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In My Suitcase: BEA Edition

May 28, 2011 |

After the ALA Midwinter convention, I posted about the books I picked up, linking the titles to the GoodReads descriptions, along with publisher and publication date information.

I thought I’d do that again with my BEA picks — starting with the titles I packed in my luggage. Perhaps next week I can give a peak of what was in the two boxes I sent home. Look for a wrap up of the highs (and lows) of this year’s convention this week from both Kim and myself.

I hope you find this a useful and fun references for titles coming up to keep on your radar. Not all of the books have covers yet, but I’ve tried to include covers where possible.

Penguin

The Future of Us by Jay Asher and Carolyn Mackler, September
I read this one already and completely adored it. It’s lighter on plot, but it’s an interesting look at what power we have to shape our own futures.

Lola and the Boy Next Door by Stephanie Perkins, September
The companion novel to Perkins’s debut Anna and the French Kiss. Not the same plot or characters, which is really refreshing.

Crossed by Ally Condie, November
Sequel to Matched, which I finally just got around to reading. I’m interested in how this story progresses.

Simon and Schuster

Fury by Elizabeth Miles, August
I’ll talk about this one in more detail soon, but this is the first book out of Lauren Oliver’s Paper Lantern Lit. Mythology-based story. Miles is a debut author.

Unbecoming of Mara Dyer by Michelle Hodkin, September
This was probably THE biggest buzz book at BEA for young adults. Another debut author.

Perfect by Ellen Hopkins, September
Companion novel to Hopkins’s Impulse.

Virtuosity by Jessica Martinez, October
This one looks like it’s up my alley — a story about music competition with some romance added.

Flux

Sirenz by Charlotte Bennardo and Natalie Zaman, available now
This is supposed to be a cleaner read and it’s the first in a trilogy.

Witch Eyes by Scott Tracey, September
Debut author with a paranormal that features a gay main character.

Skyship Academy: The Pearl Wars by Nick James, September
A debut science fiction title that looks like it will have loads of good guy appeal.

Scholastic

Want to go Private? by Sarah Darer Littman, July
I’m super excited about this timely story about the trouble that can pop up when the internet becomes quite real and scary.

Pretty Bad Things by CJ Skuse, July
This looks insane (in a good way): a road trip with twins to Las Vegas where lots of crazy things go down.

Forever by Maggie Steifvater, July
The final installment in the series — I actually liked this paranormal series and know my teens are going to flip when they can win this this summer.

13 gifts by Wendy Mass, September
Have I mentioned how much I love Wendy Mass before? I’m stoked for this companion to 11 Birthdays and Finally. I flipped through and see we’ll be visiting some of those characters again, and I’m eager to see what goes on in their world now. Perfect middle grade novels.

Pie by Sarah Weeks, October
The publicist gave me this one after hearing how much I adore Wendy Mass and was excited about 13 Gifts. This looks like a sweet middle grade novel.

The Scorpio Races by Maggie Steifvater, October
It’s Steifvater’s first stand alone novel. This was getting huge buzz at the Scholastic booth.

First Day on Earth by Cecil Castellucci, November
I’ve been a fan of Castellucci’s previous books, and this one looks really good to me, too.

Bloomsbury

Underground Time by Delphine de Vigan, December
I’m fairly sure this is an adult title, and it’s about office bullying. Timely, for sure.

Fracture by Megan Miranda, January 2012
It seems to me the end of 2011 and beginning of 2012 will involve a lot of “there was an accident and someone woke up” kind of stories. This is one — main character wakes after an accident and doesn’t know whether she’s a miracle or freak.

Macmillan

All These Things I’ve Done by Gabrielle Zevin, September
Zevin’s name on a book is enough to sell me on it, but in this one, coffee and chocolate are outlawed. As a non-coffee drinker and non-chocolate lover, this speaks to me on a level that is probably opposite everyone else who’d be interested in this book.

Sourcebooks

If I Tell by Janet Gurtler, October
A girl catches her mother making out with her own best friend. Drama! Tension! This looks fantastic.

Harper Teen

Supernaturally by Kiersten White, July
This is the sequel to Paranormalcy, which happens to be the last book my teen book club at work read and discussed before I left. They were begging me for the sequel, so to say I’m excited I managed to get this for them is an understatement.

Cold Kiss by Amy Garvey, September
This is one of the titles Laura Arnold talked about earlier this year. Another debut author.

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi, November
Another debut author and another huge buzz title at BEA. I’m not sure I’m totally sold on the concept, but I’ll give it a fair shot.

Little Brown

Shut Out by Kody Keplinger, September
I quite liked Keplinger’s first book, The DUFF, and I’m curious what her sophomore effort will look like.

How to Rock Braces and Glasses by Meg Haston, September
I think this sounds like it will resonate with a lot of middle school readers. A younger YA title.

Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor, September
This was one of Little Brown’s buzz titles, and for good reason: it looks like it will have huge appeal for readers. Taylor’s last novel, Lips Touch: Three Times, was one I really liked.

Bunheads by Sophie Flack, October
It’s an interesting trend to see more than one title coming out in this batch featuring a 19-year-old main character. It makes me wonder if YA is trending up in age a little bit. Also, I got this book signed and it was, by far, the slowest signing I’ve ever waited for. The book looks really good though, with huge appeal.

Queen of Kentucky by Alecia Whitaker, January 2012
This sounds like a great Dairy Queen read alike.

How to Save a Life by Sara Zarr, January 2012
Janssen has read this one and says it’s really good. I’ve only ever read one Sara Zarr (after thinking I’ve read none, I realize I have read Story of a Girl — perhaps one of the first YA books I read during grad school) but I look forward to this one.

Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler, January 2012
I think this book might have been a bigger buzz title than the Taylor one. It’s part text, part image: another trend I noticed this year. I think it’s a good trend, too, if it’s done well.

The Rivals by Daisy Whitney, February 2012
This is the companion to Whitney’s The Mockingbirds. I began this one on the plane home and am already convinced it’s far better than her first. The writing is beautiful (I’ve even marked some fantastic lines already) and Alex, who starred in the last story, is a much stronger character now. I’m eager to see where this continues.

As you can see, there are a few that I’m extremely excited about, and you can see some of the trends emerging for fall 2011 and spring 2012. Other books will resonate with my teens like crazy, even if they aren’t my cup of tea.

Although it appears there’s quite a bit of contemporary, my luggage picks were the bulk of contemporary titles I picked up this year. It looks to be a thin year in that genre yet again, but what is publishing looks strong and timely. I’m holding out for a renaissance for this genre because it’s been really lacking the last couple of years — or at least, the attention for it has certainly been shadowed by big name fantasy/dystopian/paranormal titles and series.

Filed Under: BEA, Uncategorized

Blood Red Road by Moira Young

May 27, 2011 |

It always makes me nervous when a book is pitched to me as “the next Hunger Games” for a few reasons: first, I don’t think any book can ever truly be “the next _____,” no matter what the title; second, my expectations are then set either sky high (if I liked the book in comparison) or quite low (if I didn’t); and finally, it doesn’t let the book stand out for its own qualities. We don’t get a real pitch for the book and what makes it stand out from everything else.

Fortunately, when I was hand-pitched Blood Red Road at Midwinter, I got more than a standard pitch of “the next Hunger Games.” It was sold to me as having the adventure of Collins’s book, but the main character, Saba, was supposed to be a hundred times more kick ass, and the story totally absorbing, different, and addictive. Then there was the added bonus of being told some of the “behind the writing” stuff, too — that Young turned the manuscript in at the end of 2010 and the book would be published in June 2011 (a pace not found in publishing) because the writing was so tight and that this book didn’t follow traditional conventions of punctuation. Okay, so the last part made me a little skeptical, but there was enough to build up this book for me. And then I put it off. And put it off. And put it off.

But then, it met and exceeded my expectations when I did read it.

Saba and Lugh are twins, and they live in an extremely remote place with no one else around except Pa and their younger sister Emmi; there is a guy who lives nearby, but Saba’s always had weird feelings about him, and Pa says it’s best to stay away. Saba feels resentment toward younger sister Emmi and isn’t afraid to voice this; Emmi’s the reason her mother died. Oh, and there’s a crow that Saba’s raised for many years, despite her father’s disapproval. In this remote place, experience a lot of storms — dust storms caused by a lack of rain — and when the book begins, we’re tossed right into a huge storm on the horizon. It’s a storm that they survive, but that doesn’t mean what comes about the corner after is any better: it’s four men on horses here to take Lugh away from the family. Saba can’t stand by and let this happen, and in the midst of a battle, there is death, destruction, pain, and the loss of Saba’s twin brother to these bandits.

She’s not going to let this be the end of him, though, and she promises Lugh she will rescue him; little does she know how much work this will be, especially when younger sister Emmi has to tag along with her. Saba knows where Lugh’s been taken, though she knows nothing about Hopetown. That is, until she herself becomes a victim of kidnapping and quickly learns that Hopetown is nothing like the name may promise. Saba’s been sold into a fighting ring (think Hunger Games here) as a way for her captors to make money, which buys them more drugs. Hopetown, it turns out, is a mega drug town, and people will do anything for another fix, including pillage and steal and sell innocent people into battle. It is here Lugh’s been taken, too, as the chosen boy to be sacrificed by the King. And Saba’s not going to let this happen. No way.

This is what happens in the first 150 pages of the 500 page book.

Blood Red Road is an incredibly fast paced book, and it begs to be read in one sitting. Saba is a killer character, and she’s not necessarily that way because she’s the smartest. In fact, I think Saba’s a bit of a dumb character, and she needs to be that way — if she were more intelligent, she wouldn’t have followed her brother, wouldn’t have fought with the raw power inside her, and she wouldn’t have been so open about her resentment toward Emmi. That last part is important, since it plays a huge role in the structure of the story and the pacing, as well. I believed Saba from the beginning, and I knew she had something inside her that would drive her to achieve a lot despite her upbringing. But as the story progressed, it was wonderful to see Saba begin to believe in herself and begin to understand the raw power within her to do good things and to make things happen herself. She’s not reliant upon a male to be powerful; she relies upon herself, which is something there isn’t enough of in YA lit.

In fact, one of the things I appreciated about Young’s book is that there is virtually no romance. Jack, a guy Saba saves following an incident in the arena, is absolutely in love with Saba from the beginning of their time together. But Saba’s both a little ignorant of the fact and a little bit frustrated by it. She knows he’s interested, but she doesn’t know how interested, but even that slight interest is infuriating. Yes, there will be a kiss, but Saba will not linger on it. She’s got bigger dragons to slay, and even when those beasts have been slayed, well, Jack’s a secondary thought.

There’s a lot of symbolism piled up in the story, and it’s easy to latch onto. The world Young’s created is believable, and it’s easy to picture, as well. It’s desolate and deserted and red. It feels a bit like a story that could be set in the Great Depression, but it’s futuristic, rather than historical. With some of the clues dropped in the story, it felt like it may take place in Europe, though the location really isn’t that important. What is important is how important the setting is to the story, and how scary believable it is because there are places similar to Hopetown existing in our world.

To the writing — this is a book written in a dialect. It’s not standard English, and some of the words dropped aren’t necessarily in English either. That was part of what made me believe this book may be set in Europe. Unlike many books written in a dialect, the use of it in Young’s book is well-placed. It really gives a strong character to both the setting and to Saba, and it enhances our knowledge of who she is and what makes her such a powerful character. As a reader, I had no problem diving into it, and even found myself believing it made the story read faster. I think if it had been done without the dialect, much of the story would be lost. Likewise, I had no problems with the lack of punctuation in dialog, as it made the story read more naturally. Teens and adults will certainly have no problem with this, either.

Perhaps my favorite part of the book is that fact that it can stand alone. Don’t get me wrong: this isn’t a stand alone book, but rather the first in a series. But the story line and characters are completely developed and come to full resolutions at the conclusion of the book, meaning readers can walk away entirely satisfied having read just this volume. I would absolutely read the second volume of this book because I think that this one was engaging and exciting enough I want to know what else Young can come up with, but it makes me thrilled to know I can hand this to a reader and let them know it can be read all on its own and they don’t have to wait a year to find out what happens. It all happens right here.

Hand Blood Red Road to your fans of fast paced, action packed dystopians, including The Hunger Games and Veronica Roth’s Divergent. Readers of post-apocalyptic stories will eat this one up, as well. Thriller fans, too, will fall into this world without problem. This has wide appeal to males and females, and I think it certainly deserves attention. Will I call it “the next Hunger Games?” No. But I will say it appeals to that fan base, and that it’s a book for readers looking for adventure, high stakes, and a powerful main character who refuses to take crap from anyone who gets in her way.

Bound manuscript handed to me at ALA midwinter. Blood Red Road will be published by Simon & Schuster June 7 — just in time for summer reading!

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Prisoners in the Palace by Michaela MacColl

May 26, 2011 |

I dislike this cover rather intensely.
Michaela MacColl’s debut novel, Prisoners in the Palace, is the best kind of historical fiction: it spins an interesting (even thrilling) story out of real-life events while still remaining true to those events.  In so doing, it opens the reader’s eyes to a part of history they might otherwise have overlooked.
Prisoners in the Palace sounds like it could be a story spun straight out of fiction.  After her parents die in an accident, sixteen year old Elizabeth (Liza) must find a way to pay off her father’s debt.  Therefore, instead of making her debut in society as planned, she takes a position as lady’s maid to the teenaged princess.  The princess has been sheltered her whole life, living under the thumb of her mother and her unscrupulous advisor Sir John, who plots to steal the throne, rob the royal coffers, and seduce various and sundry maids.  Liza is drawn into this intrigue and must help the princess secure her future position as queen while avoiding the detection of the villainous Sir John, who may have murderous tendencies.
That princess is Victoria, who would go on to become the longest-ruling monarch in England’s history, and much of the events described by MacColl in the book actually happened, as detailed in her lengthy but fascinating Author’s Note at the end. 
There’s more to Prisoners in the Palace than interesting history, though – it has an immensely likable protagonist and mixes in elements of a spy novel, an adventure novel, and a tiny bit of a romance novel too.  
Much of what makes Liza so likable is that she is a very proactive character.  Rather than allow things to just happen to her, she takes the initiative.  She seizes the opportunity to be Victoria’s lady’s maid when she originally had a much different position in mind, and she concocts a plan to win Victoria over (and therefore perhaps re-gain some social status as thanks) by offering to spy for her.  While she has some minor loyalties to other characters, and develops real friendships with some, it’s clear she isn’t swayed by them and can look out for herself.  I love that in a protagonist.
Even though the ending of the story is never really in doubt, the journey there is immensely enjoyable.  Reading Prisoners in the Palace is the same kind of fun as reading  Heist Society and Clarity.  All three books have feisty, capable female leads, a good bit of action and adventure, and some nice surprises.  They’ve all got a similar lightweight tone, too, where not a whole lot seems at stake even though the characters are in some fairly serious situations.  
Prisoners in the Palace is probably best for readers already interested in historical fiction, since the history is so important to the story, but even those just looking for a fun spy/adventure tale would find a lot to like here.  It doesn’t hurt that it involves a princess, a perennially popular component of almost any story for teenage girls (and that definitely includes me).  
Sidenote: When I was a little girl I wanted to be a princess (not surprising) because I figured they would always have beautiful dresses.  The descriptions of the dresses in this book are pretty great.  I no longer want to be a princess, but I do still like reading about them.

Filed Under: Historical Fiction, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

All debuts, all the time

May 26, 2011 |


I haven’t posted about this and realize I should mention it, since some of our readers might be interested.

I’ve been posting at YALSA’s new blog, The Hub, for the last three months. I’m writing up a monthly feature on the debut novels that month — so you can read my posts from March, April, and the one I posted today on May debut novels.

It’s a nice way to spread the word about debut authors to the wider librarian audience and to those who are ya book lovers looking for a new author to try.

Filed Under: blogs, debut authors, Uncategorized

Double Take: Feel the rain! Feel the sweat!

May 25, 2011 |

Another cover double that snuck up on me. Now this one may or may not be the same photo, depending on what you believe could be done with a little image editing. Chances are it could have been the same photo shoot (again, depending on what you believe about image editing). But it’s a striking image, and I think both covers work it quite well.


Harmonic Feedback by Tara Kelly (Holt, May 2010): I love this cover. It’s dark, but it’s also got a feeling of hope to it. The girl is reaching out, and there’s something in her stance and body language that feels promising to me. Like she knows she can achieve something. It fits so well with the book, too.

Then there’s this one:

Stick by Andrew Smith (Feiwel and Friends, October 2011): I haven’t read this one, but the cover again gives such a good vibe. The book deals with a physical deformity and sexuality and the cover again gives a bit of that hopeful vibe within the dark.

In both covers, the composition is similar — the person is in the lower right-hand part of the book, reaching in the same spot for the sky. I think the title and author font and placement works a little bit better on Smith’s book, simply because I think the font stands out a little more against the image.

Does one do it better than the other? Know of any other similar covers floating around? Share your thoughts!

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

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