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Twitter-view with Jessica Warman

October 2, 2010 |

Yesterday, you read my review of Jessica Warman’s new book, Where the Truth Lies. Today, we have a Twitterview with the author, who shares insight into her writing process, her passions, and whether what she shares about the private school life is close to reality or not.

What’s your writing process like? Writing is meditation for me. It takes me to a place of complete concentration and inner stillness.
Do you have a writing playlist? What’s included on it? I need total silence to write. Any distraction – phone, music, TV – drives me nuts.

If you were to compare WHERE THE TRUTH LIES to a book, a film, and a television show, what would those be? I honestly have no idea. I can’t think of many stories that it’s similar to.

If you could have written any book in the world, what would it have been? Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace. Best book ever. Wallace was a genius. Unfortunately, I am not.

In BREATHLESS, your main character is a swimmer and in WHERE THE TRUTH LIES, the main character is a singer. What are your biggest passions? Aside from writing, running is my passion. I had a chance to explore that further in my upcoming novel Between, in which the main character is an avid runner.

Both of your books are focused on prep school life. You attended prep school, so dish: how close or far from reality are your settings? They’re actually very close to reality. Many of the events in Breathless, and a few from Where the Truth Lies, were taken from real life.

What’s the most embarrassing thing to happen to you? I was twenty years old before I learned that reindeer were real animals, not mythical creatures like unicorns. I don’t know how that fact slipped by me for so long.
Have you ever had a secret as deep as Emily? No, thank goodness!

How has social media impacted your relationship with your readers? I love that it gives me a chance to interact more freely with readers. Nothing makes my day better than getting an email from a reader who has truly enjoyed one of my books.

One of my favorite parts in your writing is silence, indicated with “…” “…”. This technique stood out. What made you decide to do that? That technique is borrowed from the late, great David Foster Wallace. I hope he wouldn’t mind my using it!

What’s your favorite ice cream flavor? Mmmm… Chocolate peanut butter.

If you were going to prison forever, say, because of some breaking and entering or vandalism, what would you want as your last meal? Sushi.

With what character in WHERE THE TRUTH LIES do you most identify? Probably Renee. Like her, I was pretty rebellious in high school!

What’s next for you? My third book, Between, comes out next year. I could not be more excited about it. I loved every single minute that I spent working on it.

Thanks for stopping by, Jessica!

Filed Under: Author Interview, Uncategorized

September’s AudioSynced

October 1, 2010 |


Don’t forget! Go share your links on Abby’s AudioSynced this morning. I once again failed to listen to a book, but guess what you’ll be seeing here next month?

Filed Under: audiobooks, Uncategorized

Where the Truth Lies by Jessica Warman + Giveaway

October 1, 2010 |

Emily Meckler’s life is, in short, charmed. She’s going to a private boarding school where her father is the president, and she gets to live with some of her best friends in the dorm. But when her junior year of high school resumes after a short break, things that once looked perfectly rosy take a nose dive with the arrival of the mysterious and utterly magnetic Del Sugar. Her school never lets in students mid-year, and since she didn’t hear a word about this from her father during break, Emily begins thinking something very strange is afoot, and she wants to get to the bottom of it.

What sounds like a girl-meets-mysterious-boy story is actually much more layered: turns out that everything Emily has come to believe about herself and her family may be lies. And we’re not just talking little white lies: these are the sorts of lies that may change her entire life.

Jessica Warman’s Breathless was one of the titles I dove into last fall upon its release because of the premise of secrets, family drama, and a little prep school suave. Although I ultimately had some issues with the book (similar to what I had with this particular one), the writing here is top notch. Warman has a very literary styling to her writing which requires the reader to slow down and engage. And engage I did; I was immediately drawn into Emily who, on the surface, comes off as a typical girl who has everything. But the further I fell into the real Emily, the more I had revelations similar to her — everyone has a deeper story than what’s explained on the surface.

Where the Truth Lies is a companion to Breathless but it is not essential to read her first novel to read this one. Instead, it’s much like the smooth connection Wendy Mass makes between her 11 Birthdays and Finally: we have a character who is related to the previous characters. This connection gave me a huge ah-ha moment and made me think that Warman was pretty clever. But those who don’t have that moment will not be missing out on anything essential to the story.

Warman’s prep school drama has great appeal to fans of realistic and contemporary fiction. We are dropped amid a world of wealth, privilege, drugs, sex, and secrets; it’s everything you imagine this sort of world to be where teens are left to live in dorm rooms away from their parents. Emily will fall in love with the off-limits Del who can convince her of everything, including breaking and entering into her own home. But oh, this will have so many consequences for her, and we’re not just talking about the sort that requires time writing the same line 500 times.

As much as I dug the drama (and I did), there were some issues that I struggled with through this book. First, the pacing and time passage in this book, much like in Breathless is a bit wonky; we meet Emily part way through junior year, but somehow there is a pregnancy that doesn’t quite time out appropriately. The book ends near the middle of her senior year, I think, and it seems that there are periods of time between that simply don’t exist. While I appreciate that we weren’t dragged into periods of nothingness in the novel, there was a sense of some plot points missing that could have been worked up a little more. Likewise, some of the characters who were initially really compelling (including Franny) seem to drop out of the story too quickly for my tastes. It didn’t quite make sense to me why we knew she had a hair pulling disorder if we never got much more of her. I also wish I had learned a little more why Emily became suddenly interested in a friendship with Renee, a known drug user/seller, after initially writing her off. Perhaps this is for a second volume or a third book that pulls these characters in again.

Where the Truth Lies will appeal to fans of Nina de Gramont’s edgy prep school story Gossip of the Starlings. These are darn near perfect readalikes for me, as both are full of scandal, unraveling secrets, illegal activity, and quite lovely writing. Fans of Curtis Sittenfeld’s Prep and even Tom Wolfe’s I am Charlotte Simmons will find a lot to like here, as will fans of books along the lines of Gossip Girls, Pretty Little Liars, and Anna Godbersen’s The Luxe series. This is for more mature readers, for sure. I think this book will also have wide appeal to adults.

While I rarely comment on book covers fitting the book (haha), I just want to say that this is one of the most perfect captures of how I imagine the main character. Emily is a red head with long messy tresses, and she strikes me as a bit of an artsy dresser. In addition, the smoky element of the sky fits in perfectly with the smoke and water images that haunt Emily at night. Well played!

Want your own copy? Fill out the form below, and we’ll pick a winner at the end of the month.

*Review copy received from BEA, but this post is part of the Bloomsbury Tour.

Filed Under: Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Monsters of Men by Patrick Ness

September 30, 2010 |

The young adult market has been saturated for the past few years with paranormal romances of every possible flavor – vampires, werewolves, ghosts, fallen angels, zombies – but the recent abundance of dystopian and post-apocalyptic stories is giving the paranormal subgenre a run for its money.  Dystopian fiction has been a favorite of mine since before I knew what the word “dystopia” meant, and it can be a bit disheartening to see so many new titles pop up without a single outstanding one among them.

Amid this crowded and too often disappointing field, Patrick Ness has written a gem of a series – three books that make up the Chaos Walking trilogy.  The third and concluding volume, Monsters of Men, was published Tuesday.

This is not to say Chaos Walking doesn’t share anything with the immensely popular and significantly more mediocre books of its kind also targeting teens.  Some of the immediately noticeable aspects of Ness’ story fit right in with the mega trends of today’s young adult fiction market: first person, present tense, series of at least three, some sort of fantasy or science fiction element.  Despite these similarities, Ness has managed to create something unique, and he’s made the more traditional elements fresh again.

If you haven’t heard much about the books yet, I encourage you to check out my review of the first book here, where I provide a description of the premise.  I won’t go into much plot detail in this post since I wrote about it previously; instead I’ll concentrate on other aspects of the books – writing style, themes, and audience.

The first book, The Knife of Never Letting Go, is told entirely with Todd’s voice and ends with a cliffhanger (of course). The second book, The Ask and the Answer, picks up right where the first left off, but adds Viola’s voice to the mix.  In this volume, Todd and Viola are separated, and Todd is taken under the wing of the manipulative mayor while Viola is pulled into a rebel group called the Answer whose goal is to destroy the mayor at any cost.

Meanwhile, another war with the Spackle looms, and Ness leaves his readers on another precipice as the volume ends.

Which brings us to the third book, Monsters of Men.  In the concluding volume, Ness has added a third voice, that of a Spackle called the Return.  Here is where Ness really shines.  He’s succeeded in bringing us into the Spackle’s mind, a mind that feels both familiar but also very, very alien.  The Return’s sections are poetic and pained and at times hard to decipher, and when we finally do sink far enough into the character’s voice to understand the Return’s story, it is all the more satisfying.  Other authors have tried something similar with varying levels of success.  Philip Pullman’s Mulefa in the Amber Spyglass are brought to mind, but even Pullman couldn’t portray his aliens as effectively as Ness.  While the Return is ultimately a figure we relate to and feel sympathy for, we are also always conscious of his non-humanness.  It’s a terrific feat that Ness is able to pull off. 

There are some heavy themes at work here.  The first major one is gender, in particular what it means to be a man (in a world devoid of women or not).  It’s not a stretch to call the series feminist books for boys, but Ness doesn’t hit us over the head with it.

The other major theme is war, and this comes into play most heavily in the third installment.  Monsters of Men (taken from a character’s statement that “war makes monsters of men”) brings us full-on war with the Spackle from page one.  The mayor and the Answer must decide whether they should keep fighting each other or join forces to beat back the Spackle, and the process is not quick or pretty.  Even when it’s over, there are aftershocks.

These themes make for a very dark story, but Ness provides some balance with a few humorous touches.  Todd’s voice is a big part of what makes the first book such an enjoyable read.  His narration resembles the Noise that surrounds him, so he tells his story in fragments and run-ons and quick parenthetical asides (“Shut up!” he frequently tells the reader after he knows he’s said something not very nice.).  The style is unique and more than a gimmick – it’s necessary to the story Ness needs to tell.

Ness also brings us Todd’s dog Manchee, the best dog in literature ever.  The first line in The Knife of Never Letting Go is “The first thing you find out when yer dog learns to talk is that dogs don’t got nothing much to say.”  To prove his point, Manchee’s first words are “Need a poo, Todd.”  When you think about it, that is really one of the main things our dogs would say to us, isn’t it?

Comparisons with Suzanne Collins’ Hunger Games trilogy (which I also love, just not with quite the same fervor) are unavoidable.  You can read my thoughts on Mockingjay at our round-robin review here.  There’s no doubt that Collins has written a heck of a story, a dystopia in first person present-tense (sound familiar?) about a teenager who fights against the odds in a war that tears her world apart.  But when both books are placed side by side, Mockingjay never really stands a chance.  Ness’ story is much more layered with more complex characters and subtler, less heavy-handed messages.  Mockingjay is great, but Monsters of Men is a masterpiece.  

This complexity of character and theme is also what propels Monsters of Men beyond just the teen market.  It’s one of those crossovers that’s fast-paced enough to appeal to even reluctant teen readers, but also layered enough to appeal to adults whose teen years may be far behind them.  In this regard, it’s similar to Markus Zusak’s The Book Thief, another outstanding book marketed to teens but read and appreciated by all ages.  I hope that adult readers who don’t normally read YA won’t let the “young adult” tag mislead them – the book’s protagonists are teens, but its exciting plot and skillful writing are universally appealing.

Not everything about Chaos Walking shines.  The abundance of short fragmentary sentences can sometimes wear, and bad guys have a tendency to come back from the dead so many times that it would break even the most willing suspension of disbelief.  But these are minor quibbles about a story that is one of the best I’ve read this decade.

A common saying among readers and writers alike is “There are no new stories.” Mind-reading has been done before, as has colonization of faraway planets and war and aliens.  But it’s never been done in quite this way, and it’s never been told quite so well.

Filed Under: Dystopia, Reviews, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Anticipation- Fall & Winter releases

September 29, 2010 |

My reading list is ridiculous. I visit blogs, author websites and Amazon.com to check the release dates for upcoming books, continuously update my library reserve list (at the moment, I have 54 books on hold and 12 checked out), and keep a detailed wish list to remind me of what I want to buy.

While sometimes the sheer number of incredible-sounding books coming out is a bit overwhelming (talk about a first-world problem, having too much to read and too many books for my bookshelves), I also LOVE having all these fantastic books to look forward to, love being able to participate in all the blogosphere conversations about them. Here are some of the fall/winter releases I’m most anticipating:

Enchanted Ivy- Sarah Beth Durst
(release date: October 12, 2010)
I fell in love with Ice when I read it last year. Perhaps one of the most inventive fairy tale adaptations I have ever read, the update of “East of the Sun, West of the Moon” and Cassie and Bear’s love story stole my heart. I can’t wait to see more of Durst’s writing in her newest book–magic, romance, mystery, and the Ivy League? I’m sold.

Sugar and Ice- Kate Messner (release date: December 7, 2010)
The Brilliant Fall of Gianna Z. was my favorite middle grade book of 2009, and I raved about it to more patrons than I can count. Gianna’s spunk, heart, and determination leapt off the page (and it is so nice to see a girl athlete!), while Messner’s vivid writing brought the novel’s family issues to life. Sugar and Ice, Messner’s new figure skating novel, promises to be more of the same. (Kate Messner will also be stopping by Stacked on her Sugar and Ice blog tour on December 2nd!)

Secondhand Charm- Julie Berry (release date: October 12, 2010)
Another original fairy tale by the author of the wonderful The Amaranth Enchantment, about a young girl with healing power whose skills with charms are suddenly necessary. I will never get tired of a good, simple fairy tale.

Forge- Laurie Halse Anderson
(release date: October 19, 2010)
I was lucky enough to get an ARC of Forge, which I read and adored last month. I’m definitely purchasing a hardcover copy of this novel, which continues the sage started in Chains, this time from Curzon’s point of view. I’m a sucker for a Revolutionary War historical fiction novel, and, as usual, Anderson’s voice brings both the time period and the characters to life.

The Scorch Trials- James Dashner (release date: October 12, 2010)
The sequel to the amazingly suspenseful The Maze Runner. Hand this to fans of The Hunger Games clamoring for more.

Delirium- Lauren Oliver
(release date: February 1, 2011)
While I had heard dozens of bloggers raving about Before I Fall, I somehow waited until last month to read it. SO GOOD. I can’t wait for Oliver’s next novel, a dystopian about a world where love has been declared a disease, to be ‘cured’ when you turn 18.

Anna and the French Kiss- Stephanie Perkins (release date: December 2, 2010) Twitter and YA blogs have been exploding with love for this debut novel. Love in a Parisian boarding school? Witty dialogue? Ooo la la!

The Candymakers- Wendy Mass (release date: October 5, 2010)
Wendy Mass’ Finally and Eleven Birthdays are what middle grade magical realism are made of. Combine her token humor and magic with Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and I can’t wait to taste the result!

Bright Young Things- Anna Godberson
(release date: October 12, 2010)
The author of The Luxe series takes on the Roaring Twenties. Family secrets, the search for a father, murder, flappers, and the Jazz Age. I’m dancing the Charleston over here just thinking about it!

What are your most anticipated Fall and Winter releases?

Filed Under: anticipation, Uncategorized

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