Thursday, April 30, 2015

The Raven Boys Discussion | #WednesdayYA Live Show!

For those of you who missed it, here's last night's liveshow discussion of The Raven Boys! Surprisingly, Liz only sorta liked it, and I (who was expecting not to), really liked it. Go figure.
If you've read it and were unable to make the discussion, feel free to let us know your thoughts in the comments!
And I'll be officially announcing May's Book Club pick next Wednesday, but there is a spoiler of what it is at the end of the video, if you want to get a head start. ;)




The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater
Fantasy, 416 pages
Published September 18th 2012 by Scholastic Press
“There are only two reasons a non-seer would see a spirit on St. Mark’s Eve,” Neeve said. “Either you’re his true love . . . or you killed him.”

It is freezing in the churchyard, even before the dead arrive.

Every year, Blue Sargent stands next to her clairvoyant mother as the soon-to-be dead walk past. Blue herself never sees them—not until this year, when a boy emerges from the dark and speaks directly to her.

His name is Gansey, and Blue soon discovers that he is a rich student at Aglionby, the local private school. Blue has a policy of staying away from Aglionby boys. Known as Raven Boys, they can only mean trouble.

But Blue is drawn to Gansey, in a way she can’t entirely explain. He has it all—family money, good looks, devoted friends—but he’s looking for much more than that. He is on a quest that has encompassed three other Raven Boys: Adam, the scholarship student who resents all the privilege around him; Ronan, the fierce soul who ranges from anger to despair; and Noah, the taciturn watcher of the four, who notices many things but says very little.

For as long as she can remember, Blue has been warned that she will cause her true love to die. She never thought this would be a problem. But now, as her life becomes caught up in the strange and sinister world of the Raven Boys, she’s not so sure anymore.

From Maggie Stiefvater, the bestselling and acclaimed author of the Shiver trilogy and The Scorpio Races, comes a spellbinding new series where the inevitability of death and the nature of love lead us to a place we’ve never been before.

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

APRIL BOOK HAUL [2015]

Before we get started I just want to say, YES, winner announcements are coming soon for Fairy Tale Fortnight giveaways! I'm verifying them as we speak, and will be posting my winners (and Bonnie's when I have them) by this weekend, at the latest! I haven't forgotten about you!

Now, on to the video. I'm sorry we skipped about a weeks worth of vlogs; this was actually recorded over awhile ago, but as I mention in the video, I've been sick. I'm on the mend(ish) though, so should be back into the swing of things soon! And though I might have to go off schedule to catch up, and I'm not positive what video is coming next (TBR, maybe?), keep an eye out for my review of SKANDAL, which will be coming soon! I've been too sick to record it, but I'm ready to talk about it, y'all!
And yes, more has shown up since I recorded this, as expected, but this already seemed pretty full, so I'll share those soon!
Now, onto the books!



THE BOOKS:
The Real Boy | Anne Ursu [review]
Dragon's Beware | Raphael Rosado & Jorge Aguirre
The Stranger (Last Man, vol 1) |  Bastien Vivès, Michaël Sanlaville & Balak
The Royal Cup (Last Man, vol 2) | Bastien Vivès, Michaël Sanlaville & Balak
Exquisite Corpse |  Pénélope Bagieu
Anything Could Happen  | Will Walton
Out of the Easy | Ruta Sepetys
A Jane Austen Education | Willia Deresiewicz
Harry Potter Box Set (this edition) | J.K. Rowling (obvs)

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

GIVEAWAY: #GabbyDuran & the Unsittables prize pack!

Though there are plenty of us adults who like young adult and middle grade reads just fine on our own, thank you very much. There are also those among you that are still YAs and MGers yourselves, and are looking for new things to read, and readers to connect with and talk to about them. And lastly, I'd imagine there are certainly many of you who read this blog (and others) because you have children in your life, and you want to keep up on things for them to read.  You may have already begun counting down the days until school lets out for the summer (so soon!), and you suddenly have an eager, energetic summer kid on your hands, and you're looking for things to keep them occupied...

...which is why today's giveaway is kinda perfect. To celebrate the release of Elise Allen's & Daryle Conners' Gabby Duran and the Unsittables, Disney Publishing has put together some prize packs that are perfect for summer: book, drinks tumbler & toy, what more could you you want as a quick "here, my child, go out into the world and have fun with bookish things" summertime gift?  It's kinda perfect.

You can read an excerpt of the book here, but before you go, make sure you enter to win!

****GIVEAWAY****
The folks at Disney Publishing has put together an OUT OF THIS WORLD prize pack in celebration of the release of Gabby Duran and the Unsittables!
One (1) winner receives:
  • a copy of Gabby Duran and the Unsittables!
  • branded Tumbler!
  • UFO light-up flyer!
Giveaway open to US addresses only.
All prizing and samples provided by Disney Publishing.
Must be 13 years or older, or have parents permission.
Ends May 5th at midnight,
Fill out the Rafflecopter to enter. EST. Good luck!
About the Book:

Gabby Duran and the Unsittables by Elise Allen & Daryle Conners
Middle Grade/Fantasy, 208 pages
Expected publication: May 12th 2015 by Disney-Hyperion
Case File: The First Unsittable

Summary: The Association Linking Intergalatics and Earthlings (hereby known as A.L.I.E.N.) has a new member. After months of investigation, Gabby Duran, Associate 4118-25125A, has proven herself to be a babysitter extraordinaire. Her celebrity clients fly her around the country to care for their rambunctious little humans. Our spy, Associate 4118-23432B, otherwise known as Edwina, believes Gabby can be trusted with the truth: aliens are living among humans on Earth. And here at A.L.I.E.N we believe that even extraterrestrials need a babysitter now and then. No one was up to the task...until now.

After accepting the top-secret position, Edwina has paired our new associate up with her first charge, a little girl from the planet Flarknartia. The timing for associate 4118-25125A is less than ideal. It's a school day on Planet Earth, Gabby's audition for the solo part in the band is tonight, and this tiny alien is a bit more than meets the eye.

Can Gabby Duran, Associate 4118-25125A, First Sitter to the Unsittables, keep her otherworldly charge safe in the unpredictable halls of middle-school and keep A.L.I.E.N hidden?

About the Authors:
Emmy-nominated writer and New York Times best-selling author Elise Allen made a name for herself with her acclaimed young adult novel Populazzi (Harcourt), and the Jim Henson's Enchanted Sisters chapter books (Bloomsbury). In television, she has written for talent ranging from Bill Cosby to Kermit the Frog, and is currently writing for the new Disney Junior show The Lion Guard. Her dog may or may not secretly be from another planet.

Daryle Conners is an award-winning writer, filmmaker and video game designer. She writes joke and riddle books and has designed many game titles for the PC and iPhone/iPad including Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, Scene It? Harry Potter, Hot Wheels Slot Car Racers, and Scene It? Twilight Saga. Her non-fiction books include Lunchtime LOLZ, Nintendo DS Hot Tips, ROFLs,Video Game Secrets and Monster High Jokes, all for Scholastic. Daryle lives in Seattle, where she still babysits from time to time.

Learn more at the Official Site
Follow Disney-Hyperion on Twitter
Follow Elise Allen & Daryle Conners on Twitter
#GabbyDuran
Buy the book here!


Disclaimer: All prizing and samples provided by Disney Publishing.

Monday, April 27, 2015

Reveal: Interactive, Multimedia sequel to Something Real!

Heather and Lexie
 You guys may remember how much I loved Heather Demetrios' debut, Something Real, and how it made me feel all the things. Funny story: I pushed it on a friend who also loved it, and we went to see Heather at a signing (where we recorded this); last month, we went to a different signing, and while we were there, she asked me (very hopefully) if there was going to be a sequel to Something Real -- to which I had to give her a sad, 'No, I don't think there is'... and a month later, to the day, I got an email from Heather about helping get the word out about her upcoming sequel to Something Real! I take that as a sign, y'all.
(So of course, I said yes.)

This time, Heather's taking on Lexie's story, and launching a whole multimedia thing -- bringing Lexie to life far beyond the pages of the book, and getting fans involved in a crowd-sourced, cross-platform storytelling experience! [Hot damn, I should right ad copy. ;P ]

A cover is coming soon, and I'll be sharing more when it all gets rolling this summer, but for now, I wanted to make sure you guys knew about it, and can get it on the ground floor, so you can weigh in and help shape the story!


official press release:
YA AUTHOR HEATHER DEMETRIOS ANNOUNCES SEQUEL TO SOMETHING REAL

Brooklyn, New York (April 27, 2015)—Heather Demetrios announced today that she is writing a sequel to her critically acclaimed debut novel, Something Real.

The Lexie Project is a multi-media, multi-platform storytelling experience, a novelized memoir that reaches readers through social media, including Wattpad and Tumblr. Demetrios will be writing the story in serialized form with weekly installments, at no cost to the reader. Daily updates on Lexie’s social media accounts will give readers the chance to interact directly with Lexie, as well as provide readers with opportunities to influence the course of the story.

Said Demetrios, “YA readers are passionate fans and their deep investment in the stories they love is something I took into consideration when I set out to work on the sequel. Lexie’s story is about a reality TV star who’s now trying to make it in Hollywood. As such, I want to give my readers a fresh, modern way of entering into into her story—this is how Lexie would tell it. Fan interaction and crowd sourcing allows the YA fandom to be part of the creation of the story and I’m excited to see where it will take us.”

The first installment of The Lexie Project comes out on Wattpad on June 8, 2015. Lexie is already active on her social media accounts. Readers can find out more on www.heatherdemetrios.com/books/lexie_project.

About the Book
Lexie Baker is ready for her close up and nobody’s gonna get in her freaking way.

Nearly a year after graduating high school and taking a hiatus from her family’s reality TV show, "Baker's Dozen: Fresh Batch," Lexie is in Los Angeles, on a mission to take Hollywood by storm. From red carpet premiers to helping her YouTube star roommate film weird videos, Lex fits right in with the droves of girls just as hungry as she is for some screen time. When Jax Wilson, a young, hot producer, offers to launch The Lexie Project, a reality show that will chronicle Lex’s adventures trying to make it as an actress in LA, she jumps at the chance. It isn’t an Oscar-winning role, but it’s a start.
Then she meets Liam, a film student who brings books to parties and is one of her twin brother’s closest friends. When it becomes clear that her brother, Benny, has a serious drinking problem—one that lands him on the front page of tabloids and threatens to get him kicked out of his university—Lexie relies on Liam to help her protect her brother. But spending time with Liam throws Lex into a spiral of self doubt: is this the life she really wants? And how far will she go for the stardom she’s always longed for? The City of Angels soon becomes Hell on Earth and Lexie realizes that everyone—even Liam—has something they’re hiding. Fed up with Hollywood, Lexie decides she needs to find a new role to play–not the one she was cast in at birth. The Lexie Project is a spin-off of the critically acclaimed novelized memoir, Something Real, by Heather Demetrios and features several of the major characters from the novel, including Chloe and Patrick.

Find the story & Lexie


Wattpad (where the story will be told)




About Heather Demetrios

When she’s not traipsing around the world or spending time in imaginary places, Heather Demetrios lives with her husband in New York City. Originally from Los Angeles, she now calls the East Coast home. Heather has an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is a recipient of the PEN New England Susan P. Bloom Discovery Award for her debut novel, Something Real. Her other novels include Exquisite Captive, the first in the Dark Caravan Cycle fantasy series, and I’ll Meet You There. She is the founder of Live Your What, an organization dedicated to fostering passion in people of all ages and creating writing opportunities for underserved youth. Find out more about Heather and her books at www.heatherdemetrios.com or come hang out with her on Twitter (@HDemetrios) and any number of social media sites.   

Tuesday, April 21, 2015

The Vlog #8: Sunshine & Fairy Tales...

Hello there, and welcome to a new vlog! This one's a bit shorter (yay!) and a little montage-y, since I had my handss full with FTF -- speaking of which, giveaways are open until the 22nd, and many are international, so make sure to go check them out!

I don't believe there was anything else I said I'd link up this time 'round, but if I forgot something, remind me and I'll add it in!

Thanks for watching, chat with you in the comments, and hope you've had a lovely start to the month!



All music from Youtube creator library

Monday, April 20, 2015

Trailer Reveal & Giveaway: Hold Me Like a Breath by Tiffany Schmidt!

I know today is technically supposed to be a vlog day, but it will be going up tomorrow, so that you guys can see (and enter to win)...


You've already had one chance to win Tiffany Schmidt's crime family-meets-The Princess and the Pea retelling, Hold Me Like a Breath, when I reviewed it for Fairy Tale Fortnight (and that giveaway is still going for a couple of days, so if you haven't entered - do! Double your chances!)
But today the trailer has been released, and you're getting another chance to win a shiny new copy!

Check it out:



****TRAILER REVEAL GIVEAWAY****
To celebrate the reveal of the Hold Me Like a Breath trailer, Bloomsbury is giving away  one (1) finished copy of Hold Me Like A Breath by Tiffany Schmidt! This giveaway is US Only, and ends Sunday, April 26th.
Fill out the Rafflecopter to enter!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


ABOUT THE BOOK:
Hold Me Like a Breath by Tiffany Schmidt
Get It | Add It
Contemporary, Fairy FindTale Retelling, 400 pages
Expected publication: May 19th 2015 by Bloomsbury
Penelope Landlow has grown up with the knowledge that almost anything can be bought or sold—including body parts. She’s the daughter of one of the three crime families that control the black market for organ transplants.

Penelope’s surrounded by all the suffocating privilege and protection her family can provide, but they can't protect her from the autoimmune disorder that causes her to bruise so easily.

And in her family's line of work no one can be safe forever.

All Penelope has ever wanted is freedom and independence. But when she’s caught in the crossfire as rival families scramble for prominence, she learns that her wishes come with casualties, that betrayal hurts worse than bruises, that love is a risk worth taking . . . and maybe she’s not as fragile as everyone thinks.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Tiffany Schmidt lives in Pennsylvania with her saintly husband, impish twin boys, and a pair of mischievous puggles. She's not at all superstitious... at least that's what she tells herself every Friday the thirteenth.

SEND ME A SIGN is her first novel. BRIGHT BEFORE SUNRISE will follow in Winter, 2014. The ONCE UPON A CRIME FAMILY series begins with HOLD ME LIKE A BREATH in 2015. You can find out more about her and her books at: TiffanySchmidt.com, TiffanySchmidtWrites.Tumblr.com or by following her on Twitter @TiffanySchmidt.

Find her on:



Other things to know:
This spring, Bloomsbury's sending four amazing authors—Trish Doller, A.C. Gaughen, Emery Lord, and Tiffany Schmidt—to bookstores together for our Boldly Bookish tour. To celebrate it, they are giving away some goodies! All you have to do is buy one of the following books: The Devil You Know, Lion Heart, The Start of Me and You and/or Hold Me Like A Breath and email your receipt to teensusa@bloomsbury.com, in order to receive one of the following prizes:

Preorder 1 of the books pictured above, and get a Boldly Bookish logo sticker.

Preorder 2 of the books pictured above, and get a sticker + a Boldly Bookish bookmark!

Preorder 3 of the books pictured above, and get a sticker + bookmark + a Boldly Bookish button!

Preorder all 4 of the books pictured above, and get a sticker + bookmark + button + a Boldly Bookishmagnet!

And remember, the more books you preorder, the more Boldly Bookish swag you get!

This giveaway brought to you as part of the Fantastic Flying Book Club



Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Interview & Giveaway: Lindsay Smith, author of SKANDAL | blog tour

Next week, you'll be seeing a vlog with my thoughts on Skandal, the sequel to Lindsay Smith's Sekret, which some of you may recall, I loved. (I was even part of the street team!) But until then, Lindsay sat down to chat with me about the book and what's on the horizon, and to give YOU a chance to get your hands on a copy! Check out our chat below, and then make sure to enter to win!
Hi, Lindsay! Welcome back to The Book Rat! Alright, let's get down to business...
Your book in a tweet: Skandal in 140 characters or less:
1960s Washington not what Russian psychic defector Yulia expects; new and powerful psychic sickness even worse than she fears.

For the Sekret Street Team Tumblr Takeover (which is what I call it in my mind, apparently), the bloggers on your street team made bits of fan art, playlists, or in my case, weird watercolors and propaganda posters... I would imagine it's a bit of a heady experience, seeing your world through others' eyes like that. Between the street team, general reviews, and fans you've talked to since Sekret debuted, did anything stand out to you, in the things people came up with or the way the answered the prompts, or how people have responded to the characters/world?
I was so amazed by the creativity and passion in the Street Team works! Seriously, it was like the rush of seeing my book in stores for the first time magnified a hundredfold. I loved all the graphics people put together with nice creepy espionage, Soviet, and romantic images, and I also loved the playlists they put together—music is such an important part of Yulia’s world, and the mixes of modern and classical music were awesome.

I’m always so happy when people tell me how much they admired Yulia and Valentin and their character arcs. Yulia’s not an easy heroine to like—she’s stubborn, even to her detriment at times, and paranoid and fatalistic—but I’m proud of her growth.

And following up to that, has any of it made you see your characters and world in a different light? Did you start to see things you didn't even realize were there, now that the book is being filtered through so many different people's perceptions?
I’ve had a lot of people ask me where they should start if they wanted to get into classic Russian literature! I know many readers found Yulia’s fatalistic view somewhat overwhelming, which is understandable, but I can’t say I’d recommend Dostoevsky or Akhmatova to those readers, as they’re even more soul-crushing. ;) But there’s some great Russian sci-fi and fantasy being written today—I personally like the Dyachenkos and Inna Shargorodskaya.

If you could have abilities like Yulia or one of the characters in the book, would you choose to? And what would you most want to be able to do? Least?
I think Sergei’s and Marylou’s “remote viewing” ability has the potential to be the least intrusive; I’d totally use it to watch concerts half the world away or go sightseeing in, like, the Himalayans. In Skandal, I explore the pyrokinetics a little more, and their ability could be incredibly dangerous, but how fun would it be to start a campfire wherever you needed one, or extinguish fire where it shouldn’t be? I’d least want the scrubbers’ ability: the ability to change people’s thoughts and control them against their will. I can’t immediately think of any 100% ethical applications for that.

Music has been a huge part of the story, both because the style of music was undergoing an upheaval during the time period of the book, and because of the way Yulia and Valentin connect to music (and use it as a shield).  Could we get a playlist of songs that are meaningful to one of the characters, or to the book itself?

You got it! Some of these are songs that are mentioned in the books, while some are just songs I liked to listen to while writing (including a few that obviously didn’t exist in Yulia’s time):


And with Skandal finished and out, what's next on the horizon?
I actually have another book releasing later this year, also from Macmillan Kids! Dreamstrider is a standalone high fantasy book, about a girl who has to manipulate the dream world to save her real world from a nightmarish war. We recently revealed the cover, which, in my completely biased opinion, is just stunning. I can’t wait to share this book with the world.


****GIVEAWAY****
To celebrate the release of Skandal, the awesome folks at Macmillan have offered up a copy of the book to one lucky read in the US or Canada! To enter, leave some love for Lindsay in the comments, and fill out the Rafflecopter below! Ends April 23rd at midnight, EST.
Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


ABOUT THE BOOK:

Skandal by Lindsay Smith
Get It | Add It
336 pages
Published April 7th 2015 by Roaring Brook Press
The dramatic sequel to Sekret, this psychic Cold War espionage thriller follows Yulia to Washington, DC, where she fights to discover the truth about her family without losing control of her mind.


My mind is mine alone.

Life in Washington, D.C., is not the safe haven Yulia hoped for when she risked everything to flee communist Russia. Her father is reckless and aloof, and Valentin is distant and haunted by his past. Her mother is being targeted by the CIA and the US government is suspicious of Yulia's allegiance. And when super-psychics start turning up in the US capitol, it seems that even Rostov is still a threat. Ultimately, Yulia must keep control of her own mind to save the people she loves and avoid an international Skandal.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Lindsay Smith's love of Russian culture has taken her to Moscow, Saint Petersburg, and a reindeer festival in the middle of Siberia. She lives in Washington, DC, where she writes on foreign affairs. SEKRET is her first novel.




Author Links/Info

 Full Blog Tour Schedule
April 8-Icey Books
April 9-Exlibris Kate
April 12-Fly Leaf Review
April 15-The Bookrat

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Teaser, First Impressions & Giveaway: Silver in the Blood by Jessica Day George

I had really wanted to review this for you guys for FTF, but unfortunately, it (and a few other books) got here just before the event started, which didn't leave me enough time to read them all, try as I might (and I did try!). But because this one comes out the last of all of the books I'd planned to review (July!), I had to save it for last, and my superhuman reading skills failed me. I have started on this one, and I DO intend to review it for you, closer to its release, but until then I'm going to share my First Impressions with you, as well as an excerpt, so you can get a taste of the book yourself!
Check those out below, and then make sure to enter to win a copy for yourself! And keep an eye out for my full review of Silver in the Blood this summer!

26 April 1897

Dearest Lou, 

Whoever said that travel was exotic and full of adventure clearly has not sailed on the White Lady. Before you worry yourself sick that I am sitting in some squallid cabin, suffering from seasickness, fear not! Of course it is all that is respectable and luxurious, and I would never do something so horribly undignified as become seasick. Fear, rather, that I, your dearest cousin and bosom companion since infancy, shall die of boredom before the trip is even halfway through! I do not know why Papa would not let me take the train from London. I could have stopped in Paris and waited for you, and we could have made our way to Bucharest together. The Orient Express is all that is fashionable.

But my mother was adamant that I avoid Paris at all costs. I am to be punished until the end of time for one moment of frivolity! She couldn't possibly know that William Carver is spending the summer in Paris, could she? I certainly didn't tell her! I have been dying to see Paris, and I could have gone shopping with you besides!

Aunt Kate reminds me endlessly that Bucharest is the Little Paris, and that should be good enough for me, but I disagree!  Why limit myself to the 'Little Paris" when I can see the big one? And thus far there is nothing to see but ocean, and no shopping, and no Will Carver or any reasonable substitute. I am becoming most disagreeable. Aunt Kate is threatening to lock me in my cabin if I do not shake off my "mood," as she calls it. She has yet to see me in a true "mod," dare I say. Much more of this and I shall descend into a despair so black that no amount of elegant dinners in the dining room or walks along the ship's promenade to take the air will bring me out of it.
Unless, of course, we are attacked by piraes. Young, dashing pirates. Will Carver would look very handsome in pirate costume, don't you think, Lou? Oh, you are too far away to ask!

Dear Lou, the other thing is that I'm missing you!  If you were here this would be far more bearable. I shall console myself that one of us shall see Paris—the real Paris— and that soon we shall be reunited! Even if it is in a strange place! And I shan't even be able to send this letter until we reach land, which I pray is soon.



Much, much love, 
D

First Impressions:
As you can see, this is Victorian-set, semi-epistolary novel (not all of it is in letters; they are interspersed), and that's something we don't see a ton of these days! I for one am excited, because I love things that are different from everything else out there, and also things that take something old and give it new life!

The action and intrigue of the whole thing picks up pretty quickly from the start, which I'm glad of -- it's not drawn out, with a prim little story of a Victorian teenager, that then suddenly becomes something other. I have a feeling we're going to get the excitement and adventure both quickly and boldly, so I can't wait to truly dig in!

And of course, I'm a  big fan of Jessica's, so I was already looking forward to this, but I'm also getting a touch of a Gail Carriger vibe, who is another author I love -- I think this could be something really fun and new in tone from Jessica, and I am very eager to see how it plays out!

Make sure to stop back by this summer for my full review of  Silver in the Blood, before its July release date. But until then, please to enjoy this...
****GIVEAWAY****
The awesome folks at Bloomsbury have offered up a copy of Silver in the Blood to one lucky Fairy Tale Fortnight reader!
This giveaway is US only, and ends April 22nd at midnight EST
To enter, make sure you are registered on the FTF giveaway registry, and then fill out the Rafflecopter form below.
Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


ABOUT THE BOOK:
Get It | Add It
Historical Fantasy, 358 pages
Expected publication: July 7th 2015 by Bloomsbury USA Childrens
A New York Times bestselling author brings dark secrets to life in a lush new YA perfect for fans of Libba Bray or Cassandra Clare.

Society girls from New York City circa 1890, Dacia and Lou never desired to know more about their lineage, instead preferring to gossip about the mysterious Romanian family that they barely knew. But upon turning seventeen, the girls must return to their homeland to meet their relatives, find proper husbands, and—most terrifyingly—learn the deep family secrets of The Claw, The Wing, and The Smoke. The Florescus, after all, are shape-shifters, and it is time for Dacia and Lou to fulfill the prophecy that demands their acceptance of this fate . . . or fight against this cruel inheritance with all their might.

With a gorgeous Romanian setting, stunning Parisian gowns, and dark brooding young men, readers will be swept up by this epic adventure of two girls in a battle for their lives.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Are there more "authorly" pictures of JDG? Yes.
But do they have her bursting out of her own book,
overtop of a griffin? I didn't think so.
Jessica Day George likes chocolate, knitting, books, travel, movies, dragons, horses, dogs, and her family. These are all things to keep in mind if you ever meet her. For instance, you could bring her chocolate to make the meeting go more smoothly. You could also talk about how adorable her children are, even if you have never seen them. You could discuss dog breeds (she had a Maltese named Pippin, and grew up with a poodle mix and a Brittany Spaniel). You could talk about Norway, and how it's the Greatest Place On Earth, and Germany, The Second Greatest Place On Earth. You could ask her about yarn, and indicate a willingness to learn to knit your own socks, if you can't already do so.

And, well, you could talk about books. Jessica's books, other people's books. It's really all about the books. To paraphrase Jerry Seinfeld: Friends, family, school, they were just obstacles in the way of getting more books.

She would like it if books came with chocolate to eat while reading them. 

Want more fairy tales? Return to the main schedules
by clicking here for The Book Rat or here for A Backwards Story

Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Moments from 5 years of Fairy Tale Fortnight!


Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by The Broke & the Bookish, and today's topic is Top Ten Inspiring Quotes from Books. Bonnie and I have decided to mix things up a bit and do a 5th FTF anniversary retrospective of sorts, which means today won't be inspiring quotes so much as quotes and moments from the last 5 years of Fairy Tale Fortnight. It's hard to pin these down, really, so I'm sure I'm going to miss some. (Also, now that Ashley, my original co-host, is no longer blogging and her blog is gone, some of those moments are lost to history!)
But here are 10 of the moments that always come to mind, that I've loved in some way and find myself thinking about, years later. (And if you want more, I've been sharing them all FTF-long as "In Case You Missed It" posts!) I would LOVE to know some of yours in the comments!

10. I'm going to kick off with my favorite thing of this year, which was my giveaway of a watercolored glass slipper. It's not that this is the best thing I've ever done, or even my favorite post of this year, but this will be the one I remember. I had a goal this year of bringing more me into the blog, and sharing my silly little side projects, like these watercolors, is one way of doing that. So that makes me happy, and knowing that one of you will have something personal from me makes me even happier. ^_^

9. Because it's something I personally like to talk about, IRL, I was happy when Elizabeth Blackwell joined us to talk about strong female characters, and had this to say:
But I’ve discovered, in my own life, that there are many ways to be strong. Elise [main character of While Beauty Slept] quietly subverts other’s expectations. She knows that keeping a secret can be the key to holding power. And when she is tested, she finds strength within herself that she didn’t know she had.[...]Being strong doesn’t always mean being tough and loud—and that goes for real life as well as literature. 
8. Two vlogs on the same note as each other often come to mind, and they are my "Genre Push" of fairy tales, where I tried to narrow down the perfect retelling for different types of readers (and the list is lengthy), and my Top 10 favorite retellings vlog from 2012 -- though I think some of these may have been bumped from their spots in favor of books I've read since... May need to do an update to this!

7. I shared an Ariel lookbook with you as an ICYMI post earlier this month, but my favorite might be last year's lookbook for Belle (probably because I wanted to be her, and certainly wanted to dress like her, when I was a kid). Though I'm not sure anyone else cares the least little bit about these, I love doing them, and they always make me smile when I look back on them -- and probably will even more as the years go on and fashions become laughable... ;)

6. In one of my more unique posts -- and I mean unique in that, it'd probably be hard to pull off again, because there aren't often books so similar, and yet so different -- I compared three retellings of East of the Sun, West of the Moon, side by side, and gave my verdict on which ones failed it and which ones nailed it
I also made the most juvenile joke I think I've ever made, so... there's that.

5. I took a look at some weird tales. Some REALLY weird tales, and they still kinda haunt me to this day... I just... I don't even know what's going on.
What even, Grimms?

4. We've played a couple of Mock Cover games, where you make your own cover for a fairy tale or retelling, but my favorite that I've personally done was 2013's Wolf - a cover I still love so much that I kinda want to write a Little Red Riding Hood retelling to go with it... lol

3. I listed my top 3 tales that I desperately wanted to see unique, solid retellings of, and surprise, surprise, Jack & the Beanstalk and Rapunzel are on it. I had actually forgotten about this post, but I find it particularly funny, given my recent Tea Chat...clearly these are long-standing issues with me. ;)

2. In my review of Jodi Lamm's Titan Magic: Body & Soul, I had some lovely, glowing things to say:
The thing I love about Jodi Lamm's writing is that there are a lot of things I love about Jodi Lamm's writing. 

I was going to list an actual item there, like that her writing is deep and layered.
Or that it's lyrical and lovely.
That it uses the inhuman as a canvas for a study in humanity.
That it's heartbreaking. Triumphant. Poignant.
But as you can see, as soon as I try to pick out the thing I love, a whole host of others clamors to be chosen, too.
But the reason that this quote means something to me is that, beyond reminding me of how much I love this series, I don't think I ever would have found or read these books without Fairy Tale Fortnight. It's possible, but without the strong fairy tale theme of this blog, Jodi wouldn't have found me, and without a fairy tale event to prep for, I may well have dismissed this indie gem out of hand, as I normally did/do with indies & self-pubs (just because of the sheer volume of requests I get, and books I have). And I would have really been missing out. So I have Fairy Tale Fortnight to thank for some of my favorite books, and the chance to share one of my favorite passions with you -- and have it reflected back at me.

1. This "collaborative bedtime story" from the first year. Even though it's rough, this is still one of my favorite things to have ever done on this blog. Pulling together all of these different people, bloggers, authors and readers alike, and getting them to read Little Red Riding Hood -- getting their interpretations and their 'bedtime story voice' -- and the satisfaction of seeing this crazy idea I had not only come together but have people enthusiastically joining in, is still kind of amazing to me. As frustrating as it was to pull off and try to edit together, I wish I'd made it a yearly tradition.


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Interview with Betsy Cornwell, author of Mechanica!

I can not believe it is the last day of Fairy Tale Fortnight, you guys, I really cannot. But it is, and we're kicking it off with an interview with Betsy Cornwell, author of Tides, and the upcoming steampunk Cinderella retelling, Mechanica. Check out what she has to say below, and then enter to win a copy of Mechanica for yourself!



Welcome, Betsy! What inspired you to write a steampunk version of Cinderella?

Way back in the spring of 2009, I was a junior at Smith College in Massachusetts, and I got approval to spend most of my senior year working on a book-length collection of fairy tale retellings. My last semester of college consisted of one poetry class and a weekly meeting with my project advisor (we usually met over sushi), plus a bunch of writing time in the library. It was pretty much my ideal lifestyle (and still is!).

At the same time, my best friend was doing some research into steampunk for a set design class. I loved the whole aesthetic, and  I'd been having conversations with my advisor about the machinations of fairy tale narratives: the way they're so perfectly, beautifully constructed, but at the same time can be claustrophobic, especially all those very narrow and specific definitions of happily-ever-after.

Cinderella seemed to lend itself particularly well to a steampunk retelling: there's already clockwork there, in the all-important midnight clock, and the story itself is one of the most archetypal, tight, and 'perfect' of them all. So Mechanica started as just one short story among a dozen or so in my independent project collection, but with my advisor's encouragement, it quickly grew from there.

Mechanica is dedicated to that advisor, Betsey Harries. She believed in my writing career when I wasn't sure if I believed in it myself, and in that sense, she's definitely my fairy godmother.

What was the easiest part about writing MECHANICA? The hardest?

The easiest part was writing in Nick's voice--she's the narrator and my Cinderella. I don't usually write in first person, and in many ways Nick and I aren't that alike, but I've always felt that I know her well and can hear her voice clearly, if that makes sense.

For a long time, the hardest part was admitting that the story had to keep getting longer. As I said above, I'd thought it would just be a short story for a college project, and I felt as if I should move on to other things! But even though it started out at a mere 10 pages and is now exactly 300, I'm still not done. I've intentionally left a few things open-ended, in hopes that I'll be able to write a sequel (or two, or . . . oh dear, I might never be done).

You've written about both fairy tale lore and selkie lore now. Will you delve into more types of classic stories in future novels?

Oh, yes. I'd love to be primarily a fairy tale reteller in my writing career. I'm just now finishing a companion novel to Tides that focuses on lore about male selkies, and I have plans for a Vaudeville-era "Snow White and Rose Red" and a reimagining of Jane Eyre in the near future, if all goes well! I'm also the story editor at Parabola magazine, and I get to write about fairy tales for them a whole lot, which is great.

What are your favorite obscure fairy tales?

"The Selkie Bride" has always been one of my favorites, and I think it does count as obscure, even though selkies are getting a little more love these days. I wrote my first novel about them, and there are other wonderful selkie books out there, like The Folk Keeper by Franny Billingsley and Tempest Rising by Nicole Peeler. The film Song of the Sea just came out, of course, and The Secret of Roan Inish and Ondine are both beautiful selkie movies. The web series Caledonia is worth checking out too, and--hmm, I could go on about selkies, but I think that's enough! Find them, read them, watch them. Selkies are great.

I've also always loved the old Scottish ballad "Tam Lin." In fact, the first piece of writing I ever published outside of a school magazine was a retelling of Tam Lin called "Shapes." It came out in a lovely online journal called Fickle Muses that only does fairy tale retellings. I was as proud of being in that journal as I was when I got my book deal!

If your life was a Disney movie, which would it be...and which character would best represent you? 

THAT IS SO DIFFICULT. When I was growing up I would have said either Belle or Ariel, given my twin obsessions with books and mermaids. However, the answer that sprang to mind right away for this question is Lilo or Nani from Lilo and Stitch, and I'd say they both represent my personality fairly well, depending on the day. Plus, I just bought a used car (with my Mechanica advance!) and named him Stitch.

Which fairytale villain would you never want to reform and why?

The first character I thought of isn't generally labelled as a villain at all: Triton, Ariel's father in the Disney version of The Little Mermaid. I grew up with a father prone to rages and verbal abuse, and as an adult, I really can't see Triton as a positive father figure at all. Triton gets no fairy tale brownie points from me!

You have to wonder what made him exile Ursula, too. Now that's a villain whose story I'd love to hear . . .

Which fairytale mode of transportation would you want to try out?

Fairy dust, of the Peter Pan variety. I've had plenty of times when it would have been lovely to fly on the power of happy thoughts!

THIS OR THAT:

- Dragon or kraken?
Sea dragon??
[I like the way you think, Betsy...]

- Mermaid or princess? 
MERMAID 10000000%

- Hero or villain? 
Both. Definitely both.

- Prince or knight?
Knight. 'Proven bravery' over 'born to privilege' any day.

- Befriend the birds or the mice?
Aww, mice. I once had a pet mouse named Kimberly after the Pink Ranger.

Thanks for joining us!!

****GIVEAWAY****
To celebrate the upcoming release of Mechanica, Betsy has offered up one physical ARC (US) and one e-ARC (INTL) of Mechanica to 2 lucky winners!
This giveaway is structured as listed above, so yes, it is international! The giveaway ends April 22nd at midnight, EST
To enter, make sure you are registered on the FTF giveaway registry, and then fill out the Rafflecopter form below.
Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


ABOUT THE BOOK:
Mechanica by Betsy Cornwell
Get It | Add It
304 pages
Expected publication: August 4th 2015 by Clarion Books
Nicolette’s awful stepsisters call her “Mechanica” to demean her, but the nickname fits: she learned to be an inventor at her mother’s knee. Her mom is gone now, though, and the Steps have turned her into a servant in her own home.

But on her sixteenth birthday, Nicolette discovers a secret workshop in the cellar and begins to dare to imagine a new life for herself. Could the mysterious books and tools hidden there—and the mechanical menagerie, led by a tiny metal horse named Jules—be the key to escaping her dreary existence? With a technological exposition and royal ball on the horizon, the timing might just be perfect for Nicolette to earn her freedom at last.

Gorgeous prose and themes of social justice and family shine in this richly imagined Cinderella retelling about an indomitable inventor who finds her prince . . . but realizes she doesn't want a fairy tale happy ending after all.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Betsy Cornwell wrote her first novel, TIDES, as a student at Smith College. After graduating from Smith and getting an MFA from Notre Dame, she moved to Ireland to live with the fairies.

Her second novel, MECHANICA, a steampunk retelling of Cinderella, is coming in August 2015. A companion novel to TIDES, currently called COMPASS, is slated for early 2016.

Betsy is also the story editor for Parabola Magazine, and in her free time she wanders around Ireland looking for rose hips and hazelnuts, and also keeps dairy goats.



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Monday, April 13, 2015

Review: Hold Me Like a Breath by Tiffany Schmidt

Don't forget, I have a giveaway of this book going on right now! Make sure to stop by and enter to win!!


Hold Me Like a Breath by Tiffany Schmidt
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Contemporary, Fairy Tale Retelling, 400 pages
Expected publication: May 19th 2015 by Bloomsbury
Penelope Landlow has grown up with the knowledge that almost anything can be bought or sold—including body parts. She’s the daughter of one of the three crime families that control the black market for organ transplants.

Penelope’s surrounded by all the suffocating privilege and protection her family can provide, but they can't protect her from the autoimmune disorder that causes her to bruise so easily.

And in her family's line of work no one can be safe forever.

All Penelope has ever wanted is freedom and independence. But when she’s caught in the crossfire as rival families scramble for prominence, she learns that her wishes come with casualties, that betrayal hurts worse than bruises, that love is a risk worth taking . . . and maybe she’s not as fragile as everyone thinks.

Like yesterday's thoughts on Beastkeeper, this is an interesting one for me: on one level, I really like it, and on another, I have some pretty major issues with it.
We'll start with the things I liked:

This is a retelling of The Princess & the Pea set in a crime family, about a girl with a rare disease that makes her incredibly delicate, and that is kinda genius. The Princess & the Pea can be a kind of problematic story, and it's certainly always been one that required a HUGE suspension of disbelief: there's a girl who's so fragile, a single pea under a massive stack of mattresses (which somehow don't just squish the pea into oblivion) causes her massive discomfort; this is somehow a desirable trait... It's one of the more odd fairy tales out there (though by no means the oddest). Both the affliction that Penelope has, and her status as a result among the various crime Families, really works to tie in the retelling aspects and make it actually believable. There are a lot of clever nods to the story, most of which subtle enough to be unobtrusive, but well-developed enough to add that extra layer.


The crime family aspect, and even some of the general plot, hit some of the same notes as the Birthright series, which I love. Penny isn't cold like Anya, though, so it's like getting the plot elements  -- crime family, questions of legalization, constant danger, grief for those lost -- but filtered through a completely different character. This may be a comparison that will be lost on those who haven't read All These Things I've Done and the rest, and it may even be personal to me entirely, but I think if you like any of the things I mentioned, either here, just now, or in any of my reviews for the Birthright series, then you may like this as well.

And speaking of grief, it does that extremely well. I wasn't expecting it, and I didn't feel that I was particularly emotionally invested (and also, I saw some of the grief coming), and yet it still hit me like a punch to the gut. I barely knew the characters at the point that things start to unravel, and yet I felt their pain, and I felt for them. The core characters, those affected, said things and did things in their grief that felt so real to me that I grieved -- it all felt very real, and it reminded me of my own moments of grief and loss, of witnessing the grief of those I care about, in a really visceral way. I'm honestly still a little amazed at how real the pain felt at times, and how well it was carried through the story

BUT.

Sometimes everything was far too easy. Penny spends her life being coddled and living in a perpetual state of fear for her life, essentially, so that even though you know she wants to break out a bit and experience life, it's still jarring when Penny's finally off-estate and running for her life, health at a near all-time low, and acting rather recklessly, frankly. I mean, I love the subplot of her finding her independence and her voice, and proving to herself (and everyone else) that she's more capable than the china doll they treat her as. But it goes beyond that simple desire to live life, into basically flouting all the rules she's ever known -- which yes, I get, is often a teenager/independence thing... But when you're on the run for your life, could easily DIE, even just left to your own devices, I'd think you'd be a little bit more careful, no matter how much you hate that word...

To also be seemingly already in love with someone she's always known, to then be so immediately and obsessively drawn to someone new, whom she's just met, who she knows nothing about and who followed her home and she keeps finding waiting outside her apartment (keep in mind: she's in hiding, so people watching her apt should set off MAJOR warning bells...) -- it all starts to get a little TSTL, which is a term I hate, but come on now! And even though I pegged who this new guy was immediately, and I understand the need to work him in somehow, I have to say, I didn't love the way it played out. Though it ended up kinda endearing, it took me time to wrap my head around, and it was time that I felt like it should have taken Penny. It happened to fast to feel like there was any real basis for it; it reads as a flight of fancy, on both their parts. Forced love-triangles aren't my thing; nor are ultra-convenient coincidences. And to accomodate this new player in town, it has to throw other things into chaos, which is also something I saw coming a mile away, and also didn't like how that played out. Again, it felt shallow and somewhat baseless, and for a story that started strong and was reminding me of a fast favorite, it sure didn't end that way. The shift was so dramatic that I almost stopped reading.

In the end, I did enjoy myself, and am even curious enough to see how it plays out, that I'll likely read the next book -- eventually. I think plenty of readers will be able to get lost in and enjoy this, though, and if you are a lover of fairy tale retellings, it's worth it if only for the clever (and actually pretty solid) spin on The Princess & the Pea. But it is a mixed bag, and if some of these things are pet peeves of yours, know that going in, because this may not be the book for you.



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