Friday, August 13, 2010

Book Blogger Hop - August 13-16

Book Blogger Hop

To check out other answers and join the hop go and check out Crazy-For_Books.com for the Mr. Linky for the Blog Hop. 

This week's question:
How many books do you have on your 'to be read shelf’?


My answer - I have absolutely no clue - I have a bookshelf full of my own books that I have collected through the years and haven't read.  I then have the piles of wonderful review books to get through as well.  I can't even imagine how many books I have.  But that makes me happy - I always have something to read!

I'm currently reading The Candidates by Inara Scott and hope to read that as well as Nightshade by Andrea Cremer this weekend.

Have a great weekend everyone!

Book Review: The Deadly Sister by Eliot Schrefer


The Deadly Sister 
The Deadly Sister by Eliot Schrefer
Publisher:Scholastic
Publish Date: May 1, 2010
Hardcover, 352 pages


My Review:
Why I read this:  Suspenseful and dark, it sounded like a book that was right up my alley and different from the paranormal YA I have been reading.  I also loved the cover, creepy and effective.  So when I could, I signed up for it with 1-ARC Tours.

How is the novel driven: Character driven, the murder has happened and though there is a lot of action, most of the book is dedicated to what happened and why it happened, the reader never really knowing until the end.  The character development is mainly between the two sisters, Abby and Maya.  One good sister and one who has gone astray.

My thoughts:  
A very interesting book, different from a lot of the YA I have read recently.  This one is contemporary and suspense.  The book starts off with Abby finding a body of a boy who her sister, Maya was known to associate with and had a rather explosive relationship with.  Abby immediately thinks her sister killed the boy and is off on a mission to find her sister and protect her as she has protected her for years.

As the book progresses the reader learns more and more about Abby and Maya and why Maya might have commited the crime.  The reader is also introduced to some rather colorful characters from the shady side of Maya's life and friends of Abby and their beloved one time step-grandmother.

Mr. Schrefer does an amazing job of weaving the story lines together and guiding you where he wants you to go.  Scenes jump back and forth from past to present from what is going on with Abby and then adding Maya in.  It was a very effective form of writing as it drew me as a reader in and kept me enthralled until the very end.

This is not for the faint of heart, there is obviously a crime of murder committed, there is drug and alcohol use, and profanity in the book, but like others I have read lately because it is from the shadier side of life, it seems in place and not out of place.  The book is a real look at what can happen to a member of a family when they begin to slide away into the dark places that can be found anywhere.



My Rating:  4.25/5.0

About the Book:
Abby Goodwin is sure her sister Maya isn't a murderer. But her parents don't agree. Her friends don't agree. And the cops definitely don't agree. Maya is a drop-out, a stoner, a girl who's obsessed with her tutor, Jefferson Andrews...until he ends up dead. Maya runs away, and leaves Abby following the trail of clues. Each piece of evidence points to Maya, but it also appears that Jefferson had secrets of his own. And enemies. Like his brother, who Abby becomes involved with...until he falls under suspicion.

Is Abby getting closer to finding the true murderer? Or is someone leading her down a twisted false path?
About the Author:
Eliot Schrefer is the author of The School for Dangerous Girls, Glamorous Disaster, and The New Kid. He lives in New York City. He does not have a sister.

His Website
Facebook

FTC Information: I received this book through 1-ARC Tours for review.  I have Amazon links on my review pages but I do not make any money from these because of NC laws.  I put them solely for people to check out the books on a retail site.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Book Review: Freefall by Mindi Scott


 Freefall
Freefall by Mindi Scott
Publisher:Simon Pulse
Publish Date: October 5, 2010
Paperback, 336 pages


My Review:
Why I read this:  It sounded like a very intriguing premise and I signed up for it with 1-ARC-Tours.

How is the novel driven: Character-driven, the events that set everything into motion have already happened and the characters growing and developing and learning to deal with what life has dealt them is what the book is all about.

My thoughts:  Amazing, simply amazing.  See my note below as to why I almost put this book down, but I did not and I'm glad I didn't.  This is one powerful YA novel and I finished it over a week ago and it is still staying with me.  The book opens with Seth in a downward spiral that seems like it can only end one way, then he meets the lovely Rosetta and he starts searching for a way to make things better.  But this does not come overnight - it's not magic - he sees the girl, he falls in love and straightens out his life for her.  Nor is the girl perfect in every way, she has her own issues to work through as well.  But the book is about working through those issues and little by little, the reason Seth has become the way he is is revealed and that made it a fascinating read.  It's hard to like Seth in the beginning, he's binge drinking on the verge of flunking out of school and just generally not easy to like, but through the book I started to like him and then I was cheering for him.  It's a great book and one that I would recommend to a lot of teenagers, it has the angst that is so evident in those years, it has cliques and the social workings of high school, it has romance and most of all it has a character who works hard to better himself not only for a girl he falls for, but for himself and those around him.

I don't know what else I can say - the book must be read to be understood and while it's not a happy-go-lucky book, it is amazing.  Great job Ms. Scott on your first book - I will be looking forward to more books from you in the future!


Note:  Honestly I almost put this book down after the first few pages.  The language is rough, there are sexual references, drug use and alcohol use in the form of binge-drinking.  However I am glad I did not put it down.  For those of you that saw Jerry Maguire - you know how in the beginning, he is crass, has horrible language, horrible values and it's just rough in the beginning, but through the movie he changes and you see the point of the roughness of the beginning to show the journey.  That is what the beginning of Freefall is about and it's important to the book and therefore I don't feel it was just put in to titillate or just be gratuitous.  We have to be honest with ourselves, teenagers do talk that way so this book is not over the top.

My Rating:  4.5/5.0

About the Book:
How do you come back from the point of no return?

Seth McCoy was the last person to see his best friend Isaac alive, and the first to find him dead. It was just another night, just another party, just another time where Isaac drank too much and passed out on the lawn. Only this time, Isaac didn’t wake up.

Convinced that his own actions led to his friend’s death, Seth is torn between turning his life around . . . or losing himself completely.

Then he meets Rosetta: so beautiful and so different from everything and everyone he's ever known. But Rosetta has secrets of her own, and Seth will soon realize he isn’t the only one who needs saving . . .

About the Author:
Mindi Scott lives near Seattle, Washington with her drummer husband in a house with a non-sound-proof basement. Freefall is her first novel. Visit her online at .
Her Website
Twitter 
Facebook
Blog
Goodreads

FTC Information: I received this book through 1-ARC Tours for review.  I have Amazon links on my review pages but I do not make any money from these because of NC laws.  I put them solely for people to check out the books on a retail site.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Book Review: Monster High by Lisi Harrison


 Monster High
Monster High by Lisi Harrison
Publisher: Poppy
Publish Date: September 1, 2010
Hardcover, 272 pages


My Review:
Why I read this:  I love The Clique series by Lisi Harrison and this premise sounded very intriguing so I signed up as soon as Book It Forward Tours put it up.

How is the novel driven: Characters are the star, but the plot drives as well.  I loved getting all the setup for the series in this book - it was well-done, and still enough story to go along with the set-up to really enjoy it.

My thoughts:  What made this book really interesting to me is that it wasn't cut and dried who the good guys were and who the bad guys were.  You thought you knew after one episode in the beginning, but truthfully there were two different cliques and there was friction between them, but seeing it from both sides I saw that neither was particularly in the wrong.

Both Melody and Frankie are new girls and learning to fit in at the high school.  Melody is a normal girl in an area that is filled with Monsters, though people don't know that.  Frankie was created by her parents and is one of the monsters, but she just wants to be who she is not some put on person.  Her naivete coupled with her pop culture knowledge made her a great character to watch develop.  Melody on the other hand was an ordinary girl until her father helped her along with some cosmetic surgery, now she is the girl all the girls are jealous of at her new school and this causes problems.  Not to mention the one guy she is interested in seems to  have two very different sides.

As the monster community collides with the normal community mayhem ensues and the book ends settling matters in one way but setting things up for the next book which I am eagerly awaiting.  I really like both Melody and Frankie and look forward to learning more about the monster community that Lisi Harrison has created in this book.


My Rating:  4.5/5.0

About the Book:
From Lisi Harrison, the New York Times bestselling author of The Clique and Alphas, comes a new series with a fresh twist on high school, romance, and the "horrors" of trying to fit in.

The monster community has kept a low profile at the local high school, but when two new girls enroll, the town will never be the same. Created just fifteen days ago, Frankie Stein is psyched to trade her father's formaldehyde-smelling basement lab for parties and prom.

But with a student body totally freaked out by rumors of monsters stalking the halls, Frankie learns that high school can be rough for a chic freak like her. She thinks she finds a friend in fellow new student Melody Carver-but can a "normie" be trusted with her big secret?

About the Author:
Lisi Harrison was the Senior Director of Production Development at MTV, and was responsible for creating and developing original programming for air on MTV. She also served as Head Writer for MTV Production and before that had her own column in Jane Magazine.

Lisi lives in Laguna Beach, California, and is currently working on her next Alphas novel, coming in April 2010, as well as her next Clique novel.

Her Website
Twitter 
Facebook
Blah-G

FTC Information: I received this book through Book It  Forward Tours for review.  I have Amazon links on my review pages but I do not make any money from these because of NC laws.  I put them solely for people to check out the books on a retail site.

Series Talk: What's Your Opinion - The Immortals series by Alyson Noel (Giveaway at end)

I was at my wonderful local library yesterday picking up my reserved copy of Blue Moon by Alyson Noel.  I finished Evermore last week and couldn't wait to get my copy of Blue Moon.  While there, the girl who was checking my books out told me she really didn't know what to think about The Immortals series.  I told her I read the first one and loved it and she confessed as she read the series she went back and forth on her thoughts about it and after the latest one she really just didn't know how she felt.  This gave me the idea of this post and if popular enough maybe a weekly or bi-weekly series discussing various series books out there.

Now I trust her opinion, she is a very sweet girl and actually closer to the YA age group than I am.  She helps the children's librarian and my 9-year-old adores her.  What she said got me thinking - I think I remember hearing mixed views about the series all over the internet.

So have you read the series and what did you think?  Try to keep the spoilers away and don't bash the author, but you can be honest - did you love the series, is there one or two books that just didn't do it for you?  Are you still reading the series?  I'm just curious - I'm still going to read the series and form my own opinions, but the comments made by this sweet girl just got me wondering.

For those of you unfamiliar with the series here are the books.  I have read Evermore and loved it, review will be coming later this week and I should start Blue Moon in the next week or so.

Evermore: The Immortals  Blue Moon (The Immortals, Book 2)  Shadowland (The Immortals, Book 3)  Dark Flame (The Immortals)  Night Star

Note:  Night Star comes out November 16, 2010.

To sweeten the deal and generate some discussion, let me know what you think and you'll be entered for a book of your choice under $15 at the Book Depository, so that means if Book Depository has free shipping to your country - you are welcome to enter!  Simply let me know your opinion on this series and if you haven't read it, are you interested in reading it.  Giveaway ends 8/18.  No extra entries for this one, but I always appreciate tweets and blog mentions. :)

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

Book Tour and Review: Live to Tell by Lisa Gardner

Live to Tell

Join Lisa Gardner, author of the mystery novel, Live to Tell (Bantam July 2010), as she virtually tours the blogosphere in August on her first virtual book tour with Pump Up Your Book Promotion!

My Review

Why I Read This:  Lisa Gardner is one of my must-read authors, I have read most of her books and have always read her new ones for the last 5 or so years and have worked on her backlist.  When the title came up for review through Pump Up Your Book Promotions, it was an easy decision to want in on that tour.

How is the novel driven:  It's a mix, but I will go with plot driven for the most part, but the characters play a main role as well.  How do three seemingly different women get their lives intertwined because of one night.  What is each ones' motivation behind the secrets they keep or the secrets they seek.  This is the story to this book and an enthralling one.

My Thoughts on the Book:
Something you can always count on Lisa Gardner novels for is nail-biting suspense, and Live To Tell delivers on that promise.  Gritty and real at the same time, Live to Tell is suspense at it's best. I started this book and had a hard time putting it down.  I also learned something during this book.  I honestly did not know there were children like Evan out there.  I understood Ozzie's situation somewhat, abusive or neglectful family, but Evan was from a loving family and he is still a very frightening child.  How women like Victoria and Danielle do the things they do I'm not sure and the same goes for Detective D.D. Warren.

The suspense plot is brilliantly woven and keeps you hooked through the book, how do these lives intersect and what happened to cause the murders of these families?  Amazingly enough there is some humor through the book even while dealing with a very difficult subject.  Most have to do with D.D.'s lack of a sex life which is rather amusing.

Well-written, thought-provoking and hard to put down is how I would describe Live to Tell.  Lisa Gardner is still at the top of my must read list after this one.  She manages to frighten me and most suspense stories don't do that, but for some reason her books really do.

If you haven't read a book involving D.D. Warren before, don't worry, there is enough character development and information given in this book that you can pick this one up as the first one, then you will be anxious to go back and read the rest.  Live to Tell stands on it's own very well.

One word of warning, the language in this book is rough (they are detectives dealing with rough situations).  This is not a tame book at all, it's gritty, but still well-done.  It's not gratuitous as I often say, and that's what I judge a book on - if it's use of language seems pointless and just thrown in, I'm not a fan, but if it makes sense I overlook and understand.  That's where Live to Tell falls for me on that spectrum.

My Rating:  4.5/5.0

Lisa GardnerAbout Lisa Gardner

Lisa Gardner is the New York Times bestselling author of twelve novels. Her Detective D. D. Warren novels include The Neighbor, Hide, and Alone. Her FBI Profiler novels include Say Goodbye, Gone, The Killing Hour, The Next Accident, and The Third Victim. She lives with her family in New England, where she is at work on her next D. D. Warren novel, Save Me, which Bantam will publish in 2011.
You can find Lisa online at http://www.lisagardner.com/.

 

 

 

Live to TellAbout Live to Tell

He knows everything about you—including the first place you’ll hide.
On a warm summer night in one of Boston’s working-class neighborhoods, an unthinkable crime has been committed: Four members of a family have been brutally murdered. The father—and possible suspect—now lies clinging to life in the ICU. Murder-suicide? Or something worse? Veteran police detective D. D. Warren is certain of only one thing: There’s more to this case than meets the eye.
Danielle Burton is a survivor, a dedicated nurse whose passion is to help children at a locked-down pediatric psych ward. But she remains haunted by a family tragedy that shattered her life nearly twenty-five years ago. The dark anniversary is approaching, and when D. D. Warren and her partner show up at the facility, Danielle immediately realizes: It has started again.
A devoted mother, Victoria Oliver has a hard time remembering what normalcy is like. But she will do anything to ensure that her troubled son has some semblance of a childhood. She will love him no matter what. Nurture him. Keep him safe. Protect him. Even when the threat comes from within her own house.
In New York Times bestselling author Lisa Gardner’s most compelling work of suspense to date, the lives of these three women unfold and connect in unexpected ways, as sins from the past emerge—and stunning secrets reveal just how tightly blood ties can bind. Sometimes the most devastating crimes are the ones closest to home.

Read an Excerpt!

Thursday night, Sergeant Detective D. D. Warren was out on a date. It wasn’t the worst date she’d ever been on. It wasn’t the best date she’d ever been on. It was, however, the only date she’d been on in quite some time, so unless Chip the accountant turned out to be a total loser, she planned on taking him home for a rigorous session of balance-the-ledger.
So far, they’d made it through half a loaf of bread soaked in olive oil, and half a cow seared medium rare. Chip had managed not to talk about the prime rib bleeding all over her plate or her need to sop up juices with yet another slice of bread. Most men were taken aback by her appetite. They needed to joke uncomfortably about her ability to tuck away plate after plate of food. Then they felt the need to joke even more uncomfortably that, of course, none of it showed on her girlish figure.
Yeah, yeah, she had the appetite of a sumo wrestler but the build of a cover girl. She was nearly forty, for God’s sake, and well aware by now of her freakish metabolism. She certainly didn’t need any soft- middled desk jockey pointing it out. Food was her passion. Mostly because her job with Boston PD’s homicide unit didn’t leave much time for sex.
She polished off the prime rib, went to work on the twice- baked potato. Chip was a forensic accountant. They’d been set up by the wife of a friend of a guy in the unit. Yep, it made that much sense to D.D. as well. But here she was, sitting in a coveted booth at the Hilltop Steakhouse, and really, Chip was all right. Little doughy in the mid¬dle, little bald on top, but funny. D.D. liked funny. When he smiled, the corners of his deep brown eyes crinkled and that was good enough for her.
She was having meat and potatoes for dinner and, if all went as planned, Chip for dessert.
So, of course, her pager went off.
She scowled, shoved it to the back of her waistband, as if that would make a difference.
“What’s that?” Chip asked, catching the chime.
“Birth control,” she muttered.
Chip blushed to the roots of his receding brown hair, then in the next minute grinned with such self-deprecating power she nearly went weak in the knees.
Better be good, D.D. thought. Better be a fucking massacre, or I’ll be damned if I’m giving up my night.
But then she read the call and was sorry she’d ever thought such a thing.
Chip the funny accountant got a kiss on the cheek.
Then Sergeant Detective D. D. Warren hit the road.
■■■
D.D. had been a Boston PD detective for nearly twelve years now. She’d started out investigating traffic fatalities and drug-related homi¬cides before graduating to such major media events as the discovery of six mummified corpses in an underground chamber; then, more recently, the disappearance of a beautiful young schoolteacher from South Boston. Her bosses liked to put her in front of the camera. Nothing like a pretty blonde detective to mix things up.
She didn’t mind. D.D. thrived on stress. Enjoyed a good pressure-cooker case even more than an all-you-can-eat buffet. Only drawback was the toll on her personal life. As a sergeant in the homicide unit, was the leader of a three-person squad. It wasn’t uncommon for them to spend all day tracking down leads, interviewing informants, or revisiting crime scenes. Then they spent most of the night writing up the resulting interviews, affidavits, and/or warrant requests. Each squad also had to take turns being “on deck,” meaning they caught the next case called in, keeping them stuck in a permanent vortex of top- priority active cases, still- unsolved old cases, and at least one or two fresh call- outs per week.
Didn’t sleep much. Or date much. Or really do anything much. Which had been fine until last year, when she’d turned thirty-eight and watched her ex- lover get married and start a family. Sud¬denly, the tough, brash sergeant who considered herself wed to her job found herself studying Good Housekeeping magazine and, even worse, Modern Bride. One day, she picked up Parenting. There was noth¬ing more depressing than a nearly forty-year-old single, childless homicide detective reading Parenting magazine alone in her North End condo.
Especially when she realized some of the articles on dealing with toddlers applied to managing her squad as well.
She recycled the magazines, then vowed to go on a date. Which had led to Chip—poor, almost- got-his-brains-screwed-out Chip—and now had her on her way to Dorchester. Wasn’t even her squad’s turn on deck, but the notification had been “red ball,” meaning something big and bad enough had happened to warrant all hands on deck.
D.D. turned off I-93, then made her way through the maze of streets to the largely working-class neighborhood. Among local offi¬cers, Dorchester was known for its drugs, shootings, and raucous neighborhood parties that led to more drugs and shootings. BPD’s local field district, C-11, had set up a noise reduction hotline as well as a designated “Party Car” to patrol on weekends. Five hundred phone tips and numerous preventive arrests later, Dorchester was finally seeing a decline in homicides, rapes, and aggravated assaults. On the other hand, burglaries were way up. Go figure.
Under the guidance of her vehicle’s navigational system, D.D. ended up on a fairly nice street, double lanes dotted with modest stamps of green lawn and flanked with a long row of tightly nestled three-story homes, many sporting large front porches and an occa¬sional turret.
Most of these dwellings had been carved into multiple-living units over the years, with as many as six to eight in a single house. It was still a nice-looking area, the lawns neatly mowed, the front-porch banis¬ters freshly painted. The softer side of Dorchester, she decided, more and more curious.
D.D. spotted a pileup of Crown Vics, and slowed to park. It was eight- thirty on a Thursday night, August sun just starting to fade on the horizon. She could make out the white ME’s vehicle straight ahead, as well as the traveling crime lab. The vans were bookended by the usual cluster of media trucks and neighborhood gawkers.
When D.D. had first read the location of the call, she’d assumed drugs. Probably a gangland shooting. A bad one, given that the deputy superintendent wanted all eighteen detectives in attendance, so most likely involving collateral damage. Maybe a grandmother caught sit¬ting on her front porch, maybe kids playing on the sidewalk. These things happened, and no, they didn’t get any easier to take. But you handled it, because this was Boston, and that’s what a Boston detec¬tive did.
Now, however, as D.D. climbed out of her car, clipped her creden¬tials to the waistband of her skinny black jeans, and retrieved a plain white shirt to button up over her date cleavage, she was thinking, Not drugs. She was thinking this was something worse. She slung a light jacket over her sidearm, and headed up the sidewalk toward the lion’s den.
D.D. pushed her way through the first wave of jostling adults and curious children. She did her best to keep focused, but still caught phrases such as “shots fired…” “heard squealing like a stuck pig . . .” “Why, I just saw her unloading groceries not four hours before . . .”
“Excuse me, excuse me, pardon me. Police sergeant. Buddy, out of the way.” She broke through, ducking under the yellow tape rop¬ing off portions of the sidewalk, and finally arrived at the epicenter of crime- scene chaos.
The house before her was a gray-painted triple-decker boasting a broad- columned front porch and large American flag. Both front doors were wide open, enabling better traffic flow of investigative person¬nel, as well as the ME’s metal gurney.
D.D. noted delicate lace curtains framed in bay windows on either side of the front door. In addition to the American flag, the porch con¬tained four cheerful pots of red geraniums, half a dozen blue folding chairs, and a hanging piece of slate that had been painted with more red geraniums and the bright yellow declaration: Welcome. Yep, definitely something worse than gun-toting, tennis-shoe-tossing drug dealers.
D.D. sighed, put on her game face, and approached the uniformed officer stationed at the base of the front steps. She rattled off her name and badge number. In turn, the officer dutifully recorded the info in the murder book, then jerked his head down to the bin at his feet.
D.D. obediently fished out booties and a hair covering. So it was that kind of crime scene.
She climbed the steps slowly, keeping to one side. They appeared recently stained, a light Cape Cod gray that suited the rest of the house. The porch was homey, well kept. Clean enough that she sus¬pected it had been recently broom swept. Perhaps after unloading groceries, a household member had tidied up?
It would’ve been better if the porch had been dirty, covered in dust. That might have yielded shoe treads. That might have helped catch whoever did the bad thing D.D. was about to find inside.
She took another breath right outside the door, inhaled the scent of sawdust and drying blood. She heard a reporter calling for a state¬ment. She heard the snap of a camera, the roar of a media chopper, and white noise all around. Gawkers behind, detectives ahead, re¬porters above.
Chaos: loud, smelly, overwhelming. Her job now was to make it right. She got to it.


CymLowell

Teaser Tuesday - August 10

teasertuesdays31

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers! 
"Mr. Lightfoot," she repeated. "What exactly do you do?"
"In colloquial terms, I am an expert in woo-woo."
From Live to Tell by Lisa Gardner

I can't help it, those lines just made me laugh.  Mr. Lightfoot is a shaman of sorts who deals with people and trying to get them to work through their positive energy to get rid of negative energy.

Live to Tell: A Detective D. D. Warren Novel

I just thought these lines were too funny. The book is really cute so far and I can't wait to read more of it.