• STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

STACKED

books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
      • Size Acceptance
    • In The Library
      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
      • Readers Advisory
    • Professional Development
      • Book Awards
      • Conferences
    • The Publishing World
      • Data & Stats
    • Reading Life and Habits
    • Romance
    • Young Adult
  • Reviews + Features
    • About The Girls Series
    • Author Interviews
    • Contemporary YA Series
      • Contemporary Week 2012
      • Contemporary Week 2013
      • Contemporary Week 2014
    • Guest Posts
    • Link Round-Ups
      • Book Riot
    • Readers Advisory Week
    • Reviews
      • Adult
      • Audiobooks
      • Graphic Novels
      • Non-Fiction
      • Picture Books
      • YA Fiction
    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

“If you like this, you might like…”

June 7, 2012 |

So you know how the ladies of The Readventurer wrote that guest post for me this week? The one with the amazing YA Flow Chart?

They were kind enough to ask me to write them a guest post, too. And it’s up! The mission was to talk about random things I like and make recommendations based off those things. So I talked about things like books about people’s day jobs, movies about werewolves, music about girls, and bok choy. Go check it out. It would make my day, too, if you left a comment over there. Even if you lie about how great those recommendations are.

Filed Under: book lists, Uncategorized

On two things that make my life rich

June 7, 2012 |

Five years ago today, I married my best friend. Anniversaries are really special to me, not just because it’s a celebration of our relationship, but also because it’s a reminder of the celebration we had and the people who were with us that day who both are and aren’t with us anymore. We had a great wedding and without doubt, I’d do it all over the same way I did before. I’d even marry the same guy.

I thought about sharing a list of books set in Las Vegas — where we got married — but that seemed too limited. Instead, I thought I’d take you on a little bit of a book road trip and share ya books set in some of the significant places where my husband and I spent time together. Consider it a little bit of a literary road trip through our relationship.

Note: I haven’t read all of these books, they’re almost all available now, and descriptions come from WorldCat. 

Iowa

My husband and I met in Iowa, at our small college about 20 minutes east of Cedar Rapids. Much of our entertainment there was derived from late-night trips to the city and roaming Wal-Mart. In fact, we cemented our relationship one night when we were trapped inside the store because of tornadoes outside. Where many people were ducking and covering, we wandered back to the furniture department and ended up sitting beside a comedian who kept us entertained for the hour or so we were stuck there. We spent three years together here, and despite being small-town Iowa, we both loved it, and I find that I have a soft-spot in my heart for the books set in this state.

Rotters by Daniel Kraus: Sixteen-year-old Joey’s life takes a very strange turn when his mother’s tragic death forces him to move from Chicago to rural Iowa with the father he has never known, and who is the town pariah.

The Princesses of Iowa by M Molly Backes: After being involved in a drunk driving accident in the spring, Paige Sheridan spends the summer in Paris as an au-pair and then returns to her suburban Iowa existence for her senior year of high school, where she begins to wonder if she wants more out life than being popular, having a handsome boyfriend and all the latest clothes, and being a member of the social elite.

Ashfall by Mike Mullin: After the eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano destroys his city and its surroundings, fifteen-year-old Alex must journey from Cedar Falls, Iowa, to Illinois to find his parents and sister, trying to survive in a transformed landscape and a new society in which all the old rules of living have vanished.

The Vast Fields of Ordinary by Nick Burd: The summer after graduating from an Iowa high school, eighteen-year-old Dade Hamilton watches his parents’ marriage disintegrate, ends his long-term, secret relationship, comes out of the closet, and savors first love.

The Mostly True Story of Jack by Kelly Barnhill: Jack is practically invisible at home, but when his parents send him to Hazelwood, Iowa, to spend a summer with his odd aunt and uncle, he suddenly makes friends, is beaten up by the town bully, and is plotted against by the richest man in town. Even though this one is middle grade, rather than YA, I love how it gives Iowa a magical quality.

Road Trip Stop: Alliance, Nebraska

My husband and I are huge fans of road trips. We took our first one together not too long after we met. It took us through Minnesota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Montana, Colorado, and Nebraska, and along the way we stopped at places like the Mitchell Corn Palace, The Badlands, Mt. Rushmore, and Wall Drug. Perhaps the most memorable stop is the one that is most surprising: Alliance, Nebraska. Sounds like your average small town in the Midwest. But Alliance is the major setting in one of my and my husband’s favorite novels, Ann Patchett’s The Magician’s Assistant. We stayed in a shady motel when we were there, and we were once again haunted by bad weather (tornadoes follow us). One of the scenes in the book involves a K-Mart in Alliance, so we went looking for it — and it doesn’t exist. So while we had a blast roaming the town one of our favorite reads was set in, there was very little in town that was in the book. The second setting in the book, Los Angeles, would be the first city my husband and I ever flew to together (and actually, the very first time I ever flew on a plane), later on in our college career. It’s a big literary circle.

The Magician’s Assistant by Ann Patchett: Just before dying, magician Parsifal of Los Angeles married his assistant, Sabine, who knew nothing of his private life, veiled in mystery. Not wanting to be an ignorant widow, Sabine sets out to learn who Parsifal was outside the world of illusion.

Las Vegas

I didn’t want to fuss with a big wedding and the idea of stressing about something that is meant to be a big party really didn’t sit well with me. So when my mom suggested I get married in Vegas and not deal with the stresses of planning something traditional, I thought that was the perfect solution. I spent the summer before the wedding looking up venues and decided that Caesar’s Palace was perfect because I loved the outdoor setting and I was (and still am) a little in love with Roman culture and Latin. If you’re expecting some story about the fun of shopping for my wedding dress and trying on everything in front of fancy mirrors with an adoring crowd . . . you’re not going to get it. My dress shopping was stopping at one wedding store with my maid of honor, trying on a bridesmaids dress I liked from their catalog, and purchasing it (actually, I didn’t even try on the dress I bought — they didn’t have it, so I tried on “something similar” and bought the real deal based on that). All of my wedding invites were hand made and put together by my best friend and I.

The actual wedding itself was everything I imagined and I wouldn’t change a thing. The day of, I rolled out of bed, wandered the Strip with my friends, and won $350 at a Star Wars penny slot. With the winnings, I bought everyone yard-long margaritas. Then with two hours left to spare before the ceremony, I decided I needed to try out all of the pools at Caesars. So, I did. An hour before the wedding, my hair still pool-wet, I slide it into a clip and called it a day. The actual ceremony itself was short and the officiant was incredibly humorous (he called me by my nickname at one point, causing me to laugh uncontrollably). After the vows, we all went to a restaurant for a family-style meal where my aunt and uncle taught my friends the song “In Heaven There is No Beer” and I didn’t have a wedding cake.

I can’t say I’m too surprised there aren’t a lot of books for young adults set in Vegas, and the ones that are don’t give quite a rosy impression of the city.

Tricks by Ellen Hopkins: Five troubled teenagers fall into prostitution as they search for freedom, safety, community, family, and love.

What Happens Here by Tara Altebrando: When sixteen-year-old Chloe returns home to Las Vegas from a family vacation in Europe, she learns that her best friend Lindsey has been murdered.

Pretty Bad Things by CJ Skuse: When they were six years old, twins Beau and Paisley were famous for surviving on their own after their mother died of a drug overdose, and now, at sixteen, they escape from their abusive grandmother to look for their father, who is out of prison and, unbeknownst to them, has been writing them letters since he was put away.

Austin, Texas

I’ll spare many details, but after we got married, my husband moved to South Carolina for school and I moved to Austin, Texas for school (we had road trips from Vegas to Austin and then from Austin to Columbia, SC in the mean time). It wasn’t easy. That’s part of why he ended up leaving his school and moving to Austin. So officially, we spent our first married lives together in Austin. We lived in three different places in three very different parts of the city, and we spent the bulk of our free time (which wasn’t much with the time-sucks of school and work) meeting and spending time with new people. We also ate a lot of Mexican food. Not sure what it says about me that the bulk of what I remember about the years I was here was the food, but there it is.

I love how Austin is becoming a bigger setting in YA novels because I think it’s rich with stories.

 

Love, Inc by Yvonne Collins and Sandy Rideout: When three fifteen-year-old Austin, Texas, girls who met in group therapy discover that they are all dating the same boy, they first get revenge and then start a wildly successful relationship consulting business.

Lovestruck Summer by Melissa Walker:  Quinn plans to enjoy her summer in Austin, Texas, working for a record company, even though she has to live with her cousin Penny.

The Less-Dead by April Lurie: Sixteen-year-old Noah Nordstrom, whose father is the host of a popular evangelical Christian radio program, believes that the person who has been killing gay teenagers in the Austin, Texas, foster care system, is a regular caller on his dad’s show.

Tantalize by Cynthia Leitich Smith: When multiple murders in Austin, Texas, threaten the grand re-opening of her family’s vampire-themed restaurant, seventeen-year-old, orphaned Quincie worries that her best friend-turned-love interest, Keiren, a werewolf-in-training, may be the prime suspect.

Wisconsin

We moved from Texas to northern Illinois, but soon after that move, we ended up buying a house in Wisconsin. People always ask how we ended up living here, and the answer was that it was the practical choice at the time: my husband was working 40 minutes in one direction then going to school 40 minutes in another direction, and I was working 40 minutes in the other direction. We don’t live in a city here, so I am even more appreciative of the novels set in small towns or rural areas of the state. In news that should not surprise anyone, I have read all of these. I consider it my duty to try to read as many of the books set in Wisconsin as possible (and I know there are more than these, too, but I don’t want to list every single one and really, it’s a little too close to home for me to think about Bick’s Ashes). For the most part, if you set your book in Wisconsin, it appears your cover should be blue.

The Dairy Queen by Catherine Gilbert Murdoch: After spending her summer running the family farm and training the quarterback for her school’s rival football team, sixteen-year-old D.J. decides to go out for the sport herself, not anticipating the reactions of those around her.

Drowning Instinct by Ilsa J. Bick: An emotionally damaged sixteen-year-old girl begins a relationship with a deeply troubled older man.

Bluefish by Pat Schmatz: Everything changes for thirteen-year-old Travis, a new student who is trying to hide a learning disability, when he meets a remarkable teacher and a sassy classmate with her own secrets.

Stupid Fast by Geoff Herbach: Just before his sixteenth birthday, Felton Reinstein has a sudden growth spurt that turns him from a small, jumpy, picked-on boy with the nickname of “Squirrel Nut” to a powerful athlete, leading to new friends, his first love, and the courage to confront his family’s past and current problems.

With or Without You by Brian Farrey: When eighteen-year-old best friends Evan and Davis of Madison, Wisconsin, join a community center group called “chasers” to gain acceptance and knowledge of gay history, there may be fatal consequences.

Personal Effects by EM Kokie (September): Matt has been sleepwalking through life while seeking answers about his brother T.J.’s death in Iraq, but after discovering that he may not have known his brother as well as he thought he did, Matt is able to stand up to his father, honor T.J.’s memory, and take charge of his own life.

Toronto, Ontario

After we were married, we didn’t take a honeymoon. Since we traveled to Vegas for the wedding and then had to move immediately afterward, we not only were short on time, we had no money whatsoever. But four years later — last summer — when we were both in jobs which gave us real vacation time, we were able to finally do it. Being that we still had no money, we couldn’t do anything fancy, so we turned to what we hadn’t done in a few years and what we loved doing: taking a road trip. When my husband and I were first dating, we’d made plans to go to Toronto; he’d been there before and loved it, and my family was from a small town about an hour and a half southeast of the city. A number of things came up before we got to make that trip (we had to take a much condensed version and we were there during a huge tornado outbreak which I guess doesn’t happen a whole lot in Ontario — what does this say about us anyway?), and we’d always wanted to complete it. Enter the idea of finally completing that trip and our honeymoon was born.

While most people want to hit a tropical paradise, I can say that neither of us are much into that. We loved every second of driving to and from Toronto. I had the chance to see the teeny tiny place where my grandmother and aunt came from, even though their house was no longer there. My husband and I stayed in a beautiful hotel room right on the water in the city. In between watching a lot of Canadian television, we did a ton of wandering the city, hitting up museums, going up in the CN tower — where only I was brave enough to stand on the glass floor — and drinking in the hotel restaurant (where we became fast pals with one of the servers who eventually stopped charging us for drinks). And because I can’t do something that isn’t related to books or reading, our trip also included spending time with two of my favorite ya authors (since my husband is a super social person, he was more than along for the ride). I’m so glad we waited to take this trip because I think it meant a lot more to us than had we done it immediately after the wedding.

I’ve read two of these, and both of them were books I read post-trip. I loved “seeing” where they were happening. 

Above by Leah Bobet: When insane exile Corner and his army of mindless, whispering shadows invade Safe, a secret, underground community of freaks and disabled outcasts, Matthew, traumatized shapeshifter Ariel, and other misfits go to the dangerous place known as Above, where Matthew makes a shocking discovery about the histories entrusted to him. This one’s about a futuristic Toronto.

Blink & Caution by Tim Wynne-Jones: Two teenagers who are living on the streets and barely getting by become involved in a complicated criminal plot, and make an unexpected connection with each other.

Yesterday by CK Kelly Martin (September): After the mysterious death of her father and a sudden move back to her native Canada in 1985, sixteen-year-old Freya feels distant and disoriented until she meets Garren and begins remembering their shared past, despite the efforts of some powerful people to keep them from learning the truth. (One of my favorite scenes in Yesterday starts at one of the museums we visited, and I could picture so much of the events that happened.)

After five years, I can still say I’m married to my best friend. I’m so lucky to have someone who supports what I do and supports my decisions, despite the fact he would probably roll his eyes so hard knowing I wrote a blog post about our relationship using YA books. If you’re curious, he’s celebrating our anniversary by being elbow-deep in a reread of the entire Harry Potter series.

It doesn’t even make me blink.

Filed Under: Geo-Reading, Uncategorized

The False Prince by Jennifer Nielsen

June 6, 2012 |

This is a really hard book for me to review. Not because I didn’t enjoy it (which I did), but because I think the discussion about it needs to involve a major spoiler. Without discussing the spoiler, the review doesn’t get the chance to say a whole lot of substance (in my view), so I’m going to bite the bullet and weave the spoiler in. Not right at the beginning – I’ll warn you in bold before I start discussing it, so if you’d like to avoid the spoiler, you’re safe reading the first part.
Fourteen year old Sage is an orphan in the country of Carthya. He’s got no family and no money, although he does have a home in a sad little orphanage run by a woman who doesn’t like him (or any of the orphans, really). He gets by in life by stealing: food, money, whatever he can get his hands on. Except one day, someone steals him. That someone is a noble by the name of Conner, and he has big plans for Sage and three other boys he’s taken.
Prince Jaron of Carthya, the heir to the throne, disappeared during a pirate attack at sea a few years ago and has been presumed dead since. Conner intends to make one of his boys into the picture of the prince and place him on the throne. All in the name of patriotism of course: with no apparent heir to the throne, the late king’s advisers are chomping at the bit to be named the next ruler, and it could send the country into civil war, which would in turn make Carthya susceptible to attack by neighboring countries.
None of the boys resemble the dead prince too closely, but Conner is convinced that with the proper training, clothing, and hair dye, he can pull it off. Of course, only one of the boys can be his choice. As to what would happen to the others – well, Conner can’t let anyone talk about his plans to anyone else, can he? Sage isn’t sure if he’s down with this competition, but when the alternative is death, there really isn’t a choice.
WARNING: SPOILER BELOW
I’m an avid review-reader. Before I pick up a book, I go to Goodreads and see what people are saying about it. Sometimes it will convince me to give the book a pass, and sometimes it will make me more excited to read it. In this case, reading reviews helped me spot the spoiler, and I’m not sure if that’s a good thing. I don’t read reviews with spoilers deliberately, and none of the reviews I read actually revealed the spoiler, but they revealed enough. Really, all they had to do was tell me that the book reminded them of The Thief.
If you’ve read The Thief and you’ve read this far in my review, I bet you can call the ending of The False Prince without even reading the first page. I sure could. Every time I think about this book, I wonder if I would have discovered the twist at the end if I had not read that comparison, and I honestly can’t say. Perhaps. But it would have been harder, it would have taken me longer, and I wouldn’t have been so sure until I got there.
When I first read The Thief, the twist ending is what elevated it from a book I really liked to one I would remember forever. It was all good, but the real joy came in re-reading and determining just where Turner had dropped those hints. In The False Prince, I looked for those hints right from page 1, and they seemed so easy to spot. It makes me struggle to determine the true quality of the book – is the twist a gimmick because it’s predictable and too similar to another middle grade fantasy novel? Or is my experience with The Thief clouding my judgment?
I don’t know the answer to those questions. What I do know is that despite my foreknowledge, I still raced through the book and was completely engaged the entire time. Even though I knew how it would end, I wanted to see how Nielsen got us there. So I can safely say it’s a good book, but I don’t know about great. It’s got plenty of excitement, a lot of action, and a good voice in Sage. Sage’s fellow prince contenders are quite well drawn, as are the two female ancillary characters, though they don’t get a lot of page time. And I definitely plan on reading the sequels. Nielsen can’t use this same trick in them, so I’m interested to see where the story goes.

Filed Under: Fantasy, middle grade, Reviews, Uncategorized

The Hardcover to Paperback Switch: Five to Consider

June 5, 2012 |

I told someone recently I keep a list of books that have had cover changes when they’ve gone from their initial hardcover printings. Although there have been a number of changes in just the last three years I’ve been blogging, there seems to be an even greater number of cover swaps in the last year or so. Even more interesting to me than the cover changes are the pair of books here that got both cover changes and title changes.

Eileen Cook’s Unraveling Isobel (reviewed here by Kim) is getting a cover change that I’m a little bit torn about.  I think the hardcover stands out quite a bit: the color is bright and vibrant, and I like the use of the leafy swirls from the font through the entire image. The cover fits the story quite well, though I find the Photoshopping of the model’s crotch area to be really disturbing (you can’t see it so well in the digital images but it’s visible in the physical copies). This is ultimately a story about mental illness, and I feel like the cover subtly hints at this.

However, one of the things I remember about this book was that there is a notable romance. While it didn’t necessarily work for me, I noted that that would be the sell for many teen readers. The paperback cover knocks it out of the park then, in terms of making it clear there is romance in Cook’s novel. Maybe what I find most interesting, though, is the treatment of title and author in the switch from the hard to paper covers: in the hardcover, the title takes up much more space than the author’s name, whereas in the paperback, the author’s name has much more prominence than the title. In fact, the title almost gets a little lost in the image itself. And although the image is fairly generic, it fits the story.

I don’t know if one cover is better than the other; rather, they seem to appeal to two entirely different readerships. The hardcover seems to appeal to those looking for a non-romantic thriller (which is how the flap copy reads, despite a blurb that calls the book sexy) and the paperback seems to appeal to those looking for a story with romance. The paperback edition of Unraveling Isobel will be available in October.
  

I read John Cusick’s Girl Parts a couple of years ago and was pretty put off by the cover. It’s a story about a boy who suffers from a mental illness whose parents choose to purchase him a companion bot in order to help him deal with the challenges arising from his illness. The companion doll, however, happens to fall for a different boy completely. So while the cover makes sense, there are a couple of problems: first, it’s unabashedly packaging a girl for consumption and the title doesn’t help a whole lot, either. Neither do the stickers on her body that call her “fragile.” Obviously, these make sense because the story is about a companion bot, but the use of a live model rubs me all sorts of wrong. The other problem I have with this cover is that, while this book has strong appeal for male readers, the cover won’t sell it to them. It’s a pretty girl.

The paperback, though, does this book a huge favor while still getting to what the story’s about. The girl is finally gone, and instead, we only have the image of bubble wrap. It’s entirely neutral, which gives it wide reader appeal. The title font is the same as the hardcover, and it works because it gets at the robotic element to the story. One of the big additions to the paperback cover is the tag line, which reads “Can a custom-made girl-bot fill a boy’s needs?” Rather than use the girl on the cover, the tag line does an effective (and much less wince-inducing) job of showing what the book is about. I like this rendition of the cover much better, even if the “fragile” sticker still rubs me wrong — it makes sense, of course, but any time fragile is applied to a book about a girl without agency, I can’t help myself. Girl Parts is available in paperback now. 

Technically, this is a paperback to paperback cover change, rather than a hardcover to paperback switch. You can check out the hardcover edition here (and I’ll say I much prefer both versions of the paperback to the hardcover which bothers me not because it’s risque but because it’s so blank and empty). Although I haven’t read Doing It, I’m pretty familiar with the content of the book, and I think that the original paperback cover on the left hits all the right notes for me. It is awkward. I love that we only get to see the guy and the girl from the waist down, and I think so much it said in the way the guy’s hand lays on the girl’s lap. I also think there’s a lot implied in the way the guy and the girl have their legs in the image. The only thing I don’t care a lot for in the original paperback cover is that it’s a little dark. The colors bleed together a bit: the people blend into the furniture which blends into the background, too. It’s just the title and author that stand out because of their bright color and center-stage placement.

The new paperback — available now — definitely gets rid of the color blending issue. This cover is bright. Despite being remarkably similar to the original paperback cover, the changes are interesting ones. The floor isn’t carpet anymore and the couch isn’t floral but an orange-red. Maybe most noteworthy, though, is that the girl in the image is no longer wearing anything on her legs. They’re bare, and the boy is no longer placing his hand tentatively on her thigh; he’s running it along her leg. His foot is also rubbing against hers. There’s an interesting contrast in the body language between the new paperback and the original, in that the tentativeness and awkwardness of the first seems to have disappeared in the second. Instead, it’s been replaced with more comfort in the situation, at least in the guy’s positioning. The girl in the image still has a hesitance in her body language. I like how the title and author name are treated in this cover, and I think it’s interesting they’ve added a tag line to the newer version: “Everyone’s thinking about it, but are they . . .”

I can’t say I prefer one of the paperback covers better than the other, but I wish I could take elements of the first and combine them with elements of the second to make the perfect version of this cover. I’d love to take the body language of the first and mash it up with the setting of the second. 

I read Mary Jane Beaufrand’s book as The River a couple of years ago, and the mystery woven within the frame of the story of la llorona kept me hooked. It’s also a book I’ve talked to teens and they’ve been drawn to it for the same reasons. For me, the original cover and original title of the book work. I love how there’s so little to it: it’s a few wisps of hair, an image of the water, and the tag line that implies the story is a mystery: “What dark secrets does the river hold?” The colors in the cover work, too. I love the light/dark juxtaposition, as it further alludes to the mystery. What doesn’t work for me is a little thing, and that’s the blurry title font and treatment (it’s less noticeable digitally). Worth noting is that the title is much bigger than the author’s name, which is tiny and shoved in the bottom corner of the cover. It’s a little lost. If there’s something worth noting about the original cover, though, it’s that it looks much more like an adult novel than a YA novel.

This book not only gets a new look in paperback, it gets an entirely new title: Dark River. While this doesn’t sound like a huge change, it is a pretty big one. Even bigger, I think, than the image on the cover being swapped. I always think about cover changes as a librarian, and I can’t help but wonder if the title change will lead to a lot of confusion. I foresee some duplicate purchasing of this book, and I foresee frustration about cataloging in the event of duplicate purchases. That said, I think the new title is a better fit for the story and a better fit for the YA market. The image on the cover of the girl underwater explains it perfectly. I think it’s interesting to note that the title treatment is stronger than in the original hardcover, and the author’s name is much bigger and bolder, right at the top of the book, rather than hidden in the corner. Note, too, the change in the tagline for the story: “What deadly secrets does the river hold?” As a whole, this cover looks much more than a traditional mystery to me than the original. Dark River is available now as a paperback.

I read and raved about Janet Ruth Young’s The Babysitter Murders last year. I don’t think the book got a whole lot of attention, which is part of why I suspect this one is getting a major makeover. The original cover stands out to me because it is so different from most other YA books. The image is really straightforward and there’s little going on in the background. The title is allowed to stand out, and the title sort of indicates what’s going on in the image (the babysitter is there with her charge). What’s sort of uncomfortable about the cover is that this happy picture is then set against the notion of this book being about murder. The font for the title and for the author are also bright and happy. It’s a bizarre contrast, but more than that, the cover looks very much like an adult book cover to me. There’s nothing about it that seems like it would appeal to teens. Even though it stands out, I don’t know if it does so in a way that would reach teens.

Young’s book is not only getting a new cover in paperback, it’s getting an entirely new title: Things I Shouldn’t Think (available in November). Let me start with the easy part, which is the new cover itself. I don’t think it does any favors for the book at all. It’s the same generic girl face with her hair over her eye and nose that seems to be on so many paperback covers, and her expression tells us nothing. In the first cover, the happy image is uncomfortable because of the title, but that uncomfortable feeling works because that’s what the story is ultimately aiming to do to the reader. This one misses so many marks and does little for the book since it looks like everything else out there. As for the title change, though, I am a huge fan. Things I Shouldn’t Think gets right to the heart of the story, which is about a girl struggling with the “C” side of having OCD. What she thinks is what she shouldn’t be thinking. The Babysitter Murders is a tiny bit misleading and I would go so far as to say potentially a spoiler in and of itself. But as much as I like the title change, I dislike the treatment on the cover. I don’t like that it’s not capitalized nor that it’s on a strip of black above the girl’s face. And like the original cover, it’s interesting to note that the author name is tiny, at the bottom, and hard to spot.

Something else worth mentioning about this book’s change is the flap copy. Here’s the original, and here’s the updated version. The first talks around the OCD, while the second hits it head on and uses it as a selling point. I think the second does the book a huge favor in that hitting the mental illness aspect of the book will sell it to readers (which is good, since the new cover is doing no favors). I’m not sure either of these covers are getting the book to the right readers, but I do think the new title is an improvement. Thanks to Courtney for pointing this change out to me.

What are your thoughts? Any of these covers doing it better as a paperback than in a hardcover? What about the title makeovers?

Filed Under: aesthetics, cover designs, Cover Redesigns, Uncategorized

So You Want to Read YA?: Guest Post from Catie, Flannery, and Tatiana of The Readventurer

June 4, 2012 |

This week’s guest post for our “So You Want to Read YA?” series comes from the ladies at The Readventurer. This is one of my favorite book blogs, and these three sharp readers cover everything from YA to adult, films and audiobooks, and more. Welcome Catie, Flannery, and Tatiana and the most impressive flow chart I have seen in a long, long time.

Tatiana is an unapologetic Goodreads addict and a lover of yoga, British TV, and books of many genres. You can find Tatiana at The Readventurer, Goodreads or on Twitter. 
Catie is a voracious reader and science nerd living in Northern Virginia. When she’s not reading, she’s training up the next generation of reading addicts, geeking out about random things with her equally nerdy husband, and taking ridiculously long walks. She can be found at The Readventurer, Goodreads, and Twitter.
Flannery only started reading YA in college (unless you found her and her friends’ obsession with Judy Blume’s Just As Long As We’re Together in high school!) but that genre takes up a lot of her reading schedule these days. When she’s not reading, you’ll find her doing her part to keep King County Library System the highest circulating system in the country, doing outdoorsy things, or watching sci-fi television and movie marathons. You can find her at The Readventurer, Goodreads, and she runs the main Twitter account for the blog @TheReadventurer.

The three of us have only been blogging together for a short time and we’ve never actually met in real life, but all of us are around the same age (in the adult years…other than that we’re not commenting) and we all love to read young adult literature.  In fact, that’s pretty much what brought us together – that and an obsessive love of Goodreads.

While brainstorming ideas for this post, we realized that almost all of the young adult reading adults that we know (including ourselves) were initially hooked by one of three books:

a)      Harry Potter
b)     Twilight
c)     The Hunger Games

More than one of us came into YA this way and we’ve each had experience (lots of it) recommending books based on these three entry points. So we wanted to explore the avenues that we all traveled from there. Flannery brought her evil genius flow-charting skills, Catie drew a few pictures, and Tatiana made sure we had all the best books.  

Are you brand new to YA?  Have you tried one or two books?  Or is it all just old hat to you now? No matter where you’re starting out, use this handy flowchart to navigate the world of YA.  All of the recommendations are outlined in blue.  Obviously this is not an exhaustive chart (although it’s pretty darn elaborate, if we do say so ourselves) but we recommend every book on this list.  

Follow the steps to your next young adult read…and have fun!
The New to YA chart that will blow your mind. Click here for a bigger image.
 
If you’d like to download the full chart in all its glory, you can do so here.

Filed Under: Guest Post, So you want to read ya, Uncategorized

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 212
  • 213
  • 214
  • 215
  • 216
  • …
  • 404
  • Next Page »
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter

Search

Archives

We dig the CYBILS

STACKED has participated in the annual CYBILS awards since 2009. Click the image to learn more.

© Copyright 2015 STACKED · All Rights Reserved · Site Designed by Designer Blogs