Saturday, 8 November 2014

In My Mailbox #8: THE WINNER'S CURSE by Marie Rutkoski

 photo IMM iphoneFINAL_zpse6jelmrr.png
Welcome to In My Mailbox (IMM)IMM is a weekly meme created by Kristi @ The Story Siren which features books bought/received in the mail, borrowed from the library as well as other awesome book-related goodies in your mailbox.


I meant to post this last week but things kind of got in the way—school, especially—and the Once Upon A Time TV series! Crabs, I just can't stop watching that show (I'm catching up with Season 2 now).

Anyway, I took my first bookstagram when my copy of The Winner's Curse by Marie Rutkoski arrived in the mail :D It's Book One in the The Winner's Trilogy, and I was lucky enough to win a Book Depository giveaway hosted by Dre @ Sporadic Reads. Thanks again, Dre! ♥︎


I still can't stop admiring the cover—it's just toooo pretty! Aside from that, I just have to see for myself how awesome this book is because almost everyone is gushing over it. They say it's high fantasy and dystopia as well. I was sold when I read this particular review by Kat @ Perusing Bookshelves (not to mention that the last gif in her review is an OUAT one)! 

By the way, the lovely Lillie @ Bookraptured and I are currently on Day 3 of our read-along for The Winner's Curse! So far, it's been good ;) You can follow me or Lillie on Instagram for our occasional read-along updates if you'd like!

Have you read The Winner's Curse? What did you think about it?
If you haven't read it, would you want to?








Wednesday, 15 October 2014

Book Blitz: FROST by Kate Avery Ellison + Excerpt & Giveaway



Frost (The Frost Chronicles, #1) by Kate Avery Ellison
Publisher: CreateSpace
Released: March 29th 2012
Genre: Dystopian



In the icy, monster-plagued world of the Frost, one wrong move and a person could end up dead—and Lia Weaver knows this better than anyone.

After monsters kill her parents, Lia must keep the family farm running despite the freezing cold and threat of monster attacks or risk losing her siblings to reassignment by the village Elders. With dangers on all sides and failure just one wrong step away, she can’t afford to let her emotions lead her astray. So when her sister finds a fugitive bleeding to death in the forest—a young stranger named Gabe—Lia surprises herself and does the unthinkable.

She saves his life.

Giving shelter to the fugitive could get her in trouble. The Elders have always described the advanced society of people beyond the Frost, the “Farthers,” as ruthless and cruel. But Lia is startled to find that Gabe is empathetic and intelligent…and handsome. She might even be falling in love with him.

But time is running out. The monsters from the forest circle the farm at night. The village leader is starting to ask questions. Farther soldiers are searching for Gabe. Lia must locate a secret organization called the Thorns to help Gabe escape to safety, but every move she makes puts her in more danger.

Is compassion—and love—worth the risk?

THE FROST CHRONICLES



EXCERPT

She appeared out of the shadows suddenly. Her cheeks were bitten red with cold and her long dark hair was wet with melting ice. She stumbled, grabbed my hands. Her mittens were missing. “Hurry,” she breathed, tugging at me. “Quickly.”

“Ivy Augusta Weaver,” I hissed, torn between joyful relief and flickering anger. “It’s almost night time. There is a storm coming. What were you thinking? Where have you been?”

“There is a boy,” she panted, ignoring my scolding. “In the woods.”

“What?”

But she was already plunging deeper into the forest, and I had no choice but to follow her, a new worry filling my mind and replacing the short-lived relief I’d felt. A boy in the woods? Who had gotten himself lost in the woods at a time like this? One of the farmers’ sons, perhaps?

We were the last farm in the Frost. There was nothing beyond us to the north but the Empty, and to the south there was only the Farther World. What was anybody doing at the edge of that?
Ivy and I continued into the forest. We ducked around branches and scrambled over icy roots. The shadows were thick, and they painted our cloaks a deep indigo.
Ivy reached a giant rock at the mouth of a clearing and stopped. “There,” she said, pointing with a trembling hand.

I could just make out the crumpled form. In my anxiety, I saw only isolated details. A thin, wet shirt, a pair of shoulders, a face almost hidden by the snow. I took a step forward, trying to place the face...and then I saw the sharp features, the dark hair, the slightly tanned tone of the skin. I halted as my blood turned stone-cold. Time became protracted and dense, like swimming underwater. Sound was muffled. My chest felt tight.

You must be strong, Lia. My mother’s voice rang in my head. I remembered her wind-weathered face, her chapped hands gripping mine, her earnest eyes as they scoured my face for weakness. There could be no weakness here in the Frost, where we clung to life between the mountains as desperately as a drowning man clings to a stone.

“He’s not one of ours,” I said, turning to her with sudden fierceness. “Ivy...”

“He’s hurt,” she said.

“Don’t you understand?”

She just looked at me. I drew in a deep breath.

“That is a Farther.”

Ivy’s eyes widened a fraction at my harsh words. The wind blew between us, spraying ice against our faces. She blinked. I didn’t.

“A...a Farther?”

Of course she knew what that was—every person in our village knew who the Farthers were, even those who’d never caught a glimpse of them across the river. We barely ever spoke of them, but they inhabited everyone’s nightmares all the same.

I nodded curtly.

Ivy struggled to understand what I was implying. “But he’s hurt,” she managed, as if that was the only concern. “And it’s getting dark.”

“We must protect ourselves,” I said.

Ivy swallowed hard.

I glared at her. “No.”

She looked back at the figure lying in the snow. I glanced at the sky again, trying to calculate how much time we had left before the sun sunk completely behind the trees, and we were no longer safe from the things that prowled in the darkness. The Watchers never moved across our yards or around the town perimeter during the sunlight hours, but some had reported seeing them during the narrow span of twilight that joined the day and the night, and it was rumored that they wandered freely in the deep of the forests even during the day.
The wind howled through the trees and tugged at my cloak. Snow fell sideways.

“But he’s hurt,” Ivy whispered again, breaking into my thoughts.

I closed my eyes briefly. My sister was the kind of person who brought home baby birds who’d fallen from their nests and raccoons with thorns in their paws. But we couldn’t simply take a Farther and bandage him up like a lost puppy. “The Elders say—”

“I know they’re dangerous. I know what the Elders say.” Ivy’s voice was as brittle as ice. “But are you telling me you’re going to leave him out here to die? After what happened to Ma and Da?”

I bit my lip so hard I tasted blood. Ivy looked at me with her big brown eyes and the fear in my gut snarled. What would the villagers say? This is dangerous, my mind screamed at me. This will endanger the family!

The figure in the snow stirred. “Please,” he whispered, his voice just a hiss.

I stepped to his side, crouching down to touch his face. His eyes opened a crack, and then...

He looked at me.

I felt hollowed out and filled up again as our gazes collided—mine and this Farther from beyond the edge of my world—and then his eyes shut as he passed out again, and I was released from the spell of them. I stepped back quickly, but the damage was already done. There was already an ache in my chest from the knowledge of what we were about to do.

GIVEAWAY

Enter below to win 1 ebook copy of FROST. This giveaway is international. Prize will be sent out after 12 November 2014. Be sure to read the full T&Cs!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
I've been making up stories since I was five years old, and now I'm thrilled to be able to do it as a full-time job. I have an obsession with dark fantasy, dystopian futures, and Pride and Prejudice-style love stories full of witty banter and sizzling, unspoken feelings. When I'm not writing, I'm creating digital art, reading funny blogs, or watching my favorite shows (which include TVD and BSG). I live with my geeky husband and our two bad cats in Atlanta, GA.


Connect with Kate: Blog | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads | Amazon


Get your copy of Frost!










Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Blog Tour: SOULLESS by Crystal Collier (Review + Giveaway)


Welcome, welcome to the SOULLESS blog tour, book 2 in the Maiden of Time series by Crystal Collier!

CAN WE ALL START GUSHING ABOUT THIS NOVEL NOW

Soulless (Maiden of Time, #2) by Crystal Collier
Publisher: Raybourne Publishing
Released: October 13th 2014
Format: eARC
Source: Review copy from author
The Soulless are coming...

Alexia manipulated time to save the man of her dreams, and lost her best friend to red-eyed wraiths. Still grieving, she struggles to reconcile her loss with what was gained: her impending marriage. But when her wedding is destroyed by the Soulless - who then steal the only protection her people have - she’s forced to unleash her true power.

And risk losing everything.



What a sequel. WHAT. A. SEQUEL.

If I had to make a list of books I would kill for to own a physical copy of, Soulless would be one of them. This is a novel you have to judge its cover by!

Soulless packs a punch with plenty of action, romance, time-travel and absolutely amazing characters. Chapter one kicked off with some major action and I am so relieved it didn't turn out to be one of those slow-paced beginnings in other novels. We quickly learn that other Passionate factions exist and are struggling for power amongst themselves. The conflict is established clearly from the start: Amidst the battle for world domination between the Passionate factions, Soulless and human collectors, Alexia and Kiren have to unite the Passionate no matter what and find a way to save those they love before it is too late.

Alexia Dumont is no longer the innocent girl who longs for Kiren, nor is she still oppressed by English society. With the Soulless gatecrashing her wedding, Sarah's fate unknown and a war brewing, we see a different side of the Maiden of Time emerge. Despite Kiren's worries causing him to hold back information from Alexia, she refuses to give in to the confusion and stoically ploughs through crisis after crisis. I was rooting for her all the way. The Kiren in Soulless is pretty different from the one in the first book, Moonless. He came across as flawless to me in Moonless and I have to admit that it was refreshing to see a more vulnerable side of him because it made him feel more real and relatable. So yes… Kiren is as mesmerising as ever, but we see him trying to deal with his insecurities—especially those involving Alexia.

I think that the absolute highlights of this series are the romance and time-travel. Every time Alexia and Kiren are together, it makes for some serious swooning and squealing. The amount of kissing is no less than in Moonless! But that's not to say their relationship is smooth-sailing, either. Collier introduces conflicts in Alexia and Kiren's relationship early in the book and gives them time to grow as a couple. The plot played an immense part in fleshing out their relationship due to the ever-changing events and action. As for time-travelling, I was pleased that Alexia wasn't over-reliant on Dana for advice and instead sought to improve her powers gradually. It was incredibly fascinating to know the extent and limitations of her powers, and even more so when Alexia began using them to her advantage. She actually kicked some butt on occasion and it was way beyond cool! Dana's experiences with manipulating time felt so bittersweet and successfully illustrated the heightened stakes Alexia had to deal with. The consequences of time-travel proved to be harrowing and I never saw any of those coming. It was thrilling yet horrifying all at the same time!

And holy carp, the other characters are AMAZING. Bellezza's jarring backstory gives a glimpse into her complex, wild personality, yet doesn't make her any less predictable. Ethel and Sybil filled me with awe and worry; they wormed their way into my heart despite sharing only a chapter together. And Miles. Poor, sweet, strong Miles! My heart aches so much for that boy. Sarah and John planted so much doubt and tension between the pages that I screamed internally at Alexia countless times to be careful around them. Mae was just… wow. I cannot begin to describe the devastation of her power. Also, we haven't seen the last of Alexia's father, Charles, either. And then there's Nelly, Lester and Edward. These are all characters I have grown to love. The new characters are really cool as well and it was a real treat to see more of the unique, wacky abilities possessed by the other Passionate. Secrets revealed, revelations and epiphanies between characters left me staring into space for more than a few seconds before I could continue reading. Numerous surprises kept me on edge and the mind-blowing ending totally unsettled me!

I truly wasn't expecting Soulless to be this awesome. It completely gripped me and I enjoyed it so much more than Moonless. I feel incredibly privileged to be able to review this novel. For those who've read Moonless but are hesitant to continue the series, I SAY PICK UP SOULLESS AND YOU WON'T REGRET IT. I am extremely anxious for Alexia and Kiren in the next book, Timeless, and I hope to read more about the other Passionate factions and see the war come to a satisfying conclusion!





BLOG TOUR GIVEAWAY





Psst! MOONLESS will be FREE on October 13, 20, 27, 31 and Nov 7! That's on every Monday of October, plus Halloween and the last day of the tour. Grab a copy now and start reading this awesome series!



MOONLESS: Amazon US | Amazon UK | Barnes & Noble | The Book Depository | iTunes
SOULLESS: Amazon US | Amazon UK | Barnes & Noble | LibraryThing


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Crystal CollierCrystal Collier is a young adult author who pens dark fantasy, historical, and romance hybrids. She can be found practicing her brother-induced ninja skills while teaching children or madly typing about fantastic and impossible creatures. She has lived from coast to coast and now calls Florida home with her creative husband, three littles, and “friend” (a.k.a. the zombie locked in her closet). Secretly, she dreams of world domination and a bottomless supply of cheese.

Connect with Crystal: Website | Blog | Twitter | Facebook | Goodreads



Good luck, and thanks for swimmin' by!









Thursday, 18 September 2014

Life of a Blogger: Languages

This feature is hosted by Jessi @ Novel Heartbeat. Each week, a non-bookish topic will be chosen and I'll talk about it so you can get to know me on a personal level!

Click HERE to view the full list of topics.

THIS WEEK'S TOPIC: LANGUAGES

It's languages this week! I'll be dishing out info on the ones I speak.

ENGLISH

This one totally goes without saying XD

MANDARIN (普通话)

This is my mother tongue, and as such I also have a Chinese name.

I speak, write and read the language and started learning it along with English when I was old enough to speak, so yay, that makes me bilingual.

Even so, I wouldn't say I'm effectively bilingual – which is what our education system has always strived for – because my English is undoubtedly more fluent than my Mandarin. I speak Mandarin on a daily basis with my family, but it's still not as much as English. I'm way better at listening to Mandarin news/TV shows/songs and reading Chinese characters (in my head and aloud are fine) than giving a presentation or writing an essay in the language. My grammar structure and vocabulary are sorely lacking if you compare them to the Mainland Chinese and Taiwanese people's.

Heh.
I wanted to touch on the two main writing systems we have because it's actually pretty interesting. The first and most commonly used one is Simplified Chinese (简体字) and the other is Traditional Chinese (繁体字). I wasn't formally educated in the latter but learnt to read it through watching subtitled Taiwanese variety shows.

What's the difference, you ask. Well, the former is used in China and Singapore while the latter is more commonly found in Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau. The characters are also written very differently. Let's take the word dragon, for example:


Traditional Chinese does take more steps to write, but it's still really beautiful. It's almost pictorial – don't you think 龍 looks more like a real dragon with all its twists and curves as compared to the simplified 龙?

Anyway, I think knowing the language is still better than having to rely on a translator, especially if you're in a foreign country. I'm definitely fluent enough to ask for directions and maybe introduce myself, which was certainly put to good use since my parents especially love going to Taiwan (we've been there six times already!).

SINGLISH

Singlish, a a portmanteau of the words Singaporean and English, is the crazily complicated colloquial language in my country, Singapore. However, I won't be covering it as that would literally take days. I'm not pulling your leg fin. Sea-riously. I'll let Wikipedia do the rest.

FRANÇAIS

I am in love with this language and wanted to learn it since I was 12. I started beginner classes last year and had so much fun!

Unfortunately, I am now stuck with all my basics and can only converse in the present and future tense... not very helpful, I know. The intermediate French class that my school offered was cancelled twice this year because the minimum number of students for it to start wasn't met ): Looks like I'll have to teach myself that past tense...


What are the languages you speak? Are there any you wish to learn? Let me know, and thanks for swimmin' by!




UPDATE: My comments form has completely lost its barnacles and I am so sorry, my fishies! I have no freakin' clue what in the starfish pants is going on (if you do, please help this mermaid out – she probably won't sleep well tonight) so if you would like to leave a comment, please click here to view the mobile version of this post; the comment form works fine there!


Tuesday, 16 September 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: Authors The Mermaid Has Only Read One Book From But NEEDS to Read More


Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish.

Each week, a new Top Ten list will be posted at The Broke and the Bookish. Everyone is welcome to join. Just remember to link back to The Broke and the Bookish and add your name to the Linky widget so that everyone can check out other bloggers' lists! Click here to view the full list of Top Ten Tuesdays.


1. Marissa Meyer. As mentioned in my previous TTT post, I've only read Cinder and really need to get crackin' on the sequel, Scarlet!

2. Emm Cole. Big (sea) fan of the Merminia series here, my fishies! An absolute must-read, especially if you adore mermaids. I LOVED the first instalment and will be starting on Keeping Merminia as soon as I can.

3. Lauren Oliver. I read Before I Fall and got one of the craziest book hangovers after that. Her books kind of fell off my radar soon after – I think I started one of my mermaid novel-reading sprees and didn't look back. *sheepish grin* She's such a big name now, and I know everyone seemed to love Panic when it was released.

4. Rick Riordan. Yes, yes, I know. I really liked The Lightning Thief, but at the time I read it, the series was unfinished. And you know how I feel about waiting for a series.

5. Elizabeth Fama. I went gaga over Monstrous Beauty, her super dark mermaid novel. She released another novel called Plus One in April this year, a dystopian about Smudges (people who live and work at night) and Rays (those who live and work in the day). Sounds like something I'd want to read.

6. Stephanie Perkins. Looooved Anna and the French Kiss. I'm not one who particularly loves contemporary, but it was a lovely read and I want to check out Lola and the Boy Next Door, as well as Isla and the Happily Ever After.

7. L. A. Weatherly. Read Angel when I was 15 and the trilogy had not been finished. It's completed now, but I haven't caught up with it yet!

8. Carolyn Turgeon. Mermaid was such an interesting new spin on the classic tale of The Little Mermaid. I'm interested in her other retelling of Rapunzel, The Fairest of Them All (I hear that Rapunzel turns out to be Snow White's evil stepmother!).

9. George Orwell. I did Animal Farm in Lit class when I was 14 and loved the historical references to Russian politics. Might try reading 1984 sometime!

10. Aimée Carter. I read The Goddess Test a couple years back. While it didn't blow me away, I think I'll re-read it and maybe finish the series.


What's on your list? Leave a comment below, and thanks for stopping by! (:


Review: The Maze Runner (The Maze Runner, #1) by James Dashner

The Maze Runner (The Maze Runner, #1) by James Dashner
Publisher: Delacorte Press
Released: October 6th 2009
Format: Ebook
Source: My own
If you ain’t scared, you ain’t human.

When Thomas wakes up in the lift, the only thing he can remember is his name. He’s surrounded by strangers—boys whose memories are also gone.

Nice to meet ya, shank. Welcome to the Glade.

Outside the towering stone walls that surround the Glade is a limitless, ever-changing maze. It’s the only way out—and no one’s ever made it through alive.

Everything is going to change.

Then a girl arrives. The first girl ever. And the message she delivers is terrifying.

Remember. Survive. Run.
The first thing I tweeted after finishing this book was this:
(The Grammar Nazi in me realises it should've been 'what I planned' instead of 'how', but meh, who cares)

Hold your seahorses, there are some spoilers in this review but I've got spoiler-hiders! If you're reading this in your email, they probably won't work, though.

So I finally got around to reading The Maze Runner after it appeared in my Top Ten Tuesday post and when I finished it, I felt like this:


and it was due to many reasons.

I have heard great things about this book, heard people gush over it, been recommended it countless times and sensed the hype over the release of its movie adaptation. I wouldn’t say I'm entirely disappointed with The Maze Runner, but I know for sure that I definitely enjoyed The Hunger Games more. 

Nevertheless, this novel does have originality and some strong points.

First off, the premise: A boy named Thomas wakes up in a lift remembering nothing else but his name and meets other boys living in a forest-y place called the Glade, situated in the middle of an ever-changing, stone-walled maze with dangerous, abominable creatures outside of it. No one knows why or how all this is happening. When a girl arrives in the Glade for the first time in two years, everything changes and they have to work together to escape the maze and its perils. 

The Glade is sort of like a mini-society all on its own with rules and roles established by its inhabitants, who are inherently called Gladers. They've unique slang like “shank”, “klunk” and “shuck-face”, most of which are their own versions of swear words. I thought these were nice embellishments, but perhaps not entirely necessary. There are the Grievers, which are slimy, half flesh and half machine/metal creatures outside the maze and Beetle Blades, which look like metal lizards with twelve bug legs.

All in all, a very fine plot but quite lacking in execution. I felt detached from most of the characters like Newt, Alby, Minho and even Thomas himself while also feeling like I was wading around in octopus muck trying to make sense of the bigger picture.

When Thomas first arrives in the maze, many of his questions are left unanswered and he’s always told to be quiet. The suspense Dashner tries to create nearly failed because all we are told instead of shown is how “confused” and “annoyed” Thomas is, and we don’t actually feel confused confused or annoyed annoyed along with Thomas – I for one was frustrated with the repetitiveness of it all because it just wasn’t shown in the writing.

As a result, I couldn’t get a deeper sense of Thomas' character. There was some awesome maze-running action in between, but if it weren’t for the plot, I wouldn't have stuck through with this book. Chapter cliffhangers kept me turning the pages, but this was due to the nature of them dishing out information only to move the plot forward. I don’t recall desperately wanting to find out what Thomas or Minho or Newt would do next. Yet, there’s potential for Dashner’s characters to stick with you, and I’m talking about moments like this:
“No way,” Alby said. “...We can’t freaking ask people to go out there and die, Minho! Who’d volunteer for that?”


… “I will if I have to,” Newt said, surprising Thomas; though he’d never talk about it, the older boy’s limp was a constant reminder that something horrible had happened to him out in the Maze… 

“With your bum leg?” Alby asked, a harsh laugh escaping his lips.


Newt frowned, looked at the ground. “Well, I don’t feel good askin’ Gladers to do something if I’m not bloody willing to do it myself.”
I think this is the only part where I really connected with Newt. Maybe it would’ve been better if the other Gladers had been more central to the plot; they weren't fleshed out enough for me to form enough emotional attachments to them.

And then there were instances when I had to re-read some parts of the book more than twice to visualise how the maze doors looked like and worked, how Thomas did the mapping with wax paper to get the code and how the Grievers looked like compared to the Beetle Blades, because I kinda got both creatures mixed up into some hybrid (that wasn’t very fun, I can assure you) and so I ended up googling them. I remember thinking that the movie adaptation might be the best way of showing these plot elements instead (another disappointment, unfortunately. Not going to cover this in another blog post because I could go on and on about it. But you can tweet me if you wanna discuss the movie!).

Another thing which had me feeling quite meh was how some parts felt deus ex machina-ish to me. Like BOOM suddenly something happens out of nowhere and the problem is more than half-solved, and all Thomas needs to do is think for a minute (or sometimes he doesn’t need to) and ta-da, job done.


This is especially applicable to when Teresa (the girl) arrived and gave a crap ton of completely new info to Thomas when she was unconscious and also when Thomas found the Griever Hole with Minho AND also when Thomas figured out that he should go get stung by a Griever and rely on the Changing to give him more info.

I just felt like something was lacking – like there should've been something more to everything, but there wasn’t.

And then I cried.

I actually cried when Chuck died, and to be frank I don’t really know why I did! Chuck was probably the only character whom I felt a little more for than any other character throughout the story. I guess Thomas actually telling us how much he treasured Chuck got to me after all. I also think Thomas being unable to fulfil his promise to Chuck just did it for me, and so the tears just came.

It was fleeting, though. Once I finished the novel, I thought that the ending – or payoff – of Dashner’s entire concept was questionable, and probably one of the biggest downers for me.

I have no idea if it was because of all the pre-movie hype or the fact that my classmates gave me a gist of the plot before I read it (no spoilers were involved) that could’ve influenced my reading experience on a such high scale. They pretty much told me just the blurb, so it must be either the hype or my high expectations…


I’ll still be reading the rest of the trilogy to see if it picks up (I heard the next book is better). The Maze Runner will be getting half a starfish more than I’d have given it because, well, I cried. And I usually don’t cry over a book – I mostly get hangovers and can’t touch another book for days – so this might spell something better for the rest of the series. I think.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR
AboutPortrait AboutJames was born and raised in Georgia but now lives in the Rocky Mountains with his family. He has four kids, which some might think is too many but he thinks is just right. Once upon a time, James studied accounting and worked in the field of finance, but has been writing full time for several years. (He doesn’t miss numbers. At all.)

In his free time, James loves to read, watch movies and (good) TV shows, snow ski, and read. (Reading was mentioned twice on purpose.) Most of all, he’s thankful that he gets to make a living writing stories and considers himself pretty much the luckiest guy on the planet.



Get your copy of The Maze Runner!







Sunday, 7 September 2014

Blog Tour: Guest Post by Rachel M. Wilson, author of DON'T TOUCH

Welcome to my stop on the DON'T TOUCH blog tour! 



Don't Touch by Rachel M. Wilson
Publisher: HarperTeen
Released: 2nd September 2014
Genre: Young Adult Contemporary
A powerful story of a girl who is afraid to touch another person’s skin, until the boy auditioning for Hamlet opposite her Ophelia gives her a reason to overcome her fears.

Step on a crack, break your mother’s back. Touch another person’s skin, and Dad’s gone for good.

Caddie can’t stop thinking that if she keeps from touching another person’s skin, her parents might get back together... which is why she wears full-length gloves to school and covers every inch of her skin.

It seems harmless at first, but Caddie’s obsession soon threatens her ambitions as an actress. She desperately wants to play Ophelia in her school’s production of Hamlet. But that would mean touching Peter, who’s auditioning for the title role—and kissing him. Part of Caddie would love nothing more than to kiss Peter—but the other part isn't sure she's brave enough to let herself fall.

Perfect for fans of Laurie Halse Anderson, this debut novel from Rachel M. Wilson is a moving story of a talented girl who's fighting an increasingly severe anxiety disorder, and the friends and family who stand by her.
Today, author Rachel M. Wilson will be sharing four things the book world doesn't know about her (until now). Don't forget to enter the giveaway below after reading the post!

GUEST POST
4 THINGS THE BOOK WORLD DOESN'T KNOW ABOUT ME (UNTIL NOW) 
by Rachel M. Wilson, author of Don't Touch

1. I was born on a farm—well, not exactly on the farm, but my parents were living on a family farm near the Alabama River when I was born. It’s an ancient house with a peaked roof and a wide porch—if any place is haunted, this place is haunted. Now the farmland is mostly leased out to other farmers, but when my Dad ran it, it was a feeder pig farm. Not so coincidentally, my parents were vegetarians at the time.

The farmhouse where Rachel was born (left) and the barn (right)
2. I’m a Francophile. I don’t speak French as well as I used to, but I belonged to the French club in high school and always competed in the French Convention. I used to be completely fluent. My granddad was a paratrooper on D-Day, and I was lucky enough to accompany him and other surviving members of the 82nd Airborne on a trip to France for a monument dedication. As the only person on our bus who spoke French, I got a lot of practice translating. Lots of small villages in Normandy put out tables full of calvados and cheese and pastries for the veterans, and I almost cried when an older gentleman asked if he could give my grandfather a kiss on the cheek. He obliged, and it was one of the sweetest things I’ve ever seen.

3. I spent several Halloween seasons working in the haunted house at Chicago’s Navy Pier. This meant dressing up in elaborate costumes to play a real estate agent with a knife through her head or a frightened librarian ghost or a crazed French chef . . . on repeat. The house was a kind of limbo—a Disneyesque production with tons of
special effects, all timed to a track. So we’d go through a 90 second scene for a crowd of people, usher them to the next room and then perform the same scene again . . . for hours! At one point, I was so exhausted that when a kid offered my French chef his plastic spider ring, saying, “Cook it! Cook my spi-dow!” I stuffed the thing in my mouth. Instant. Regret.

4. I love camping! I love it so much that when I drove cross-country between Chicago and LA, I pulled up to campsites all along the road with a giant U-Haul. Unfortunately, I wasn’t prepared for the winds on the plains or the storms in the Badlands knocking the tent flat. The ensuing exhaustion required an emergency stop at Wall Drug, SD, for tent stakes and ties.

Rachel's dog Remy as a puppy figuring out how to use tent stakes

BLOG TOUR GIVEAWAY
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rachel M. Wilson is the author of the contemporary YA, DON'T TOUCH, forthcoming from HarperTeen, Sep. 2, 2014.

She graduated from Northwestern University and holds an MFA in Writing for Children & Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Rachel grew up in Birmingham, AL, and she currently writes, acts, and teaches in Chicago, IL.



Connect with Rachel: Website | Tumblr | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook | Goodreads

Get your copy of Don't Touch!


Thanks for stopping by!







Tuesday, 19 August 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: Books People Have Been Telling The Mermaid That She MUST Read


Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish.

Each week, a new Top Ten list will be posted at The Broke and the Bookish. Everyone is welcome to join. Just remember to link back to The Broke and the Bookish and add your name to the Linky widget so that everyone can check out other bloggers' lists! Click here to view the full list of Top Ten Tuesdays.

This is my first time participating in Top Ten Tuesday! I've finally found some free time to do it. School is just insane right now but the holidays are in about two weeks (aka more reading time!).

So here we go – ten books people have been telling me that I MUST read!

Most of these books are ones I keep hearing about but have never read. There are probably a ton of books that fall under this category for me, because #1, I used to have this mindset of not reading what I thought was ‘mainstream’, and #2, I just simply didn’t have the time. 


1. Under The Never Sky by Veronica Rossi: Manon from Sous Ma Couverture recommended this! Movie rights have been sold, but there isn't much news regarding that as of now.

2. The Fault In Our Stars by John Green: Seems like EVERYONE has read this. But yes, I haven't read TFIOS. And no, I have not seen the movie. I probably wouldn’t have shifted it up my TBR list if the movie hadn’t been released.

3. The Maze Runner by James Dashner: Like TFIOS, the same goes for The Maze Runner. My classmates have been telling me to read it and are eagerly anticipating its movie release in September, so this time I will read it before then (like I did for The Hunger Games trilogy).

4. Promises (Syrenka, #1) by Amber Garr: Michelle from The Passionate Bookworms recommended this series to me, especially since I’m a mer-freak. I’ve heard it’s fin-tastic.

5. The Bellwether Revivals by Benjamin Wood: I was exchanging book recs with a classmate in a bookstore after being properly introduced to him for the first time (and finding out he's a fan of The Lunar Chronicles!). I recommended What Kills Me by Wynne Channing to him. In return, he located a copy of The Bellwether Revivals in the store and showed it to me.


6. Scarlet (The Lunar Chronicles, #2) by Marissa Meyer: Said classmate and fan of The Lunar Chronicles asked me why I hadn't read Scarlet yet even though I'd finished Cinder already.

I’m a reader who prefers to wait till a series is finished because I can’t stand the agonising wait for sequels. The more popular an unfinished series is, the less likely I am to start reading it anytime soon.

Fun fact: During the pre-release hype of the third book, Cress, one of my pins on Pinterest showcasing fan art (not mine) had an insane amount of repins. The number now stands close to 500!


7. The Mortal Instruments by Cassandra Clare: I was pretty confused over whether one should start reading The Infernal Devices (the prequel series) or The Mortal Instruments first. A classmate of mine who’s an avid fan of this series recommended starting with the latter, so at least I'll know where to start!

8. Wonder by R. J. Palacio: What a lovely sky blue cover. A friend reading it recommended it after I asked about the illustration.

9. The Chrysalids and 10. The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham: Another classmate of mine who particularly loves dystopian/post-apocalyptic novels suggested these to me. Aside from their interesting premises, these were written in the 1950s. I was told that John Wyndham’s sci-fi novels weren’t that popular in those days, but with the resurgence of books in the similar genre, I think they'll be better-appreciated in this century.


Thanks for checking out my Top Ten Tuesday post! Leave a comment with a link to your post so I can swim over ;)









Sunday, 10 August 2014

In My Mailbox #7: Holy carp, it's signed copies of the MERMINIA series!

 photo IMM iphoneFINAL_zpse6jelmrr.png
Welcome to In My Mailbox (IMM)IMM is a weekly meme created by Kristi @ The Story Siren which features books bought/received in the mail, borrowed from the library as well as other awesome book-related goodies in your mailbox.

I. 

Am. 

Goingtoburstwithexcitement.

Actually, I already have. *uncontrollable sheepish giggle*

If you don't know already, I'm CRAZY. Sea-riously.
As you know, I absolutely adore Merminia, the first book in Emm Cole's amazing series about mermaid clans and wars. And swoon-worthy mermen. *coughARAMIScough* 
Review of said fintabulous novel can be found here if you wish to acquaint yourself with awesomeness.

So imagine my immense delight when Emm sent me both of her books in the series.



#BRBdying
Before anything else:
  1. I wasn't expecting this at all! I gave Merminia the love I would give to any book that's earned a special spot in my heart, which includes spreading some serious bookish love. This is something I totally didn't see coming, and a surprise like no other!
  2. As an international book blogger, I don't get many bookish goodies in my letterbox. Us international peeps don't live near major US publishers to receive physical ARCs for review, nor do we have many local YA book events to attend (well, for me, at least). Our eyes light up every time we see an international giveaway, because let's face it – shipping prices can be a pain in the mer-ass for those hosting such giveaways. And we understand that. Of course, there's always the lovely Book Depository to help out but generally, what I'm saying is that it's just different if you're an international blogger. That's why I'm always so flippin' excited about anything that literally lands in my mailbox.
But. This post isn't to gripe or complain! I'm trying to illustrate my sheer joy for having received a series I love from a talented author (:

Okay. Photo time!

I'm so stoked about getting to review Keeping Merminia in paperback. And it's thicker than Merminia too, so that means I get to see more of the characters! ^~^

Autographs!

Isn't that just sweet?! I feel so blessed and honoured to know about the world of Merminia through your writing, Emm! Thank you so much for sending some major author love all the way to Singapore! I truly appreciate it <3 


Don't know who the gorgeous Emm Cole is? Well, time to rectify that! You can find her at these links: 

And while you're at it, do grab a copy of Merminia for yourself! Trust me, it's the best thing since sushi ;)


                                                       Merkisses,