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Post at The Hub & Other Oddities

July 18, 2012 |

My best friend and I started a tradition in college when we were both feeling really unable to get anything done. We decided we needed an item, some sort of thing we could see or wear, that would remind us that taking care of business was within our own hands. One night we bought a pair of matching sparkly headbands and we started referring to them as our power bands. Whenever we needed just a little bit of a kick in the pants to finish a project or when we HAD finished a project and were celebrating, we’d put on the power bands.

It’s been a few years since then, a number of moves between the both of us. We’ve both broken the bands since then. When she was out here in May, we went looking for replacements, but we didn’t find them.

Then I took myself out a couple weeks ago to celebrate my new job, and I found a pair of sequined headbands. Replacement power bands. One for myself and one for her. Last week, I mailed one off to her, which she told me she got today. I popped mine on in honor, then I took to putting it to good use.

All of this is a long story to say I finished something today for STACKED that I feel has been a work in progress for months. It’s been a goal of ours to have all of our reviews alphabetized and organized and to pull together all of our features into one place. While we have tags on the sidebar, they’re a bit of a mess and not the easiest to wade through.

But now, you can access all of our reviews, our guest posts, our interviews, and our features in one place. You can find that link right on the top of our blog, now called “Reviews & Features.”

It’s my goal to eventually organize the tags on our blog and to maybe make cover features and book lists easier to find. That’s a job for another day and another power band wearing session. Because the other thing going on today is this:

I’ve got my monthly roundup of debut novels coming out at YALSA’s blog. Check it out. It was fun to talk about two of my favorite reads of the year over there because they happened to be debuts.

My power band has been put to good use today.

Filed Under: blogging, Uncategorized

The Book of Blood and Shadow by Robin Wasserman

July 18, 2012 |

The Book of Blood and Shadow is the first book I read where reading the review copy actually impinged significantly on my enjoyment of the story. All review copies are going to have some mistakes, and they usually don’t bug me. They’re occasionally jarring, but don’t interrupt the flow of the story or draw my attention away from some really good writing.
Unfortunately, this review copy (with a plain black cover and red text) was riddled with errors. I started reading it well before the book was published, set it down, and then came back to it several months later when the hardcover was already out. I really should have traded it in for the finished copy at that point, but the arc was too handy. It was certainly a lesson to me.
I mention all this before I get into the nitty gritty of the review because the errors greatly influenced my reading experience. I’ve a feeling a lot of my problems were due to my reading the unfinished version.
There’s no doubt the plot is intriguing (it’s what drew me to the book in the first place). Nora is working on a special project for a professor at the local university, alongside her best friend Chris and Chris’ roommate Max. While Chris and Max (both college students) work closely with the professor in his attempt to decipher the famous Voynich manuscript – a book full of secrets, written in code – Nora (a senior in high school) is given a series of related letters to translate from Latin into modern English. Nora and Max eventually start dating, and Wasserman excels at making this romance sweet and believable.
But then Chris is murdered, and his girlfriend (and Nora’s friend) Adriane is found kneeling over his body, covered in blood and catatonic. Max is nowhere to be found, and he quickly shoots to the top of the suspect list. Convinced that Max is innocent, Nora and Adriane (once she recovers) set out to discover who killed Chris, and why. This journey takes them to Prague, where they’re pulled deep into a dangerous conspiracy involving a device that people say could link them to God – and the letters Nora was translating, written by a young woman named Elizabeth Weston, hold the key.
There’s an incredible amount of danger here, and it’s real danger – Wasserman doesn’t skimp on the violence. It’s kind of harrowing to think about, really. Here are these two kids, completely alone in a foreign land where nobody really speaks their language, and they’re being pursued by at least two different groups who intend them serious harm. Add to that the fact that they soon discover no one can be trusted, and the sense of paranoia reaches epic proportions.
So, I liked this book. But I didn’t love it. What bothered me most is that the story seemed choppy. Sometimes I had to read a few paragraphs over to determine what precisely had happened. Occasionally a reference would be missing or a pronoun incorrect. Since the book also included frequent typos and grammatical errors, I feel sure that the choppiness was fixed in final edits. Ultimately, it stopped me from becoming fully immersed in the story.
A lot of what didn’t work for me I can write off as a matter of taste. Nora begins by trusting her friends and boyfriend completely, and that trust is put to the test time and again throughout the story. Almost all of the people close to Nora morph into thoroughly unlikeable people, and by the end of the story, it just made me feel depressed. I do like some books that are quite dark, but this one rubbed me the wrong way. I’m being purposely vague here so as not to spoil anything, but I can say that there’s a difference between a book that kills off the protagonist’s loved ones and a book that robs the protagonist of her loved ones in other ways. I just felt awful for Nora and thankful her story wasn’t real. (Did I mention that Nora’s younger brother died in a drunk driving accident a few years ago? Girl cannot catch a break.)
Despite my issues with it, the book should have high appeal. It’s got a great hook, the pace is quick, the mood is spot on, and it’s different enough from the usual fare to spark interest. It’s a smart, mature book that should appeal to anyone who’s ever been interested in any of history’s famous mysteries (Stonehenge, Easter Island, the Shroud of Turin, etc.). Nora’s voice also comes through nice and strong, something I always appreciate. 
Review copy received from the publisher. The Book of Blood and Shadow is available now.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Sapphire Blue by Kerstin Gier

July 17, 2012 |

Gwen’s snotty cousin Charlotte has been groomed her entire life to be the final piece of the time-traveling “Circle of Twelve,” the so-called “Ruby” who will complete the Circle and cause an as-yet unnamed secret to be revealed. However, in Gier’s previous book, Ruby Red, Gwen discovered that she, in fact, was the Ruby, a discovery that flipped her once normal life upside down. Unlike Charlotte, who has been trained since birth for future time travel missions, learning deportment, ballroom dancing, and history, Gwen is just your typical London teenager, happier to hang out with her best friend Lesley and make fun of their teachers than to study up on the fashions of England in the early 1900s.

But Gwen is quickly pulled into this new life, especially when she discovers that it is now her responsibility to gather blood from four other Circle members in order to power the chronograph, the device that will ultimately cause the Circle to close. Along with Gideon, the 11th Circle member (and a really cute guy, to boot), she must figure out whether fellow time travelers Paul and Lucy are really traitors, what her part actually is in all of this, and what is going on with Gideon’s fickle moods (first he kisses her in an abandoned church, then he ignores her completely!). Oh yeah, and then there’s the matter of the ghosts and demons that she keeps seeing…

Kim reviewed Ruby Red last year, and while she had some issues, I really enjoyed the first novel in this trilogy, especially for its mix of a solid backstory, intelligently explained time-travel rules, and a thoroughly modern heroine. I enjoyed Sapphire Blue, as well, just not as much. Honestly, I’m not even sure why. It just didn’t seem to have much of an impact. While Gwen and Gideon did time travel a few times, nothing really happened in this book. The bad guy from the previous book was given a bit of a sympathetic backstory and a new bad guy was introduced, but nothing was revealed to illuminate the details behind the Circle of Twelve. Gwen also seemed, well, a bit stupid to me. I understand that Gier wanted to emphasize that she wasn’t as ‘trained’ as Charlotte, but some of the basic facts and word definitions that she didn’t understand were a bit jarring. As a whole, though, this was a quick, entertaining read, and I’ll be looking forward to how Gier wraps up her story.

Disclosure: Sapphire Blue will be released in the U.S. on October 30, 2012. Review copy received from publisher.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

So You Want to Read YA?: Guest Post from Trisha Murakami

July 16, 2012 |

This week’s guest post for our “So You Want to Read YA?” series comes from one of the very first bloggers I ever read — Trisha Murakami of The YA YA YAs. 

When I first started library school, I wasn’t sure what I wanted to specialize in. Thankfully, I took a YA literature class my first semester and immediately knew that this was where I wanted to be. Less ten years had elapsed between my reading YA (well, mostly Christopher Pike, R.L. Stine, and Sweet Valley High) as a youngster and my “rediscovery” of it in library school, but so much had changed in that time. These days, my taste in YA lit has broadened and I work as a YA librarian in Hawaii.

There are so many great YA books that I had a hard time limiting myself to a reasonable number. I finally managed to narrow things down to two categories of five picks each, though I was only able to do that by including series (don’t worry, none suffer from mid-series slumps) instead of individual titles. Even then, there were a couple of books that didn’t quite fit in with my categories, and I couldn’t bring myself to create a list that excluded them, hence my bonus picks.

Since my list of books is long enough, let’s keep this introduction short. Here’s what I picked:

Memorable Characters

Some authors are capable of creating characters that leap off the page, so believable and alive I could swear they were real people. If you’re looking for a story that doesn’t skimp on tension or conflict, but are primarily character-driven, give one of these a try.

A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly
Swoon.

Not because there’s a swoonworthy love interest, but because of the luscious, expressive prose. Sixteen-year-old Mattie is a lover of words and writing, and this love shines through in her narration.

After her mother died and her pissant brother who took off to drive boats on the Erie Canal and refused to come back and work the farm like he ought to abandoned the family after a fight with their father, Mattie must care for her three younger sisters and toil on the family farm. With her father’s struggle to make ends meet, not even a long-awaited letter informing Mattie that she has been accepted to college and awarded a scholarship offers the same sort of hope it once would have.

As soon as she said it, as soon as she talked about my dream like that and brought it out in the light and made it real, I saw only the impossibility of it all. I had a pa who would never let me go. Because it’s 1906 and Mattie’s father does not understand her yearning to leave, especially not when he needs her help at home. Accepting a neighbor’s marriage proposal would solve some of her problems, but then what would happen to Mattie’s dreams?

Right now I want a word that describes the feeling you get–a cold, sick feeling deep down inside–when you know something is happening that will change you, but you can’t stop it. And you know, for the first time, for the very first time, that there will now be a before and an after, a was and a will be. And that you will never again be quite the same person you were.

[quotes from pages 23-24, 66, and 2]

I Know It’s Over by C. K. Kelly Martin
Nick is sixteen and still in love with Sasha when she tells him she thinks they need a break, still in love with her weeks later when she tells him she’s pregnant. I Know It’s Over is written from Nick’s point of view, tracing his and Sasha’s relationship from beginning to end.

First love can be a messy topic, but Martin writes about it with an honesty and, in a way, precision, that gives the story a quiet intimacy. Yet Nick’s characterization and voice never ring false–he always seems like a teenage guy. Just as importantly, Martin allows both Nick and Sasha to make mistakes and decisions that seem true to them, instead feeling contrived or melodramatic.

Note: the ending (Sasha’s decision) won’t be for everyone, but this is still outstanding contemporary realistic fiction. A book that deals with issues without ever feeling like an Issue Book.

Flygirl by Sheri L. Smith
It’d be easy to root for Ida Mae Jones to achieve her dream of becoming a pilot, even if she didn’t have so many obstacles to overcome. But although Flygirl is historical fiction, Ida’s biggest obstacle isn’t sexism. It’s her race–which gives the story an added level of tension.

Ida’s father taught her to fly in their cropduster, but now he’s dead and she can’t afford to go to Chicago to earn her pilot’s license. After the U.S. enters World War II and Ida learns about the Women Airforce Service Program, which trains female pilots to fly non-combat missions, her dreams are revived. Then she realizes the only way she can become a WASP is to take advantage of her light-colored skin by passing as white. Once accepted into the program, Ida leaves home and travels to Texas, where WASP training takes place. And, needless to say, where Jim Crow laws make Ida’s deception extremely dangerous.

While readers will empathize with Ida and want to see her become a WASP, what makes Flygirl so memorable to me is the palpable tension caused by Ida’s race. Not just the fear of someone discovering she is black and the physical danger she’d be in, but also the mental and emotional weight of passing.

Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork
Now that Marcelo Sandoval is seventeen, his father, a high-powered lawyer, decides it is time that Marcelo learn to function “in the real world.” Instead of the job that Marcelo wants to take, he is forced to spend the summer working in the mailroom of his father’s law firm.

Marcelo has an unidentified autism-like disorder that has put him at a distance from most people. Now he’s forced to interact with people who don’t know him, don’t understand him, or want to take advantage of him. But he also begins to recognize emotions and feelings he’s never felt before, to live beyond the boundaries he previously restricted himself to. And through it all, Stork masterfully brings Marcelo to life, with intelligence and tenderness and so much heart.

The President’s Daughter series by Ellen Emerson White (1. The President’s Daughter 2. White House Autumn 3. Long Live the Queen 4. Long May She Reign)
Unlike the books mentioned above, which are all written in the first-person, White uses a third-person narration in this series that I swear is more intimate than most books written in first (excluding the other books on this list, of course).

The second word I’d use to describe this series, after intimate? Smart. And leavened by an ironic, sarcastic sort of humor, often courtesy of some strong and intelligent female characters.

It begins during Meg’s sophomore year of high school–when her mother, a U.S. Senator and rising star in the Democratic Party, decides to run for president–and continues through Meg’s freshman year of college. As I’m sure you’ve guessed from the title of the first book, and the series, her mother wins the election. At times, the first book feels like a prologue or prequel to the series, introducing readers to Meg and her family and how they ended up in the White House. The traits that make Meg such a compelling character are present from the beginning, but they don’t come out in full force until books 2-4, when she and her family go through some intense ordeals and her strength of will is something to behold.

The President’s Daughter, White House Autumn, and Long Live the Queen were originally published in the 1980s. They were re-released in 2008, a year after Long May She Reign debuted, seamlessly updated to remove out-of-date references (well, except for some of the names).

bonus pick: Drums, Girls, & Dangerous Pie by Jordan Sonnenblick
So all my earlier picks all had memorable main characters. I’d be shortchanging Steven if I didn’t acknowledge his, um, memorableness, because he’s a great character himself. But honestly, Steven’s younger brother Jeffrey is the reason Drums, Girls, & Dangerous Pie makes my list. This book is proof that cancer books can be funny and heartbreaking at the same time, and the bond between Steven and Jeffrey is just awesome.

Twists and Thrills

Flipping things around, what about books with fully-realized characters that are primarily plot-driven? In this category I’ve included books packed with twists and thrills. That is, books that 1) leave you breathless with anticipation, unable to put the book down; 2) practically demand you to read them again right away because of plot twists you didn’t see coming; or 3) put a new spin on a familiar story.

The Curse Workers trilogy by Holly Black (1. White Cat 2. Red Glove 3. Black Heart)
Noir mysteries + magic.

Black’s series is set in a brilliantly conceived world very much like our own, only with a magical Prohibition that was never repealed. Ever since 1929, when curse work–magically manipulating emotions, dreams, memories, etc.–was outlawed, most curse workers have been selling their goods and and services on the black market or working for one of the big six organized crime families, like the Zacharovs.

Take Cassel Sharpe’s family. Cassel is the only non-magical member in a family of curse workers. His (imprisoned) mother is an emotion worker and con artist, his eldest brother a body worker for the Zacharovs, and his grandfather a retired Zacharov death worker.

When Cassel was fourteen, he killed his best friend, Lila Zacharov. Three years later, as White Cat begins, he is a student at a boarding school, Wallingford Prep. After he wakes up one night on the roof of his dorm with no memory of how he got there, the school won’t allow Cassel to live on campus anymore unless he can get a doctor’s note saying the sleepwalking was an isolated incident and won’t happen again. As Cassel tries to con his way back into Wallingford, he realizes there is more to Lila’s death than he remembers. Memories can be manipulated, after all, and only Cassel’s talent for con games will allow him to uncover the truth.

And, just an FYI, I liked White Cat, but I thought Red Glove was much stronger.

Liar by Justine Larbalestier
On page one, Micah tells us she is a liar. Everyone at her school knows that she lies, but that hasn’t stopped her from continuing to lie. But now, after a missing classmate’s dead body is found and the police begin questioning students, Micah promises to stop lying. She swears she will start telling the truth.

Or is that a lie, too?

Despite her promise to be honest, Micah presents some things as truth that she later admits are lies. She tells us some of the things she (claims to have) lied about. She puts you, the reader, on guard, never knowing what or how much to believe. Because when a narrator admits she is a liar, and she makes such outrageous stories seem plausible, how much can you trust her?

Liar is not told in a linear, straightforward fashion. Instead, Micah narrates her story in short bursts that flash from “Before” to “After,” from “Family History” to “History of Me.” It’s an effective way of allowing Micah to control the flow of information, telling the reader what she wants to when it suits her, and leaving it up to the reader to decide what is true and what is a lie.

Read Liar, then make a friend read it so you can debate what *really* happened.

Cinder by Marissa Meyer (Lunar Chronicles, book 1)
Okay, the plot of Cinder isn’t new–it’s based on Cinderella and I found it mostly predictable in terms of plot twists (though I don’t consider this is a major flaw, considering the book is a retelling). Meyer’s assured writing keeps readers engaged with the story, even if you’re pretty sure you know where it’s going, and–the main reason I’ve included it here–she’s put a great twist on the setting. Many fairy tale retellings mine a familiar psuedo-medieval European landscape, while a few transplant the tale into modern times. Not Cinder. This is a sci-fi Cinderella (in fact, a cyborg Cinderella, as one of my coworkers exclaimed when I recommended Cinder to her), set in a futuristic, multiethnic New Beijing. Not as “literary” as most other books on this list, but definitely enjoyable.

The Chaos Walking series by Patrick Ness (1. The Knife of Never Letting Go 2. The Ask and the Answer 3. Monsters of Men)
Patrick Ness is an author who is not afraid to tackle big themes. That he does so in books with breakneck plotting and heartstopping cliffhangers (oh my god, those cliffhangers!) makes the series even more stunning.

In one month, Todd Hewitt will become a man and there will be no boys left in Prentisstown. All the women who once lived in Prentisstown, including Todd’s mother, are dead–killed by the same virus that made the thoughts of the remaining men audible to all.

Oh, and did I mention that the first book is narrated by Todd in a sort of common vernacular, complete with run-on sentences and occasional misspellings?

Yeah, I know what some of you are thinking. I thought it, too, when I first heard about The Knife of Never Letting Go. It took reading rave review after rave review on so many of my favorite blogs for me to finally give it a try. After which I mentally kicked myself–hard–for waiting so long before reading it. (Though on the bright side, it did mean I didn’t have to wait as long to get my hands on The Ask and the Answer and Monsters of Men. Because, seriously, those cliffhanger endings!)

Todd’s voice is strong and electric, and by the time I hit the end of chapter six in The Knife of Never Letting Go, I was hooked. As the story, and series, progresses with increasing intensity, the main characters become engulfed in a web of moral ambiguities; questions of war, terrorism, genocide, and more; provoked by one of the most charismatic villains in YA literature. It’s not an easy read, and not for everyone, but worth taking a chance on.

The Queen’s Thief series by Megan Whalen Turner (1. The Thief 2. The Queen of Attolia 3. The King of Attolia 4. A Conspiracy of Kings)
I refuse to give too much away about this series, other than to say it’s a fantasy about a thief and political intrigue, because I don’t want to spoil even the tiniest bit of the reading experience, but this also makes it tough to talk about and recommend the books.

Sample conversation:
Me: “Read it, it’s awesome.”
Other person: “What’s it about?”
Me: “It’s awesome!”
OP: “…”
Me: “Do you trust me?”
OP: “Uh, yes?”
Me: “Then just read it. In order.”

I can tell you from experience, this is not always the best way to get a person to read a book. But it won’t stop me from trying again!

If you need more, how’s this? Megan Whalen Turner is a genius. She’s a genius with point-of-view, a genius with the subtleties of language, and a genius when it comes to plot twists and reveals. She’s the kind of author who is still able to surprise you, even when you’re on the lookout for hints. And these are the kind of books that stand up to, are even enhanced by, rereading.

bonus pick: Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta
Jellicoe Road could have easily been my bonus pick in the Memorable Character category, as it is bursting with them. But I’ve included it here in Twists and Thrills because, although it’s not as relentlessly thrilling or cleverly twisty as the other books in this category, part of what makes Jellicoe so wonderful is its structure. You’ll start off the book confused, plunged into a war (what?) between the students at the Jellicoe School, the townies, and cadets (who?), with initially random excerpts of a story that’s not our main story (huh?). Then suddenly, everything starts to fit together. You see the connections and relationships that have been there all along. And still Marchetta manages to throw in a few more “Aha!” moments. It’s complicated and emotionally complex and respects its readers, and that’s what ultimately makes Jellicoe Road such a satisfying read. Not to mention, it includes my all-time favorite romance in YA fiction…

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

Audiosynced: June edition

July 15, 2012 |

Apologies for being late to rounding up June’s audiobook links. But better late than never! June is designated audiobook month, so there is a lot to enjoy in this month’s collection of links and news.

News & Features

Jen at Devourer of Books hosted Audiobook Week, with daily topics for bloggers to write on and link up.  I started pulling them all out individually, but why reinvent the wheel? Go check out discussions of where readers learn about their audiobooks, what makes for a good audiobook narrator, the essentials of reviewing audiobooks, and how this year has sounded in listening (including reader favorites).  Jen and others shared a ton of audiobook reviews over the course of the week, so I highly encourage you to check out all of the posts during that week. Good stuff!

Emily at Emily’s Reading Room hosted a number of excellent features in June focused on audiobooks, including “Narration Creation,” which interviewed multiple audiobook readers on the different facets of preparing to record, getting into character and more. She also teamed up with a number of other bloggers to feature numerous reviews and interviews, so check out her post with the links to other participants to read their contributions.

The annual Odyssey Awards presentation the American Library Association convention in Anaheim got some nice blog coverage, too, including this piece on The Hub by Gretchen Kolderup and this one at Liz Burns’s blog.

Over at Booklist’s Audiobooker blog, you can check out the winners of this year’s Audie awards.



NPR has a piece on audiobooks for family road trips. Then make sure you check out the SLJ post about more family-friendly audiobooks.

Reviews

Our friend Lee at Reading with my Ears reviewed Zombies vs. Unicorns, Little Women, Rabbit Run, One Day and One Amazing Morning on Orange Street, Nightwoods, The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making, and Dissolution.   

Over at The Readventurer, check out reviews for Steve Martin’s Born Standing Up: A Comic’s Life and MT Anderson’s Feed.

April at Good Books & Good Wine has a review of Barry Lyga’s I Hunt Killers, Jenny Lawson’s Let’s Pretend This Never Happened, and a review of Ally Carter’s Uncommon Criminals.

Sarah at YA Love Blog reviews Catherine Gilbert Murdoch’s The Dairy Queen and Bill Konigsberg’s Out of the Pocket.

Beth at A Foodie Bibliophile reviews Jennifer Holm’s Turtle in Paradise and Blood, Bones, and Butter by Gabrielle Hamilton (this review is amazing).

Sarah at YA Librarian Tales reviews The Cheshire Cheese Cat by Carmen Agra Deedy and Randall Wright.

Beth Fish Reads has reviews up of Mark Kurlansky’s Birdseye, as well as six mini reviews.

Melanie from Melanie’s Musings has two reviews this month: Amy Kathleen Ryan’s Glow and Georgette Heyer’s Venitia.

Megan at Devour Books has four reviews this month to share, including The Selection, Unwind, Cinder, and Dreamland.

Carin from Caroline Bookbinder has a review of David von Drehle’s Triangle: The Fire That Changed America.          

Mindi has a review of Meg Cabot’s Pants on Fire up at KidLitGeek.

I know I’ve missed stuff this month, so please drop any reviews, news, or interesting stories about audiobooks you might have in the comments. And don’t forget — next month Audiosynced will be over at Abby (the) Librarian.

Filed Under: audiosynced, Uncategorized

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