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Monday, March 26, 2012

Showcase Sunday

So I decided to do In My Mailbox. I limit myself to only three memes and since I, regretfully, deleted Goodsies and Badsies (Don't worry, I'll restart it. Though you may see some I already did.) and think I will delete Song of the Week, I have room for In My Mailbox! Showcase Sunday
Of course, all credit goes to The Story Siren Books, Biscuits, and Tea who I think is the mother of all book blogs. Seriously.
For those of you who don't know, In My Mailbox Showcase Sunday is a meme where I share all of the books that I'll be reading/reviewing. Keep in mind that I won't have time to review every single one, but at least you'll know what's going on behind the scenes.

Books I bought:
Pandemonium (Delirium, #2)          Obsidian (Lux, #1)         

Books I recieved from other bloggers: 
Illuminate (Gilded Wings, #1)          The Secret Sisterhood of Heartbreakers

Library:
Rules of Attraction (Perfect Chemistry, #2)

I'm dying to read Pandemonium by Lauren Oliver, also known as the "Most Awaited Book of 2012". Of course, Delirium amazed me, so it was a given that I would read Pandemonium! Obsidian, I'm not so sure about. Aliens? Not really my thing. Everyone's been ranting about it though, as well as Half-Blood which I  haven't read, so I decided to give it a try. It can't be that bad though.

Illuminate seems interesting enough, but I've read some negative reviews. So far so good though! Secret Sisterhood of Heartbreakers captred my interest. It looks like it has a good plot and a a lot of character developement.

Rules of Attraction is the second book to Perfect Chemisty, which I rated 5 stars. Yeah, it was that good! I can't wait to read Rules of Attraction!


Sunday, March 25, 2012

The Hunt Audiobook Giveaway

The HuntHere's one more giveaway for all of you guys! The Macmillan Audio Company is generously giving the audiobook of the Hunt to one winner on my blog. The Hunt was amazing, and for my full review, click here . To enter, all you have to do is fill out the rafflecopter below (which I have just discovered) and pray that you win!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Remembrance by Michelle Madow

Remembrance (Transcend Time, #1)
Goodreads Blurb
Lizzie Davenport has been reincarnated from Regency Era, England ... but she doesn't know it yet.

Then Drew Carmichael transfers into Lizzie's high school at the beginning of the year, and she feels a connection to him, almost like she knows him. She can't stop thinking about him, but whenever she tries talking with him about the mysteries behind her feelings, he makes it clear that he wants nothing to do with her. Reaching him is even more difficult because she has a boyfriend, Jeremy, who has started to become full of himself after being elected co-captain of the varsity soccer team, and her flirtatious best friend Chelsea starts dating Drew soon after his arrival. So why can't she get him out of her mind?

Even though Lizzie knows she should let go of her fascination with Drew, fighting fate isn't going to be easy.


Warning: this review may contain minor spoilers.
A disappointment. That’s the first word that pops into my head when I think of Remembrance. I will not be saying “I hated it, I hated it, I hated it.” over and over, so no need to worry. I’ll try to keep this as non-hateful as possible. Oops. I guess some just spilled out…
Remembrance captured my interest because a) it was inspired by “Love Story”, one of my favorite songs ever, b) almost everyone was talking about it, and c) I love reincarnation. The blurb was very cliché, yes, but all books have at least a little cliché in them. I mean, can you think of one that doesn’t? But Remembrance didn’t have a little. 100% was cheesy and very, very, unreal. For those of you who just love fairytales, I guess this one’s for you, but I am not that kind of person who reads that stuff. Sweet and sappy and totally cheesy. Kind of like melted cheese; it melted a few of my brain cells. I’ve also heard it sounds eerily familiar to Twilight so if you like Twilight, I guess that you’d like this too? I mean, a “connection” when the new guy enters scene 1 left stage? The “noise melting into a hum”? I mean, that’s fine and dandy, but when Drew starts dating Chelsea, and she says she think she loves him, you’d think that Liz would tell Chels about her feelings, right? Or at least in the beginning. It’s perfectly fine for two best friends to have a crush on the same guy. Giggle over the same guy, it happens all the time. But having feelings and moving on them while your friend starts loving him? No. I disliked Lizzie. And poor Jeremy. I mean, he was a jerk and all: a dou*** even, but he really loved Lizzie. And she just stomped on his heart. If you’ve read Remembrance, then you should know what I mean by the car speeding part. Those are not words you should lie about. Especially when you know what he feels. So what’s with all this hate towards Chelsea and Jeremy? They’re my favorite characters actually.
I never even understood how Lizzie could take all the info about past lives so easily. I mean, she accepted it, no questions asked. No “what?!” “You’re kidding!” or even a hesitation to believe it. One more thing: I couldn’t even find out where he told her about the past lives. She definitely didn’t figure it out herself. For someone who believed her visions were hallucinations, she sure took it easy. And how did Drew find out? He’s not immortal, at least I think he’s not, he even said that he felt it, knew it, when he first saw her! So how did he figure it out? Obviously he must be very, very, very smart. As in, unrealistically smart. As in, way smarter than any normal person. So yeah.
The writing and pace were wonderful though. Michelle Madow has great potential, she just needs to tap into her imagination a bit more for something more original. I’ve seen a lot of 5-star reviews, so I guess it’s only me who feels this way. I’m sincerely sorry to those of you who love this book, but I guess it just wasn’t for me!  I think I was just a bit cranky when I read the book, and maybe later I’ll re-read Remembrance.
Pages: 314
Series: Transcend Time #1
Genre: Fantasy/Romance
Rating: 2.5 stars
 "But it was time to realize that I wasn't Cinderella, and no matter how hard I wished it were true, life wasn't a fairy tale where everyone lives happily ever after.”

Friday, March 23, 2012

My First Giveaway!

As my first ever giveaway, I decided to do something a bit...pratical. Instead of giving away popular YA books (I know, I know!) I will be giving away the entire Hunger Games series to ONE lucky winner! After all, we all know the movie comes out today! Contest ends on April 15, and the winer will be announced on the 20th.

RULES:
  • All you have to do is tell me why you hate/love the Hunger Games.
  • Most creative response will get 5 entries!
  • No entering twice. Only one entry per person.
  • If you tweet about this giveaway, +1 entry
  • Like my facebook is +1
  • Follow my twitter is +1
  • Follow my blog is +5!

Monday, March 19, 2012

Author Interview: Ann Redisch Stampler



I had the chance to talk to the absolutely wonderful author of Where it Began (you can find my review here), Ann Redisch Stampler!


Fiction Freak:  What first inspired you to write about a teen with absolutely no memory of what happened?

Ann Redisch Stmapler: When I was in my early teens, coming out from under anesthesia, I had an odd, disassociative experience of being half-conscious and half-asleep, and not remembering who I was.  I wanted to remember who I was, though, and I kept having very clear visual images of aspects of my life, as if they were still photos or video clips with distorted sound, but I couldn’t put it together for what seemed like a very long time. 

This stayed with me and I think it informed some of Gabby’s experiences.

FF: The world of Where it Began is very well-thought out and very realistic. Do you have any personal experience/knowledge with anything that happened in the book?

ARS: The book really is a work of fiction, and isn’t based on specific personal experiences.

Geographically, I’ve spent my adult life in Gabby’s world.  I wrote this book in Brentwood.  My kids attended private school in the hills, although Winston is not based on their school. And while I made up Estrada for Gabby to live on and created a fictional school for her to attend, I have a feel for the concrete aspects of her environment.  I know those restaurants (although I renamed a couple that were amalgams) and street corners, and neighborhoods.

But have I been up close and personal with a car crash with the ramifications of Gabby’s accident, or a relationship just like Gabby and Billy’s, or the level of corruption that’s depicted in the book? No.


FF: Do you think that anyone goes through what Gabby does? And if they could?

ARS: I do think that sometimes people—male and female, and not always teenagers—can fall in love and become obsessed with people who don’t reciprocate their feelings in the way they would hope.  And certainly, manipulation and betrayal are not unheard of in human relationships.  Unfortunately.

FF: What is the funniest moment you've ever witnessed?

ARS: Visually, okay, my husband was walking down the street with my daughter in a baby carrier slung over his chest.  He was eating a Dove bar, vanilla ice cream with a chocolate coating.  And people kept grinning at us and kind of giggling, as if there were something in the air and our neighborhood was suddenly slightly loony. 
                                                              
But when we got home, and pulled our daughter out of the carrier, we saw that chocolate from the ice cream bar had fallen onto her.  Her face and hands and arms were covered with chocolate; it was smeared all over her face, especially around her mouth, and she was completely blissed out, not unlike all the people who’d been laughing at the chocolate-coated baby.

FF: Can you relate to any characters in Where It Began?

ARS: All of them.

FF: What is your personal opinions about some of your characters?

ARS: I’ve tried to present the characters as three dimensional and as having motivation, sometimes conflicted, for their actions.  I would hate to influence readers’ reactions to the book by going beyond this.

FF: Would you rather read with an eReader or with the book in your hands?

ARS: A book.  I have nothing against eReaders on principle; I think they’re a wonderful thing if they make literature more accessible to more people.  But personally, I like the experience of reading a book.

FF: Tell us something no one else knows about you!
                                                             
ARS: Hmmmm. I’m usually a pretty open person, but if there’s something about me that literally no one else knows, it’s a deep, dark secret!

FF: What is your absolute favorite meal/dessert?

ARS: Anything chocolate.  Cake, milkshakes, chocolate chip cookies, pastilles, mousse, soufflé, cupcakes, brownies.  Do you have all day?  I could go on…

FF: Do you think that reviewers can be too harsh on their reviews or that it's their opinion? And why?

ARS: I’ve been very fortunate with reviews of Where It Began.  There are a couple of bloggers and goodreads folks who have really, really hated it, but the vast majority have been very positive.  So I feel very well supported rather than beaten up.

It’s interesting, before the internet, there were formal reviewers in respected publications, and popular magazine and newspaper reviewers, and that was pretty much it.  And those formal venues for reviews are still there; I very much want my books to be well-reviewed there.  (And so far, Where It Began has been.)

But now, every single person who reads a book has a very public way to express his or her feelings.  And it’s inevitable that some people just won’t like a book.  It’s their prerogative to say so, although, one would hope, not in vitriolic way.  I have seen some bizarre, nasty stuff, but I suspect it is more a reflection of the reviewer than the book in question.


FF: What is your favorite passtime?

ARS: Other than writing?

Alone: reading.  With others: hanging out over a meal, going to movies.  With or without company:  Anything to do with a beach. 


FF: Have you ever experienced writer's block when writing Where It Began? And what parts?

ARS: I don’t want to tempt fate here, so I’m tossing imaginary salt over my shoulder (Truly superstitious people with an Eastern European background will understand!) but I really haven’t experienced writer’s block.  It was challenging to go from the first to the second draft, but that was more of a structural issue than an issue of somehow finding myself unable to put words on paper.

FF: What is the corniest joke you've ever heard?

ARS: This was my son’s favorite joke when he was three or so.  I love it.

Knock knock?  Who’s there?  Banana.  Banana who?  Knock knock.  Who’s there?  Banana.  Banana Who? (Repeat about a dozen times.) Who’s there? Orange.  Orange who?  Orange you glad I didn’t say banana?

FF: Favorite book?

ARS: Pride and Prejudice

FF: If you went into the world of Where It Began and told the Gabby that you wrote her story, what do you think her reaction will be?

ARS: Gabby is tweeting about this a lot at @gabbygardiner.  She is quite annoyed.  At one point she wanted a restraining order and she has a whole series of complaints called “Disasters thanks to Where It Began.” 

Also, if anyone wants to ask Gabby a question directly, there is an “Ask Gabby” function at my website at www.annstampler.com.

FF: Anything to say to us readers?

ARS: Keep reading! 

Where it Began Blurb:

Gabby lived under the radar until her makeover. Way under. But when she started her senior year as a blonder, better-dressed version of herself, she struck gold: Billy Nash believed she was a the flawless girl she was pretending to be. The next eight months with Billy were bliss...Until the night Gabby woke up on the ground next to the remains of his BMW without a single memory of how she got there.

And Billy's nowhere to be found.

All Gabby wants is to make everything perfect again. But getting her life back isn't difficult, it's impossible. Because nothing is the same, and Gabby's beginning to realize she's missed more than a few danger signs along the way.

It's time for Gabby to face the truth, even if it means everything changes.

Especially if it means everything changes

Short Author Bio:
Where it Began marks the YA debut of Ann Redisch Stampler. She is the author of several picture books, including The Rooster Prince of Breslov. Her books have been an Aesop Accolade winner, Sydney Taylor notable books and an honor book, a National Jewish Book Awards finalist and winner, and Bank Street Best Books of the Year. Ann has two adult children and lives in Los Angeles, California with her husband.

Contact Info
Ann Stampler's Facebook

Friday, March 16, 2012

The Hunt by Andrew Fukuda

Goodreads Blurb
Don’t Sweat.  Don’t Laugh.  Don’t draw attention to yourself.  And most of all, whatever you do, do not fall in love with one of them.
Gene is different from everyone else around him.  He can’t run with lightning speed, sunlight doesn’t hurt him and he doesn’t have an unquenchable lust for blood.  Gene is a human, and he knows the rules.  Keep the truth a secret.  It’s the only way to stay alive in a world of night—a world where humans are considered a delicacy and hunted for their blood.
When he’s chosen for a once in a lifetime opportunity to hunt the last remaining humans, Gene’s carefully constructed life begins to crumble around him.  He’s thrust into the path of a girl who makes him feel things he never thought possible—and into a ruthless pack of hunters whose suspicions about his true nature are growing. Now that Gene has finally found something worth fighting for, his need to survive is stronger than ever—but is it worth the cost of his humanity?


As the only human in a world of vampires, Gene has to be careful. He’s been trained by his father: Don’t be noticed. But now, Gene is on his own, his family either dead or turned, and he needs to tread lightly. One wrong move, word, reaction, and he would be dead in an instant, his blood being sucked out. Then, the worst happens; the Heper Hunt. What happens is that the government had captured humans, feeding them, growing them, until they’re “plump enough”. A few lucky winners will be the hunters and will get to suck the humans’ blood. It’s dangerous enough for Gene, but when he’s picked to be a hunter, things get even more edgy. Worse, Ashley June, someone who may, just might, know, or suspect, Gene’s secret. And the only one that Gene is attracted to, and the one who definitely is attracted to Gene. But she’s hiding a secret of her own. And not to mention the fact that the other winners are starting to suspect his race, making it all the more dangerous. No matter where you look, where you go, all you have to do is be careful.
Half the time when Gene was on the verge of being discovered, I just sat there with my heart pounding in my chest, even though I knew that he wouldn’t be killed. Yet. But it was still scary. I mean, we can relate to Gene in many ways, in ways we relate to anyone. If this world was real, I wouldn’t want to be Gene. It’s creepy, having to be careful about my reactions, my smell, my looks. Ugh, no thanks! It would be terrifying, but Gene is used to this, has been all his life. It’s hard to think of.
The vampires in this story seem different than in other stories. Yes, they drink blood, yes they’re bloodthirsty, yes they can’t go in sunlight, but they don’t have to hide what they are. Most vampire books, the world is dominated by humans, and the vampires have to hide what they are; it’s the humans who hunt the vampires. When people say “a new take on the paranormal world” now, The Hunt is what pops into my mind. The story is wonderfully written, twists and turns at every edge.
It was weird seeing them use “unknown” phrases when they were ones we used every day. I just wanted to jump up and say “I know what it means!” When they did something that seemed unnatural I wanted to shout “That’s what you’re supposed to do!” I smiled and shook my head so much, I’m surprised my head wasn’t stuck that way. I trusted Ashley June until about three fourths in because of a warning issued by a stranger. But we’ve learned in books, that those warnings are the ones you have to listen to, right? So that’s what I was thinking. (Currently, I’m still reading…this is on March 14 so that none of y’all get confused.) I’m still not sure whether or not to trust her.
The anticipation killed me in the “final scene” as they call it. I was in shock! Pure shock. And I was so scared. My mom dropped something and was like “Ah!” And I screamed. Yeah, that’s how creeped out I was! The story is just so written that we can imagine ourselves in Gene’s shoes. Which petrified me throughout the entire book. Especially the last 50 pages or so. And the ending? I fell on the floor and was moaning “I should’ve known! Of course it was him!” And when the book stopped there…kill me! There has to be a second book and I will be the first one in line, guaranteed.
Summary: the Hunt was full of intrigue, anticipation, danger, fear, betrayal, and trust, with just a pinch of romance. It will make your heart pound and shivers go up your spine. Be prepared to read one of the most orignial books of 2012.

Pages: 304
Series: The Hunt #1
Genre: Dystopian/Paranormal/Romance
Rating: 5 stars






“A horrific howl rips up the hallway, a screech that rattles the building. A skittering of noises along the walls. Distant thumps. Another howl, softer but with more anguish.”

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