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, November 11, 2012

Sunday Book Share #10

 

I'm participating in both The Sunday Post, hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer, and Stacking the Shelves, hosted by Tynga's Reviews. Each meme allows book bloggers the chance to share books they've received, and different posts and events at their blog.

Last week went by quickly, how is it Sunday again already? We got some snow this week, about on an inch of it, heavy and wet. Happily it melted in a couple days. I'm not ready for winter yet, then again I never am. :D I had a checkup with the main doctor on the surgical team and she's excited, quite optimistic about its effects. She thinks that my quick recovery from the asthma attack a few weeks ago is a sign that the procedure is working. :)


Cover Reveals:  Hidden Gates by D.T. Dillin
 



This week I have several spotlights, an excerpt and giveaway, a guest post, and reviews. I'm very excited about the excerpt and giveaway; the author J.A. Campbell is a friend of mine and I've been waiting for this book, "Summer Break Blues", for a year now. Be sure to stop in on Friday, read the excerpt and enter the giveaway! Also, if you want to be part of her blog tour, send me an email, beasbooknook@gmail.com

BOOKS

Library:


I'm so behind on the Elder Races series; I need to catch up so I can read the book I won a few weeks ago.

Bought:


Won:


I won this from the author in a giveaway on the wonderful Kimba the Caffeinated's blog

Kindle Freebies:


"Waking Up Married" is a pre-order, it won't land on my Kindle until December 1st. I bought "The Negotiator" because of the blurb and despite the cover. I really dislike that cover, though the purple is pretty.


Kindle freebies are crack, my crack certainly. :D

I hope you all have a good week. Don't forget to leave a link to your post in your comment.

Friday, November 9, 2012

ARC Review of Checking It Twice by Jodi Redford

Publisher: Samhain
Format Read: eARC
Release Date: November 27, 2012
Buying Links:  Amazon   Barnes & Noble   Samhain

Book Blurb (from goodreads):

Tis the season for double seduction.

The only item on Jana Colton's Christmas list this year is Kevin Monahan. Preferably naked in her bed. The delicious, hunky chef has been resisting her forever, but she's pulling out all the sexy stops this holiday. Especially since his acceptance of an out-of-state job threatens to nix her quest to rock his boxers off.

Jana has always been Kevin's personal Kryptonite, but giving in to her isn't an option. Relationships are a four-letter word in his book. He cares far too much for Jana to let his emotional baggage ultimately break her heart.

With the arrival of his best friend, Nick Pappas, the balance of temptation shifts. From their past history of sharing women, Nick knows every dirty trick it takes to lead Kevin astray, and he's not afraid to use them. Particularly since Nick's convinced that Jana is exactly what Kevin needs to be happy and whole.

Their game of seduction quickly snowballs into something that feels an awful lot like love--in triplicate. But with Kevin dead set on leaving Michigan, there's a real possibility it could be a blue Christmas for them all.

Warning: This book contains an extremely tormented voyeur, a very naughty and not so saintly Nick, a liberal application of candy cane-flavored body paint, a buzzing butterfly, and enough raunchy fun on a sex swing to melt a snowman...or two.


Quote:
Intimacy didn't come easy for him. Until Jana entered his life, he rarely let down his guard enough to share that side of himself. The only other person who'd broken through his barriers had been Nick.
And look where that got you.
Reviewed By: Bea

Bea's Thoughts:

"Checking It Twice" is a follow up to "The Naughty List", featuring Jana Colton, sister to one of the main characters in  that book. As always with Redford's books, there's hot, steamy sex; humor; and a character who is reluctant to love.

Jana is in love with Kevin and though they are friends, she's never had any luck in getting him to let her in. Kevin is attracted to Jana, may even love her but due to several different past experiences feels that he has nothing to offer her and that he is in fact a sexual freak. Then his former best friend Nick arrives in town and turns everything upside down. As relationships change and boundaries are pushed, Kevin slowly starts to confront his past and his hangups, Jana discovers a side to herself that she'd been unaware of and Nick makes another life change. Everyone changes during the story, a process that can be frightening and Redford doesn't back away from showing us the difficulties.

There's a revelation near the end of the book that I wish she'd spent more time on and I hope that if there's another book, it will be addressed. She presents what happened in a character's past as an affair but since only one partner was of legal age and the other one was only fifteen years old it strikes me more as abuse or statuatory rape. That bothered me but not enough to detract from the story. If you enjoy your romances extra steamy and aren't bothered by threesomes or voyeurism, then you need to read this story.



I received an eARC from the author for review.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Spotlight: The Breeders by Matthew J. Beier





Matthew J. Beier’s new novel "The Breeders", set in a dystopian future where homosexuals run the world and heterosexuals are being set on a path to extinction, is available now from Epicality Books. Beier, an openly gay Minnesota native, hopes the political satire will add fuel to the nation’s debate over gay marriage, coming just in time to dovetail with Minnesota’s proposed amendment to ban it.

 Beier knows something most heterosexual people don’t: what it’s like to be perceived as a threat—or even hated—due to his sexual orientation. In a unique reflection of his own life experience, "The Breeders" flips social norms upside down and imagines a future where homosexuals have figured out how to reproduce via genetic engineering, and heterosexuals are the disdained minority—kept around only as a backup plan for human survival. Inspiration for the novel came from the National Organization for Marriage, whose 2008 ad campaign equating gay marriage to “a coming storm” was both humorous and frustrating for the author.

“Despite the fact that I’ve been very fortunate in avoiding any life-altering instances of prejudice, I’m often on the outside, looking in,” he says of his experience living on the homosexual fringe. “When I see political agendas, news stories, or online news comments conveying fear or disgust over the GLBT community, I can’t help but think that most of the people behind them haven’t even bothered to put themselves in the place of those they are speaking out against. In developing The Breeders, I asked myself, ‘What would happen if I imagined it for them?’” 

What drew Beier’s attention was the idea of two heterosexuals conceiving a child in a future where reckless, unplanned reproduction is the most hated of human flaws. The book draws on current political, media, and scientific trends to make the dystopian future feel as realistic as possible.

“The Breeders takes this scenario to the extreme, but at its core is a story about two human beings trying to find their own worth in a society that drags them down,” Beier says. “I think the book is hitting at just the right time due to the public attention focused on gay marriage issues, bullying, and anti-gay prejudice. I’m often surprised to see just how diverse people’s beliefs and feelings are on these subjects, especially when hatred and violence are involved. One of the key problems is that there are so few conversation starters out there that encourage the differing camps to understand each other.” 

While Beier hopes "The Breeders" will be entertaining for people of all political persuasions, he also hopes it will foster dialogue between people of differing opinions on human rights and social progress. “My dream,” he says, “is to help people to see that humanity is—to quote Albus Dumbledore—only as strong as it is united and as weak as it is divided. But if this novel simply makes anybody’s list of top books to read, that would be a thrill, too.”

I like the cover of this book, though why it has icebergs I have no idea. I guess I'll have to read it to find out. It's an intriguing premise with a dynamite plot. If you read it before I do, let me know what you think.


Author: Matthew Beier 
ISBN: 978-0983859406 
Publisher: Epicality Books 
Genre: Fiction, Dystopian, Speculative
Release Date: January 2012 
Formats: paperback, ebook
Length: 426 pages, 708 KB
Price: $14.99US 
Buying Links:  The Book Depository   Amazon   Barnes & Noble

Interested? Check out the book trailer.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

John Scalzi Ebook Bundle Sale

Subterranean Press is having a sale on it's John Scalzi ebook bundle. You get 7 fiction titles and 1 non-fiction title. The sale runs until the end of November and is available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Kobo (links below).

Fiction:
  • How I Proposed To My Wife: An Alien Sex Story
  • An Election
  • Questions for a Soldier
  • The Sagan Diary
  • Judge Sn Goes Golfling 
  • The Tale of the Wicked
  • The God Engines
Non-Fiction
  • You're Not Fooling Anyone When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop
If purchased individually, the books would run you $17.92, but for the month of November, you can get all of the Scalzi you can handle for the low price of $7.99. If you haven't read Scalzi before, this is a good way to ease into his writing.

To order, head over to (Kindle|BN.com|Kobo).

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Cover Reveal: Hidden Gates by D.T. Dyllin

Today I have an absolutely gorgeous cover to share with you. It's a real eye catcher, and uses my favorite colors. "Hidden Gates" is the first book in the P.J. Stone Gates trilogy by D.T Dyllin. The expected release date is January 2013.


The blurb (from the author):



For P.J. Stone, being a “Seer” who has never seen anything is less than fun. And P.J. isn’t known for her patience.

To make matters worse, she must choose a suitable mate to continue the Seer bloodline. Duty always comes before her heart…at least that’s what her parents taught her. When she finds herself wanting someone who is considered off-limits, P.J. is forced to question everything she believes. 

As if navigating her love life isn’t complicated enough, P.J. finally receives a vision—of a threat to her world that only she can perceive. But no one will believe a fledgling Seer’s warnings. With nowhere else to turn, she may decide to trust a stranger with her life, her world, and maybe even her heart.
  

Cynical-Optimist. Chocolate-holic. Sarcasm Addict. Paranormal Believer. Self-Imposed Insomniac. Sci-Fi Geek. Animal Lover. Writer…are just a few words to describe D.T. Dyllin. She was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and now lives in Nashville, Tennessee with her husband and two very spoiled GSDs.

Author Links:







Is that not a gorgeous cover? The colors, the shading, the reflection in the eye, just lovely. Quick, go add this to your TBR list so you don't forget about it between now and January.

ARC Review of Trapped by Kevin Hearne

Publisher: Del Rey
Series: Iron Druid Chronicles #5
Format Read: eGalley
Release Date: November 27, 2012
Buying Links:  Amazon   Barnes & Noble   The Book Depository

Book Blurb (from goodreads):

After twelve years of secret training, Atticus O’Sullivan is finally ready to bind his apprentice, Granuaile, to the earth and double the number of Druids in the world. But on the eve of the ritual, the world that thought he was dead abruptly discovers that he’s still alive, and they would much rather he return to the grave.

Having no other choice, Atticus, his trusted Irish wolfhound, Oberon, and Granuaile travel to the base of Mount Olympus, where the Roman god Bacchus is anxious to take his sworn revenge—but he’ll have to get in line behind an ancient vampire, a band of dark elves, and an old god of mischief, who all seem to have KILL THE DRUID at the top of their to-do lists.

Reviewed By: Bea

Quote:
 "They were once merely Druids, you say. The Tuatha De' Danann."
"Yes, but they were skilled in their own magic even before that."
"How did they become gods? What powers did they accrue when they did?
"They became gods once people worshipped them as such. They became vessels for Celtic faith, tuning forks for our yearnings, keepers of our hopes and prayers. And the powers they gained were those assigned to them by worshippers. Manannan Mac Lir was not a psychopomp until people thought he was; he was only a Druid with some extra powers in the sea."....
"Godhead transcends generations and requires the concerted belief of a large number of people." ....
"The connection is that there are clearly some powers and processes in the universe we simply don't understand yet. They are ineffable-for now. I don't know how it's possible for Gaia to have a magical nature. And the Tuatha De' Danann cannot tell you how, precisely, they gained the powers of gods on top of the powers of Druids. But they  can tell you they didn't always possess them. Some grew slowly, and some were discovered abruptly. And it's no different with any other gang of gods....the smart ones will tell you they're not sure how they got the gig they got and they don't remember creating humanity, much less the world. For most of space and time, they weren't there; and then, one day, they were, complete with a small but hopefully growing collection of praying humans."....
"Nobody has the answer, do they?" she asked quietly.
"No. I'm sorry."
Bea's Thoughts:

I love this series, I don't ever want it to end. Hearne takes mythology and Druidry and brings them to the modern world in stories that are full of action, humor, religious and philosophical discussion, pop culture references, a little romance, strong plotting and in-depth characterization. All but one have been four and five star reads for me (over on goodreads since I don't use ratings here.) I gave this one four stars.

Life is rarely dull with Atticus around, especially as he tends to speak without thinking first. It's that tendency that gets him into so much trouble. His words have unintended consequences and then he has to to try to clean up and make amends. For the most part, Atticus is a live and let live guy; you leave him alone and he'll leave you alone. But if you mess with something or someone that matters to him, he gets involved. Between that and his speak first, think later tendency, he winds up in many adventures. He's an honorable man and always repays his debts.

Those debts come calling as he's trying to finish up the last stage of Granuaile's Druid training.They are constantly interrupted, there are numerous assassination attempts on their lives, and finding out who is responsible and the connections amongst everything going on is one heck of a roller coaster ride. Along the way, Atticus and Granuaile hang out with a sea god, see Amelia Earhart (and oh boy, was Granuaile NOT HAPPY about that), Atticus finally admits he's attracted to Granuaile, they meet new elementals and oh yes, they go to Hel. :D

Hearne winds up some storylines from earlier books, advances others and introduces new ones. I was a bit concerned when I first found out that this book takes place twelve years in the future, but it wasn't a problem at all. For most of the book, they are out in the wilderness or off in other planes of reality. The few times Atticus and Granuaile are in the modern world, Hearne keeps the details vague enough that it feels current but not stagnant.

The pace is fast, the plot convoluted but tightly woven, it's a nearly perfect story. "Trapped" is an excellent addition to the series and I'm counting down the days to the next one. Now, go to your favorite book store or book site and buy this book. 

Some favorite quotes:
"Oh yeah, I forgot. Irish wolfhounds are the ultimate accessory for humans."
"So they've decided you're a tad easier to kill. Nothin' personal, y'see. It's not your fault that your life is in the way of their personal ambition." "Silly of me to be offended, then."
Dark tangles of hair, groomed by static or maybe playful kittens, provided stark chaotic frames for pale symmetrical faces.
People go into sporting goods stores ostensibly to prepare themselves to get closer to nature, but, in fact, every time they buy another plastic doodad, they're doing just the opposite.
"You sent in the clowns?" I said into the phone.
 Druid's Log, July 15: Dark elves are not only quick and efficient killers but creative and pyrotechnically inclined ones. (I love the Star Trek reference and it's not the only one in the book.)
 I beamed at him. "You're my favorite sea god, you know." "Aw, get your nose out of me arse. Just make life interestin' as ye promised." (That of course is something that Atticus has no trouble doing.)
Really, go pre-order the book NOW!

I received an eARC from the publisher for review.

Dusty Reads Link Up


Dusty Reads is a meme started by Giselle at Xpresso Reads featuring a book that has been sitting unread on your shelf for some time. Books don't have to be 'x' years old. If you've had the book for a few months without reading it, it's dusty! :D You can post on any day but Giselle and I usually post or put up a linky on Tuesdays. If you don't use the button, try to link back to this post or Giselle's so others will know how/where to link up. You can use the above button, the one below or create your own if you prefer.  





Monday, November 5, 2012

Cover Reveal: Pieces by Michelle Davidson Argyle

Today I'm excited to participate in the cover reveal for a new young adult/new adult novel, "Pieces" by Michelle Davidson Argyle. It's the follow up to "The Breakaway", which released in May of this year. "Pieces" will be available February 14th, 2013; it can be read as a stand alone.

The blurb (from the author):
Two years after watching her kidnappers go to prison, Naomi Jensen is still in love with one of them. Jesse will be released in a few years, and Naomi knows college is the perfect distraction while she waits. But when her new friend Finn makes her question what is right and what is wrong, she begins to wonder if Jesse is the one for her … until she discovers he's out on parole. Naomi must sort through her confusion to figure out where love and freedom truly lie—in Finn, who has no connections to her past, or Jesse, who has just asked her to run away with him.
Pieces is a companion to The Breakaway and can be read independently, if desired.
Michelle lives and writes in Utah, surrounded by the Rocky Mountains. She loves the seasons, but late summer and early fall are her favorites. She adores chocolate, sushi, and lots of ethnic food, and loves to read and write books in whatever time she can grab between her sword-wielding husband and energetic daughter. She believes a simple life is the best life.

Author Links:
   Website
   Goodreads
   Twitter
   Facebook



Well, what do you think? Are you excited for the book to come out? Here's a little something to pique your interest even more ~