Sunday, October 19, 2014

Only Everything (True Love #1) by Kieran Scott AudioBook

Only Everything by Kieran Scott Book Review









High school romance is tough—even for a bona fide love goddess. Can Cupid succeed as a mortal matchmaker?


When Eros (aka Cupid) is expelled from Olympus for defying Zeus after falling in love with Orion, she is banished to what she believes to be hell. We call it New Jersey. If she ever wants to go back to the comforts of her old life, she will have to find love for three couples—without using her powers.


Eros, now calling herself True, immediately identifies her first project in Charlie and believes finding him love will be a piece of cake. Charlie is new at school and eager to break out of his old image of band geek, so it’s lucky for him when he falls in with the right crowd on his first day. But music is still his passion. That is, until he meets Katrina…


Katrina is floundering after the death of her father and takes refuge with a boy who, while not entirely supportive, will be there when she needs him, unlike her mother. Too bad True thinks any girl Charlie talks to is perfect for him. Can she get out of her own way and help Charlie and Katrina connect, or will she be stuck in New Jersey forever?






Reviewed by Becca Packer


I am always hesitant to pick up one of Kieran Scott’s books. I will buy them without any hesitation, and then they will sit on my shelf where I will stare at them for weeks before actually picking them up and reading them. Her books are always wonderful; I never have any doubt that once I start reading I won’t be able to stop until the last page—and it is on the last page that I instantly regret reading the book without having access to the next in the series. I continue to hope that one day I will not have these angry feelings towards her cliffhangers, but time and time again I slam the book down on the floor or table and walk away, cursing everything and everyone. (You know who you are, Tristan.)


And of course this same thing happened with Only Everything.


I want to say I was honoured to have received an ARC copy of Only Everything from Kieran Scottl but now I have to wait an extra two months for the sequel Complete Nothing, due out in September.


Now on to my review of the book and not my rantings of the pain these books cause me.


Only Everything is told from the point of view of three characters: True/Eros, Charlie, and Katrina. Each completely different people, with very different background stories.


True is the daughter of Aphrodite and Ares. Most people know her as Eros, or the name she truly despises: Cupid. She has made a horrible mistake by falling in love with a human. Orion has fallen from the stars and only Eros knows because it was kind of her fault. She hides him away on a lonely island in Maine, where she visits him frequently to teach him about life on Earth in the 21st century, and because she has fallen in love with him. When Zeus and Ares find out they threaten to kill him, but Eros strikes a deal with the two gods. She will live on Earth without her powers and help three couples fall in love. If she succeeds Orion gets to live and they can be together, if she fails… well, not everyone can have a happily ever after when gods are involved.


Charlie is the first friend Eros meets on Earth—well, at least the first niceperson Eros meets on Earth. He is new to school and having moved around multiple times because of his father’s job, he knows what it is like to be the new kid in school. Charlie doesn’t really fit in with his dad and brothers; they are all football legends and Charlie would much rather play the drums than throw a football around. Surprisingly on his first day of school, he manages to make it in with varsity jocks and finds himself getting along with them more than the band people he was hoping to make friends with.


And then there is our last main character, Katrina. She has it rough. Her dad was killed in a horrible motorway accident the year before, and because of this her once-perfect academic record is full of blemishes. Instead of being in accelerated classes, she finds herself in classes with people who don’t really feel like learning and make fun of those who do. You know, standard high school classes. Her boyfriend, Ty, is a jerk who needed a good punch to the jugular several times throughout the novel. Her mom has been horrible to live with since her father passed away, and Katrina prefers to spend her days at Ty’s instead of at her home. However, over the summer she did find an escape at the library, which is where her want to learn returned to her.


As the novel continues on, you learn that Charlie just wants to make his dad proud of him and Katrina wants to feel like someone loves her.


Eros keeps messing everything up by setting Charlie up with girls who are horrible matches for him and by not really knowing how a typical teenager acts. She pretends to know what goes on in Earth, but she honestly has no clue at all.


I loved this book. I loved the typical high school romance and the anger felt at the two main characters being with the wrong person.


I did roll my eyes at how clueless Eros was a lot of the time because she was so clueless, taking whatever she wanted from people and dressing quite questionably. I had to keep reminding myself that she was experiencing culture shock and it was like all those times I went to a foreign country and had no idea about their customs and traditions. You can only pretend so much before someone has to help you out a bit.


The ending was so perfect and I was all excited for a happily ever after—one down, three to go—and then that last page happened… ugh!!!!


After all the hype behind Percy Jackson and seeing all these new series come out about going to battle with gods or gods coming to Earth to kidnap girls and make them their brides, it is refreshing to read a book that is about a goddess/god trying to help people find love. It is like the Percy Jackson for the romantics in all of us, except better.


I think you will be doing yourself a great disadvantage if you do not choose to read this series. It is destined to be the next big thing, and if you don’t believe me check out the review from Teen Vogue.


Jump on the bandwagon before it is the cool thing to do, and while you are waiting for this book release check out any of her other books. The Shadowlands trilogy, She’s so/He so trilogy, or the series that got me hooked on this author Private… although most of the aforementioned are written under Kieran’s pen name, Kate Brian.


Plus, Kieran Scott is probably one of the friendliest authors you will ever meet. She is always responding to my dumb tweets and Facebook messages—and put one of my ideas in her books (it was an idea for a Halloween costume, but still, that is pretty awesome). She loves her fans and is always willing to chat to with them.


 


Listen Audiobook “Only Everything by Kieran Scott ” here:





Only Everything (True Love #1) by Kieran Scott AudioBook

Nobody by Jennifer Lynn Barnes AudioBook

Book Review: Nobody by Jennifer Lynn Barnes


 



Nobody by Jennifer Lynn Barnes


Book Summary: 
There are people in this world who are Nobody. No one sees them. No one notices them. They live their lives under the radar, forgotten as soon as you turn away.


That’s why they make the perfect assassins.

 

The Institute finds these people when  they’re young and takes them away for training. But an untrained Nobody is a threat to their organization. And threats must be eliminated.


Sixteen-year-old Claire has been invisible her whole life, missed by the Institute’s monitoring. But now they’ve ID’ed her and sent seventeen-year-old Nix to remove her. Yet the moment her lays eyes on her, he can’t make the hit. It’s as if Claire and Nix are the only people in the world for each other. And they are – because no one else ever notices them.


 



 


I’m a Paranormal/Fantasy/Dystopian YA girl, but I was intrigued by the description of this book because it was YA with a bit of a sci-fi twist. It read in many ways as a YA Contemporary, though this didn’t bother me, even though that isn’t my usual fare. There was enough exciting odd stuff going on to keep me absorbed.


The premise of the book is basically that all people have energy, but a rare few are born with various energy abnormalities – Nulls, who can give their energy easily to others, which makes them very influential, but who cannot absorb energy from anyone else – which kind of makes them sociopaths. Then there are the opposite, the Nobodies, who cannot give their energy to anyone, and who therefore are incapable of having anyone care about them at all.


So in this world, we are introduced to Nix, a Nobody, who is used by the dubious Society to exterminate Nulls, once their lack of empathy inevitably leads them to start killing people. He has been taught his whole life that no one is even capable of loving him, so he accepts his lot in life bitterly. Then he meets Claire, another Nobody, who has no idea why her parents do things like abandon her in supermarkets and forget to even bother to come home and check on her. Nix meets Claire because he has been sent to kill her, but finds himself unable to do it, because she’s the first person who has ever really seen him. (Nobodies are able to exchange energy because their energy signature is the same.)


We have a bit of an annoying stretch of the book in which Nix is convinced that Claire is, indeed, a Null (since that’s what his perceived job is – killing Nulls), and the reason she effects him so much is her master manipulative powers (even though none of the Nulls he killed could do this to him – they never even saw him coming), yet he actually saves her life so HE can be the one to kill her, when he’s finally able to. It’s only after he just can’t kill her and gives up that he realizes that actually she’s not a Null – she’s like him.


Then we have an equally annoying stretch of angsty “OMG she’s the only person who I can ever really be with and without me she’ll be ignored and unloved but NOOOO I’m a killer and I’m not good enough so I have to leave even though that will hurt her blah-blah-blah…”


Once all that is out of the way, the story really picks up and is quite engaging. It is very much worth trudging through the first fifty-or-so pages of bleakness and angst. The first part of the story is very bleak, because it is told in alternating narratives by Nix and Claire, who are about as alone as anyone can possibly be. (This bleakness is understandable, but still a bit troubling to read.) Once they decide to work together to figure out the true aim of The Society (since obviously they weren’t just sending him out to kill Nulls), that bleakness is replaced by some great tension, mystery and a sweetness as the relationship between the two characters matures and becomes very tender and romantic.


Lots of excellent twists and turns toward the end definitely make for a satisfying reading experience.


P.S.: I know a few people might complain about the “insta-love” factor in this book, but to me, it seems completely logical that two people who are the only ones in the world who are even capable of loving the other would immediately be very drawn to one another and fall in love. And it still took them a while to be together. Plus, deep affection can happen quickly sometimes, especially in highly emotionally-charged situations.



Rating: 4 Star – Good Book


Content: Violence, but not unnecessary violence, and not very graphic.


Source: Won from a blog giveaway


 


Listen AudioBook Here:






Nobody by Jennifer Lynn Barnes AudioBook

Saturday, October 18, 2014

Paper Valentine by Brenna Yovanoff AudioBook

Book Review: Paper Valentine by Brenna Yovanoff


 


Paper Valentine by Brenna Yovanoff


 


Summary from Goodreads:

The city of Ludlow is gripped by the hottest July on record. The asphalt is melting, the birds are dying, petty crime is on the rise, and someone in Hannah Wagnor’s peaceful suburban community is killing girls.


For Hannah, the summer is a complicated one. Her best friend Lillian died six months ago, and Hannah just wants her life to go back to normal. But how can things be normal when Lillian’s ghost is haunting her bedroom, pushing her to investigate the mysterious string of murders? Hannah’s just trying to understand why her friend self-destructed, and where she fits now that Lillian isn’t there to save her a place among the social elite. And she must stop thinking about Finny Boone, the big, enigmatic delinquent whose main hobbies seem to include petty larceny and surprising acts of kindness.


With the entire city in a panic, Hannah soon finds herself drawn into a world of ghost girls and horrifying secrets. She realizes that only by confronting the Valentine Killer will she be able move on with her life—and it’s up to her to put together the pieces before he strikes again.


divider


As other reviewers have said, readers in search of a murder mystery should not pick up Paper Valentine in hopes of an enthralling chase to unmask a serial killer. Personally, I came into this with that expectation, and it took a bit of adjustment for me to realize that Yovanoff’s story had more to do with people living their lives and going through day-to-day stuff (whilst a serial killer is abroad), than about finding and punishing a murderer. Instead, Paper Valentine is about a girl and a ghost and relationships and imperfect people.


Most of the time I don’t have much trouble picking out what an author’s themes are. I can say, “this book is about moving on after grief” or “this book is about learning where loyalties lie” or something along those lines. But to be honest, I can’t do that here. For me, Brenna Yovanoff just sat down to write about real people in real situations, and if there were any messages she wanted readers to take away from Paper Valentine, they weren’t obvious or easy to pick out. Everything was subtle, kept beneath the surface, and, in my opinion, masterfully done. This entire novel is approached with a fairly light hand, and the story was allowed to grow and shape organically. Authorial presence in this book is kept to a minimum.


Paper Valentine’s main character, Hannah, is teenager who’s being haunted—literally—by her best friend, Lillian. Lillian died six months ago after several years of being anorexic. And Lillian’s ghost is a projection of all the very worst things about Lillian. Her selfishness, her need for control, her obsession with perfection, her snobbishness. But in some way, Hannah still clings to Lillian, and neither of the girls is able to let the other go.


Aside from the obvious problem with Lillian’s ghost, Hannah’s also dealing with the reality of a serial killer loose in her town, one who targets young girls. Her parents and younger sister are understandably freaked out, and so is Hannah in a less significant way. Primarily, Hannah and Lillian take on something of an obsession with the murders, and that leads them into trouble. Trouble, in this case, takes the form of Finny Boone, a trouble youth with the scars and foster care experience to prove it.


Initially, Hannah is taken aback by her attraction for Finny, but not for long. With him, she finds the voice she’s always kept hidden, and when he tries to break things off, she isn’t afraid to speak out.


“Stop,” I tell him.


He glances over, squinting at me. “What?”


“Stop acting like you need to protect me from yourself.” And I sound angrier than I ever usually sound. “I’m not a victim or a fragile little thing. And maybe there’s dangerous stuff out there, but not you. Okay? I don’t need to be kept safe from you” (pg. 272).


And now that she’s found the courage to do it, Hannah begins talking back. First to her friends, who are jealous and petty and snooty. To them Hannah proves that she won’t be controlled any longer, not the way Lillian controlled her. And Hannah also speaks to her mother, who’s clung so long to an image of what “perfect Hannah” should be that she doesn’t quite know how to deal with Hannah’s grief and confusion.


“For maybe the first time in my life, she is listening to the words I’m saying and not telling me the words she thinks I should use” (pg.241).


As the different relationships in her life come into sharp relief, Hannah is forced to think about things and people differently. She has to learn (to some degree) who she is now that she’s out of Lillian’s shadow, and how to step out of the mold everyone expects her to fit into. Without a doubt, Hannah was a dynamic, well-rounded character, though her growth isn’t immediately obvious.


Eventually, of course, the serial killer catches up with Hannah and Lillian and Finny. The villain gave the obligatory monologue for the reader’s benefit—to recap important plot points without too much difficulty on the author’s part. But it all comes out right in the end, of course. Everyone safe and sound, happy and well. But Hannah still has to learn to come to terms with Lillian. Who she was, who she is as a ghost, and what their relationship meant.


“The idea that a person can be defined by anything so superficial [as sickness] is terrible. […] The simple version isn’t even recognizable when you hold it up against a living, breathing human being. Her ghost will always be so much less of her than the girl I used to see every day” (pg. 256).


Paper Valentine is a book that really defies categorization. It is its own entity, separate from anything else either the paranormal or mystery genres have to offer. Brenna Yovanoff’s storytelling is unique, her prose is engaging, and the way she treats characterization is uncomplicated and straightforward.


4 Stars


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Paper Valentine by Brenna Yovanoff AudioBook

Vixen (Flappers #1) by Jillian Larkin AudioBook

Book Review: Vixen (Flappers 1) by Jillian Larkin


Vixen (Flappers #1) by Jillian LarkinJazz … Booze … Boys … It’s a dan­ger­ous combination.


Every girl wants what she can’t have. Seventeen-year-old Glo­ria Car­mody wants the flap­per lifestyle—and the bobbed hair, cig­a­rettes, and music-filled nights that go with it. Now that she’s engaged to Sebas­t­ian Grey, scion of one of Chicago’s most pow­er­ful fam­i­lies, Gloria’s party days are over before they’ve even begun … or are they?


Clara Knowles, Gloria’s goody-two-shoes cousin, has arrived to make sure the high-society wed­ding comes off with­out a hitch—but Clara isn’t as lily-white as she appears. Seems she has some dirty lit­tle secrets of her own that she’ll do any­thing to keep hidden.… 


Lor­raine Dyer, Gloria’s social-climbing best friend, is tired of liv­ing in Gloria’s shadow. When Lorraine’s envy spills over into des­per­ate spite, no one is safe. And someone’s going to be very sorry.…


I’m a big fan of his­tor­i­cal fic­tion, which, more often than not, tends to be either medieval or Vic­to­rian. While I love to read about those eras, it’s always excit­ing when you come across some­thing a lit­tle bit dif­fer­ent within the genre.


Despite some slightly aver­age char­ac­ters, Vixen was a book I really enjoyed. The pas­sion Larkin has for the 1920’s shines through on every page and it was the rich atmos­phere of the book that I loved. The details woven into the story, the intri­cate fash­ion, the lan­guage, the descrip­tive set­ting, all of it brought the 1920’s to life. Read­ing Vixen, you feel as though you are right there along­side the char­ac­ters, walk­ing into a tempt­ing under­ground world of ille­gal booze, jazz, glitz, sex and smoke.


I also really liked that Vixen is largely about an inter­ra­cial romance, which is rare in con­tem­po­rary YA, let alone one set in the 1920’s. The dan­ger, prej­u­dice and alien­ation of such a rela­tion­ship, along with the con­stant back­ground pres­ence of the mob, gives Vixen an edge to what is oth­er­wise, a fun, but fairly typ­i­cal, YA his­tor­i­cal romance.


Vixen is told through three dif­fer­ent nar­ra­tors, Glo­ria, Clara and Lor­raine, three soci­ety girls drawn to the illicit flap­per lifestyle and each with their own secrets. I enjoyed their indi­vid­ual sto­ries, their romances, friend­ships and break-ups. The other char­ac­ters, par­tic­u­larly the roman­tic inter­ests, weren’t as well-developed and dare I say it, a lit­tle bland. Clara and Jerome’s for­bid­den rela­tion­ship was eas­ily the most entic­ing of the three, but didn’t quite have the siz­zle I was look­ing for. I have to admit that at times the char­ac­ters felt a lit­tle too famil­iar, like I had read about them all before, but it didn’t hin­der my enjoy­ment of the book.


Aside from the odd, frus­trat­ing, moment where the nar­ra­tive would jump to a dif­fer­ent girl, cut­ting of an impor­tant or inter­est­ing scene, I felt the multiple-narrative worked very well. Vixen is def­i­nitely a find­ing your­self, romance novel, as not much action really takes place until the last third of the book, where things sud­denly become a lot more dan­ger­ous and cer­tainly leave the reader intrigued for book two.


Fans of Anna Godbersen’s Luxe series will most likely love Vixen, as it has quite a sim­i­lar feel (I believe God­bersen also has a series set in the 1920’s but since I haven’t read any of them I can­not com­pare the two). Larkin brings to life a fas­ci­nat­ing period of Amer­i­can his­tory, a time of Pro­hi­bi­tion, speakeasies, gang­sters and glam­our. Vixen takes a while to estab­lish the char­ac­ters and for the read­ers to warm to them, but the atmos­phere and set­ting, almost a char­ac­ter in itself, hits you from the first page. This book sim­ply wouldn’t be the same, or half so inter­est­ing, set in any other period. Fans of the era should def­i­nitely pick this one up.


Listen AudioBook “Vixen (Flappers 1) by Jillian Larkin” Here:


Vixen (Flappers #1) by Jillian Larkin Part 1 [Teen & Young AudioBooks]



 


Vixen (Flappers #1) by Jillian Larkin Part 2 [Teen & Young AudioBooks]




Vixen (Flappers #1) by Jillian Larkin AudioBook

Thursday, October 2, 2014

The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason AudioBook

Book Review – The Richest Man In Babylon, By George S. Clason



Richest man in Babylon


In my review of Jim Rohn’s book “7 Strategies for Wealth & Happiness” I mentioned a book recommended by Rohn called “The Richest Man In Babylon.”  Rohn refers to it as “The Appetizer for the Full Discourse on the Subject of Financial Independence.”


“The Richest Man In Babylon” was written in the 1920s by George S. Clason as the first in a series of pamphlets about thrift and financial success.  “The Richest Man In Babylon” uses parables set in ancient Babylon to teach valuable lessons relating to finances.


Banks and insurance companies distributed these pamphlets in large quantities, and they became well-known to millions.  “The Richest Man in Babylon” became the most popular of these, and has impacted the lives of millions of people. These “Babylonian Parables” have since become a modern inspirational classic.


The book’s introduction, written by the Los Angeles Times, frames the book nicely by saying:


What can a book written in the 1920s tell modern investors about their finances?  A whole lot if it’s George Clason’s delightful set of parables that explain the basics of money.  This is a great gift for a graduate or anyone who seems baffled by the world of finance and a wonderful, refreshing read for even the most experienced investor.


The 7 Principles of Riches:


“The Richest Man In Babylon” offers 7 principles as told by Arkad, the riches man in Babylon.  When talking about the 7 Principles of Riches, Arkad says “Money is plentiful for those who understand the simple rules of its acquisition.”  The 7 principles of riches are:


  1. Start thy purse to fattening

  2. Control thy expenditures

  3. Make thy gold multiply

  4. Guard thy treasures from loss

  5. Make of thy dwelling a profitable investment

  6. Insure a future income

  7. Increase thy ability to earn

Of course these principles are nothing new, but they are considered by many successful people to be the foundation to wealth.  The book lays them out in a way that’s interesting to follow, easy to understand, and really sinks in.


1. Start thy purse to fattening:


I’m sure you’ve heard this advice before, which for many is easier said than done:


For every ten coins thou placest within thy purse take our for use but nine.  Thy purse will start to fatten at once and its increasing weight will feel good in thy hand and ring satisfaction to thy soul.


The advice here is to save at a minimum 10% of everything you earn, and to pay yourself first.  That means before paying any bills, before you buy those new shoes, before you do anything with your paycheck, take out 10% to pay yourself.  It doesn’t sound like much, but over time it will grow.


Other common advice, not specifically mentioned here, is to have the money direct deposited into an account that’s not easily accessible.  Since this is automatic, there’s no chance to put it off until you find you need that money for something else.  Also, it’s harder to access if you feel like spending it.


Of course, if you look at the statistics of how much people have in their savings account, this is not as simple as it sounds.  But if you think about it, for most of us, we easily blow 10% on things we don’t need.  This means it’s less a matter of being able to afford it, and more a matter of discipline.


2. Control thy expenditures:


Simply put, live below your means.  In the past, I lived above my means and I paid a heavy price for it.  The advice here is solid advice, no matter what your current level of income.  If you’re making $300,000.00 a month, and spending $350,000.00 a month, it’s just a matter of time (or a matter of a misfortune or two) before you lose it all.


The advice here is to create a budget for your expenses, and stick to it.  That includes the 10% you set aside, and making sure that you don’t touch that money.  This is not easy for a lot of people, and I know not everyone believes it’s necessary, but a budget is a great way to keep things under control.  I’ll be reviewing a budgeting program I just purchased in the next couple of months, called “You Need a Budget,” or “YNAB.”


3. Make thy gold multiply:


Compound Interest.  It’s one of the largest wealth growth components available.  Of course, with small amounts of money earning interest, the growth begins very slowly.  But that’s where the compounding comes in.  Anthony Robbins uses an example about wagering on a round of golf.  Starting with ten cents, you wager “double or nothing” for each hole.  What’s the worst that you can lose, maybe a couple of hundred dollars?


Things start off very slowly.  Of course, the first hole is $.10.  The second hole is $.20.  By the ninth hole, it’s up to $25.60.  Not bad so far.


By the time you get to the 14th hole, the total wager is up to $819.20.  If you think that’s surprising, wait until you hear the final wager after 18 holes!  After 18 holes, the wager has become $13,107.00.  That’s the power of exponential growth through compound interest, and that’s the lesson of “make thy gold multiply.”  The Wealthy know how to make their money earn more money:


Behold, from my humble earnings I had begotten a hoard of golden slaves, each laboring and earning more gold. As they labored for me, so their children also labored and their children’s children until great was the income from their combined efforts.


One very important point – starting earlier makes a huge difference in the rate of growth.  It’s never too late, but the earlier you start, the better.


4. Guard thy treasures from loss:


Simply put, make safe investments.  If you’re investing all of your money on a tip from your brother in law, because he knows someone who knows someone who said stock xyz was gonna explode, you might as well head to Vegas and let it ride on black…at least that way will be more fun.


You’ve got to do your due diligence with any investment.  The recommendation here is consult with experts related to the field of investment.  I say take it one step further, and research the topic yourself so you can make educated decisions.


5. Make of thy dwelling a profitable investment:


The fifth cure recommended here is to “own thy own home.”  Whether or not you consider your home an asset or a liability, it’s hard to deny the point mentioned in the book, the feeling of satisfaction of owning your own house.


6. Insure a future income:


This is advice that unfortunately so many struggle with in their old age.  During the retirement years, instead of enjoying life many are struggling to make enough to live.


Provide in advance for the needs of thy growing age and the protection of thy family.


7. Increase thy ability to earn:


Our recent article “Investing In Your Number One Asset” touches on the 7th Principle of Riches.  You must continue to improve yourself, making yourself more valuable and increasing your earning ability.  This includes all areas of our life!  We should always work to improve ourselves, physically, spiritually, intellectually, emotionally – in all areas of our lives.  It will bring wealth into your life, not just financially but in every way.


…cultivate thy own powers, to study and become wiser, to become more skillful, to so act as to respect thyself.  Thereby shalt thou acquire confidence in thyself to achieve thy carefully considered desires.


Final Thoughts:


These basic financial fundamentals have been around for ages.  They sound simple, but are not so simple in practice.  “The Richest Man In Babylon” nonetheless does a great job of explaining them in a simple to understand, enjoyable to read way that I think will benefit most people that read it.


I recommend that you buy and read this book!  It’s a small book, easy to read and inexpensive.  Who knows, you might find that it explains things in a way that will make you want to follow the advice and grow your own wealth.


Listen AudioBooks “The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason” Here:





The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason AudioBook

Monday, September 29, 2014

Healing Trauma by Peter A. Levine AudioBook


Healing Trauma by Peter A. Levine


Healing Trauma by Peter A. Levine


According to the National Institute of Mental Health, more than 23 million Americans suffer from anxiety disorders- many as a direct result of trauma. As a young stress researcher at the University of California at Berkeley, Peter A. Levine found that all animals, including humans, are born with a natural ability to rebound from these distressing situations. Now on Healing Trauma, you can join this respected therapist and teacher to learn how to address these and other symptoms at their source-your body-and return to the natural trauma-free state that you were meant to live in. Featuring more than six hours of guided instruction to engage your body’s built-in healing process.


Listen AudioBooks “Healing Trauma by Peter A. Levine”




Healing Trauma by Peter A. Levine AudioBook

The Guardians (The Guardians #1) by Jennifer Raygoza AudioBook

Review: The Guardians (The Guardians #1) by Jennifer Raygoza





The Guardians (The Guardians, #1)


The Guardians (The Guardians #1)

 by Jennifer Raygoza






The Guardians is a compelling tale focused on love, pain and sacrifice. The battle of good versus evil. The question is who will win.


Gianna Botticelli is the daughter to a Los Angeles Mafia boss. Although content working for her father, she mentally struggles with her mother’s death—and life choices after her passing. But everything she knows will change when she meets the sexy, mysterious Caleb.


Who is he? What is he? How does he know things? Gianna finds herself struggling with her feelings for him—and the sacrifices she will have to make as Caleb introduces her to a world unknown. Will she have to sacrifice herself to save everyone and everything?


Sexy and entertaining, this book is for mature vampire lovers. I challenge you not to fall in love with Gianna and Caleb.


WARNING: This book contains violence, adult language, and sexual content.


This book is sure to please the average vampire lover.










**Given a copy in exchange for an honest review**



The Guardians, good story and flow.

It may be fast paced but everything is there.


The characters, Gianna and Caleb are cool.

I love how the characters blended and their personalities.

Both characters are cool and bad-ass.

Especially Gianna, she’s cool and I love her sass and being feisty.

Caleb, he’s sweet and mysterious at the same time.

I love them both.


The story, it’s good and even though it’s a bit fast, everything is there.

I love how things went and the way it ended,

gah!! I loved it.. It’s unexpected and I liked it.

Touching Ice (Cyborg Seduction #4) by Laurann Dohner AudioBook


Touching Ice (Cyborg Seduction #4) by Laurann Dohner

Touching Ice (Cyborg Seduction #4)


by Laurann Dohner

What can go wrong overseeing a bunch of android sex bots on an automated whorehouse in deep space? Great job, if Megan doesn’t die of boredom. Then she catches sight of the sexiest male she’s ever seen. On her grainy security monitor, she watches all his sexual exploits with the bots, and fantasizes. But that’s all she can do because he’s a cyborg. Then fate steps in.


There’s a crash and Megan must escape or die. The cyborgs are rescuing the sex bots-taking them onboard their ship. She knows cyborgs hate humans. They’ll kill her if she asks for help so she devises an insane plan-pretend to be the most realistic sex bot ever made.


His name is Ice, and Megan is now his personal sex bot. He will satisfy every sexual fantasy she’s ever had-and as many more as she can dream up. She just has to figure out how to keep her big, sexy cyborg from discovering that she is all woman.


Thursday, September 25, 2014

So Hard to Say by Alex Sanchez Audiobook

Review: So Hard to Say, by Alex Sanchez





When Frederick starts 8th grade in a new state, he falls in with a group of Latinas who call themselves Las Sexy Seis. His new best friend, Xio, has the hots for him, but he only feels tingly when he hangs out with his new soccer buddy Victor. Could that mean he’s gay?


Alex Sanchez is one of the go-to authors for gay YA, and I’d never read anything by him. This book is fairly workmanlike, but it gave me the warm fuzzies. It’s told in alternating points of view, Xio’s and Frederick’s. I loved that Xio is Mexican (along with everyone Frederick hangs out with in his new California town) and Frederick is Wisconsin white, and you get to see the ways their lives are culturally different, but it’s never a Big Deal. The parents are three-dimensional. There’s a gay kid who gets picked on, so Frederick knows what’s in store if he comes out, and the book doesn’t try to pretend that Frederick will somehow escape that treatment — some kids (and adults) will be jerks, but both Frederick and Iggy still have friends.


This is as much about Xio figuring out who she is — her absent father, her newly-dating mother, her friends, all her dramatic 13-year-old emotions — as it is about Frederick, so I think even kids (like a lot of my girls) who are a little embarrassed about reading A Gay Book will find a lot to enjoy here.


Here’s a column by Sanchez about writing controversial books for teens.



Listen AudioBooks” So Hard to Say by Alex Sanchez” Here:




So Hard to Say by Alex Sanchez Audiobook

Life As We Knew It (The Last Survivors #1) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Review: Life As We Knew It by Susan Beth Pfeffer




Life As We Knew It (The Last Survivors #1)Book: Life As We Knew It (The Last Survivors #1) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Publication Date: May 1, 2008

Publisher: Graphia

Number of Pages: 337

Genre/s: Young Adult, Apocalyptic

I guess I always felt even if the world came to an end, McDonald’s still would be open.

High school sophomore Miranda’s disbelief turns to fear in a split second when an asteroid knocks the moon closer to Earth, the way “one marble hits another.” The result is catastrophic. How can her family prepare for the future when worldwide tsunamis are wiping out the coasts, earthquakes are rocking the continents, and volcanic ash is blocking out the sun? As August turns dark and wintry in northeastern Pennsylvania, Miranda, her two brothers, and their mother retreat to the unexpected safe haven of their sunroom, where they subsist on stockpiled food and limited water in the warmth of a wood-burning stove.

Told in a year’s worth of journal entries, this heart-pounding story chronicles Miranda’s struggle to hold on to the most important resource of all—hope—in an increasingly desperate and unfamiliar world. – From Goodreads




Here’s the funny thing about the world coming to an end. Once it gets going, it doesn’t seem to stop.



I wish I’ve read Life As We Knew It sooner.


It is so refreshing to read something like this. An apocalyptic novel who focused on just being an end-of-the-world story. The characters encountered harrowing experiences and their lives were complicated because of what’s happening around them, a completely plausible scenario that could happen anytime from now or in the near future. It wasn’t fascinating because of the love story, or because there are zombies or robots out there, or because the government is acting all crazy to have power and control over society. It was just because the asteroid hit the moon, the moon got closer to Earth, then all hell broke loose. 



I’m the one not caring. I’m the one pretending the earth isn’t shattering all around me because I don’t want it to be…I don’t want to have anything more to be afraid of…I didn’t start this diary for it be a record of death. 

I was pleasantly surprised when I found out Life As We Know It was written like a journal. It made the book all the more gripping, realistic and I get to know and care for the characters. I kept reading everywhere. At the Mcdonald’s for about 2 1/2 hours (No kidding!), at our field trip, at class, at lunch. I just couldn’t get enough of it. I might sound heartless but I almost wish I hadn’t finish it so soon because I enjoyed reading Miranda’s POV and the thrill of the unexpected was indeed riveting.


The atmosphere of the book was splendidly done, too. You almost feel claustrophobic as well because the setting is just in one place. You are cut off from the civilization and the only form of connection from others are late letters, static radios and dwindling neighbors.


The feeling of living day by day with no certain future to look forward to scares me. You don’t know if dying the instant the world went wrong was better than living in the aftermath of it. Of making do with what little you have and finding the most happiness in things you wouldn’t even appreciate before. If anything, Life As We Know It made me think.

I’ve yet to process the whole religion thing. Not that I thought it was badly handled. It’s just that I felt like it was glossed over or shoved in the corner. Or maybe I just thought I would have gotten something out of it.


Life As We Knew It portrayed survival, sacrifices, and realizing that life is full of uncertainty. But Life As We Knew It also represented the true of being a family. That you could get through the toughest of times with them. That with family you would do anything just to survive. That being with each other builds hope. I am positive they would not survive if they weren’t part of each others lives.

 

What am I doing with my life last 2008 that I haven’t even heard of this book? I do not know. I am so lucky the world didn’t end back then or else I would’ve missed this solid apocalyptic novel.

Listen AudioBooks” Life As We Knew It (The Last Survivors #1)” Here:





Life As We Knew It (The Last Survivors #1) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

This World We Live In (The Last Survivors #3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Book Review: This World We Live In (The Last Survivors #3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer


This World We Live In (The Last Survivors #3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer


Well, it seems I’m going to read this entire series in the span of a week or so…The third book in the “Live As We Knew It” series returns once again to rural Pennsylvania and Miranda’s family.  It has been nearly a year since the moon was hit by an asteroid, thus completely changing the lives of those on Earth.  The struggle to survive is compounded when Miranda’s brother brings someone new into the family and Miranda’s father and stepmother arrive with a baby and three strangers in tow. One of the newcomers is Alex Morales (our main character from the novel “The Dead & The Gone”). When Miranda’s feelings for him, turn to love, the plans he has for himself and his sister Julie look to end their relationship before it truly begins. When an already difficult world faces even more devastation, Miranda makes a decision that will change everyone’s lives forever.


Once again, this novel is one that I simply could not put down.  I feel like I’ve gotten to know these characters (especially because I’ve been reading these books nonstop). However, that doesn’t truly mean that I LOVE the series.  This book returned to telling the story from Miranda’s perspective, and of the two protagonists, I really liked Alex’s point of view better.  I also felt that many of the characters did things in this novel that were completely out of character…and maybe this is called for because of the desperateness of the situation they find themselves in.  There are only so many times the author can say that they are worried about running out of food…that the weather is cold, gray and gloomy…I really want MORE from this series.


I was, at first, concerned because I did not like the end of this book.  You are left with very little hope for the future of these characters, and I thought that this was the final book in the series.  Luckily (because I’ve come to this series late), there IS a fourth book.  I have high hopes for that book that it will finally bring a hope to Miranda and her family, and that all of this reading will have been worth it.


Listen AudioBooks” This World We Live In (The Last Survivors #3)” Here:





This World We Live In (The Last Survivors #3) by Susan Beth Pfeffer

Timebound (The Chronos Files #1) by Rysa Walker AudioBook

Book Review – Timebound by Rysa Walker



Timebound (The Chronos Files #1)


Timebound – Chronos Files #1 by Rysa Walker is a book about a girl, Kate, who finds out she has a gene that allows her to use a CHRONOS device that will allow her to travel through time. Her grandmother, Katherine, is dying of cancer, and needs Kate to go back and start setting the timeline straight.  Things have been done that have taken things out of order, popped things out of existence, and at first Kate is skeptical, but a series of unfortunate events, beginning with Kate being mugged, and ending with her parents being blinked out of existence, force Kate to come to terms with the fact that she can easily shift through time. Through out the story we find out this Kate, isn’t the original version of Kate, and once had a lover by the name of Kiernen, but in this Kate’s timeline, her heart belongs to Trey – the boy who believed her wacky story about time travel when Kate was about to upchuck her cookies and lose her mind.


The story itself is wonderfully written – when the story is being told.  The biggest issue with this book is the gigantic info dumps that had me skimming through chapters.  Revealing character history and placing points so that the story makes sense is of course important, but dedicating chapters upon chapters of dialogue between characters about what happened and this is why things are the way they are is tedious and can quickly make the reader lose attention.  That being said – once the skimming of the info dumps was over, the actual basis of the story and the action scenes, the way the author twisted it all together – was freakin’ fantastic!  There were a few qualms with the younger characters perhaps being a little too wise beyond their years, but it’s nothing drastic that would deter the story.   The imagery was vivid, and there wasn’t an over abundance  of ‘I’ used within the story which tends to be the downfall of debut authors and first person.   All the jumping forward and back can be easy to misplace and lose track of, but Walker weaved it together so following the many timelines was easy – even if the explanation of CHRONOS and the giant info dumps could become confusing.


It’s very conflicting on how to rate a book like this.  On the one hand, it’s a beautiful story, and on the other, there were cringe-worthy parts that lowered the standards of the quality of book this could be.   It’s definitely something to read.  It’s worth the read, and recommended.  When the second one comes out, this blogger is going to want to know what happens next.


Listen AudioBooks “Timebound (The Chronos Files #1)” Here:


Timebound (The Chronos Files #1) by Rysa Walker Part1 [Teen & Young Adult AudioBooks]


Timebound (The Chronos Files #1) by Rysa Walker Part2 [Teen & Young Adult AudioBook





Timebound (The Chronos Files #1) by Rysa Walker AudioBook

Touch (The Queen of the Dead #2) by Michelle Sagara, Michelle Sagara West AudioBook





Touch (The Queen of the Dead #2)


Touch (Queen of the Dead #2)

Michelle Sagara
Published: January 7, 2014 (DAW)

Purchase at: Book Depository or Amazon
Review source: Provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review


Reviewed by: Amanda


Rating (out of 5): 4 stars


Note: While this review is spoiler free, it does assume you’ve read Silence.


It is a very rare occurrence that I cry while reading a book. I’m not much of a crier in general (Hunger Games movies notwithstanding), so if a book makes me cry, it’s a big deal.


I cried during the prologue of Touch. The prologue.


Nathan was killed in a car accident four months ago, and Emma hasn’t gotten over it. She’s learned to live with missing her father, who died eight years ago, but the thought of having to live without Nathan is too much. So she goes through the motions of everyday life, convincing most people she’s fine, even though she’s not.


In the intervening months, Emma’s learned she’s a Necromancer, or at least, she has necromantic powers. She’s different from the others with the same powers; unlike them, she sees the dead as people and wants to help them find solace. Not use them for the power they can give her. Because of the events at the end of Silence, she’s become a target, and her friends, who have refused to leave her side, are caught in the crossfire.


Touch is much darker than Silence. If Silence was about grief and loss and the love you felt for someone who was gone, Touch is about acceptance of that loss – and what it can do to you if you don’t. Emma isn’t ready to let Nathan go. Nathan isn’t ready to let Emma go. He doesn’t care that her touch gives him a little bit more of her warmth and kills off a tiny part of her each time. They’re only for each other, and reading about Nathan waking up after the accident, realizing he’s dead, and that he’s left Emma behind, that made me cry.


The story is told mostly from Emma and her friend Allison’s points of view, which is a change from the previous book. Allison is worried about Emma. She knows Em’s putting on a show for everyone else, and she knows that one more death, one more loss, will destroy her. She’ll give up the pretense of living and just wait for death. When Chase, one of the hunters sent to kill Emma, starts trying to convince Allison to abandon her friend for her own safety, Allison won’t, even though she’s in danger.


Pretty much everyone’s in danger this time around. The Necromancers want to bring Emma to the Queen of the Dead, and they’ll kill anyone who gets in the way. Friends and family aren’t safe…and they’re also in the dark. Aside from a few friends, no one knows Emma can see the dead, so they don’t know they’ve got targets painted on their backs.


It gets a little preachy toward the middle (there’s a subplot involving Emma and a small dead boy trying to find his way home), but the story is otherwise solid, and the connection between Nathan and Emma is heartbreaking. By the end, we think we know that Emma and Nathan will have to make a choice to let the other go.


But we may very well be wrong.


Sexual content: Kissing


Listen AudioBooks “Touch (The Queen of the Dead #2)”  Here:




Touch (The Queen of the Dead #2) by Michelle Sagara, Michelle Sagara West AudioBook

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian AudioBook

Book Review: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie



The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman AlexieGenre:
Young Adult – Contemporary, Coming of AgeTitle & Author: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie


Release Date: September 12, 2007


Series: Standalone


Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers


How I Got the Book: ARC from Publisher


Description:



“In his first book for young adults, bestselling author Sherman Alexie tells the story of Junior, a budding cartoonist growing up on the Spokane Indian Reservation. Determined to take his future into his own hands, Junior leaves his troubled school on the rez to attend an all-white farm town high school where the only other Indian is the school mascot. Heartbreaking, funny, and beautifully written, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, which is based on the author’s own experiences, coupled with poignant drawings by acclaimed artist Ellen Forney, that reflect the character’s art, chronicles the contemporary adolescence of one Native American boy as he attempts to break away from the life he was destined to live.”


Simple Language, Big Issues


The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian is a one-of-a-kind look at life inside (and outside) a Native American reservation. The author, Sherman Alexie, is himself a Native American and has said this book was semi auto-biographical.


I’d say it’s more than “semi,” but knowing his history and background made a huge difference while reading it. This is a story of change and loss and becoming who you’re meant to me.


It’s told from the perspective of high school freshman Junior. The language of the story is very simplistic. It reads like a diary, which it is in a way. And, it’s a little over 250 pages, so a very quick read.


Even though the way it’s written is very easy-to-read, the storyline is full of really big, tough issues like alcoholism and death. I loved how Alexie approached these topics – with honesty and no quick solutions.


I appreciated that he was unafraid to tackle things in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian that one might guess he experienced firsthand. Like facing down a community who doesn’t want you to leave and takes your leaving as a betrayal.


As I read this book, I kept thinking that no one else could have told this story except Junior/Sherman Alexie. No one else could have talked about life in a reservation except someone who’s lived it, and it made me appreciate his journey and what it took to for him to make it.


There is definitely some content in The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian that I would encourage parents to consider before letting their teen read it. That being said, I think this book’s rawness will really resonate with teens. I would just be advised before gifting this book unknowingly.


Bonus: Junior draws to express himself and the doodles are included in the book. I read the novel on my Kindle, so the text on some drawings was hard to read but overall it was fine. I loved the addition of the images because it adds another dimension to the mind of a teenaged boy.


I actually read Alexie’s Reservation Blues in a Native America Lit class in college. It’s a fantastic read, and I highly recommend it if you’re looking for something similar to The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian.


OVERALL:


This is a book I would have loved to have read in high school. It’s eye-opening and raw. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian will expose you to a culture not often highlighted in literature, and to a young boy’s experience that is totally and endearingly relatable.


Listen AudioBook “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, Ellen Forney” Here:


 




The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian AudioBook

The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2) by Susan Beth Pfeffer AudioBook

Book Review: The Dead & The Gone (The Last Survivors #2) by Susan Beth Pfeffer


The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2)


Billed as a companion novel to “Life as We Knew It,” Susan Beth Pfeffer’s book, “The Dead & The Gone” is the second in The Last Survivors series.The novel follows the same events as the first (an asteroid hits the moon, moving it closer to Earth’s orbit and causing catastrophic climate change) but this time it is told from the point of view of Alex Morales, a seventeen year old Puerto Rican, who must lead his family when both his mother and father are lost during the event.


For me, it was interesting to see the same events from a different perspective.  Where Miranda and her family dealt with the situation on a farm in rural Pennsylvania, Alex and his young sisters must navigate the Upper West side of Manhattan.  Although the situations and catastrophes are the same, the fresh take this novel gave was interesting.  Miranda and her family were quite leery of the church, while Alex and his sisters lean on their faith to survive.


I had hoped that this book would have a more exciting plot – but I found that it was very similar to the original.  Although, this was a completely new perspective and setting, the problems were the same.  This book tends to focus more on the characters in the book, and their relationships with others, where Live As We Knew It was more about the actual events.


While I am not super in love with this trilogy, the books are oddly addictive.  Whenever I start one, I have trouble putting it down, even if I feel that the book is very repetitive (especially after reading the first one.) I have picked up the third one where the two sets of characters from each novel come together, so it will be interesting to see how the story progresses.


Listen AudioBook “The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2)” Here:


The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2) by Susan Beth Pfeffer



The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2) by Susan Beth Pfeffer Part 2




The Dead and the Gone (The Last Survivors #2) by Susan Beth Pfeffer AudioBook

The Shade of the Moon (The Last Survivors #4) by Susan Beth Pfeffer AudioBook

Review * The Shade of the Moon by Susan Beth Pfeffer



I received this book for free from BEA, Borrowed in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.




Susan-Beth-Pfeffer-Shade-of-the-MoonThe Shade of the Moon
by Susan Beth Pfeffer
Series: The Last Survivors #4
Published by HMH Books for Young Readers on August 13, 2013
Genres: Post Apocalyptic, Young Adult
Pages: 304
Format: ARC
Source: BEA, Borrowed


It’s been more than two years since Jon Evans and his family left Pennsylvania, hoping to find a safe place to live, yet Jon remains haunted by the deaths of those he loved. His prowess on a soccer field has guaranteed him a home in a well-protected enclave. But Jon is painfully aware that a missed goal, a careless word, even falling in love, can put his life and the lives of his mother, his sister Miranda, and her husband, Alex, in jeopardy. Can Jon risk doing what is right in a world gone so terribly wrong?


This is the fourth book in the series. I will keep it spoiler free for The Shade of the Moon, but there will be spoilers for the  first three books.





What I Thought…


  • I read the first three books in the series in my preblogging days. Because of this I didn’t want to get super excited for The Shade of the Moon. My views on books have changed a lot (for the better) in the last year and half that I have been blogging.

  • Even with my expectations in check The Shade of the Moon and I did not get along. We got off to a pretty rough start and even though things started to get better it just wasn’t enough.

  • The Shade of the Moon is narrated by Jon. His sister, Miranda narrated two of the first three books, and she was the only thing I really liked about The Shade of the Moon. She was the little bright spot with the positive attitude that was so needed.

  • We pick up a few years after the This World We Live In and Jon, his step mother and step brother are living in a “city” while his mother, sister and brother in law live outside of it. There are two groups of people: the clavers (the haves) and the grubs (the have nots).

  • Jon and I got off on the wrong foot due to his whinyness and highhandedness. Jon is a claver and his attitude reflects that. I realize that growing up after the disaster would have been different for him than Miranda, but he is a selfish jerk. His entitlement attitude was annoying as was his whinying when things didn’t go his way.

  • At the end of the third book Alex’s sister, Julie, died and that causes two points of contention with me regarding Jon in The Shade of the Moon. The minor one is that he is all pissed off that Miranda ended Julie’s life (Julie was paralyzed from the neck down and with no medical care there was no hope of maybe fixing it). Miranda did what she felt was best given the circumstances (and I agree with her decision) and did it humanely and not out of spite so he needs to stop being a spoiled brat about it. Rather than talk to Miranda about it he was a spiteful asshat to her.

  • The other point issue I had with Jon is that we learn more details of how Julie got hurt and they were quite unpleasant View Spoiler » After this I had a hard time connecting with him at all.

  • A little more than half way through the book Jon suddenly realizes that he should stop being a jerk and help his family and do the right thing rather than the easy thing. Given the fact that I was already annoyed with Jon this just further annoyed me.

  • Sarah is new to town and of course Jon takes an interest in her. She was a nice girl and had good intentions, but her quick forgiveness of Jon’s issue was a bit of a shocker and felt a bit out of character.

  • I may have been annoyed with the characters I did like where the plot went. There were arguments and fights between the clavers and grubs (as to be expected), and I thought the twist involving Miranda and Alex’s baby was done really well (and to be honest if she would have done some kind of twist with that I would have been really upset).

  • The end was satisfactory, but similar to her other books leaves a lot up in the air.

If you’re looking for a post-apocalyptic The Last Survivors series isn’t a bad place to start, butAshfall by Mike Mullin is grittier and more enjoyable, in my opinion.


Kimberly


Listen AudioBook “The Shade of the Moon” Here:


The Shade of the Moon (The Last Survivors #4) by Susan Beth Pfeffer




The Shade of the Moon (The Last Survivors #4) by Susan Beth Pfeffer AudioBook

The Taking (The Taking #1) by Kimberly Derting AudioBook

REVIEW: THE TAKING BY KIMBERLY DERTING!


Review: The Taking by Kimberly Derting!The Taking (The Taking #1)

by Kimberly Derting

Published By: Harper Teen

Format: eARC

Release Date: 04/29/14
Narrator: Tavia Gilbert
Length: 9 hrs and 30 mins

Pages: 368

four-starsfour-starsfour-starsfour-stars


A flash of white light . . . and then . . . nothing.


When sixteen-year-old Kyra Agnew wakes up behind a Dumpster at the Gas ’n’ Sip, she has no memory of how she got there. With a terrible headache and a major case of déjà vu, she heads home only to discover that five years have passed . . . yet she hasn’t aged a day.


Everything else about Kyra’s old life is different. Her parents are divorced, her boyfriend, Austin, is in college and dating her best friend, and her dad has changed from an uptight neat-freak to a drunken conspiracy theorist who blames her five-year disappearance on little green men.


Confused and lost, Kyra isn’t sure how to move forward unless she uncovers the truth. With Austin gone, she turns to Tyler, Austin’s annoying kid brother, who is now seventeen and who she has a sudden undeniable attraction to. As Tyler and Kyra retrace her steps from the fateful night of her disappearance, they discover strange phenomena that no one can explain, and they begin to wonder if Kyra’s father is not as crazy as he seems. There are others like her who have been taken . . . and returned. Kyra races to find an explanation and reclaim the life she once had, but what if the life she wants back is not her own?


I received this ARC received for review purposes in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

 


I was so excited when I found out that Kimberly Derting had a new series in the works!  The Body Finder series is a favorite of mine (Killer POV’s? Yes please!)  Sci-fi isn’t one of my favorite genres and I haven’t read many books about aliens but I’ll read anything Derting writes.  I loved that this wasn’t heavy on the sci-fi but it still had the feel of it.


Kyra has a pretty damn good life.  Her team has just won a championship game, she has really great parents, she has a strong and close relationship with her dad, an awesome best friend and a great, steady boyfriend.  When Kyra and her dad get into an argument about her boyfriend (typical), she throws a hissy fit and gets out of the car and storms off down the side of the road.  Of course, he dad goes after her, but when a bright light appears and disappears, Kyra disappears along with it.  She wakes up the next morning, still wearing the same clothes, only to find out that 5 years have passed even though it feels like only a a day to her.  Her whole life is turned upside down and she’s kind of horrified to find out that everything has changed and everyone has moved on.  Life went on.  Her dad went a little nuts with conspiracy theories about her disappearance, her parents got divorced and her mom has a new life complete with a new husband and a new kid and her boyfriend has moved on with none other than her best friend.


Understandably, Kyra doesn’t take it well.  Besides the fact that she has no idea what the hell is going on, everyone has had 5 years to adjust and move on with her life while everything is basically thrown at Kyra from one day to the next (for her, at least).  She hates that her mom moved on and feels like her new little brother is a replacement for Kyra.  Kyra makes absolutely no effort to get to know her new stepdad and brother, and while that sucked because they did nothing wrong, I understood where she was coming from.  I can’t imagine having to go through that, much less without the proper time (marriage and pregnancy) to adjust.  The only thing that is helping Kyra adjust to this fucked up new life is Tyler, her exboyfriends little brother.  I was a little bit weirded out by the age difference at first.  Sure, he’s 17 now and she’s 16 (I think), but when she disappeared he was 12.  Not to mention the whole ‘he’s your exboyfriends brother’ thing.  But, what can I say?  I’m a sucker and they ended up growing on me.


Just when Kyra is starting to adjust to her new life, she finds out that she’s a danger to the people close to her.  Suddenly, someone is after her and they will stop at nothing to get their hands on her.  Not knowing who to trust, Kyra ends up running for her life.  But as much as she tries to keep her loved ones safe, she can’t do that without knowing what happened to her and finding out who is after her and why.  The Taking started off really strong.  I loved finding out along with Kyra what had happened to the people in her life for the past 5 years.  The middle part of the story fell a little bit flat for me and I started to get a tiny bit bored.  But, the beginning and the end of the book are strong.  It starts off intense and ends off with a bang and a bit of a cliffhanger ending.  Definitely looking forward to the next book in the series!  I have a lot of questions and theories and I hope the story gives us more answers the next time around.  I enjoyed this one!


Some of my favorite non-spoiler quotes from The Taking:


“Awkward or not, you should know I’m lad you’re back.” He flashed me a sheepish smile as he added, “And now that I’m older, I’ll try to be a little more memorable.”


Just mentioning my dad and the World’s Best Dad mug I’d gotten him for Father’s Day when I was eleven made me sick to my stomach.  I wondered what kinds of mugs I’d get him now.  WORLD’S BEST ALIEN HUNTER.  MY DAD’s CRAZIER THAN YOUR DAD.


I didn’t want to be an anomaly.  I just wanted to be the old me again.


“You should jump in the shower.  It’ll warm you up.”

“You’d say anything to get me out of my clothes wouldn’t you?” I amused.

“Well…” He grinned.  “You’re not wrong.  But in this case, I think saving you from hypothermia comes before seeing you naked.” He paused a second and then added with a wry look.  “Although seeing you naked runs a close second.”


“It was worth it, you know.  I would trade a million lifetimes for the one I’ve had with you.”



About Kimberly Derting


Kimberly is the author of the BODY FINDER series (HarperCollins), THE PLEDGE trilogy (Simon & Schuster), and THE TAKING trilogy (coming April 29th from HarperTeen). She lives in the Pacific Northwest, the ideal place to write anything dark or creepy…a gloomy day can set the perfect mood. She lives with her husband and their three beautiful (and often mouthy) children who provide an endless source of inspiration.


Listen AudioBook “The Taking (The Taking #1)” Here:


The Taking (The Taking #1) by Kimberly Derting [Teen & Young Adult AudioBook]






The Taking (The Taking #1) by Kimberly Derting AudioBook

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan

Book Review: The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan


Book Review: The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBanTitle: The Tragedy Paper
Author: Elizabeth LaBan
Release Date: January 8, 2013
Publisher: Knopf BFYR
Page Count: 312
Genre(s): Realistic Fiction

Summary from Goodreads:

Tim Macbeth, a seventeen-year-old albino and a recent transfer to the prestigious Irving School, where the motto is “Enter here to be and find a friend.” A friend is the last thing Tim expects or wants—he just hopes to get through his senior year unnoticed. Yet, despite his efforts to blend into the background, he finds himself falling for the quintessential “It” girl, Vanessa Sheller, girlfriend of Irving’s most popular boy. To Tim’s surprise, Vanessa is into him, too, but she can kiss her social status goodbye if anyone ever finds out. Tim and Vanessa begin a clandestine romance, but looming over them is the Tragedy Paper, Irving’s version of a senior year thesis, assigned by the school’s least forgiving teacher.


Jumping between viewpoints of the love-struck Tim and Duncan, a current senior about to uncover the truth of Tim and Vanessa, The Tragedy Paper is a compelling tale of forbidden love and the lengths people will go to keep their love.


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Book Review: ‘The Tragedy Paper’ by Elizabeth Laban


The Tragedy Paper follows two characters. We first meet Duncan, a student starting his first day at The Irving, a boarding school in upstate New York. Duncan is hesitant to come back, after what happened last year, which he only vaguely alludes to and doesn’t explain. He’s even more disheartened when he realizes that he is stuck with the worst dorm room, a small space with hardly a window. It’s in the room that he finds a collection of CDs that Tim, the senior who lived in his room last year, left specifically for him. Duncan sits and listens to the CDs and learns that Tim has recorded his story about what led to the big thing that happened last year. Duncan can’t believe it and doesn’t want to listen anymore, but he can’t stop listening to Tim’s story.


What struck me right away when reading Elizabeth Laban’s The Tragedy Paper was that it’s similar to stories I’ve read before, yet I still didn’t find this kind of narrative tiring. If anything, I was eager to find out what this impending and slightly scary revelation the story is leading up to. The book switches between Duncan and Tim, although the story is mostly focused on Tim, who I should mention is albino. Clearly, you can guess Tim’s story is something about fitting in and the lengths someone would go to seem “normal” to impress a girl. In that regard, it’s nothing new, but we do get to meet an interesting and unique character in Tim. He’s the one that I most connected with since his story is told in first person. It was harder to connect with Duncan because I didn’t know what his connection to Tim’s tragedy was. Was it bad? Was it good? All we know is that Duncan feels a tremendous guilt over it, leaving the reader unsure how to feel about him.


The story has a perfect backdrop, a tragedy-themed essay that every senior has the entire school year to write and complete for their English class. It’s looming on every senior’s minds. It’s worked into their story effortlessly and adds more significance to the story at hand. In addition, Laban is a talented writer. She knows how to draw the reader in and writes her characters with authenticity.


My biggest issue with the novel is some of its predictability. With using common tragedy tropes, it was easy to expect what would happen to Tim. 1. You obviously know it’s tragic. And 2. Tim leaves big clues how what will cause it to happen. That, in turn, made me feel a tad underwhelmed by the revelation. However, I wasn’t able to predict how exactly it played out and every character’s role in the event. So, there is some surprise in the climax.


The best thing about The Tragedy Paper is the take-away. It delivers a good and simple message: Believe in yourself. Yeah, you may have heard that so many times. Trust me; I have as well. But it is nice to be non-annoyingly and genuinely reminded of that, and The Tragedy Paper finds a profound and engrossing (and well, also tragic) way to reinforce that message into readers.


3 Stars


Listen AudioBooks “The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan” Here:


The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan [Teen & Young Adult AudioBook]




The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth LaBan

Wanderers (Wasteland #2) by Susan Kim, Laurence Klavan

Review: Wanderers (Wasteland, #2) by Susan Kim & Laurence Klavan


Wanderers by Susan Kim & Laurence Klavan


Series: Wasteland, #2

Release Date
: March 25th 2014
Publisher:  HarperTeen
Format: egalley

Pages
: 352
Genre: Young Adult – Science Fiction, Dystopia

Source:
Edelweiss


The Emmy Award-nominee and Edgar Award-winning duo bring readers back to the Wasteland in this thrilling sequel.


Karin Slaughter, bestselling author of Criminal, called Wasteland, “A Lord of the Flies for future generations. An irresistible page-turner.”


The former citizens of Prin are running out of time. The Source has been destroyed, so food is scarcer than ever. Tensions are rising…and then an earthquake hits.


So Esther and Caleb hit the road, leading a ragtag caravan. Their destination? A mythical city where they hope to find food and shelter – not to mention a way to make it past age nineteen.


On the way, alliances and romances blossom and fracture. Esther must rally to take charge with the help of a blind guide, Aras. He seems unbelievably cruel, but not everything is as it seems in the Wasteland.…


In this sequel to Wasteland, the stakes are even higher for Esther, Caleb, and the rest of their clan. They’re pinning all their hopes on the road…but what if it’s the most dangerous place of all?


*This is a review of the second book and it may contain spoilers.*


Nope, just Nope. I will start right off the bat saying that I will not be picking up the next book in the trilogy. I tried to give the second book and a chance and it just didn’t do it for me either, although it was slightly better than the first book. I almost didn’t pick it up at all because someone put a spoiler in the capital letters on Goodreads and I saw it as I was skimming through to see what people had rated it. I was super bummed about that spoiler too.


The book starts with Esther hunting using the techniques that her variant friend Skar had taught her. She has not really seen Skar since she was partnered. Skar is acting very distant and Esther can tell that something is wrong. Joseph, Caleb, Kai, & Esther all live in a crumbling apartment together above a Starbucks. Everyone in the town is starving and they all blame it on Caleb since he took down Levi and caused “the source” to burn down. Leaving the town to provide for themselves.


Caleb and Esther try to talk the town into leaving but of course no one wants to go. Then quite conveniently, later that night a giant earthquake hits and destroys the town and kills half the people in it. This forces everyone to have to leave. Rafe, who had stepped down from being the town leader but still likes to be the leader, tells everyone that they need to go to a place called Mundreel (Montreal), which they have only heard rumors about. Everythign there is supposed to be great, but Caleb and Joseph try to tell them they haven’t heard anything true about it, or anything that can be verified.


After certain events happen that I won’t spoil, Skar ends up leaving town with the group also. People are wary of her but welcome her because she can hunt. I would also like to say that no one knew that edible plants grew in the wild. They thought it had to be dried out and packaged in order to eat it. I found this a little unbelievable. New friends are made in this book and some people die., including ones that I was not expecting at all. Caleb also mentions having a child with Esther. Why would someone want to bring a new child into a world that you can’t survive in?! Now, don’t get me wrong, there are a couple scenes that are worth reading but a couple scenes out of an entire book just aren’t worth it to me.


The writing is not the best in this book which was a major problem for me in the first book. There are plot holes and things happen and then never get spoken of again. As with the first book this one changes different points of view, however, it changes in the middle of a chapter with no warning what so ever. Multiple times I had to try and figure out who was narrating. There is a certain death scene that could have been written really well and I felt like the entire thing was over in a couple of pages.


Like I said, I will not be going on to the next book and I really can’t recommend either book to anyone. IF you read the first one and didn’t like it, don’t waste your time.


*This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review. 


Listen AudioBooks “Wanderers” Here:


Wanderers (Wasteland #2) by Susan Kim, Laurence Klavan [Teen & Young Adult AudioBook]




Wanderers (Wasteland #2) by Susan Kim, Laurence Klavan