Tyger, Tyger now in paperback

I read Tyger, Tyger by Kersten Hamilton a while back as a netgalley ARC and I really enjoyed it. The author wanted me to let everyone know that Tyger, Tyger as of September 26th is now available in paperback. I recommend that if you are a fan of goblin fantasy books that you pick this one up and give it a read. The second book is coming out November, 22nd, 2011 called In the Forrest of the Night and I can't wait to get myself a kindle version when it  comes out!

If you haven't read Tyger, Tyger  yet I am linking to the paperback version on amazon.com, and if you have read it then get the link to the sequel also listed.

Tyger, Tyger by Kersten Hamilton
In the Forrest of the Night by Kersten Hamilton

*ATTN everyone, especially librarians*

Kersten is having a trailer contest for In the Forest of the Night and if your trailer wins you could win a thousand dollars for your library!!! Just go to this link for more information and rules. http://home.comcast.net/~kerstenhamilton/Trailer/IFN_trailer.html

Coming Soon to Books, Movies, Reviews. Oh my! will be a interview and giveaway from Kersten Hamilton! So stay tuned.





BTT: Reading Out Loud

Booking Thru Thursday is asking questions about reading out loud.
1. What do you think of reading aloud/being read to? Does it bring back memories of your childhood? Your children’s childhood?
2. Does this affect the way you feel about audio books?
3. Do you now have times when you read aloud or are read to?

Nobody reads out loud to me nor do I read out loud to anyone. I think if I have a kid I might read to him/her out loud, but not sure about having someone read to me. 

I love audio books if the narrators voice can hold my attention, but I have found that if I find the voice is lacking in enthusiasms while reading I can't really listen. I have to have someones who's voice is really engaging and they must  at least attempt to make different voices for different characters.

So what is your take on reading out loud?

It's Monday! What are you reading?

It's Monday! What are you reading is hosted by Shelia at Book Journey.

Last week I finished:

Reaper Two Six Year Five: Rise of Global Insurgency by Robert Grand
The Dead Kid Detective Agency by Evan Munday (review)

Reading now:

Never Have I Ever by Sara Shepard (five chapters in and its not to bad) (bought this one so its my fun read)
Variant by Robinson Wells (This one is strange, but so far not bad)(It's from Netgalley and will be coming out October 4th)

Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern (Not really done much reading on this one)

So that is what I am reading right now, what about you?


Review of The Dead Kid Detective Agency


The Dead Kid Detective Agency by Evan Munday
Pages: 300
Publisher: EWC Press
Review Souce: Netgalley
Rating: 3.5/5
Reviewed by: Stormi
Authors website: http://www.idontlikemundays.com/
Buy it now:
Amazon
Barnes and Noble

Thirteen-year-old October Schwartz is new in town; short on friends and the child of a clinically depressed science teacher, she spends her free time in the Sticksville Cemetery and it isn’t long before she befriends the ghosts of five dead teenagers, each from a different era of the past. Using October’s smarts and the ghosts’ abilities to walk through walls and roam around undetected, they form the Dead Kid Detective Agency, a group committed to solving Sticksville’s most mysterious mysteries. So when the high school’s beloved French teacher dies in a suspicious car accident, it provides the agency with its first bona fide case, putting them in the midst of a murder plot thick with car chases, cafeteria fights, and sociopathic math teachers, and sending them on an adventure that might just uncover the truth about a bomb that exploded 40 years ago.

This was a fun and interesting little story based around a misfit girl and five dead ghost kids. October dresses like a goth and on her first day of High school gets labeled a "Zombie Tramp" right away by the pretty popular girl.

She is only twelve when she starts high school and trys desperatly to keep it all a secret because she doesn't want the other kids to know, since it is already hard enough to fit in. October finds solice in the cemetery behind her house and starts writing a horror novel. When she accidently wakes up the ghost of five dead teenagers she is at first a little frightened but then they soon become her friends.

The only teacher that she really liked at her school is killed, but everyone thinks its a accident. October just can't let it go and that is when they form The Dead Kid Detective Agency.  They set out to prove that Mr. O'Shea was murdered. 

I really found October to be a interesting character, some might see her as being messed up because she hangs in a cemetery but I thought it really just fit who she was and where else would you want to write about horror. Her father is stranger than she is and he is clinicly depressed. Yumi and Stacy are Octobers only living friends and they are a strange pair. (Oh by the way Stacy is a boy)

There are only a couple things that I didn't like about this story. As you are reading all of a sudden you get a piece of diary from someone you don't even know. Even though you find out who this person is later in the book, it really just disrupted the flow of the book. I also  did not care for the fact that Stacy never gets a last name, he is always known as Stacy not sure of his last name, or what ever his last name is and that drove me crazy. I would have prefered to just know him as Stacy.

I really think that young readers will really find this mystery novel very interesting and fun to read. I would recommend it for a Middle Grade audience although I think it can be a fun light read for young teenagers as well.

 

Banned Book Week: Sept. 24th-Oct. 1st



Since this week is Banned Book Week that I should at least have a post about it. :) Whether I do or do not believe in any sort of censorship doesn't really matter, what matters is those few who must shout the loudest about things they fill should be banned.


Most people who are activist for banning books have not once cracked the spine on the book they are banning. This is the sort of thing that angers me more than people wanting to censor a book. A parent reads a couple of sentences in a book and finds something upsetting so they think the book is filth with out ever reading to see what it was really about.

I know a lot of people who had never read a Harry Potter book but where the first to protest it because it was about witches and wizards. They acted like it was the first ever book about witches, and I bet they had watched or read other things about witches and wizards and might not have even thought about it.

The one thing that really makes me mad is the fact that they take  piece of literature like, Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, and take out what they deem inappropriate words all because someone complains about it being racist. "Hello, people! The book was written in a time where that was how they seen a person of color."   I can't say that I like the "n" word but to destroy a piece of great fiction work just to appease a few people is really stupid and it makes me angry!!!


So I say in support of Banned Book Week we all grab a banned book and read it!

Follow Friday

Getting it in a little late but here is my Follow Friday! This weekly meme is hosted by Parajunkee's View.

Do you have a favorite series that you read over and over again? Tell us a bit about it and why you keep on revisiting it?

I really don't have any favorite series that I would read over again. I honestly don't have time to reread anything, there are way to many books out there to read for the first time. Between my huge review tbr pile and my for fun books tbr pile I don't have time to think about rereading anything. I do know that there are some out their I would never ever touch again and don't even own copies of and I won't name titles because I might get struck in the heart with a sparkly wooden stake...lol..

The only book I have ever reread in my entire life is Persuasion by Jane Austen as it is my all time favorite book ever.

What about you? Do you have a favorite reread?

Review of Doodling


Doodling by Jonathan Gould
Ebook
Publisher: Amazon Kindle Devices
Review Souce: The author
Rating: 3/5
Reviewed by: Tim

Neville Lansdowne fell off the world.
Actually he did not so much fall off as let go. The world had been moving so quickly lately and Neville was finding it almost impossible to keep up.

Doodling is an engaging comic fantasy which relates the events that befall Neville after he finds himself abandoned by the world and adrift in the middle of an asteroid field. Douglas Adams meets Lewis Carroll (with just a touch of Gulliver's Travels) as Neville wanders through his new home, meeting a variety of eccentric characters and experiencing some most unexpected adventures.

Thoughts:

Have you ever wanted to get out of the rat race? Is it all going too fast? Can’t keep up? Feel like you’re going to fall off?


Maybe what you need is a good laugh, and Gould serves them up in this allegory about Neville who falls off the world because it is spinning too fast. He finds himself among the asteroid belt, and the laughs start, for almost everyone he meets is crazy.

He meets a colony holding a religious ceremony to summon a toaster to their asteroid. He finds an “aimless” asteroid, where he has a particularly aimless talk with the woman who lives there. He encounters three cyclists in a never-ending race, and he meets the “Party People” who celebrate by drinking dust out of Champaign bottles.

But then Neville meets Helen, and astrophysicist who has calculated that in three and a half hours the earth will break free from the hold of the sun and come crashing through the asteroid belt.

Neville now has a mission; save the asteroid belt. If you’re a teen or older, read the book to laugh at the way he organizes his loony friends to save both the earth and the asteroid belt.
Although Gould writes in the comic vein, he teaches some important lessons. For example, after meeting the “aimless” woman:

“[Neville] jumped off the asteroid and watched as it zigzagged crazily away. In his heart, he knew that what the girl had said was wrong. It was important to have an aim. What was the point of living if you didn’t? Neville decided there and then that he had better find an aim for himself. But thinking about your life direction while you’re standing in the middle of an asteroid field isn’t such an easy thing to do. The best way to work out what his aim would be was to get out into the open, so he could concentrate better. Neville found a nice quiet spot, turned himself around so that he didn’t have to look at the asteroids any more and started to think.What would be a good aim? How could he create a fulfilling life for himself here in the middle of nothingness?”

That’s a good question, and congratulations to Gould for answering it.

It's Monday! What are you reading?

I woke up this morning and hope it wasn't Monday, but alas it was...lol. So today I have decided to participate in It's Monday! What are you reading hosted by Sherri at Book Journey. I haven't done this in a few weeks and well I have been really busy and haven't had a lot of time to read so still working on a lot of the same books I was last week, and the week before...lol

Recently I finished:

The Berlin Boxing Club by Robert Sharenow (review) This is not my usual type of read, but oh my!!!! This book is very good. I was I haven't been grabbed by a book in a long time and this one just sucked me right in and held my attention to the end. Great read and I highly recommend it.

Zombies of the World by Ross Payton (review) For all my zombie loving friends out there this book is for you! It tells all about zombies, etc and even though I am not a zombie fan I found it to be interesting.

Books being read right now:

Reaper Two-Six by Robert Grand (review book) It's not bad but at the same time I am not big military action lover and I sort of get lost in the lingo.

The Frankincense Trail by Jody Kihara (review book) Interesting Arabian night's type story.

The Dead Kid Detectives Agency by Evan Munday (netgalley book that I have had for a while and need to read) It's different..lol

Never Have I Ever (The Lying Game #2) by Sara Shepard (My fun time book, this one is mine and I enjoyed the first one!) So far its pretty good, still wanting to know who killed Sutton???  (I only watched a small bit of the TV series to know they totally screwed up the story line and I just couldn't watch it :(  )

Okay so that is the run down on all the books I am currently reading and it is safe to say that while I love my ereader it is bad for me because I start to many book at once...LOL

So what are you reading?

In My Mailbox

In My Mailbox is hosted by Kristi at The Story Siren! I am experimenting with a slideshow! Hope it works.


Netgalley:

If I Tell by Janet Gurtler
My Lunatic Life by Sharon Sala
Demons Like It Hot by Sydney Ayers (So glad Sourcebook has come to netgalley!)
Every Other Day by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Touch by Jus Accardo
Dark Eden by Patrick Carman

Bought:

Rosemary and Rue by Seanan McGuire

That's what I got this week. So what is in your mailbox?

I would also like to invite any bloggers who might want to participate in Frightfest to comment on the post or email me at booklady2007@gmail.com (Whether you want to do you own post on your blog or guest post on mine)

Frightfest 2011

I am going to do a Frightfest this year Oct. 22nd-31st and I would like to invite any author who might want to participate with a guest post or if they have a horror book they would like reviewed. Also if any bloggers would like to participate too I can link your website with mine. (or if you have a haunted story and you would like to do a blogger guest post)  I put up a linky in case you wanted to sign up if your going to post on your blog.

Review of Zombies of the World











Zombies of the World by Ross Payton
Format: Ebook
Publisher: Slang Design
Review Source: Ross Payton, the author
My Rating: 4/5
Reviewed by: Stormi

Zombies menace humanity, yet we barely understand them.
There are books that show you how to kill the undead but this is the first study to explain the importance of zombies to us. Zombies of the World reveals the undead to be a valuable part of our ecosystem and the key to new discoveries in medicine and technology.No other book covers these topics. Zombies of the World brilliantly documents that evolution has led to a wide variety of species.

Few outside the scientific community even realize that creatures like the Egyptian Mummy (Mortifera mumia aegyptus) are actually zombies. Some species are even harmless to humans. The Dancing Zombie (Mortifera immortalis choreographicus) only seeks to thrill humans with elaborate dance routines. Destroying the undead isn t always the answer. Even if we could annihilate all zombies, we would lose knowledge potentially vital to our own survival.

After decades of research, we have no idea why zombies never tire or stop. They possess an endless source of energy to shamble or (in some cases) sprint after us. Unlocking this mystery could benefit all humanity. Only Zombies of the World tackles this issue and many other paradoxes.

Most people probably know by now that I am not a huge fan of zombies. So I was a little sceptical about accepting Zombies of the World to review. I also thought that it might be interesting to see how the book described different species of zombies.

Zombies of the World is a fun, satirical look on the zombie world. Ross Payton really did a lot of research on zombies, and then with a good imagination filled in the rest. In this book you learn about where zombies might have originated from or migrated too. How to survive a zombie attach (I find the Run from a zombie to be the best approach!) I also found it very interesting to learn a little about the different types of zombies, from Haitian zombies to Domesticated Gray Shamblers (I actually think I seen some of those at work the other day..lol)

I think that this is a must have for anybody who is a die hard zombie fan (zombie girl, this is for you!) If you have any type of interest in zombies I think it is well worth the price to add to your zombie collection. Though it still has not made me a fan of zombies, I did find it interesting.

For some added fun I have put to episodes of Zombies of the World that I found on Youtube and you can find more information on Zombies of the World by going to http://www.zombiesoftheworld.com/.

Review of Jinn Nation












Jinn Nation by Caroline Barnard-Smith
Pages: 284
Rating: 4 out of 5
Review Source: The Author CarolineBarnard-Smith
Back of Book Synopsis (from goodreads.com):
Review by: Lex Write

Once, the vampire Dylan had feared nothing and no one. He'd rampaged throughout the world on a seemingly never ending quest to fill his eternal years with the finest, most outrageous extravagances; with exquisite, soft-limbed young women and copious amounts of rich, vibrating blood. But life, however full of joy, inevitably changes.

Finding himself alone for the first time in his long unlife, Dylan turns to the preternatural race of savage creatures called the jinn - a path that inevitably leads him to Christa, a strangely childlike woman with the power to control minds and read thoughts. Mutually intrigued by each other, they set out on a blood-soaked road trip that crosses the United States and the Atlantic Ocean,finally leading them beyond the world itself to the mysterious fae kingdoms of the Inbetween.

My Thoughts:

First of all, I have never heard of Jinn before, so right off the bat I was really intrigued, I was also excited that Jinn Nation was (mostly) not like the typical vampire novel.

Since I had never heard of Jinn, I looked them up because I figured if I had never heard of them before, others might not have as well. So, here is the definition by Alan G. Hefner on the website EncyclopediaMythica (www.pantheon.org/articles/j/jinn.html)

“In Arabian and Muslim folklore jinns are ugly and evil demons having supernatural powers which they can bestow on persons having powers to call them up. In the Western world they are called genies.

Legend has it that King Solomon possessed  a ring, probably a diamond, with which he called up jinns to help his armies in battle. The concept that this king employed the help of jinns may have originated from 1 Kings 6:7, "And the house, when it was in building,  was built of stone made ready before it was brought there, so there was neither hammer nor axe nor and tool of iron heard in the house, while it was in building."

In Islam, jinns are fiery spirits (Qur'an 15:27)particularly associated with the desert. While they are disruptive of human life, they are considered worthy of being saved. A person dying in a state of great sin may be changed into a jinni in the period of a barzakh, separation or barrier.

The highest of the jinns is Iblis, formerly called Azazel, the prince of darkness, or the Devil. The jinns were thought by some to be spirits that are lower than angels because they are made of fire and are not immortal. They can take on human and animal shapes to influence men to do good or evil. They are quick to punish those indebted to them who do not follow their many rules.

In the "Arabian Nights" jinns or genies came from Aladdin's Lamp.

There are several myths concerning the home of the jinns. According to Persian mythology some of them live in a place called Jinnistan. Others say jinns live with other supernatural beings in the Kaf,mystical emerald mountains surrounding the earth.”

The Jinn in Jinn Nation are similar but their characteristics and origin are slightly different. I like that Barnard-Smith took the idea of the jinn and changed it to be unique to her story. I also love it when an author can introduce me to new and fascinating facts.

The world Barnard-Smith has created in Jinn Nation is one where the vampires, all but one, are extinct. Dylan, the last of his kind has to find a way to feel like he belongs and he stumbles into the Jinn, humans who have become monsters who eat the organs of other humans and are almost as strong as the vampire himself. In his need to belong he becomes enmeshed into the Jinn community to his detriment.Because of the pain caused by the Jinn he finds Christa, a woman who can read minds and control people, vampires, and jinn.

Dylan is your typical vampire, decadent, violent,filled with hunger, and quite emotional (in his case the main emotion is loneliness.)Christa is somewhat of an enigma. She can know everything about everyone around her because she can literally take the info she wants right out of someone’shead but she is very tight lipped about herself, much to Dylan’s annoyance.Christa is nearly as cold and violent as Dylan. She helps him find victims and then helps clean up the bodies. She watches him kill people without even flinching. I found that aspec tparticularly creepy. I liked every other aspect about her except that; she is a strong woman who can take care of herself but the fact that she seemed to have no regard for human life (she does change at the end) turned me off.

There is a lot of suspense and mystery surrounding Christa. You want to know how she got these powers and about her past. Another source of mystery is that there seems to be a prophecy about Christa so there are witches that start coming out of the woodwork trying to get her to help save the world. Christa is very distrustful of them and the idea that her powers are a gift. She just wants to get rid of them and does not want to be the one who has to save the world. In this respect she kind of acts like a spoiled child.

Jinn Nation was very well written with a lovely writing style that flows so well. It is a unique and original story bringing new mythologies to the sort of stale paranormal genre.

I give it 4/5


Blog Hop Friday!

It's Friday again so time for blog hop Friday! It's a fun time to get to know your fellow bloggers and follow them if you like their content! It's hosted by Crazy-for-books, so go check out her post for rules and get your blog hop groove on! :)

“As a book blogger, how do you introduce yourself in your profile?”

Until today, I didn't realize that I took off my about section and don't have a real introduction on my blog. I have been doing some rearranging trying to clean up my blog a little and I guess I took it off and forgot to put it back on, so now I will have to fix that. Normally I just tell everyone my name, what state I am from, and the type of books I like to read. If I think anything else is relevant to the blog I usually add that to my intro.

I do think its important to have a name to go with the blog, it makes it more inviting. It is good to be up front about the type of books you review for authors, publishers and publicist to know so they don't waste their time on bloggers who will not read their books.

What about you? How do you introduce yourself?

---------------------

Lightning Book Promotions is currently looking bloggers who like to read military/techno action novels.

Reaper Two-Six Year 5 by Robert Grand

If your interested email me at booklady2007@gmail.com.




Review of The Iron Knight











The Iron Knight by Julie Kagawa
Pages: 400
Publisher: Harlequin Teen
Review Source: Netgalley
Reviewed by: Tia
Rating: 5/5

My name—my True Name—is Ashallayn'darkmyr Tallyn.


I am the last remaining son of Mab, Queen of the Unseelie Court. And I am dead to her.

My fall began, as many stories do, with a girl…

Thoughts:
In one word….SATISFIED!! I am content with how it all wraps up.
For a final installment which can easily be hit or miss Julie Kagawa has done it again and delivered a fabulous end to the Iron Fey series. I will be honest even though I LOVE the Iron Fey series I was worried about this book as it was added after the fact and I thought it would take away from what I already LOVE about the series but I shouldn’t have doubted Ms. Kagawa as she always delivers PERFECTION!!!!

The characters are still the characters I have grown to love and there are a few new characters that add to the fabulousness that is the Iron Fey world. In this installment you get to see from Ash’s point of view and oh do I LOVE LOVE me some Ash even more so now that I did before. The banter between Puck and Ash is still hilarious and Grimalkin is still the know it all cat with all his cryptic sayings I have come to expect. And there was just enough Meghan that she didn’t overshadow Ash’s story but you still felt her presence. The new additions were surprising but help to provide for a fresh take on this new adventure.

The writing well it’s written by Julie Kagawa so of course it still magnificently delivered and in Ash’s voice no less. Hats off the Ms. Kagawa!! You ROCK!!!
The story will it is best of the series and that is saying something as the series is Phenomenal!!! Ms. Kagawa provides action… oh tons of action where Ash and Puck go trouble does follow. Humor with Puck in the mix humor is a given. Romance….swoon if you weren’t madly in love with Ash before you will be after reading this book. Angst cause no one does angst like Ash. Sarcasm, does Grimalkin know any other way to communicate. Add the new twist and turns that Ms. Kagawa has so eloquently written and you have a jaw dropping, can’t put down, best book ever series final that the Iron Fey series deserves. 5 stars and then some!

Review of Echo Falls

Echo Falls


Echo Falls by Jaime McDougall
Format: ebook
Publisher: Amazon kindle devices
Review source: Author
Rating: 3/5
Reviewed by: Tia

Running from a nightmare stalking her every move, Phoebe Martin arrives in Echo Falls hoping she has finally found a safe place to stop. But trouble has a way of catching up and soon the signs are there.


After a vicious attack in an alley, policeman Aidan O'Bryan is left with Phoebe as his only path to understanding why the Echo Falls werewolf pack - his pack - is being attacked. When another pack member is killed, Phoebe is forced to confront her past before she loses Aidan and everything she has come to love.

Love and duty become one as Aidan strives to prevent Phoebe from becoming the next victim. But with Phoebe just as determined to protect Aidan and her new home, secrets from her past threaten to tear them apart.

Will love give Phoebe the strength to trust Aidan and face her fears, or will her past destroy her future?
 
Thoughts:
 
This book is not classified as YA (probably because the characters are older) but it is mild in its sex scenes as far as adult books go meaning that the hot and steamy parts are glossed over. So if you are looking for a paranormal book with the characters out of high school without the hot and steamy then this is the book for you.
I really enjoyed this book. It was well written in that it flowed and well thought out. There were no “Where did that come from?” plot moments. Also the as the story progresses the plot develops taking you along providing you with the information you need to start piecing together who’s the villain(s) and what they are after.

The characters were alright I could have used more character development but characters are what makes a book for me. Aidan (male lead) in particular I would like to have more back story on like how he became Alpha to help understand his character more. I also would have like to see more pack dynamics. Phoebe the main character was the most fleshed out character with the most back story but there were still scenes (only a few) that I did not understand why she acted the way she did. The romance was okay (definitely was a side story) and the characters (Phoebe and Aidan) were cute together but I didn’t feel it was well developed nor that the characters had the level of magnetism and love that author was trying to portray. Overall I enjoyed the book and the look into Echo Falls and give this book a 3 star rating. It was a delightful read.

Review of The Berlin Boxing Club

The Berlin Boxing Club
The Berlin Boxing Club by Robert Sharenow
Pages: 416
Publisher: HarperTeen
Review source: sent to me from the publisher
My rating: 5/5
Review by: Stormi

This is a fantastic book based in Nazi era Germany. Karl Stern, is Jewish by birth but not by religion. His family does not practice nor do they have anything to do with being Jewish. Karl has never really had a problem with any kids because he doesn't really have the look of a Jew. He soon finds out that it doesn't matter if you practice the religion, or if you look the part. To those in Nazi Germany, a Jew is a Jew.

Karl is cornered by some kids he deems as "The Wolf Pack" and they confront him about being a Jew, this is his first experience with hatred towards Jews and it will only get worse. Karl's father is a art dealer, and a very stubborn and prideful man. Even though most artist are leaving Germany do to Hitler taking away the freedom to express oneself in any form but the way of Nazis, Karl's father still hold to his art gallery.

After Karl is beat up, his father makes a deal with Max Schmeling, champion boxer and German national hero. Max wanted a painted that Sig (Karl's father) has so they make a deal that Max will give Karl boxing lesson and Max can have the painting. Karl is thrilled, and soon starts a training regimen that Max gives him.

As things start heating up in Germany, Karl soon realizes how bad it really is for the Jewish population. Although his father refuses to see it, it will eventual catch up to Karl and his family. This is a story told through the eyes of a teenager as he sees his world crumbling before him as Hitlers propaganda grows.

I can honestly say when I was asked to review this book that I wasn't really sure whether to say yes or no, this is really not my type of book. I am not a big fan of any stories set around WWII, as its not my favorite war. My step-grandfather was part Jew and so I get a little aggravated when reading or watching anything to do with WWII, but this was a very well told story.

The author took actual characters and events and  then wove a fictitious story around them, and he did it with creative style. Max Schemling was a real German boxer from the Nazi era and I found it very interesting how the author puts him into the story.

From the very first page I knew this story was going to upset me as well as entertain me. This is the first time in a long time, that I have read a book that grabbed me from the first page and held my attention to the last page. Karl Stern is a well developed character and you really can feel his conflicting emotions through out the story. I really wanted to punch the punching bag with him when he was frustrated. From the things that happen within his own life (girlfriend, friends, school, boxing), to what was happening with his family as a whole.

This story is very fast paced and gripping and I think even if its not your style of book that it is a powerful enough book to get anybodies attention. I would recommend this book to everyone.

The Drake Chronicles with a whole new look!

I am a huge fan of The Drake Chronicles and now the first three books are going to be put together in one book!

The Drakes are a A darkly romantic, irresistibly alluring family of royal vampire blood. The first book Hearts at Stake is probably still my favorite one, because Lucy is so crazy and fun (the vampires human friend).

Ruling Passion

RULING PASSION
By Alyxandra Harvey
Publication date: September 27, 2011
978-0-80272-802-9 / $9.99 / 816 pages
http://www.alyxandraharvey.com/
Bind up contains: Hearts at Stake, Blood Feud, and Out for Blood
(Previously published separately as The Drake Chronicles)


"A refreshing take of the familiar teenage vampire drama . . . Harvey builds an engaging world of vampire cultures balanced wit a smart mix of darkness and humor."
—Publishers Weekly

“A fabulous and fast-paced read! The action is superb . . . this is the perfect
escape read."
—Romantic Times

I know many of you are already familiar with Alyx’s Drake Chronicles series and her stand-alone ghost story Haunting Violet.


Below are URLs to excerpts from each of these books that are included in the bind up if you would like to post them as well:

Hearts at Stake: http://issuu.com/bloomsbury/docs/heartsatstake/1

Blood Feud: http://issuu.com/bloomsbury/docs/bloodfeud

Out for Blood: http://issuu.com/bloomsbury/docs/outforblood/1

If you have never read The Drake Chronicles then I would suggest you pick up a copy of this book when it comes out. Three great books in one!

In My Mailbox

In My Mailbox is hosted by Kristi of The Story Siren. I didn't get very much but I did get a couple of things.

Review:

Targets of Opportunity

THE ENEMY HAS A THOUSAND WAYS TO STRIKE. WE HAVE JUST ONE WAY TO RETALIATE. HIS NAME IS JORDAN SANDOR.


In Targets of Deception, which suspense master Robert K. Tanenbaum called “a fast-paced thriller,” Jeffrey Stephens introduced CIA agent Jordan Sandor, whom bestselling author Steve Alten praised as “terrific.” Now Sandor is back, playing for bigger stakes and facing deadlier challenges.

Whisked from his Manhattan town house to a gabled CIA safe house in Virginia, Sandor faces off with a top terrorist agent from Iran’s Revolutionary Guard. In exchange for protection from his own side, Ahmad Jaber is offering the CIA explosive information: word of a secret, unholy alliance forged among operatives in the Middle East, a ruthless South American, and Kim Jong-Il’s North Korea. Jaber claims not to know specific details, only that the strike will target the heart of America.

The fanatics stage a stunning diversion in the Caribbean, mercilessly downing a passenger jet and unleashing an assault on a French intelligence installation. Sandor, however, has already moved in a different direction. Leveraging Jaber’s infor-mation, he assembles a small strike force to penetrate North Korea. The team knows they will not all return, but the intel they gather will be vital to American security. What they ultimately discover plunges Sandor into a frantic race against time, struggling to defeat a shadowy figure—a master terrorist with a plan of destruction so perfectly disguised that even with the new knowledge he has gathered, Sandor cannot guess where or how he will strike.

As a storm rages in the Gulf of Mexico, word comes that two submarines have penetrated U.S. waters. With the U.S. military hampered by the hurricane, Sandor turns to a few daring U.S. Navy SEALs to duel with the enemy they cannot see . . . for now they know only that there are two nuclear weapons aimed at a target of opportunity whose destruction would change the world order forever.

Brilliantly conceived, electrifyingly paced, Targets of Opportunity captures a terrifying twenty-first century reality: terrorists can—and will—try as many times as they need to attack the United States. For the brave men and women who defend our country, failure is not an option.

(Sound like a good action novel!)

From my library (Overdrive)

Storm Front (The Dresden Files, Book 1)


Audiobook:

A woman named Monica makes an appointment with Dresden to discuss a missing persons case later in the day. Dresden also gets a call from Lieutenant Karrin Murphy, director of Special Investigations (SI) Unit of the Chicago Police Department. Murphy's partner shows him the bodies of two gruesomely murdered people with their hearts ripped out. Later that day, he is hired to find the husband of Monica Sells, Victor, a beginning magician who was acting oddly.


Eventually, Dresden, despite encounters with vampires, the warlock, and Warden Morgan, learns that the affair centers around the drug "ThirdEye," which allows normal humans to temporarily use The Sight, which can drive them insane. Victor Sells manufactured ThirdEye to hedge out Johnny Marcone. Using the power of thunder storms and the orgies held at his home, he powered the spells to remove his enemies, namely Marcone's men and people threatening his operation, in order to gradually bring down Marcone.

Interrupting Victor's last spell, Dresden attacks Victor, eventually burning down Victor's house while Victor is still inside grappling with monster-sized scorpions. Dresden wins, but he's trapped on the balcony on the side of the burning lake house. Warden Morgan drags him out of the fire, saving his life. Morgan witnessed the fight with Victor and knows that Dresden is innocent, testifying on Dresden's behalf to the White Council.

(I watched the Dresden Files on Netflix, it looked like a short lived tv show but was  very interesting. I have always heard about these novels but never read one. Now my library has digital ebooks and audiobooks so I downloaded the first Dresden book on audio and I am really liking it so far!)

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