Review of The Dark Divine by Bree Despain

The Dark Divine by Bree Despain
Pages: 375
Publisher: EgmontUSA

Grace Divine, daughter of the local pastor, always knew something terrible happened the night Daniel Kalbi disappeared--the night she found her brother Jude collapsed on the porch, covered in his own blood--but she has no idea what a truly monstrous secret that night held.


The memories her family has tried to bury resurface when Daniel returns, three years later, and enrolls in Grace and Jude's high school. Despite promising Jude she'll stay away, Grace cannot deny her attraction to Daniel's shocking artistic abilities, his way of getting her to look at the world from new angles, and the strange, hungry glint in his eyes.

The closer Grace gets to Daniel, the more she jeopardizes her life, as her actions stir resentment in Jude and drive him to embrace the ancient evil Daniel unleashed that horrific night. Grace must discover the truth behind the boy's dark secret...and the cure that can save the ones she loves. But she may have to lay down the ultimate sacrifice to do it--her soul.

This is one of those books that for me it is hard to explain without spoiling something so I just went ahead with the back cover blurb to explain it. Though to me the back cover does not reveil enough of what this story was about so I think that is one of the reasons I was a bit disappointed when I read it and realized it was another one of those books.

I do like the storyline surrounding the 'secret' that is in the book. Though I think the characters were left a little undefined and weak. I really tried to like Grace, but something about her just bothered me.  Daniel was the best character but he just needed to have more depth, and well I just couldn't like Jude no matter how much I tried. He is suppose to be this sweet brother that Grace has and even though things are changing in him he just comes off to harsh and mean.

When I read the back cover I knew it was a bit vague on what the book was about but it sounded cool. I didn't know much about the book or its author, so I signed up to review it. So I think when I found out what the secret was (to early in the story) I was a bit let down. Don't get me wrong I like supernatural books, but I was just thinking it was going to be about something else.

Over all its not a bad book and I don't know if there is going to be a sequel to it and that might help it a bit. Though I don't know if I would read a sequel. If you like Supernatural, urban fantasy books then you might like this one.

(Book was reviewed as a part of the Around the World Book  Tour)

Faith N Fiction Saturday: Why Read?

Welcome to Faith'n'Fiction Saturday where we take a closer look at the intersection of the Christian faith and fiction. You are welcome to participate by putting your answers in comments or writing your response on your blog.


Over the next couple of weeks, I'm going to ask a series of questions that go back to the basics. Today's question is the most basic of all. Why read?

It may seem that this is a simple question, but in truth reading is a man made activity. And the act of reading is different according to language. Reading is a solitary activity which defies our understanding that we're meant to seek community, and it's a sedentary event, which keeps me from actively doing something else. There are times when I feel downright selfish for reading, like when someone else wants to talk to me, but I just want to have my nose stuck in a book.

I read to escape:

Sometimes we just get to busy with life and its great to be able to escape into the world of make believe. You can go anywhere, be anyone, take a adventure you never would in real life when you read a book.

I read because its fun:

I love reading, I have always been a reader. Everyone I work with always laughs and ask "You always have a book don't you?" I am like "Yes" Though if they want to read a book they are more apt to ask me what I might recommend. Its just pure fun to read.

I read to learn:

I believe that reading expands a persons vocabulary. Though I don't read a lot of Non-fiction, I do like to read books that are based on factual places (historicals) so I am still learning great things about real places while getting a great story that is pure fiction.

Well that is basically why I read. So why do you read?







Movie Review: The Spy Next Door

The Spy Next Door

Staring: Jackie Chan, Amber Valletta, Madeline Carroll, Will Shadley,
Alina Foley, Magnus Scheving, Bily Ray Cyrus, and George Lopez.

Bob Ho just wants to retire from the Spy business and marry his girlfriend that lives next door. He has two problems: 1) The bad guy he just caught broke out of jail during transit. 2) His girlfriend's kids hate him.


So when his girlfriend has to go out of town to be with her father Bob thinks this is a perfect time to get to know her kids by babysitting them while she is gone. Bob really didn't know what he was getting himself into when he takes on the three kids. When the boy downloads something from Bob's house thinking it was a cool video he put the bad guys on the move. They need to track down who downloaded thier stuff and are surprised to find out it comes from his favorite spy Bob Ho. Now Bob has to protect the kids from the bad guys.

I love Jackie Chan, I have been watching his movie forever even the foriegn ones where their mouths down move the same as the voice coming out of them..lol. I was afraid at first that it was going to be to much like The Pacifier with Vin Desil (can't stand him), but to me it was much better and not really that much like it. The only thing it had in common where the fact that it was dealing with watching kids.


Jackie Chan has a way of making a martial arts film fun for everyone. He hads all the cool tricks that he does with martial art action ands a bit of comedy and makes it a great family film. The little girl was my favorite character in the movie. After her brother tells her that Bob has to be a cyborg because nobody can really be that boring, she sees him do really cool things so therefore she thinks he is a cyborg..lol. (She is only four)

Over all I recommend this for the whole family and I can't wait to get this on DVD.

 

Tuesday Teasers: Darklight


Teaser Tuesdays are hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading.


Here is what you do:

(1) Grab our current reads.

(2) Let the book fall open to a random page.

(3) Share two (or three) teaser sentences from that page somewhere between lines 7 and 12 (avoiding spoilers).

Darklight by Lesley Livingston
Page: 24

"The Hunter Fae that had almost swiped Sonny's hed off bellowed in anger at the thwart. He'd obviously been pretty sure of a kill, and had it been any other adversary, he probably would have succeeded. But Sonny Flannery was a quarry of a different sort."

It's Monday! What are you reading? and 300 followers!!


It's Monday! What are you reading? is a weekly meme hosted by J.Kaye from J. Kaye's Book Blog.

Finished up last week:

Wonderous Strange by Lesley Livingston (review)
The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan (review to come)

This week:

Darklight by Lesley Livingston
The Dark Divine by Bree Despain (for a book tour)
I, Alex Cross by James Patterson (audiobook)

So what are you reading?

Okay and on to the other thing...WHOOOOOO HOOOO I got 300 followers, I am so excited. Thank you all who followers. Will come up with a contest soon!



Saturday mailbox raid!


In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by The Story Siren. All you have to do is let everyone know what books you received in your mailbox throughout the week.

For review:


The Bricklayer by Noah Boyd

Bricklayer is the pulse-pounding novel introducing Steve Vail, one of the most charismatic new heroes to come along in thriller fiction in many years. He's an ex–FBI agent who's been fired for insubordination but is lured back to the Bureau to work a case that has become more unsolvable—and more deadly—by the hour.


A woman steps out of the shower in her Los Angeles home and is startled by an intruder sitting calmly in her bedroom holding a gun. But she is frozen with fear by what he has to say about the FBI—and what he says he must do. . . .

A young agent slips into the night water off a rocky beach. He's been instructed to swim to a nearby island to deposit a million dollars demanded by a blackmailer. But his mission is riddled with hazardous tests, as if someone wanted to destroy him rather than collect the money. . . .

Vail has resigned himself to his dismissal and is content with his life as a bricklayer. But the FBI, especially Deputy Assistant Director Kate Bannon, needs help with a shadowy group that has initiated a brilliant extortion plot. The group will keep killing their targets until the agency pays them off, the amount and number of bodies escalating each time the FBI fails. One thing is clear: someone who knows a little too much about the inner workings of the Bureau is very clever —and very angry—and will kill and kill again if it means he can disgrace the FBI.

Steve Vail's options —and his time to find answers—are swiftly running out.


Swinging on a Star by Janice Thompson
 
Bella Rossi's life is nearing perfection. She's got the perfect guy, she's running a successful business, and she's about to plan her most ambitious wedding yet, a Renaissance-themed fairy tale come true, complete with period costumes and foods, horse-drawn carriages, and even a castle. There's just one hitch. The best man just happens to be Brock Benson, Hollywood's hottest and most eligible bachelor. Oh, and did we mention he's staying at the Rossi house to avoid the paparazzi? With all the pressure surrounding this wedding, Bella's not sure she's going to make it through. Add her starstruck sister, her feuding aunt and uncle, and a trio of large, sequined church ladies with even bigger personalities, and you've got a recipe for disaster--and a lot of laughs. This hilarious romantic comedy is sure to delight both fans and new readers alike.
 
I loved the first book in the series so I can't wait to read this one.
 

Out with the in Crowd by Stephanie Morrill

[close] Skylar Hoyt may have vowed to change her partying ways, but it's not so easy to change her friends. She's trying hard to live a new life, but her old one is constantly staring her in the face. Add to that two parents battling for her loyalty, a younger sister struggling with a crisis pregnancy, and a new boyfriend wishing for more of her time, and Skylar feels like she can't win. After all, how do you choose favorites among the people you love most? In this second novel in THE REINVENTION OF SKYLAR HOYT series, Stephanie Morrill delivers another compelling story that addresses teen issues with style and grace.

Won:


I, Alex Cross by James Patterson (audiobook)

Detective Alex Cross is pulled out of a family celebration and given the awful news that a beloved relative has been found brutally murdered. Alex vows to hunt down the killer, and soon learns that she was mixed up in one of Washington's wildest scenes. And she was not this killer's only victim.


The hunt for her murderer leads Alex and his girlfriend, Detective Brianna Stone, to a place where every fantasy is possible, if you have the credentials to get in. Alex and Bree are soon facing down some very important, very protected, very dangerous people in levels of society where only one thing is certain--they will do anything to keep their secrets safe.

Alex Cross is your only hope to stay alive. As Alex closes in on the killer, he discovers evidence that points to the unimaginable--a revelation that could rock the entire world. With the unstoppable action, unforeseeable twists, and edge-of-your-seat suspense that only a James Patterson thriller delivers, I, Alex Cross is the master of suspense at his sharpest and best. (Can't remember where I won this one)
 

Candor by Pam Bachorz (ARC)
 
Oscar Banks has everything under control. In a town

where his father brainwashes everyone, he's found a way
to secretly fight the subliminal Messages. He's got them
all fooled: Oscar's the top student and the best-behaved
teen in town. Nobody knows he's made his own Messages
to deprogram his brain. Oscar has even found a way to
get rich. For a hefty price, he helps new kids escape
Candor, Florida before they're transformed into
cookie-cutter teens. But then Nia Silva moves to Candor,
and Oscar's carefully-controlled world crumbles.

(Won this off The Lateiner Gang blog)

Doesn't Candor have a cool cover, mine don't look like that because its a ARC, but I think this cover is real cool.


So what did you get in your mailbox?
 

Review of Wonderous Strange by Lesley Livingston


Wonderous Strange by Lesley Livingston
Pages: 352
Publisher: Harper Teen

Kelly Winslow wants to be a actress and so she struggles living in New York to pursue her dreams away from her Aunt Emma. She started out as the understudy for another actress who was playing Titiana in 'A Midsummer's Night Dream' at the Avalon Grande Theatre. When something happens to the main actress Kelly gets her chance to play Titiana, but what she didn't know is how close her real life was going to come to mirroring her acting life.

Kelly has always loved Central Park it is one of her favorite places to be, she goes there to rehearse her lines. It is here that Sonny Flannery comes into her life. Sonny is a Janus, a protector of the Gate between the Otherworld and the Mortal world. He is a changling, which means that he was stolen as a child and raised among the fairy folk. King Auberon raised Sonny and made him a Janus.

The gates between the two worlds use to be open, but when a mortal came and stole the Fairy King's daughter. Auberon shut the gates but something happened when he shut them and they left cracks. That is when he formed the Janus, thirteen changlings to guard the gates. During the Nine Nights the cracks become even wider and this is the Janus hardest time.

Sonny soon finds out who Kelly really is and makes it his own business to see her safely protected. Kelly is a fairy princess but she has no clue, when she finds out it seems more like a dream than real. Though she has seen the dangers and trust Sonny to protect her. Will Kelly give up her rightful air to protect those she loves or will she take on the challenge of the Unseelie Court of Fairies?

First off I want to say that I read that this was Lesley Livingston's debut novel and so I would like to say that for a debut novel she has done very well. She defiantly has talent and I can't wait to read Darklight which I just started looking at this morning.

I haven't read a lot of books on fairies I was always the vampire and werewolf girl, but with books like these the fairy world is starting to grow on me. I think I like it because as I have looked up fairies on the internet there are so many different kinds of fairies it gives the books a wide variety of settings an tales.

The one thing I love about this book is how Lesley has taken the play 'A Midsummer's Night Dream' and mirrored it when the fairy world. It is written as if Shakespeare himself has witnessed the fairy world and wrote a play about it. It really made the story much more interesting, especially since I am a huge Shakespeare fan and I love this play.

I love Kelly and Sonny they are great characters and I can't wait to see what happens to them in Darklight. I really did like all the side characters, well with the exception of one character but you are suppose to not like that one..LOL (not saying because it would give to much away). Even Tiff, Kelly's roomate was likeable especially after you find out who she really is..

Over all I really loved this book and I would recommend it to any one who loves reading books about fairies.






Darklight by Lesley Livingston giveaway!


I was so thrilled to receive a email from Karen of Harper Collins asking me if I would like to review Darklight. (I am now reading Wonderous Strange since I had not got around to reading it yet.) She also said I could give away a copy of Darklight to my readers.

The setting for Darklight alternates between the Otherworld and the mortal world realm –-- including The Avalon Grande Theatre (Kelly’s Kelley’s home-away-from-home (the theater), The River – her a fantastical, exclusive nightclub in Midtown Manhattan whose patrons are far more than just the mortal ‘in’ crowd, apartment she shares with her model roommate and New York’s Central Park. Even the most seasoned New Yorker will be fascinated by Livingston’s transformation of Central Park from the city’s most beautiful green space into a dark and mysterious threshold between the two worlds. “I did tons of research on Central Park. My goal was to make the scenes in the Central Ppark as geographically accurate as possible, both geographically and atmospherically, so even people familiar with the parkit would be amazed at the shift that the much- beloved park undergoes after dusk.” (Harper Collins press release)



So if you are a fan of Lesley Livingston's Wonderous Strange and would love to read Darklight here is your chance to win a copy!

Contest Rules

US and Canada Only (sorry my international friends)

To Enter:

Just leave a comment and a way to contact you to enter.

additional entries:

old follower +4
new follower +2
blog about it +4
sidebar or tweet +2

Ends Feb. 11th



It's Monday! What are you reading?


It's Monday! What are you reading? is a weekly meme hosted by J. Kaye from J. Kaye's book blog. It is were we spotlight what we are reading or have finished reading.

Started reading:

Percy Jackson and the Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan (want to read it before the movie comes out)
Wonderous Strange by Lesley Livingston

Up Next:

Darklight by Lesley Livingston
Legend of the White Wolf by Terry Spear

Finished:

Dead Guy Spy by David Lubar
Undead Much by Stacy Jay



Review of Dead Guy Spy by David Lubar


Dead Guy Spy: Nathan Abercrombie, Accidental Zombie by David Lubar
Pages: 160
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates. LLC (Starscape)
Middle Grade Fiction


This is book two of the Nathan Abercrombie, Accidental Zombie (My Rotten Life is book one) This is a book that you can read and understand without having to read the first one. I have not read the first book and I enjoyed Dead Guy Spy.

Now you have to remember that this is a middle grade book and I am going to say that it would probably be more enjoyed by the younger middle graders (8-10). I also think it is more fitting for boys than girls but I think both can enjoy it. Nathan Abercrombie, was in a accident with some chemicals that left him dead. He doesn't have to breathe, he has no heart beat, he has no need to sleep. His best friend calls him a zombie, but Nathan doesn't really like that term. The cool thing about being dead is you can stay up all night, but bad thing is that when you break something it breaks off of you. Nathan has some glue that is specially made to put him back together when he breaks.

BUM (Bureau of Useful Misadventures) knows that Nathan is a half dead zombie and they want to use him in their organization. Meanwhile, Nathan's gym teacher thinks he needs to toughing them up, but Nathan's just worried about losing a body part in the process.

Nathan thinks it would be cool to be a spy but when he learns somethings about  BUM he is not sure if they are the good guys or the bad guys.

Overall, I thought this was a cute book, for me it was a fast read. I thought it was funny in parts and would recommend it to anyone who has young readers. It has all the fun elements of a kids book, robot squirells, lots of talk about farting, and one very gaseous mess due to a half dead zombie eating  chicken wings.



Saturday mailbox raid!

In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by The Story Siren. She always does a lovely vlog for her IMM, but I am not near that brave. :0)

This week I got a couple of books:


Dead Guy Spy: Nathan Abercrombie accidental zombie by David Lubar
Pages: 160
Publisher: Tom Doherty Associates

Nathan Abercrombie is getting used to his rotten life as a half-dead zombie. The good thing is he doesn't feel any pain. The bad thing is his body can't heal, so he has to be really careful not to break anything. But that's hard to do when his wrestling obsessed gym teacher, Mr. Lomux, decides it's time to toughen up the class.

Then one day, Nathan is approached by the secret organization B.U.M. aka the Bureau of Useful Misadventures--which offers him a cure in exchange for his help. Nathan jumps at the chance to become the world's first zombie spy, but soon discovers that B.U.M may not be quite what it seems. Can Nathan trust them? Or is B.U.M.'s offer too good to be true?

I am going to guess that I might have got this book from Goodreads.com giveaways. I remember signing up for it because it looked cute. I can't think of any other reason I received this book this week.  I did not realize it was book two until after I started reading it. Though its always best to start with the first one I don't think I am really missing anything, it tells you how he became a dead person in this book. If I wouldn't have snooped around looking for the publisher I wouldn't have known it was the second one..LOL  It is a middle grade book it is pretty funny so far, I am liking it. I didn't mean to pick it up and read it but it was lying right by my desk and my other book was over by the couch so I picked it up and now I am going to have to finish it tonight.

From PBS:


Howling at the Moon by Karen MacInerney
Pages: 360
Publishers: Ballantine books

Sophie Garon seems to have it all: a great job at a prestigious accounting firm, a closet that rivals a Nordstrom showroom, and a terrific boyfriend wo isn't afraid to use the "M" word. There's just one little itty bitty problem: Sophie is a werewolf- and her time of the month has a whole new meaning.

Needless to say, life among yummy flesh-and-blood humans is no piece of steak... er, cake!, but regular doses of wolfsbane tea and a mother who runs a magic shop have helped Sophie keep her paranormal pedigree under wraps. Still, when a sexy, golden-eyed werewolf prowls into town, Sophie finds herself struggling to keep things on track with her super hot (and super human) lawyer boyfriend. What's more, someone is threatening to expose Sophie for what she really is. And when her mother is accused of selling a poison-laced potion, Sophie must sniff out a culprit before the fur hits the fan.

Thought this one sounded interesting. :0)

Well that is all that I got this week, unless something ended up at my brother's, because some of the UPS guys don't like coming down my dirt lane. The wimps..LOL So what did you get?


Review of Undead Much by Stacey Jay


Undead Much by Stacey Jay
Page: 304
Publisher: Razorbill

Megan Berry just wants to be a ordinary teenager, but with super strong zombie settler powers her life will never be normal. Her best friend tried to kill her and ruin homecoming and just when she thought things were calming down, it starts up again. Now there are stronger zombies they take her super powers teamed up with her new sort of friend, Monica. She also has to deal with school stuff like Cheerleaders vs. Pom squad both trying to get the half time slot during the basket ball games. On top of all that everyone thinks she is raising the zombies because of her specail powerful mojo and keeping secrets from her.

Oh yeah and lets not forget Cliff, a super cute zombie, who is psychic and he keeps fallowing Megan around talking about a zombie apocalypse. He also keeps turning on the charm making Megan got a little dizzy around him, but wait he is DEAD, and she has a boyfriend.

Will Megan Berry be able to figure out who is behind the strong zombies and the secret before she is thrown into settler prison?

I liked Undead Much, probably not as much as the first in the series, but that is usually how it goes. It is very interesting to see how much trouble Megan can get herself into as the series progresses and it leaves you with a cliffhanger ending so I can't wait to see what happens in the next book.

It has a lot of teenage angst, sometimes I just felt like slapping her and saying get over it your a zombie settler, life is not going to be normal! I like how the author dills with the relationship between a older teenage boyfriend with a young girlfriend. Since he is more experienced she has a lot of turmoil on how far to let things go and he is a raging ball of hormones.

I liked Monica's character a lot more in this one than the first one, you sort of get to see her softer side. I loved Cliff, the psychic zombie he just sounded so cute.

I would say the one thing that I didn't really care for in the book was Megan's parents. Here Megan is getting in trouble for things she didn't do, yet the parents are keeping everything a secret. They won't tell her what the big mistake is, or what the charges against her are, forcing her to find out on her own. When she finds out certian things on her own its very overwhelming for her and should have been told to her by her parents to start with. That stuff just made me a bit mad, though I know it added to the storyline, I just didn't like it.

 Over all I liked the storyline and would recommend it to those who like zombie books. Still not sure if I am won over by zombies but will continue the series.

Received this book to review as part of Around the World Book Tours.


The Brick Layer by Noah Boyd Giveaway!

Katrina, a publishist from Harper Collins is allowing me to giveaway two copies of The Brick Layer a new FBI thriller. I am very excited to get to review this one but more excited that I get to share it with you in a giveaway!



Someone gives you a dangerous puzzle to solve, one that may kill you or someone else, and you're about to fail. . . . And there is no other option. No one who can help. No one but the Bricklayer.


The Bricklayer is the pulse-pounding novel introducing Steve Vail, one of the most charismatic new heroes to come along in thriller fiction in many years. He's an ex–FBI agent who's been fired for insubordination but is lured back to the Bureau to work a case that has become more unsolvable—and more deadly—by the hour.

A woman steps out of the shower in her Los Angeles home and is startled by an intruder sitting calmly in her bedroom holding a gun. But she is frozen with fear by what he has to say about the FBI—and what he says he must do. . . .

A young agent slips into the night water off a rocky beach. He's been instructed to swim to a nearby island to deposit a million dollars demanded by a blackmailer. But his mission is riddled with hazardous tests, as if someone wanted to destroy him rather than collect the money. . . .

Vail has resigned himself to his dismissal and is content with his life as a bricklayer. But the FBI, especially Deputy Assistant Director Kate Bannon, needs help with a shadowy group that has initiated a brilliant extortion plot. The group will keep killing their targets until the agency pays them off, the amount and number of bodies escalating each time the FBI fails. One thing is clear: someone who knows a little too much about the inner workings of the Bureau is very clever —and very angry—and will kill and kill again if it means he can disgrace the FBI.

Steve Vail's options —and his time to find answers—are swiftly running out.

Noah Boyd's The Bricklayer is written with the bracing authenticity only someone who has been a crack FBI investigator can provide. And in this masterful debut Boyd has created a mind-bending maze of clues and traps inside a nonstop thrill ride that is sure to leave readers exhilarated and enthralled. (from Amazon.com)

Contest Rules

To enter please leave a comment with your contact information
US residents only

Extra entries:
old followers +4
new followers +2
blog about this contest +4
post on your sidebar +2

Contest ends 2/5





Teen Fire: Sourcebook's YA imprint

I got this great email today about the new Sourcebook imprint called Teen Fire, some of the things that you can do on there makes me wish I was a teen again..lol Here is some information:

If you visit our new website (http://teenfire.sourcebooks.com/), you’ll also be able to preview the first few chapters of ALL of our books. Additionally, you can start groups, post comments, upload videos and interact not only with other YA readers, but with Sourcebooks authors who will also have a presence on the site!


If you log on right now, you can:


Help Sourcebooks pick the new cover for Bran Hambric: The Specter Key. Sketches by Brandon Dorman (who designed Savvy and Fablehaven) are up and awaiting votes! If you let us know what you think, you could win one of 100 Bran Hambric half-moon charm necklaces, 1 of 50 signed Bran Hambric posters, or 1 of 3 signed hardcover books!

-Join the Sourcebooks Fire Teen Review board! Would you like to review all of our publications before we print them--and let us know what you think!? If you are a teen that loves YA, you can help us with our new line!

-Think you have what it takes to be the next big thing in YA? Sourcebooks Fire wants to read YOUR ideas, so we have teamed up with Georgia from #YALitChat and are hosting open submissions for all of February.

-Check out vlogger James Holder’s video on new years resolutions for Team Jacob, let us know your resolutions, and win one of three advanced copies of Eden Maguire’s US debut Beautiful Dead (March 2010).

-If you’re in the New York area, come party with us on March 18th to celebrate the birth of Sourcebooks Fire! In attendence will be Sourcebooks Fire authors and friends, with a guest performance by Tiger Beat--the first ever YA authors rock band starring Libba Bray, (our own) Dan Ehrenhaft, Barney Miller, and Natalie Standiford.

If you are a teen or you have a teen I would recommend going and checking it out its a pretty cool site. I love YA books so I signed up so I can keep up with what Sourcebook will have in the future.


BTT: Flapper? Or not a Flapper?


Do you read the inside flaps that describe a book before or while reading it?

On occasion I have glanced at the flap to see what it might say, but usually I just read the back cover of the book to see if I want to read it or not. I hardly ever read the introduction or afterwards, or readers questions. I just read the book. :O) So I will have to say I am not a Flapper.

What about you?


On my Wishlist!


On my Wishlist is a weekly meme hosted by Book Chick City. Just grab something from your wishlist and let your readers know about it so they can add it to their wishlist if they want.

Darklight by Lesley Livingston


Faerie can't lie . . . or can they?


Much has changed since autumn, when Kelley Winslow learned she was a Faerie princess, fell in love with changeling guard Sonny Flannery, and saved the mortal realm from the ravages of the Wild Hunt. Now Kelley is stuck in New York City, rehearsing Romeo and Juliet and missing Sonny more with every stage kiss, while Sonny has been forced back to the Otherworld and into a deadly game of cat and mouse with the remaining Hunters and Queen Mabh herself.

When a terrifying encounter sends Kelley tumbling into the Otherworld, her reunion with Sonny is joyful but destined to be cut short. An ancient, hidden magick is stirring, and a dangerous new enemy is willing to risk everything to claim that power. Caught in a web of Faerie deception and shifting allegiances, Kelley and Sonny must tread carefully, for each next step could topple a kingdom . . . or tear them apart.

With breathtakingly high stakes, the talented Lesley Livingston delivers soaring romance and vividly magical characters in Darklight, the second novel in the trilogy that began with Wondrous Strange.

What's on your wishlist?




It's Monday! What are you reading?


What Are You Reading Mondays are hosted by J. Kaye's Book Blog! Her blog is pretty neat, so check it out and participate.

Last week I finished:

You Are So Undead To Me by Stacey Jay

This week I am reading:

Undead Much by Stacey Jay
Wonderous Strange by Lesley Livingston

What are you reading?




Review of You Are So Undead To Me by Stacey Jay


You Are So Undead To Me by Stacey Jay
Pages: 265
Publisher: Razorbill (Penguin group)
Bought at a closeout sale

Megan Berry is a zombie settler, this means that when someone dies and they still have unresolved issues (sort of like ghost) then they go and find a settler. Megan is just a typical teenager who wants to get on the pom sqaud with her best friend Jess. She wants to go to the Homecoming dances with the hottest  guy in school, Josh. What she doesn't want is to have is zombies messing everything up.

Megan really doesn't want to be a zombie settler, but she has no choice because it was something passed down by birth through her mom. She has been dealing with zombies since she was a small child. It was also when she was younger that she was attached by a reanimated corpse, this is a zombie who is a flesh eater. After this happened she had not had any zombies visit her, but now that she is fifteen it is happening again and she must deal with the pressures of being a settler and trying to be a regular teenager.

Just one problem, some one is using black magic to make a lot of reanimated corpses. Some one seems to be after Megan and something strange is going on down by the football field. If Megan can't figure out who is behind all the flesh eating zombies it could lead to a huge disaster at the homecoming.

Okay so this was my first zombie book and well I must say it was interesting. I really wasn't sure what to think at first, I am not really into zombies, but since it is mainly based on zombie settlers I could handle it. The story line kept my attention and I thought it was interesting that a person could settle a zombie sort of like those who see ghost help them. It sounds a bit grosser than a ghost though, all that slobbery zombie slim and rotten corpse smells..lol.

I sort of thought I had it figured out who was doing the black magic, but the author did through a few different leads to try and keep you from guessing. I did figure one out but not the other so that was a bit of a surprise. I think if you are like me and have not ever tried a zombie book, then I think this is a good book to try. I would recommend this to all zombie lovers as well as those looking to branch out into something different.

Now I am off to start the sequel which I am reviewing for Around the World Book Tours.



Saturday mailbox raid!

Well its that time again for In My Mailbox. I almost didn't think I was getting anything but I did end up getting a few things on Friday. Hosted by The Story Siren (check out her cool site)

I bought:


Firespell by Chloe Neill

A new series about a boarding school filled with something worse than homework.


Lily's parents have sent her to a fancy boarding school in Chicago filled with the ultra-rich. If that wasn't bad enough, she's hearing and seeing bizarre things on St. Sophie's creepy campus. Her roommate, Scout, keeps her sane, but keeps disappearing at night. When one day Lily finds Scout running from real-life monsters, she learns the hard way that Scout is involved in a splinter group of rebel teens.

They protect Chicago from demons, vamps, and dark magic users. It's too bad Lily doesn't have powers of her own to help. At least, none that she's discovered yet...

Book Tour (Around the World Book Tours)


Undead Much by Stacey Jay

Q: How many guys does it take to make your boyfriend wild with jealousy?

A: Only one, if he's UNDEAD.

Megan Berry had a perfectly average new-sundress-and-boy-obsessed life--until her power to settle the Undead returned. Oh, and then her best friend tried to kill her--and ruin homecoming--with a bunch of black magically raised zombies. At least she got a spot on the pom squad and a smokin' boyfriend (Ethan). But now Megan is in deep fertilizer all over again.

Why? Well, let's see...

· Feral new super-strong zombies? Check.

· Cheerleader vs. pom squad turf war threatening half time as they know it? Check.

· An Undead psychic hottie (Cliff) who's predicting a zombie apocalypse--and doing his best to tempt Megan away from Ethan? Yum. I mean, Check.

· Earth-shattering secrets that could land Megan in Settler prison for life? Um, IT WASN'T ME!!!

Everyone thinks Megan's at fault for the new uber-zombie uprising. Looks like she'll need the help of both Cliff and Ethan if she's going to prove her innocence before it's too late...

I won:


The Dark Divine by Bree Despain

Grace Divine, daughter of the local pastor, always knew something terrible happened the night Daniel Kalbi disappeared--the night she found her brother Jude collapsed on the porch, covered in his own blood--but she has no idea what a truly monstrous secret that night held.


The memories her family has tried to bury resurface when Daniel returns, three years later, and enrolls in Grace and Jude's high school. Despite promising Jude she'll stay away, Grace cannot deny her attraction to Daniel's shocking artistic abilities, his way of getting her to look at the world from new angles, and the strange, hungry glint in his eyes.

The closer Grace gets to Daniel, the more she jeopardizes her life, as her actions stir resentment in Jude and drive him to embrace the ancient evil Daniel unleashed that horrific night. Grace must discover the truth behind the boy's dark secret...and the cure that can save the ones she loves. But she may have to lay down the ultimate sacrifice to do it--her soul.


Well that was all I go this week. I was beginning to think the weather up things (I hate snow) but then the mail man loved me after all and sent me a couple of books..LOL

So what did you get?