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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
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      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
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    • About The Girls Series
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      • Book Riot
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The “Meet” Market: YA X-Meets-Y Pitches of Note, Part One

January 20, 2014 |

I’m not a huge fan of pitches in the vein of x meets y. I find they don’t often make a lot of sense, and if I’m not familiar with either or both of the titles being called out, the description is meaningless to me. But despite not being a fan of them, I still like reading them. Maybe it’s because some are so bizarre that you have to stop and wonder what it means, if anything. Maybe it’s because sometimes I wonder who the pitch is geared toward — is it the teen reader or is it the adult who will be getting the book into the hands of the teen reader (or the adult who will read it themselves)? 

X-meets-y is different than books which are pitched as read alikes or for fans of a certain genre, author, or well-known book, and it makes me wonder if the x-meets-y is a bit reductive. I know it’s all in the marketing, but when so many books are pitched as x-meets-y, I wonder what’s new and fresh. 

Then again, some of the x-meets-y pitches really do pique my curiosity (the one for The Girl in the Well below really got me interested). 

And now it should be clear why I can’t stop reading them. They torment me a little bit because I want it both ways. 

I thought it’d be fun to round up some of the recent YA x-meets-y pitches I’ve read that have stood out to me in one way or another. All of the descriptions come from the publisher’s copy on Edelweiss, and all of the books are either out recently or will be out sometime this year, with included dates of publication. As you might notice, Edelweiss descriptions are much different than ones that would come from WorldCat, as they’re much more about selling the book than they are about giving a short, to-the-point description. 

This is part one of a two-part post because there were so many I wanted to show off the range of them. 

Prep meets The Crucible in this spellbinding thriller inspired by real life events

It’s senior year at St. Joan’s Academy, and school is a pressure cooker. College applications, the battle for valedictorian, deciphering boys’ texts: through it all, Colleen Rowley and her friends are expected to keep it together. Until they can’t.

First Clara Rutherford starts having loud, uncontrollable tics in the middle of class. More students and stranger symptoms follow: seizures, body vibration, violent coughing fits. The media descends on Danvers, MA, as school officials, angry parents and the board of health scramble to find something, or someone, to blame. Pollution? Stress? Or are the girls faking? But Colleen—who’s been reading The Crucible for extra credit—comes to realize what nobody else has: Danvers was once Salem Village, where another group of girls suffered from a similarly bizarre epidemic three centuries ago…

Conversion by Katherine Howe will be available July 1 from Putnam.
The Ring meets The Exorcist in this haunting story about an American boy whose last hope for protection lies with a vengeful ghost

Okiku wants vengeance…and she gets it. Whenever there’s a monster hurting a child-the same way she was hurt 300 years ago in Japan-her spirit is there to deliver punishment. But one American boy draws her like no other. The two are pulled into a world of eerie doll rituals and dark Shinto exorcisms that will take them from the American Midwest to the remote valleys and shrines of Aomori, Japan. The boy is not a monster, but something evil writhes beneath his skin, trapped by a series of intricate tattoos. Can Okiku protect him? Or is her presence only bringing more harm?

The Girl From The Well by Rin Chupeco will be available August 5 from Sourcebooks. 

Lisa McMann’s Dead to You meets Kate Ellison’s The Butterfly Clues in a psychological thriller full of romance, intrigue, and mystery.

One year ago, Callie was found in an abandoned apartment, scrawling words on the wall: “I KILLED HIM. His blood is on my hands. His heart is in my soul. I KILLED HIM.” But she remembers nothing of that night or of the previous thirty-six hours. All she knows is that her father, the reverend at the Church of the Holy Promise, is missing, as is Hannah, a young girl from the parish. Their disappearances have to be connected and Callie knows that her father was not a righteous man.

Since that fateful night, she’s been plagued by graphomania-an unending and debilitating compulsion to write. The words that flow from Callie’s mind and through her pen don’t seem to make sense-until now.

As the anniversary of Hannah’s vanishing approaches, more words and memories bubble to the surface and a new guy in school might be the key to Callie putting together the puzzle. But digging up the secrets she’s buried for so long might be her biggest mistake. 

Oblivion by Sasha Dawn will be available May 27 from EgmontUSA.

A breathtaking, genre-defying debut that will grab hold of you and not let go until the very last page

Thirteen Reasons Why meets Ellen Hopkins in a fresh and unexpected love story with the conceptual punch of a murder mystery

Sophie Winters nearly died. Twice.

The first time, she’s fourteen, and escapes a near-fatal car accident with scars, a bum leg, and an addiction to Oxy that’ll take years to kick.

The second time, she’s seventeen, and it’s no accident. Sophie and her best friend Mina are confronted by a masked man in the woods. Sophie survives, but Mina is not so lucky. When the cops deem Mina’s murder a drug deal gone wrong, casting partial blame on Sophie, no one will believe the truth: Sophie has been clean for months, and it was Mina who led her into the woods that night for a meeting shrouded in mystery.

After a forced stint in rehab, Sophie returns home to a chilly new reality. Mina’s brother won’t speak to her, her parents fear she’ll relapse, old friends have become enemies, and Sophie has to learn how to live without her other half. To make matters worse, no one is looking in the right places and Sophie must search for Mina’s murderer on her own. But with every step, Sophie comes closer to revealing all: about herself, about Mina and about the secret they shared.

Far From You by Tess Sharpe will be available April 8 from Disney-Hyperion. 

Cabaret meets Cassandra Clare — a haunting magical thriller set in a riveting 1930s-esque world.

Sixteen-year-old Thea Holder’s mother is cursed with a spell that’s driving her mad, and whenever they touch, Thea is chilled by the magic, too. With no one else to contribute, Thea must make a living for both of them in a sinister city, where danger lurks and greed rules.

Thea spends her nights waitressing at the decadent Telephone Club attending to the glitzy clientele. But when her best friend, Nan, vanishes, Thea is compelled to find her. She meets Freddy, a young, magnetic patron at the club, and he agrees to help her uncover the city’s secrets-even while he hides secrets of his own.

Together, they find a whole new side of the city. Unrest is brewing behind closed doors as whispers of a gruesome magic spread. And if they’re not careful, the heartless masterminds behind the growing disappearances will be after them, too.

Dark Metropolis by Jaclyn Dolamore will be available June 17 from Disney-Hyperion.
The X-Men meets Ocean’s Eleven in this edge-of-your-seat sci-fi adventure about a band of “super” criminals.
When the MK virus swept across the planet, a vaccine was created to stop the epidemic, but it came with some unexpected side effects. A small percentage of the population developed superhero-like powers. Seventeen-year-old Ciere Giba has the handy ability to change her appearance at will. She’s what’s known as an illusionist…She’s also a thief.
After a robbery goes awry, Ciere must team up with a group of fellow super-powered criminals on another job that most would consider too reckless. The formula for the vaccine that gave them their abilities was supposedly destroyed years ago. But what if it wasn’t?
The lines between good and bad, us and them, and freedom and entrapment are blurred as Ciere and the rest of her crew become embroiled in a deadly race against he government that could cost them their lives.
Illusive by Emily Lloyd-Jones will be available July 15 from Little, Brown. 
ABC’s hit show Nashville meets The Summer I Turned Pretty in this YA series debut about a teen country music star on the rise.

The best songs come from broken hearts.
Sixteen-year-old Bird Barrett has grown up on the road, singing backup in her family’s bluegrass band, and playing everywhere from Nashville, Tennessee to Nowhere, Oklahoma. One fateful night, Bird fills in for her dad by singing lead, and a scout in the audience offers her a spotlight all her own.
Soon Bird is caught up in a whirlwind of songwriting meetings, recording sessions, and music video shoots. Her first single hits the top twenty, and suddenly fans and paparazzi are around every corner. She’s even caught the eye of her longtime crush, fellow roving musician Adam Dean. With Bird’s star on the rise, though, tradition and ambition collide. Can Bird break out while staying true to her roots?
In a world of glamour and gold records, a young country music star finds her voice.
Wildflower by Alecia Whitaker will be available July 1 from Little, Brown. 
The Maze Runner meets Hatchet in this sci-fi adventure with a surprise twist ending that no one will see coming.

Survive one world. Save another.

Ana wakes on a barren alien world. The instructions in her pocket tell her that she must survive a trek across Paradox in less than 28 hours.

Mission? Check.
Weapons? Check.
Memory? Missing….

Meeting up with three other teens-including one boy who seems strangely familiar-Ana treks across the inhospitable landscape, occasionally encountering odd twists of light that carry glimpses of people back on Earth. They’re fighting some sort of disease, and the situation is critical. What’s the connection between Ana’s mission and the crisis back on Earth, and how is she supposed to figure it out when she can’t remember anything?

Paradox by A. J. Paquette is available now, though it’s getting a new cover in September when it releases in paperback.
Paranormalcy meets Heist Society in this new twist on ghosts from #1 New York Times bestselling author Aprilynne Pike, which School Library Journal called a “whirlwind adventure full of secrets, lies, unlikely friendships, and romance.”

Kimberlee thought she was doomed to haunt the halls of her high school for eternity…until she met Jeff.
Life After Theft by Aprilynne Pike is available now. 
Lisa McMann’s Wake trilogy meets the blockbuster Inception in this dark page-turner from #1 New York Times bestselling author Aprilynne Pike.

Oracles see the future but are never supposed to interfere. Charlotte learned that the hard way. If she hadn’t tried to change one of her childhood visions, her father would still be alive. Since the accident, Charlotte has suppressed her visions to avoid making the same mistake. But when she receives a premonition of a classmate’s murder, she can no longer ignore her powerful gift.

Then Charlotte meets someone who not only knows her secret but who also has a way for her to stop the killer. He offers to teach her how to manipulate her visions to change the future. But doing so will put Charlotte in the path of the murderer.…



Sleep No More by Aprilynne Pike will be available April 9 from HarperTeen. 
It’s interesting to me this isn’t the first book Pike’s had a “meets” pitch for, and it’s interesting it’s not the first “meets” pitch to use Lisa McMann as a comparison. 
If I Stay meets the movie Ghost in this first book in a teen duology about a teenage-girl-turned-ghost who must cling to the echoes of her former life to save the people she left behind.

When Callie’s life is cut short by a tragic accident, she expects to find nothingness, or maybe some version of heaven.

Instead, her spirit travels to the Prism, an ethereal plane populated by the ghosts she thought were fictional. Here she meets a striking and mysterious ghost named Thatcher, who is meant to guide her as she learns to haunt and bring peace to the loved ones she left behind.

However, Callie uncovers a dark secret about the spirit world: The angry souls who always populate ghost stories are real, dangerous, and willing to do whatever it takes to stay on Earth, threatening the existence of everyone she ever cared about.

As she fights to save them, Callie will learn that while it may no longer beat, her heart can still love-and break.

Ashes to Ashes by Melissa Walker is available now.

Number the Stars meets Code Name Verity in Anne Blankman’s harrowing and evocative debut.

In 1930s Munich, danger lurks behind dark corners and secrets are buried deep within the city. But Gretchen Müller, who grew up in the National Socialist Party under the wing of her uncle Dolf, has always been shielded from that side of society. Uncle Dolf has kept Gretchen’s family in his cherished inner circle ever since her father traded his life for Dolf’s, and Gretchen is his favorite, his pet.

Uncle Dolf is none other than Adolf Hitler. And Gretchen follows his every command.

Until she meets a fearless and handsome young Jewish reporter named Daniel Cohen, who claims that her father, the adored Nazi martyr, was actually murdered by an unknown comrade.

As Gretchen investigates the very people she always considered friends, she must decide where her loyalties lie. Will she choose the safety of life as a Nazi darling or will she dare to dig up the truth-even if it could get her and Daniel killed? 

House of Night and Fog by Anne Blankman will be available April 22 from Balzer and Bray.

The Goddess Test meets Dexter in an edgy, compelling debut about one teen’s quest for revenge…no matter how far it takes her.

Amelie Ainsworth is not alone in her head. Bound to a deal of desperation made when she was a child, Amelie’s mind houses the Furies—the hawk and the serpent—lingering always, waiting for her to satisfy their bloodlust. After escaping the asylum where she was trapped for years, Amelie knows how to keep the Furies quiet. By day, she lives a normal life, but by night, she tracks down targets the Furies send her way. And she brings down Justice upon them.

Amelie’s perfected her system of survival, but when she meets a mysterious boy named Niko at her new school, she can’t figure out how she feels about him. For the first time, the Furies are quiet in her head around a guy. But does this mean that Amelie’s finally found someone who she can trust, or are there greater factors at work? As Amelie’s mind becomes a battlefield, with the Furies fighting for control, Amelie will have to decide which is worse: denying the only man she might ever love, or subjecting him to the fate the Furies want for him?

Vengeance Bound by Justina Ireland is available now.

Cold cases are about to get hot. The Mentalist meets Heist Society in this exhilarating teen crime thriller.

Seventeen-year-old Cassie is a natural at reading people. Piecing together the tiniest details, she can tell you who you are and what you want. But, it’s not a skill that she’s ever taken seriously. That is, until the FBI come knocking: they’ve begun a classified program that uses exceptional teenagers to crack infamous cold cases, and they need Cassie.

What Cassie doesn’t realize is that there’s more at risk than a few unsolved homicides-especially when she’s sent to live with a group of teens whose gifts are as unusual as her own. Soon, it becomes clear that no one in the Naturals program is what they seem. And when a new killer strikes, danger looms close. Caught in a lethal game of cat and mouse with a killer, the Naturals are going to have to use all of their gifts just to survive.

Think The Mentalist meets Pretty Little Liars – Jennifer Lynn-Barnes’ The Naturals is a gripping psychological thriller with killer appeal, a to-die-for romance, and the bones of a gritty and compelling new series.

The Naturals by Jennifer Lynn Barnes is available now. I think it’s interesting this one got TWO x-meets-y descriptions in the summary. 

Graceling meets The Lion King in this powerful high-fantasy debut YA novel.

Growing up on Forge’s streets has taught Kyra how to stretch a coin. And when that’s not enough, her uncanny ability to scale walls and bypass guards helps her take what she needs.

But when the leader of the Assassins Guild offers Kyra a lucrative job, she hesitates. She knows how to get by on her own, and she’s not sure she wants to play by his rules. But he is persistent-and darkly attractive-and Kyra can’t quite resist his pull.

Tristam of Brancel is a young Palace knight on a mission. After his best friend is brutally murdered by the Demon Riders, a clan of vicious warriors who ride bloodthirsty wildcats, Tristam vows to take them down. But as his investigation deepens, he finds his efforts thwarted by a talented thief, one who sneaks past Palace defenses with uncanny ease.

When a fateful raid throws Kyra and Tristam together, the two enemies realize that their best chance at survival-and vengeance-might be to join forces. And as their loyalties are tested to the breaking point, they learn a startling secret about Kyra’s past that threatens to reshape both their lives.

In her arresting debut novel, Livia Blackburne creates a captivating world where intrigue prowls around every corner-and danger is a way of life.

Midnight Thief by Liv Blackburne will be available July 8 from Disney-Hyperion. 
Inception meets Unearthly in this hot romance for fans of Meg Cabot’s Abandon Series!

Sixteen-year-old Iris has a recurring dream— about a long corridor of many doors, and behind each door a hidden world—some magical, some terrifying. But always she is searching for the man who calls to her—the man of her dreams—who knows everything about her, who stirs feelings in her that she’s never felt before. When she discovers her father is actually the god of dreams, her nightmares and dreams follow her into reality, with both frightening and romantic results. Hunted by the god of nightmares, stalked by the horrifying creatures of the underworld, Iris must try to navigate both of her worlds, as she tries finally to be with Sebastian, the man of her dreams. Can she triumph over the dangers that have haunted her forever, and be with Sebastian, or will terrors ultimately destroy them both?

In Dreams by Erica Orloff is available now from Speak. Is it bad I don’t even know what Unearthly is off the top of my head?
Pretty Little Liars meets Final Destination in this YA psychological thriller that will have readers’ hearts racing right till the very end!

Every year, the lives of ten girls at Vienna High are transformed.

All because of the list.

Kenzie Summerall can’t imagine how she’s been voted onto a list of the hottest girls in school, but when she lands at number five, her average life becomes dazzling. Doors open to the best parties, new friends surround her, the cutest jock in school is after her.

This is the power of the list. If you’re on it, your life changes.

If you’re on it this year? Your life ends.



They All Fall Down by Roxanne St. Claire will be available October 14 from Delacorte.
Pretty Little Liars meets Heist Society in this thrilling and flirtatious caper about a high school girl whose innocent game of Robin Hood spirals way out of control.

Pretty Crooked is Elisa Ludwig’s feisty debut and the first in a trilogy about teen outlaw Willa Fox. With a daring heroine who has the pluck to stand up to bullying, a string of clever heists, a flirtatious romance, and a dramatic ending that will leave readers eager to snatch up its sequel, Pretty Crooked is perfect for fans of Sarah Mlynowski, Ally Carter, or Sara Shepard. 

Willa’s secret plan seems all too simple: take from the rich kids at Valley Prep and give to the poor ones.

Pretty Crooked by Elisa Ludwig is available now, though the new paperback cover, as seen above, will be available February 18. 

Are any of the X-Meets-Y pitches here appealing to you as a reader? Any favorites? Any head-scratchers? I’d love to know! 

Filed Under: Uncategorized, Young Adult

Comics You Should Be Reading: Captain Marvel by Kelly Sue DeConnick

January 17, 2014 |

I don’t read a lot of superhero comics. They’ve always seemed too difficult to really dive in to. There’s a ton of history with each character, and that’s incredibly daunting for a newbie. And then if you decide to be thorough and read up on all that history, it’s usually not very kind to females.

Enter Carol Danvers. Or, rather, the re-emergence of Carol Danvers. Previously, she was a superhero named Ms. Marvel, a woman who gained her powers thanks to a freak accident with Captain Marvel, a member of an alien race called the Kree. But now Captain Marvel has died, and Carol has to decide whether to take up the name (not-a-spoiler: she does). What’s extra-nice about all this background is that it’s reviewed in the comics themselves, which makes this story arc an excellent diving-in point.

So right off the bat there are huge issues of identity for Captain Marvel to contend with. While she struggles with this, she also has to deal with being a member of the Avengers and all that entails (saving the world, that kind of thing). Oh, and then there’s a small matter of time travel, where she finds herself in the year 1943, on a battlefield, facing down an all-female group of soldiers. We have huge issues of character alongside hugely entertaining plots, and what more could you ask for in a comic?

Captain Marvel as written by Kelly Sue DeConnick has garnered a loyal and very vocal following. It’s difficult to see a lot of female superheroes in comics, with their disproportionate bodies and fondness for nudity and flat characterization, as anything other than straight male fantasies. The re-launch of Carol Danvers as Captain Marvel (with a similar relaunch of her costume to a character-appropriate flightsuit!) smashes those preconceptions. This is a very feminist comic, not because the title character is always talking about feminist issues, but because she is an actual woman – you know, a person, with strengths and hangups like all the other women of my acquaintance. Plus she can fly.

The Cybils don’t honor a lot of superhero comics in their graphic novel categories, but they’ve named the first volume of Carol Danvers as Captain Marvel a finalist for the YA age group this year. It’s well-deserved. The book is well-written, exciting, with plenty of witty dialogue and complex relationships. I liked first artist Dexter Soy’s work on the book more than second artist Emma Rios’, but even my apathy toward Rios’ art didn’t detract from the story.

Marvel is re-launching Captain Marvel yet again with a Captain Marvel #1 this March (DeConnick is still writing and the character is still Carol Danvers, it’s just the beginning of a new story arc and a marketing thing. As a comics newbie I still find this strange). This means the issues from the initial relaunch in 2012 through then make a perfect beginning-to-end story. Comics newbies wanting to dip their toes into the format have no excuse. Or if you want to start completely fresh and clean, reading what everyone else will be reading, start with the upcoming March issue. The cover is very pretty, don’t you think?

Filed Under: Graphic Novels, Uncategorized, Young Adult

The Killing Woods by Lucy Christopher (& a giveaway!)

January 16, 2014 |

Emily’s father came home after a trip out to the woods — somewhere he went regularly — and he had the body of a teen girl in his arms.

She was dead.

It doesn’t take long before police arrive and Emily’s father’s put into jail, accused of murdering the girl. He was the only one it could be, right? But Emily has more questions than answers, though she is positive her dad was in no way responsible for killing Ashlee. Sure, he might suffer PTSD and he might not always be in his rightest of minds, but her father isn’t a killer and no way will she let him be locked up for the crime he didn’t commit.

Welcome to Lucy Christopher’s The Killing Woods.

Damon is the boyfriend of the girl — Ashlee — who was found in the woods. He’s at peace with the idea that the person who killed Ashlee has been found, but he’s not at all at peace with how she died in the first place. Worse, he feels immense guilt because when she died, he was too drunk and high from their playing “the Game” to know up from down or even be aware of what was happening around him.

All he knows is that they went into the woods and she didn’t come out alive.

Christopher’s novel is told in alternating view points, both of which are full of desperation. Emily determined to clear her father’s name from the crime and Damon, determined to find out just what happened and how Ashlee died. Emily and Damon aren’t coming together on this; quite the opposite, in fact. School’s turning into a real hell hole from Emily, as people see what they believe her father did as somehow something she should have to suffer for further.

But even if the two of them aren’t coming together, Emily and Damon will come together, when they realize that the only way to put the entire story to bed is if they figure out the timeline of events. Who was really in the woods? What really happened to Ashlee? What role did Emily’s dad actually play in her death, if any at all? The novel is built upon the two of them investigating this independently but it’s when they have to piece it together collaboratively that the tensions and stakes rise even higher.

The woods in Christopher’s novel are exceptionally depicted. Part of why the woods matter so much is because of what they meant to Emily’s father. The woods contained an old bunker, and he liked to spend his time in there. Maybe “liked to spend his time there” is a bit misleading. Emily’s father felt somewhat comforted by the bunker’s presence. As readers who know anything about mental illness know, what helps a person doesn’t always make the most sense. In this case, it doesn’t seem clear why her father would be comforted by a bunker, but at the same time, it makes perfect sense.

Damon and his friends weren’t strangers to the woods themselves. In fact, they enjoyed the sprawling, somewhat odd, woods because of how it afforded them the chance to play “the Game.” The game was one that let them show off their masculinity. Their power. Helped them train to become tough guys and strong guys. It would be a nice means of getting them prepped were they ever to want to join the military because they’d be prepared physically — and mentally. And the day Ashlee died, she was playing the game with them as well. Except her version of the game differed from their version of the game. And the day Ashlee died, the game involved a little more partying from the boys than it did usually.

And the day Ashlee died, more secrets spilled out than ever before.

Perhaps Damon and Ashlee weren’t exclusive.

Perhaps Ashlee wasn’t a victim of Emily’s father’s hands.

Perhaps Ashlee was a victim of . . . herself.

Don’t want to be spoiled? Go ahead and skip down to the paragraph beginning with a “*.” Because from here on it, it’s all spoilers since there is a lot I want to talk about which can’t be tackled without spoiling the reveal.

As it turns out, Ashlee wasn’t killed by Emily’s father. Nor was she killed by something that Damon did. Throughout the book, we see both of their stories, and we worry about whether Damon’s being drunk and high when she died played a big role in what happened and we worry at times that Emily’s father really did commit the crime. Christopher is savvy in how she builds her evidence for both sides, and because both teens are well-voiced and their passion for answers strong, there are enough faults in logic in each of their tellings that it seems maybe what they hoped wasn’t true really is. For a long time, I bought more into Damon being responsible, though at times I saw where Emily’s father was responsible, too. This is great story crafting, and it compelled me to keep pushing forward to figure out who the responsible party really was. But better — I hoped neither of those possibilities was the actual explanation.

And neither were.

Even though we’re given a pretty big picture of the story through two sets of eyes and two perspectives, what we aren’t knowledgeable of is what ends up playing the biggest role in the resolution: we don’t know Ashlee. We know of her. We know she played the Game. We know she was Damon’s girlfriend. We know they were sexually active and involved and we know how much that mattered to Damon. But beyond that, we’re not keen on who she was or what her goals or desires were.

Until there’s a break and we learn that maybe Ashlee wasn’t entirely sympathetic. That maybe she harbored some really dark secrets. That maybe she wasn’t exactly as faithful to Damon as Damon was to her.

Because Ashlee liked attention and she liked the attention of boys who’d give it to her. Especially when those boys were playing their Game. Especially when she could get a boy alone and let him play her game.

Although it’s well-written and plays into a bigger, quite interesting, theme about emerging sexuality and experimentation with adulthood (drugs, drinking, the Game’s goals of building and bulking up), where Christopher’s story falls apart a bit for me is when we get the big Ashlee reveal. Her game was the choking game. She lived for the high of being choked and passing out. In many ways, it’s written to be equivalent in terms of a high as reaching orgasm. It was the height of pleasure and thrill for her, and that she could convince boys to do this to her, it was even more of a high to her. Ashlee’s death happened because the boy she convinced to choke her managed to hurt her more than intended — either by her or by him. Emily’s father comes into the picture when he tried to rescue her from the woods and resuscitate her. Because her father had been in the bunker and managed to figure out there was a girl he could try to save in a way that he’d failed to save when he was himself at war. This was his shot at redemption for past actions (again, handled exceptionally well knowing that this was his means of making sense of PTSD through his PTSD-suffering mind).

What seems like a logical explanation for what happened doesn’t entirely fit the voice of the story nor does it work for me in terms of the ages of the characters. The choking game is very juvenile: it’s the kind of thing teens experiment with in middle school and something that — at least in my experience — becomes a warning to kids very early on in their lives. I don’t like to self-insert when it comes to review writing and suggest my experience is universal, but I think most teens who are 16 or 17 or 18 are well beyond the point of finding the choking game the kind of rush that Ashlee might. And while Christopher does a good job of building it against the idea of sexuality, thus aging it up, I don’t necessarily buy it. I don’t want to say it felt convenient because it didn’t — the writing and storytelling allow this explanation to be right — I don’t buy it. I wonder how teens would feel about this explanation. Would it feel too juvenile to them? Or would it make sense to them and feel like it was written right at them?

* While I didn’t buy the explanation, I thought the strong writing, the compelling characters, and the pacing of this book make it a great read. It’s crafted smartly, and I loved how much want there was in this story. At no point was there a lull because every scene involved a character desperately seeking something: an answer, a resolution, a connection. There’s no saggy middle.

Like in her Stolen, Christopher gives us characters who have a lot going on internally and who struggle with their ethical and situational choices. She knows how to write moral ambiguity and that shines through. The characters grow and change their minds, and even when the explanation comes through, what resonates with The Killing Woods isn’t the “how it happened,” but instead, “how they grew.” Damon changes significantly throughout the book, and at the end, he realizes what it is he really needs to move forward. Emily discovers the depths of her father’s own illness throughout and it helps her in the end better connect with him in a way she was never able to before.

The Killing Woods will appeal to readers who loved Stolen and who love stories where nothing is quite as it seems. This is a character-driven thriller, and there’s a lot of respect paid to teenagers coming into their own. Emily and Damon aren’t necessarily characters you like as a reader, but they’re characters you come to care about because their stories are interesting and honest. Readers who loved Carrie Mesrobian’s Sex & Violence or Stephanie Kuehn’s Charm & Strange will find this an excellent next-read in terms of character and voice, as well as for their explorations of violence and sexuality and masculinity and more. Readers who liked Laurie Halse Anderson’s The Impossible Knife of Memory, especially the aspects regarding how Hayley’s father’s PTSD impacted her and her family will find this book to be complementary — there are some neat parallels between the two books. There’s more mystery to The Killing Woods, but it’s the characters who resonate (and make up for the aforementioned misstep in the “what really happened” aspect of the story).

Readers who like their realistic YA with a darker edge have been treated lately to a lot of great stuff, and Christopher’s book will further satisfy those readers.

Want your own copy of The Killing Woods? Thanks to Scholastic, I’ve got two copies to give away to a US reader. Fill out the form and I’ll pull two winners at the end of the month.

Filed Under: review, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

A Cybils Retrospective

January 15, 2014 |

I’m deep in my reading for the Cybils, which means a lot of what I’ve been reading lately can’t be discussed (at least not yet). I thought it might be fun to revisit some older Cybils titles, particularly some SFF finalists from the years before I got involved as a judge. One of the things I like best about Cybils finalists is they almost always include a few books that flew under the radar; I love that the Cybils can help these books find a larger audience. Unless otherwise stated, links lead to my reviews.

2012

Vessel by Sarah Beth Durst was a finalist in 2012. I loved this unique desert-set fantasy which featured creative world-building, beautiful writing, a living religion, and a complicated, three-dimensional person of color as the protagonist. (Much less importantly, the cover is gorgeous.) Read my full review here.

2011

This was my first year as a judge for the SFF category, which means I’ve read all the titles. I enjoyed Blood Red Road, our winner, quite a lot, but Karen Healey’s The Shattering holds a special place in my heart. It demonstrates the tremendous ability fantasy has to reveal truths about our own world. Highly recommended and will make you want to read everything Healey has ever written.

Misfit by Jon Skovron was a wonderful surprise this year. It’s a paranormal fantasy with a little extra bite to it, a book that pushes the boundaries a little, which I always appreciate. The secondary story featuring the teen protagonist’s parents is heartbreaking, too.

Red Glove by Holly Black introduced me to the world of magical mobsters, a mini-trend which still seems to be going strong in YA fiction. Black’s series deals in very real terms with the consequences of magic – which is, of course, representative of the consequences of our actions in general. The idea of magical “blowback” is well-done and used creatively. I highly recommend this series for fans of contemporary fantasy.

2010

Rot and Ruin by Jonathan Maberry is a book I can honestly say I would never have picked up if it weren’t for the Cybils. This is a zombie story done right: it focuses on the human characters while also giving us some high-stakes thrills. Benny’s voice is spot-on teen, too, which isn’t always the case in apocalyptic stories, where our protagonists often sound older than their years. This was the winner in 2010.

I read Plain Kate by Erin Bow without knowing it was a Cybils finalist. Many readers loved it, but I was pretty tepid toward it. Even now, I have a hard time even remembering what it was about. I do remember that Kate was always referred to as Plain Kate, rather than just her name – Kate – and that irritated me. Not all books will be winners for everyone. Jen reviewed this title and obviously liked it quite a lot more than I did.

2009

Lips Touch is the book that got me hooked on Laini Taylor’s writing. I don’t normally go for short stories, but this collection featuring three stories/novellas about magical kisses (and not necessarily nice ones) looked so darn beautiful (with illustrations by Jim DiBartolo), I had to give it a shot. I’m so glad I did. The writing is gorgeous, approaching the feel of poetry. I never reviewed this one here, but I did on Goodreads: “Contrary
to a few of my friends’ opinions, I thought the third story was the
strongest (I loved all three). And the artwork rocked.” 

2008

I listened to Airman by Eoin Colfer on audio and it was excellent. Lots of adventure, a bit of humor, some fun accents – what’s not to love? The protagonist is a boy who was born in a hot air balloon while being shot at from the ground, and that sets the tone for the entire story.

Elizabeth Bunce’s A Curse Dark as Gold is another that I didn’t love, but got great acclaim from others (including the inaugural Morris award). I found this re-telling of the Rumpelstiltskin fairy tale too slow to really get lost in. In fact, I gave up before I finished it. You can read a somewhat rambling analysis of my dislike for the book here.

This was also the year of Graceling and the Hunger Games, and I’m sure you all know by now my opinions on those books. (Hint: positive)

2007

Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale is a book that helped rekindle my love of YA. I read it for a YA class in library school and loved it. It was my first and favorite of Shannon Hale’s books. I love the diary format and that it’s a re-telling of a lesser known fairy tale (Maid Maleen). This isn’t usually high up on people’s list of favorite Hale books, but it’s certainly mine.

Incarceron by Catherine Fisher is another book that fell flat for me. The concept – a living, sentient prison – is certainly unique, but the book was just a slog for me. Perhaps it’s my affinity for fast-paced stories that prevented me from loving this one. My Goodreads review sums up my feelings in a very pithy manner: “So bizarre and way too long.”

2006 was the inaugural year, and I haven’t read any of the finalists from the SFF category. This was the year that the Book Thief was a finalist in the YA fiction category, though, so I’d say the awards started off right.

Filed Under: cybils, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Reality TV and Documentaries: A YA Book List

January 14, 2014 |

I teased about reality television being a microtrend last summer, but there are even more books that have a significant aspect to them relating to reality TV coming out this year. This is such an interesting trend to me since reality television seemed to have peaked in popularity….quite a while ago. It’s still popular, but it’s waned significantly, so it’s curious how it’s now peaking in YA fiction.

Here’s a look at teens and reality tv (with a side of teens and documentary films) past, present, and future. Not all of these are contemporary/realistic YA fiction — there’s a little bit of genre dipping, as well. In fact, of all the books tackling reality television, I think taking that to an alternate world could be most interesting and compelling.

All descriptions are from WorldCat, unless otherwise noted. If you know of others, either already out or to be published soon, feel free to add to this list. I didn’t limit my list to a time frame, since I think some of the older titles on this list could be really interesting to read and compare to more current offerings.

First Date by Krista McGee: Addy Davidson finds herself on a reality dating show with the first prize a prom date with the President’s son and, although initally not interested in winning, Addy finds herself increasingly drawn into the game.

Flash Point by Nancy Kress: Amy had dreams of going to college, until the Collapse destroyed the economy and her future. Now she is desperate for any job that will help support her terminally ill grandmother and rebellious younger sister. When she finds herself in the running for a slot on a new reality TV show, she signs on the dotted line, despite her misgivings. And she’s right to have them. TLN’s “Who Knows People, Baby–You?” has an irresistible premise: correctly predict what the teenage cast will do in a crisis and win millions. But the network has pulled strings to make it work, using everything from 24/7 hidden cameras to life-threatening technology to flat-out rigging. Worse, every time the ratings slip, TLN ups the ante. Soon Amy is fighting for her life–on and off camera.

Girl Out Loud by Emily Gale: Fifteen-year-old Kass is trying to resist her manic-depressive father’s attempts to make her try out for “The X Factor” while she also deals with her crush on the same older boy her best friend likes, her distant mother’s mysterious comings and goings, and her younger brother’s criminal activities.

How I Got Skinny, Famous, and Fell Madly in Love by Ken Baker (April 22): “Thick. Heavy. Big boned. Plump. Full figured. Chunky. Womanly. Large. Curvy. Plus-size. Hefty.” To sixteen-year-old Emery Jackson, these are all just euphemisms for the big “F” word—”fat.” Living on a Southern California beach with her workout fiend dad, underwear model sister, and former model mother, it is impossible for Emery not to be aware of her weight. Emery is okay with how things are. That is, until her “momager” signs her up for Fifty Pounds to Freedom, a reality show in which Emery will have to lose fifty pounds in fifty days in order to win the million dollars that will solve her family’s financial woes. Emery is skeptical of the process, but when the pounds start to come off and the ratings skyrocket, she finds it hard to resist the adoration of her new figure and the world of fame. Emery knows that things have changed. But is it for the better? (Description via Goodreads). 

Infamous by Lauren Conrad (“Fame Game” series): Kate and Carmen are about to become big stars, but they’re going to have to survive some backstage drama first. Madison is learning hard lessons about fame as she deals with backstabbing ‘friends’ and family, out-of-control paparazzi, and a scandal reported in every tabloid.

L. A. Candy by Lauren Conrad (“L. A. Candy” series): When nineteen-year-old Jane Roberts is cast in a new reality show, she discovers that the fame and fortune of her new life come at a high price to herself and her friendships. 

Lights, Camera, Quince by Veronica Chambers (“Amigas” series): Carmen is turning fifteen and her friends Sarita, Alicia, Jamie, and Gaz plan to throw her a quinceañera; but when the group decides to join a reality show competition, Carmen feels like her party is becoming less important.

Pizza, Love, and Other Stuff That Made Me Famous by Kathryn Williams: Although sixteen-year-old Sophie has grown up working in her family’s Mediterranean restaurant in Washington, D.C., she is not prepared to compete on the new reality show, Teen Test Kitchen, when her best friend Alex convinces her to audition.

Premiere by Melody Carlson (“On the Runway” series): When two sisters get their own fashion-focused reality television show, vivacious Paige is excited, but Erin, a Christian who is more interested in being behind the camera than in front of it, has problems with some of the things they are asked to do.

Reality Boy by A. S. King: An emotionally damaged seventeen-year-old boy in Pennsylvania, who was once an infamous reality television show star, meets a girl from another dysfunctional family, and she helps him out of his angry shell. 

Reality Check by Jen Calonita: When a television executive signs Long Island sixteen-year-old Charlie and her three best friends to be the stars of a new reality television show, their lives are suddenly not the same.

Rumor Central by Reshonda Tate Billingsley (series): After appearing on the reality show “Miami Divas,” Maya Morgan is offered her own television show, but stepping up to the fame means spilling secrets about her friends, and someone will do anything to shut her up. (This series, while new, does so well at my library with teens). 

Simply Irresistible by Jennifer Banash: With rivals Casey and Madison set to star in their own reality show, Madison ponders just how much of her life of privilege she wants to reveal, while Casey wonders how much of her luxurious New York City lifestyle is an illusion.

Something Real by Heather Demetrios (February 4): Since the cancellation of her family’s reality television show, seventeen-year-old Bonnie Baker, one of twelve siblings, has tried to live a normal life with real friends and a possible boyfriend, until her mother and the show’s producers decide to bring “Baker’s Dozen” back on the air.

Stir It Up! by Ramin Ganeshram: Thirteen-year-old Anjali dreams of hosting a televised cooking show featuring foods based on her Hindu and Trinidadian heritage, but when an opportunity presents itself, she will have to defy her family to go to the audition. Includes recipes.

Taste Test by Kelly Fiore: While attending a New Hampshire culinary academy, North Carolina high schooler Nora suspects someone of sabotaging the academy’s televised cooking competition.

The Real Prom Queens of Westfield High by Layrie Boyle Crompton (February 4): High school senior Shannon Depola, who could use a popularity makeover, instead gets a beauty makeover as a contestant for a million dollars on the hidden-camera reality show, The Prom Queen Wannabees.

The Real Real by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus: When Hampton High senior Jesse is cast in a reality television show along with five other, more popular students, drama on and off screen reveals that what the audience and producers want is not the same as what Jesse wants.



Trash Talk by Cherie Bennett and Jeff Gottesfeld: Six girls and guys are invited to be part of a reality television program in New York but the real drama goes on behind the cameras.

The Vigilante Poets of Selwyn Academy by Kate Hattemer (April 8): When a sleazy reality television show takes over Ethan’s arts academy, he and his friends concoct an artsy plan to take it down

Watch Me by Lauren Barnholdt: When Ally Cavanaugh, a freshman at Syracuse University, gets picked to spend the year as part of a reality television show she soon learns that people are not always as they seem, and that love may not conquer all.

 

You Don’t Know Me by Sophia Bennett: Me and Rose. In a band. Singing together, all the way to the live finals of Killer Act. Only to be told one of them must go. But no girl would drop her best friend in front of millions…Would she? If this is fame, it sucks. Everybody is talking about us, but nobody knows the truth. It was all so good. Sasha and Rose. Best friends in a band, singing together. Right up to the finals of Killer Act when the judges tell them one of them must go. Suddenly their friendship is put to the ultimate test. On TV in front of millions . Two girls. One huge mistake. Can they ever forgive each other?

You Look Different in Real Life by Jennifer Castle: Five teens starring in a documentary film series about their ordinary lives must grapple with questions of change and identity under the scrutiny of the camera. 

For Real by Alison Cherry (December): Shy, cautious Claire has always been in her confident older sister’s shadow. While Miranda’s life is jam-packed with exciting people and whirlwind adventures, Claire gets her thrills vicariously by watching people live large on reality TV. When Miranda discovers her boyfriend, Samir, cheating on her just before her college graduation, it’s Claire who comes up with the perfect plan. They’ll outshine Miranda’s fame-obsessed ex while having an amazing summer by competing on Around the World, a race around the globe for a million bucks. Revenge + sisterly bonding = awesome. But the show has a twist, and Claire is stunned to find herself in the middle of a reality-show romance that may or may not be just for the cameras. This summer could end up being the highlight of her life… or an epic fail forever captured on film. In a world where drama is currency and manipulation is standard, how can you tell what’s for real? (Description via Goodreads). 

Filed Under: book lists, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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