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, March 24, 2013

Sunday Book Share #29

I'm participating in Feed My Reader Friday hosted by I Am A Reader, Not A WriterThe Sunday Post, hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer, and Stacking the Shelves, hosted by Tynga's Reviews. These  memes allow book bloggers the chance to share print and digital books they've received, and different posts and events at their blogs.

More frigging snow. Sigh. At least I got a day off out of it. Although the foot of snow wasn't the best thing for the daffodils that were blooming. :( I like daffodils, they're one of my favorite flowers. Despite the snow I had a busy week at work, with prepping for our annual art show and taking a workshop on play. At home, I've started doing some spring cleaning and organizing, and shared some books with a friend. 

The Week In Review







Take Control of Your TBR Pile Challenge:  Holiday Buzz by Cleo Coyle
Written in Stone by Ellery Adams - review to come

Odd phrase that led to the blog:  "shadow of the damned 3d model" - I think this might refer to a photo I posted of a 3D lung model.
"circus things that make the letter g" - this probably refers to an alphabet book I reviewed several years ago.

Upcoming This Week

Blog Tours - Guest Post by Romance Author Grace Marshall
Giveaway & Spotlight on Alpha Me Not by Jianne Carlo
Spotlight on Ixeos by Jennings Wright
Cover Reveal for As Hard As It Gets by Laura Kaye 

Reviews - Written in Stone by Ellery Adams

BOOKS - a very good week for books :)

Won - Kindle


 I won this at Cozy Mystery Book Reviews as part of their anniversary celebration.

Bought - Kindle


Last week the print version arrived and this week the ebook version arrived :)

Donated


These were donated by the author to my school. They're different age levels but all appropriate for my school. 

Review - Print



I received an ARC and the cover isn't nearly as pretty as the finished book.


This is part of a blog tour next month. The author also donated books to my school.


This is also for a blog tour next month.

Review - Kindle




Also for a blog tour, in May.

Kindle Freebies


Heavy on the review books and light on the freebies, I think I'm achieving some balance. :D

Leave a link so I can stop by and visit!

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Review of Etiquette and Espionage by Gail Carriger

Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
Series: Finishing School #1
Format Read: Hardcover
Release Date: February 5, 2013
Buying Links:  Amazon  Barnes & Noble  The Book Depository

Book Blurb from goodreads:
It's one thing to learn to curtsy properly. It's quite another to learn to curtsy and throw a knife at the same time. Welcome to Finishing School.
Fourteen-year-old Sophronia is a great trial to her poor mother. Sophronia is more interested in dismantling clocks and climbing trees than proper manners—and the family can only hope that company never sees her atrocious curtsy. Mrs. Temminick is desperate for her daughter to become a proper lady. So she enrolls Sophronia in Mademoiselle Geraldine's Finishing Academy for Young Ladies of Quality.
 
But Sophronia soon realizes the school is not quite what her mother might have hoped. At Mademoiselle Geraldine's, young ladies learn to finish...everything. Certainly, they learn the fine arts of dance, dress, and etiquette, but they also learn to deal out death, diversion, and espionage—in the politest possible ways, of course. Sophronia and her friends are in for a rousing first year's education.

Set in the same world as the Parasol Protectorate, this YA series debut is filled with all the saucy adventure and droll humor Gail Carriger's legions of fans have come to adore.


Bea's Thoughts:

I very much enjoyed Carriger's Parasol and Protectorate series. I'm not a big YA reader so I wasn't sure if I'd read this series but the book trailer, the cover and the blurb sold me. I knew I had to give it a shot.

While I enjoyed this book, I didn't love it. It had moments of humor in the same vein as the Parasol Protectorate but it was missing something. The world building was adequate, I enjoyed seeing the younger Sidheag and Genevieve, but there were unlikely coincidences and a few too many predictable events. The resolution of the mystery was rushed, humorous, and a little too neat.

I did like the details Carriger used; if you haven't read the Parasol Protectorate series, you're not at a loss. Carriger fills in the details and fleshes out the world nicely. There are even more Steampunk elements (though the scene in the school's records room was over the top and unnecessary. A more typical filing system would have made more sense.) There's a definite British feel to the story and Carriger still has the knack for sending up customs and mores.

I enjoyed the character of Sophronia and seeing the changes in her though her type is nothing new - tomboy, free-spirited girl is thrust into social situation, ie finishing school, that she's not prepared for, makes enemy of popular girl, befriends the underdogs and people in low paces, etc. Still, she's interesting and enjoyable and so is the cast of characters. I liked that Carriger does us show more of what life is like for both the lower upper-class and the actual lower-class which we didn't really get in the Parasol Protectorate except for occasional glimpses of Ivy's life. I was also happy to see the inclusion of a person of color. Right now Soap (it's a nickname) is mostly cardboard but I have hopes he'll develop as the series goes on. I enjoyed this book enough that I'll definitely pick up the next book.

Some fun quotes:
"Mummy and Daddy want him to be an evil genius, but he has his heart set on Latin verse."..."Face it, Pill, you're disappointingly good." "Oh, I like that! And you're so evil? Why, you want to get married and be a lady." (Later we get references to levels of evil geniuses such as discourteous genius and spiteful genius.)
"We had lessons in knife-fighting from a werewolf." "Werewolf? Bully! We don't have any supernaturals here. It's quite a dearth in the deanship if you ask me. Any reputable school ought to have at least one vampire professor. Eton has three. You lot are only girls, you've a vampire and a werewolf. Jolly unfair, that's what I call it." 
"Algebra was far more interesting when it was a matter of proportioning out mutton chops so as to poison only half of one's dinner guests and then determining the relative value of purchasing a more expensive, yet more effective, antidote over a home remedy."

I borrowed this from my local library.

Friday, March 22, 2013

The Werewolf - From Gentleman to Beast, A Guest Post by Laura Lee Nutt & A Giveaway



 
Let me begin by first thanking Bea, Jax, and Liz for having me on your blog today. I appreciate it immensely. And thank you to your readers for stopping by and staying to talk a little of werewolves. (We love werewolves here! It's how the three of us met. ~ Bea)


Contrary to what might seem logical, many of the earliest versions of werewolves in literature were gentlemen. Only over time did prominent werewolves become more grotesque, mindless, and bestial.



Perhaps the most well known of these early tales, one you may have been forced to read in English class, is Marie de France’s 12th century lai, Bisclavret. While Marie de France mentions the existence of savage versions in the first stanza, her story focuses on a noble baron of Brittany who just so happens to be a werewolf married to a conniving wife.



The werewolf in Bisclavret must shed his clothes to become the wolf, and he resumes his man’s form by donning them again. When his wife learns of his secret, she steals his clothes so he is forced to remain a wolf and takes off with a knight who has long been in love with her.



The king later discovered Bisclavret as a wolf and is so impressed with his gentleness and nobility that he takes him home. Later, when Bisclavret sees the knight his wife ran off with, he attacks the man. Then, when Bisclavret sees his wife, he rips off her nose. After, the wife confesses, and Bisclavret is returned his clothes, lands, and normal life.



Interestingly, though I never once learned this in a literature class, amputation of the nose was a common practice for adultery. So rather than exhibiting primal brutality, Bisclavret punishes his wife in the manner common in his time.



Similar versions to Bisclavret appear throughout the period, and while there seems to be some acknowledgement of the more bestial werewolf, they rarely take center stage. Yet over time, the werewolves featured in literature became more and more evil and monstrous. I could go into much more depth on this, but it would make this post far too long. What we think of more as the traditional werewolf really developed in the early modern centuries and into the twentieth century.



Yet at the end of the twentieth century and into our current time, the werewolf took another shift. Rather than continue to allow the impulses of the moon to blind him with demonic rage, he has reacquired some of his gentlemanly manner. In truth, the werewolf of our time often straddles the divide between gentleman and beast in a compelling balance. Stories like Weathering Rock by Mae Clair or Beauty and the Werewolf by Mercedes Lackey, both of which feature a werewolf trapped in a mindless, destructive state, are the exception.



In my book, Red and the Wolf, I embraced a concept of lycanthropy where the instincts of the beast reign. However, in homage to Marie de France’s concept of the werewolf, which I also find compelling, the human can dominate the wolf and compel it to docility. . . at least to a certain extent. In fact, it is that struggle between instinct and culture, that battle between the wild and the civilized that I imbued in my shifters. To me, the conflict is one of the major reasons werewolves are so fascinating. Let them be a bit of a gentleman and a bit of the beast.



GIVEAWAY DETAILS: Commenters on today’s post, March 22, will be entered in a drawing to win an e-copy of my new release, Red and the Wolf, in either epub, mobi, or pdf, whichever they choose. I will announce the winner in the comments on this post on Saturday, March 23.



In addition, check out my March Giveaway on my blog (running March 11-31) for a variety of prizes including a lovely copy of Andersen and Grimms’ fairy tales and Little Red Riding Hood’s basket complete with an assortment of goodies to brighten anyone’s day, even a grandmother whose house has just been burgled by a werewolf. For more details and how to earn points, visit my website. To earn your first point, comment on today’s post. (Comments will count in both giveaways if made on March 22. If made after, comments will only be added for a chance to win in the March giveaway.)



Do you prefer your werewolves be more gentlemanly or beastly? Who is your favorite werewolf in literature? I like my werewolves a little bit of both but leaning slightly more toward the beastly. My favorite werewolf is Adam Hauptman from Patricia Briggs’s Mercedes Thompson series. (One of my favorite UF series! ~ Bea)


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Thank you Laura! I learned some new things about werewolf history; learning new information is fun. :)


In elementary school, Laura Lee Nutt checked out every fairy tale in the library so often, if she picked something else, it was cause for curiosity. Even into adulthood, she nurtured her imagination with stories of fairies, true love, monsters, especially werewolves, and the fantastic, but she wondered what happened after “happily ever after.” 

This curiosity and catching an illness one chill winter day brought her before a blank computer screen, desperately desiring to write something new. Heinrich, Blanchette, and Karl swiftly spun the tale you just read. Laura feverishly typed, barely fast enough to keep up. 

Once Red and the Wolf was born, other stories coalesced in Laura’s mind, Beauty and the Beast, Sleeping Beauty, Hansel and Gretel, all asking the same questions: What might happen if the end of these tales wasn’t really the end? What were these characters’  lives really like after the harrowing events of the fairy tale? What if achieving true love and happiness required something extra? Thus came the idea for this series, Embracing Ever After, where achieving true love requires something special and happily ever after isn’t really the end.

Find Laura online:

Website
Blog
Twitter
Facebook
Goodreads

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Publisher: Lyrical Press
Genre: Urban Fantasy, Romance
Format: ebook
Length: 318 KB, 160 pages
Release Date: March 4, 2013
Buying Links: Lyrical Press Barnes and Noble  iTunes  Amazon




So, how do YOU like your werewolves?

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Review of Drop Dead on Recall by Sheila Webster Boneham

Publisher: Midnight Ink
Series: An Animals in Focus Mystery #1
Format Read: Trade Paperback
Release Date: October 2012
Buying Links:  Amazon  Barnes & Noble  The Book Depository

Book Blurb from goodreads:
Dogs, cats, and murderous misdeeds. 
Animal photographer and dog show handler Janet MacPhail knows it’s the sure-footed, finely trained canine competitors that steal the attention in the obedience ring. But all eyes are on widely disliked star handler Abigail Dorn when she falls down dead at the drop on recall command with her border collie, Pip, an Obedience Trial Champion.
Janet suspects foul play when she uncovers a bitter rivalry between Abby and Suzette, the owner of Fly, Pip’s top-ranking competitor. Balancing her dementia-afflicted mother, threats aimed at her beloved pets, and a flirty-hunk dog handler, Janet investigates as another murder takes place. And her nosing around reveals an ugly scandal in the dog show circuit.

Bea's Thoughts:

If you aren’t a dog lover, this might not be the right book for you. I like dogs but I’m not a dog lover and at times the story dragged. We get an up close and detailed look at dog shows and their culture, as well as a look at breeding purebred dogs. Mixed in with the murder mysteries are a sweet budding romance and the travails of an aging parent.

Janet is likable; she isn’t a morning person, loves animals, has bills to pay, puts housekeeping low on her priority list (which actually works to her benefit later in the story), and has family problems. When a competitor and acquaintance, Abigail,  literally falls ill at a show, she rushes over to help but Abigail dies en route to the hospital. She helps Abigail’s husband by taking the dog, Pip, home to her house for a few days. That’s when the trouble begins. She is hounded by another competitor and Pip’s breeder to turn Pip over to them and the police keep questioning her. She gets drawn deeper and deeper into the investigation, unable to turn away.

Boneham pushes one suspect very hard; so hard that I became convinced that that person wasn’t actually responsible. There are other suspects and I thought I knew who it was. Boneham sprinkles clues and red herrings throughout the story, leaving the reader wondering just who the killer is. The ending was a bit cliched, and the dog details could get incredibly dry. The book goes on too long, it could have been trimmed by a quarter and been the better for it. The story was okay but I doubt I’ll bother with the next book.

This review first appeared at BookTrib.  I borrowed this book from my library.

Cat Thursday - Where's my dinner?


Welcome to the weekly meme hosted by The True Book Addict that celebrates cats; their foibles and humorousness and the joy they bring. You can join in by posting a favorite LOL cat pic you made or came across, cat art or share with us pics of your own felines, then post your link up at The True Book Addict



My cat gets three meals a day but he'd prefer it if he could eat whenever he wants, as much as he wants. I used to work two jobs out of the house, 50 - 60 a week, which meant that sometimes he'd go 10 or 12 hours between meals. So, for many years I'd just put out food and refill as needed so he didn't go hungry but he gained weight that way. So, the vet and I put him on a diet and a schedule and he HATES it. I don't need a clock with him around. He is my clock. :D

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Excerpt & GC Giveaway - Ixeos by Jennings Wright


Tour Schedule

Today I have a sci fi YA for you. Released last month, "Ixeos" (I wonder if I could get away with that word in Scrabble?) is the first in a new trilogy. Read on for an excerpt and a giveaway.

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Excerpt

Marty chewed his crusty bread thoughtfully. “They’ve got a pretty amazing set up down here,” he observed. “Fresh food, the air is okay, there’s apparently water for drinking and washing and bathing. Dorms, a library… It’s pretty sweet!”

“Sweet?” Clay asked in amazement. “We’re two hundred feet underground, apparently recruited to fight some kind of alien serial killers, and we can’t get home! How is that sweet?”

Neahle laid a hand on his wrist just above his tattoo. Her thumb rubbed the spot. “We’ll be okay, Clay,” she said quietly. “We just need to get our bearings. You know. Figure out what we’re supposed to do.”

Clay put his hand over hers for a minute, then pulled his arm away. “How do we know that what these people are saying is true? It’s nuts! And this Landon — who’s he supposed to be? How come he can leave here, and we can’t?”

“We’ll find more out tomorrow,” Marty said. “But we were chosen, dude. There’s something we can do here to make a difference in this rebellion thing, and that makes us special. I mean, Landon chose us for a reason, right?”

“Because we were the only ones stupid enough to follow the ducks…” Clay muttered, taking a large swallow of water from his mug.
 

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Ixeos

Book Blurb ~

The McClellands are enjoying a lazy summer vacation at the beach when they are lured from our world into Ixeos, an alternate Earth. Finding themselves lost in a maze of tunnels under Paris and surrounded by strangers, they discover that they have been brought to Ixeos for one purpose:  to take the planet back from humanoid aliens who have claimed it. With the aid of the tunnels and a mysterious man named Landon, the teens travel the world seeking the key that will allow them to free Darian, the long-imprisoned rebel leader. But the aliens aren't the only problem on Ixeos -- the McClellands have to deal with brutal gangs, desperate junkies, and a world without power, where all the technology is owned by the aliens, and where most of the population has been killed or enslaved. The worst part? There's no way home.

Publisher: CreateSpace
Genre: Science Fiction, YA
Format: Paperback, ebook 
Length: 358 pages, 767 KB
Release Date: February 11, 2013 
Buying Links:  Amazon * Barnes & Noble

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About the Author:

Born and raised in Florida, Jennings spent her early years reading anything she could get her hands on, when she wasn't spending time in and on the water. She won a prize in the 6th grade for her science fiction stories.

Jennings attended the University of Tampa, graduating with a B.A. in Political Science, and almost enough credits for B.A.s in both English and History. She attended graduate school at the University of West Florida, studying Psychology. She spent time over the years doing various kinds of business writing, editing, and teaching writing, but mostly having and raising her family, homeschooling her children, owning and running a business with her husband, and starting a non-profit.

Thanks to a crazy idea called NaNoWriMo Jennings got back into creative writing in 2011 and hasn't stopped since. She currently lives in North Carolina with her husband, also a business owner and writer, and two children, and travels extensively with her family, and her non-profit in Uganda.

Find Jennings online:

 Facebook * Twitter * Website * Blog * Amazon * Goodreads

 
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Blog Tour Giveaway

$25 Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash

Ends 4/12/13 (My birthday! Maybe it's an omen? :D)

Open only to those who can legally enter, receive and use an Amazon.com Gift Code or Paypal Cash. Winning Entry will be verified prior to prize being awarded. No purchase necessary. You must be 18 or older to enter or have your parent enter for you. The winner will be chosen by rafflecopter and announced here as well as emailed and will have 48 hours to respond or a new winner will be chosen. This giveaway is in no way associated with Facebook, Twitter, Rafflecopter or any other entity unless otherwise specified. The number of eligible entries received determines the odds of winning. Giveaway was organized by Kathy from I Am A Reader, Not A Writer http://iamareader.com and sponsored by the authors. VOID WHERE PROHIBITED BY LAW.


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