lot going on that his friends don’t know about. What makes these books so enjoyable to read is that they never cross that perilous border into the world of unnecessary angst. Sure, there’s a little here and there, but the characters are teenagers with a lot going on. But both Beth and Ryan are people first, they just happen to be teenagers… so they’re incredibly easy to relate to, even though I have next to nothing in common with either of them.

At first I wasn’t sure how I felt about the second novel focusing on Beth–I didn’t really like her the first time around. But seeing into her back story made it easy to root for her, especially once she began to relax a little. She does transfer schools at the beginning of the book, so there isn’t as much Noah or Isaiah as I thought, but it still worked. There are new characters to enjoy, plus the added emotion of Beth finding a balance between her old life and her new one. It makes for an interesting read.

Dare You To is dark, emotional, romantic, and so so good. Highly recommended!

Pre-order Dare You To
@Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN) @The Book Depository

Second Opinions:
@The Book Goddess
@Best Books
@A Little Shelf of Heaven

Promo: Siege by Rhiannon Frater

Written By: Kellie - May• 01•13

SiegeBlitzBanner

Today I’m featuring the final book of my absolute favorite zombie series. I’ve talked about these books A LOT already, so I’ll keep it short. Siege!! You should read it if you’ve already started the As The World Dies trilogy… if not, then go pick up The First Days, right now!

Presenting… Siege!!

siege

As the survivors continue to seek stability in their lives,
forces both inside and outside the fort walls move
them toward a final, climactic conflict between
the living and the dead.  Jenni, Katie and the others
discover that they are not alone, that there is another
enclave of survivors whose leaders plan to take over the fort.

Faced with a series of difficult decisions, each choice they
make could lead to the deaths of those they love or, if not
careful, their own demise.

Meanwhile, an army of the dead is descending on the fort.
Soon, the living will face their ultimate fear…a siege by the dead.

But they will fight to the end to survive… As the world dies.

Purchase Siege @The Book Depository

Guest Post: Goldilocks Past and Present by Anna Rose

Written By: Kellie - Apr• 30•13

goldilocksToday, I’ve got something special for you! I don’t host guest posts very often, but… I always love fairytale retellings, so I just had to have Anna Rose, author of Goldilocks on the blog. You should absolutely check out her book, Goldilocks and then read on to find out how she went about adapting this classic character.

Synopsis: Katherine, who has grown up in the comfort and safety of her father’s palace, finds herself drawn to the cottage where her late grandmother grew up. Lured by the mysteries of the forest, and alarmed by talk of marriage between her sister and their cousin, she follows her Great-Aunt Rose into the unknown.

Although Katherine enjoys the simple life, she begins to fear for Rose’s sanity as the old woman recalls her childhood experiences, so fantastical they must surely have been imagined. She also fears the rumours of dangerous animals nearby, but an encounter with three bears leads her to discover that her aunt’s stories are true, and that the forest holds secrets even Rose never dreamed of. -Goodreads

Purchase Goldilocks: @Amazon (US) @Amazon (CAN)

And now… Goldilocks, Past and Present!

Fairytales in all forms, all media and of all eras will always be loved.  I wrote Goldilocks because I am one such lover of fairytales, and retellings of all kinds, and it is my hope that this particular retelling will be enjoyed by likeminded people.

Perhaps Goldilocks was a strange choice of heroine, as her story is brief and we know almost nothing about her.  In fact, I’d say the only thing we know for sure is that she is not a heroine at all, but rather nothing more than a brazen intruder.  Sometimes the media, from Roald Dahl’s wonderful Revolting Rhymes (do read it if you haven’t already) to an episode of the classic sitcom The Addams Family, would have it that Goldilocks is intended to be the ‘good guy’.  I’ve never understood this point of view, and I daresay Robert Southey – the first to record ‘The Three Bears’ in narrative form – would feel the same way.  I discovered, whilst researching the story’s history, that Southey wrote the Goldilocks character as an old vagrant woman, and was unkind in his descriptions of her.  From there, the evolution of the character is very interesting, but I mustn’t bore you with that now.  Instead, let me get onto my Goldilocks.

The first thing to do was change her from an antagonist to a protagonist, whilst sticking as closely as possible to the iconic events of the fairytale.  Generally speaking, it isn’t difficult to find ways to necessitate someone entering a house in the middle of the forest.  Going back to Southey’s old woman, the very word ‘vagrant’ suggests homelessness; perhaps she was simply cold and tired and hungry.  That’s not to say this is the idea I went with, and I hope that what I did was a little more inventive than that.  I did take inspiration from Southey’s original tale, however, and had an older woman be the first to the invade the three bears’ home.

It was some years ago that I saw the potential for a coming-of-age story inspired by this tale of a young girl wandering into the forest and encountering wild beasts.  Of course, I know I wasn’t by any means the first to think along those lines.  The already symbol-rich ‘Little Red Riding Hood’ has been consistently popular for adaptation, and there have been some marvellous retellings of the lesser known ‘Snow White and Rose Red’, a fairytale which has similarities to ‘The Three Bears’ and is more than a little significant in my own Goldilocks.  (Here I must take a moment to recommend Margo Lanagan’s wonderful novel Tender Morsels, which helped to inspire some of the ideas in this novel.)

In writing this book I set out to create something accessible and entertaining, with a little to chew on, and which pays homage to the much loved fairytales that inspired it.  Now I’d like to end by thanking Kellie for this opportunity to talk about – and, indeed, promote – my tribute to this timeless genre.

You can visit Anna Rose, on her website to learn more about her novel, Goldilocks.