Sunday, September 22, 2013

30 Day Book Challenge - Day 1

I just discovered something called the 30 day book challenge, which involves talking about books I have read. That is something I absolutely love to do, so I am going to take a stab at it! The full challenge can be found here.

1. Best book you read last year.

I had to go back and look through my goodreads history, because I have a horrible memory. Anyways, it is a tie between Code Name Verity and Graceling. Both are very amazing books about strong heroines. Code Name Verity is a historical fiction book about women aviators in WWII and Graceling is a fantasy series about a young women whose “grace” or special skill is killing. They were the first books I had read from each author, and they are definetly on my watch list now.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Dystopian Persuasion


For Darkness Shows the Stars (For Darkness Shows the Stars, #1)

For Darkness Shows the Stars by Diana Peterfreund


A retelling of Jane Austen's Persuasion set generations after scientific meddling nearly ended the world. 

I found this book had a slow start; the author does well by not simply laying out the setting and rules of her post-apocalyptic society but it does make for a confusing start.  The cause of the world destruction and the resulting rules were fairly complex which while very interesting, took a while to fully flesh out.  I admire that the author has confidence in her reader intelligence.  It is worth it to keep on reading.

Considering it was based on a novel I had already read (and, well because it is a YA novel) I knew how it was going to end, but I still enjoyed the journey.

Recommended for: fans of Jane Austen's Persuasion, and for those looking for another dystopian novel once they have devoured the like of Hunger Games and Divergent.

Sequel: 
Across a Star-Swept Sea



Thursday, August 1, 2013

Dancing and Bad Decisions


Ten Cents a Dance

Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher


Ruby is a poor girl, living in a poor neighbourhood of Chicago.  She works at a meat packing factory to support her arthritic mother and younger sister.  When a opportunity to do what she loves (dancing) and make more than twice her factory wage (a whole $50) comes up, she takes it.  Little does she know that even though dancing may seem innocent, it will lead her down a path of heartache and danger.

I have had this book on my mental "To-Read" list for quite some time. Sometime when that happens, if I leave a book unread for to long, by the time I get to it I am not longer interested. This was definitely not the case.

This was also one of those books where the main character keeps making bad decisions, and I am writhing in the couch in agony because it is painful to watch her do these things.  A couple time I needed to snap the book closed, put it down, and walk it off.  While possibly bad for my blood-pressure, that is a sign of a good book in my opinion.

This was more along the lines of what I had hoped Vixen would be.  It's a different era, I know, and not a flapper in sight but it is full of glamour, and scandal, gangster wanna-be's, and danger.  It felt much more real, and the stakes were, if not higher, more present. If you were a fan of Vixen, but felt it fell short, perhaps this one is for you.

Read-a-likes: Strings Attached by Judy Blundell

Published 2008, Bloomsbury

Monday, July 29, 2013

Audiobook Review: Cleopatra's Moon




I received this audio book last summer through Sync's annual audio book give away (which is happening right now, right HERE with a new batch of books).  Two free audio books every week all through the summer. It is a pretty sweet deal.

 Cleopatra's Moon by Vicky Alvear Shecter, read by Kirsten Potter

Cleopatra's Moon
As a younger me I was obsessed with everything Ancient Egypt, and had decided to be an Egyptologist until I learned that would being in school for pretty much the rest of my life.  So I moved on, and my love of Ancient Egypt faded, to resurface every so often when I would come across something awesomely Egyptian.  Like this audio book!

The plot: It follows the life of Cleopatra's daughter, Cleopatra Selene through the death of her parents, and her being taken into the custody of the Roman man who ruined her life and took her land from her: Octavius, famously known as Caesar Augustus.

I hadn't known about Cleopatra's children before.  I'd heard this story (the romance Cleopatra and Marc Antony, their suicides, and the conquest of Egypt by Rome) through history lessons and Shakespeare, but her children never came up. So this book tells this famous story through the eyes of the daughter who watches it all happen.  It is a really unique historical perspective.

The narrator has a really mature and beautiful voice. She gives the voice of this young girl the dignity and power befitting a daughter of Cleopatra. It kind of makes you forget how old this girl as is she is facing these horrible disasters, but I found it fitting.  She manages to give the voices of Cleopatra's younger brother an adorable youthful quality, and the voice of Octavius an angry, sinister one without creating caricatures.

Sadly I was unable to finish this audio book because the last track didn't download properly and won't play.  I may have to finish this story by reading it in print.  Of course it quit on a cliffhanger!

Edit:  I picked up the print version from the library and finished the last two chapters.  Nothing much to add, other than I enjoyed the historical facts at the end that explained what really happened, what there is evidance for, and what the author made up to benifit the story. I love it when historical fiction includes those.  Hurray for learning!

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

A Trip Down Vintage Lane

The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt by Caroline Preston

 The Scrapbook of Frankie Pratt
I adored this book. From the very first whimsical page to the last.  The premise of the book is that Frankie Pratt, a girl growing up in the 1920's, is given a scrapbook which she then fills with memorabilia from her life as she goes to college, New York, then Paris. Meeting friends, enemies and lovers along the way.

Even though no page can have over 100 words, and most have much less, the story feels full, and real, and totally immersive.  The pictures, newspaper cuttings, adverts, and other odds and ends tell just as much of the story as the words do.  This isn't just a book to read, but to experience.

I am surprised I hadn't heard anything about this book before I picked it up.  I assumed it was new, but it was published in 2011.  It is too bad that it flew under the radar.  Thank goodness I found it on display at the end of a bookcase, else I might never have picked it up.  Some librarian out there knows what's what!*

I found it displayed in the YA section of the library, though it is catalogued as adult fiction.  While I agree it would do well in the YA section, I am dismayed at such disorganization...This library in question also have many shelves of book organized by colour. It looks nice, but I am much to horrified by the mayhem of it to enjoy it.  I itch to rearrange them every time I come in.

Recommended for fans of 1920's, graphic novels, and independent woman characters.  If you like the Flappers series by Jillian Larken you might like this.

*As they often do.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

This is What Happy Looks Like by Jennifer E. Smith


 This Is What Happy Looks Like

I loved the first book I read from this Jennifer E. Smith, The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight, which made me really excited for this book. While it was still a pretty good book, I found myself skimming over small bits.  It just didn't hook me like her other one.

Ellie begins an email correspondence with a boy across the country accidentally.  They begin to live for each others emails.  One day, this boy shows up her small hometown and turns out to be major celebrity Graham Larkin, who happens to be filming his next big movie on location there.

It was a cute story, but felt slightly contrived.  And a little stalker-y. The love story is sweet, but not quite swoon-worthy, and since that is the major plot point of the story it falls a little short of expected.

I do wish I had been reading this book on a nice sunny beach somewhere though - I think it is a prefect book for that.  Charming, simple, with just enough excitement to keep me turning pages, but not so much that I wouldn't put it down to go for a swim.

Recommended for someone looking for a nice, light beach read.

Published 2013, Little Brown

Monday, July 15, 2013

Shades of Earth

Shades of Earth by Beth Revis
 This is the third and final book in the amazing trilogy by Beth Revis.  Set in space, in the future on a generation space ship as it sets out to colonize a new planet.  I cannot even begin to review this book without spoilers for the first two so please read the first two before reading this.  All I will say is that it is a very good series, full of plotting and conspiracies and other great things.  I think fans of Firefly would appreciate these books. (This would be the place to stop reading, if you want to avoid spoilers.)



Shades of Earth (Across the Universe, #3)Amy and Elder are finally getting (at least most of) the people of Godspeed to the surface of the planet.  With the Orion's warnings about monsters fresh in their minds, they wonder what awaits them on this new planet.  Orion's warnings about the people of Godspeed being made into either slaves or soldiers by the "frozens" is also fresh in Elder's mind...

The dynamic between the people of earth and the people of Godspeed is very interesting and so, so stressful. "Just get along, you idiots!" my brain was yelling, "there are monsters and poisonous flowers to worry about!"  This series is great not just on a science fiction level, but a sociological and cultural level.  What happens to people when you put them in these situations? How does it effect how they see each other and themselves?  How do you control them, should you control them?  Good stuff.

Recommened for: fans of SciFi, like Firefly/Serenity, sociology majors, YA fans in general

The Series
Across the Universe
A Million Suns
Shades of Earth

*Oh my, the previous book I reviewed was the second in this series?  How did that happen? I definitely read book inbetween these two. Like The Selection by Kiera Cass, which was great, and I breezed through in about two sittings.