BEA'S BOOK NOOK "I can't imagine a man really enjoying a book and reading it only once." C. S. Lewis “If one cannot enjoy reading a book over and over again, there is no use in reading it at all.” ― Oscar Wilde

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Ruby Lioness Press Contests!

Ruby Lioness Press , a small indie romance press, is having several contests, a writing contest and two tagline contests.

Writing Contest

From their press release:

Ruby Lioness Press is having a writing contest! All authors who submit manuscripts of at least 40,000 words between June 1st and July 31st, 2012 will be entered for a chance at having their book published and receiving an advance royalty.

1st Prize – $100 USD Advance Royalty
2nd Prize – $50 USD Advance Royalty
3rd Prize – $25 USD Advance Royalty 
Requirements: Submit your 40k+ novel to Ruby Lioness Press following the submission guidelines between June 1st and July 31st. The novel must not have been under contract or published before. This contest is open to participants worldwide, but the work must be in English.
This contest is open to all genres, including submissions for the Clearwater series. 
The winners will be chosen in early August. All authors who submit manuscripts during the contest time frame will be notified of their status after that time. Any author who wishes not to participate should state as such in their submission.

Tagline Contests

I received an email about these from the publisher. 

Ruby Lioness Press and their Clearwater series are doing two tag line contests. They;re looking for the best tag line that fits the publisher (Ruby Lioness Press) and one for the Clearwater series. The deadline is February 20th.
The tag line that wins will be rewarded with a $10 amazon gift card, one for each contest.
To enter the Ruby Lioness Press tag line contest, fill out this form… https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dFlyMEV0YVVlRlJYNXpydnNNdkxsV2c6MQ#gid=0
To enter the Clearwater mutli-author series tag line contest, fill out this form… https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dFRma0ctZ01KSkkzWERvM24xTWx2a1E6MQ#gid=0

In My Mailbox #17


In My Mailbox was started by The Story Siren. It's a way to share and highlight all the books we receive, even if we don't review them. l share books that I buy, that I receive for review, get from the library, borrow from a friend, etc.

It's been a few weeks since I posted an IMM. Life was busy, part of which was taking a long weekend to visit my sister in Florida for her 50th birthday. It was a ton of fun and I'm now under orders to start planning my 50th birthday (I'm the last sibling under 50). Coming home, I found packages with books waiting for me, which was a good way to come home after such a fun weekend.

I haven't bought anything in the past few weeks but I did get some from the library and receive a bunch for review, including several that I'm very excited about.

Click on the covers to see the goodreads descriptions.

Review


OMG. When I found out I was receiving this book for review, I squeed so loud I think they heard me in the next galaxy (sorry if I hurt your ear drums). I <3 Patty Briggs and her UF books are so very, very good. I had to rearrange my review schedule to accommodate this one but I know it will be worth it. Sadly, this is the last book in the Alpha & Omega series but maybe Anna and Charles will pop up in the Mercy books. I can dream, right?

 

I don't always LIKE the vampires in the books that inspired these vignettes, ok sometimes I hate them lol, but the fact that I have such passionate responses to them, well, you know the writing is good.When Donna offered a copy to me for review, of course I said "YES!" More schedule re-arranging commenced. (BTW, Rajmund and Duncan? They're MINE! Mine I say!)


I read, reviewed and enjoyed the first book, but still haven't read the second one yet. I'm short on time, so I'll probably just skim reviews of book two so I know what I missed.


This is an Amish romance, not my usual fare, but I occasionally like a sweet, chaste romance so I thought I'd give it a try. There will also be a guest post by the author.


I received this through Random House's Early Reads program. It sounds like something I'd grab at the library to read.


Jax will be reviewing this one, she jumped at the chance. :)

This sounds like a light, fluffy read; I'm not sure whether Liz or I will be reviewing this one. 


Honestly, it doesn't sound like something I'd enjoy. It was unsolicited review, not sure it will get done. If anyone wants to review it, drop me a line.

Library


I enjoy this series, it's mystery light. This one was ok, nothing special, which was disappointing since it was an anniversary book.


I just started this one today. I read and enjoyed the first one but my library doesn't have book two so I'm reading this one anyway.

Won



PNR author Dani Harper has been doing a blog tour promoting her new book, Changeling Moon, and I was fortunate enough to win a copy at one of the stops. I have book one and now book three. She says they are stand alones so I shouldn't have a problem reading this one. Along with the book was a tote bag, some bookmarks, and some postcards. I tried to take a picture but my camera's battery was dead.

It's been a good few weeks for books. How was your week? What did you get?

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Review of Ghost Trackers: A Novel by Jason Hawes & Grant Wilson, with Tim Waggoner

Publisher:Gallery Books
Release Date: September 13, 2011
Buying Links:  Amazon     The Book Depository



Book Blurb (from goodreads):


In this spine-tingling new series, the stars of TV's GHOST HUNTERS introduce readers to a team of paranormal investigators who reunite to defeat a sinister force they unleashed long ago. . . . 


For fifteen years, Amber, Drew, and Trevor have barely been able to recall--let alone explain--what happened the terrifying night they decided to explore the old, abandoned Lowry House. According to local legend, the house was cursed by a dark past and inhabited by evil. It burst into flames on the night of their visit, leaving the friends traumatized and nearly dead with only vague memories of the frightening events they had witnessed inside. Now, on the eve of their high school reunion, they have gathered to reopen their investigation and figure out, once and for all, what took place that fateful night . . . before the supernatural entity they escaped threatens to overtake them again.

Reviewed by: Bea
 
My Thoughts:

This is the first fiction book by Hawes and Wilson, stars of the tv show, "Ghost Hunters", a show where they search for and try to explain paranormal incidents. They've taken their experiences and turned them into a new fiction series. Since the back cover touts it as a new series, I had little doubt while reading the story that there would be a happy ending, with no real damage to our heroes. That removed a lot of the suspense for me.

We meet the four main characters quickly and it quickly becomes apparent that one of them, Greg, is not normal. The action is quick to start with then the story slows down and the book is longer than necessary. All of the characterizations are simplistic, there's no depth, with one exception: Jerry, who was the school bully but he's changed and his change is believable. I actually felt for him. Unfortunately, that's the extent of the depth that we get. Most of what happens is predictable, the characters are stereotypes, and the pacing veers from between fast and slow.

Amber, Trevor, and Drew are all likable and with more depth and better pacing this would be a good start to a new series. If you enjoy the show "Ghost Hunters" and enjoy reading about paranormal investigations, you may want to give this a try.


I received a paperback from the publisher for review.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

UK Cover for Kelley Armstrong's "Thirteen"

Kelley released the cover for the UK edition of "Thirteen", which incidentally, is apparently being released as "13" in the UK and not "Thirteen" like it is in the US and CA. Now, I prefer the North American cover, but this one is certainly eye catching.



Kelley also announced that "Thirteen" will have a bonus story and some author notes. I'm not sure if this applies to the UK edition also.

From Kelley's board post:
After much negotiating, we've decided to make all Thirteen hardcovers a collector's edition with bonus material. They'll be priced the same as regular hardcovers, but the story will be "bookended" with the character who started it all--Elena. The hardcover will reprint the prologue from Bitten, along with a note from me about the genesis of the series. Then it will end with a brand new story about Elena and the Pack after Thirteen, along with yet another note from me, discussing the end of the series.

The Elena story is, of course, the big bonus. It'll be called "From Russia, With Love" (yes, they let me keep that title Smiley ) It's a hefty story (about 7500 words or 25 pg). I didn't want to just write a little epilogue scene. Elena and the Pack deserve more, so I gave them an actual story.

That's the plan, then. I'm thrilled that my publishers allowed me to do this and I hope readers will enjoy this little extra.
 I am so excited! I'm delighted to get another Elena story and Kelley's notes will be interesting I'm sure.

What are your thoughts?

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Review of Between Their Worlds by Barb & JC Hendee

  • Publisher: Roc Hardcover 
  • Release Date: January 4, 2011
  • Buying LinksBarnes & Noble  Amazon
  • Blurb:  (from authors' site)
  • “A unique tale of vampires and half-vampire undead hunters set against a dark fantasy world ruled by tyrants,”* the Noble Dead Saga continues to entrance readers with action-packed adventures and an intriguing mythology. Now national bestselling authors Barb and J.C. Hendee present the long-awaited return of dhampir Magiere and half-elf Leesil…
  • Wynn Hygeorht receives unexpected visitors at the Guild of Sagecraft. Magiere and Leesil, along with the elven wolf Chap, have come for her, but Wynn can't afford to leave. She needs access to the texts within the guild's archives, which may help her decipher the locations of the last two orbs sought by the Ancient Enemy.
  • There are five orbs in total. Magiere and Leesil have two of them in safe-keeping. Chane Andraso, the vampire who loves Wynn, has hidden the Orb of Earth on her orders. To complete her task — and protect the orbs — Wynn must remain sequestered from her friends
But she's essentially a prisoner. One of the guild's superiors is just as eager for Wynn to translate the ancient texts, but she knows the others will not permit her to share that knowledge — knowledge Magiere and Leesil desperately need if they're going to stop the Ancient Enemy from unleashing war on the land…

Reviewed by: Jax

My Thoughts:

In every series, you get that book that ties up loose ends and sets up the next the next level of adventures...it's the nature of sagas. Usually, they are the books I endure, knowing/trusting that the pay off will be some awesome book to come. It was an unexpected pleasure to get to the end of this book, and not feel that moment of "is that all?" that I commonly feel in these "bridge" books. Instead of a ho-hum skip from one side to the other, JC and Barb give us intrigue and battles. Even up to the end, you're not sure who is the troll that is going to gobble up the travelers and who is going to truly help them in their quest.

I love that the right answers aren't clear, that relationships are strained and tested, and that the characters hide necessary information from each other causing that much more chaos and confusion. A thoroughly enjoyable read.

I received a hardcover from the publisher for review.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Review of The Legacy of Eden by Nelle Davy

Publisher: MIRA Books
Release Date: January 24, 2011
Buying Links: Amazon     The Book Depository

Book Blurb (from goodreads):

For generations, Aurelia was the crowning glory of more than three thousand acres of Iowa farmland and golden cornfields. The estate was a monument to matriarch Lavinia Hathaway's dream to elevate the family name - no matter what relative or stranger she had to destroy in the process. It was a desperation that wrought the downfall of the Hathaways - and the once prosperous farm. 

Now the last inhabitant of the decaying old home has died - alone. None of the surviving members of the Hathaway family want anything to do with the farm, the land, or the memories.

Especially Meredith Pincetti. Now living in New York City, for seventeen years Lavinia's youngest grandchild has tried to forget everything about her family and her past. But with the receipt of a pleading letter, Meredith is again thrust into conflict with the legacy that destroyed her family's once-great name. Back at Aurelia, Meredith must confront the rise and fall of the Hathaway family... and her own part in their mottled history. 

 "Our farm was like the world when people still thought it was flat. And when you left it, it was as if you had simply sailed too far and fallen off the surface into the void."

Teaser:
"We are all alone," my grandmother had told me once. "No one feels our aches with us, or our pains or our joys. We are like islands floating in a sea together but that's all, we are still just an island, so close we can touch each other, smell each other, but always from a distance."
My Thoughts:


Since I can be picky about the grammar and such in books, I want to note that the copy I read was a paper ARC. Since it was an ARC, it contained a number of incorrect words (Davy frequently used "tendered" for "tended"), missing words, typos, etc. that presumably were caught and fixed before it went to final print.

Apart from that, I enjoyed the story. Davy would drop little hints here and there, and sometimes those hints would be expanded upon and sometimes those hints would be all we would know about why or how something happened. The desire to know more, to see if I would learn all of the secrets kept me reading. Secrets, as Davy shows, are time bombs waiting to go off, causing ever-expanding ripples of damage. The story starts in the present day, told in the first person by Meredith, then jumps to the past, told in third person omniscient, then back to the present. Both viewpoints are told in every chapter but the break between and change in perspectives is clean, with no confusion. The third person omniscient allowed for details that we might not have gotten otherwise, but I felt as if I never really got into Lavinia's head, or understood, in the beginning anyway, what made her tick. Lavinia is the driving force in this story, the events flow from her actions and decisions. Initially, at least, her motivations were a bit weak, we weren't shown much insight into her behavior but as the story goes on, Davy makes them clearer.

Lavinia is hard, unsentimental, manipulative, and though she can read people sufficiently to manipulate, she utterly lacks sympathy and empathy. It's all about her and if she can't coerce or seduce you to her side, then she'll blackmail or break you, whichever best serves her end goal. The seduction, I should note, is not sexual; she could, when it suited her, be pleasant and kind, on the surface anyway, and before long, her victims were following her happily, with not a clue what they were getting themselves into.

With a matriarch such as Lavinia, it's no wonder that the Hathaway family is dysfunctional. The farm, and the family's reputation, are all that matters to Lavinia and she does her best to see they are priorities for the rest of the family, no matter how miserable they are. As long as the farm is prosperous and the family's reputation unstained, personal happiness is irrelevant. The pace lagged in places and the writing was occasionally pretentious, but it's a fascinating look into the disintegration of a family - obsession, secrets, jealousy, love, hate, desire - all of the things we do in the name of love or the desire to better ourselves, no matter the cost. Forgiveness, in real life, doesn't come easily, nor does it in the story. The survivors, Meredith and her sisters, have been mostly estranged for years, and dealing with the farm's dissolution re-opens scars. There's not a happy ending, Meredith and her sisters don't make up, life doesn't become all rainbows and ice cream.

If you like family sagas, multi-generational stories, with some soap opera elements to them, you might like this book. It reminded me at times of Steinbeck's "East of Eden", though it's been many years since I read that one.


To read excerpts from this book and see who else is participating in the blog tour, you can look here: . http://booktrib.com/?page_id=152294&preview=true

I received a paperback ARC for review.