Saturday 30 November 2013

The Unbelievable Top Secret Diary of Pig by Emer Stamp And Giveaway

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Me I is Pig. I is 465 sunsets old, but every day I gets older, so this fact is only correct right now, on the day I is writing.
I live in Pig House. Pig House is next to CHICKEN HOUSE, which is opposite Cow Shed, which is not too far from Duck Pond.
Published by Scholastic in October 2013
Pages - 192

Summary From Scholastic
Meet PIG who stars in the funniest debut book this year.
Written by Pig and crammed with brilliant cartoons on every page, The Unbelievable Top Secret Diary of Pig is a laugh-out-loud read for 7+ boys and girls – and parents love Pig too.
*******
Review by Liss Norton
Did you know chickens are evil? Read this book and you'll find out all about their dastardly and cunning ways from Pig himself. The story is funny, fast-paced and there's lots of farting in it, which should appeal to most children.
Pig is an endearingly naive character who thinks Farmer gives him lots of lovely slops out of kindness. When his friend Duck tells him the shocking truth – that Farmer plans to chip-chop him up and eat him – Pig is forced to make his escape. But the only way out of the farm is in a trocket, a poo-powered rocket that the evil chickens have made out of a tractor. The trocket is programmed to fly to Pluto.
The story is bursting with zaniness. There are alien garden gnomes, crazy disguises, a stowaway, a flock of itchy sheep and a sat-nav that speaks Picken (Pig language spoken by evil chickens). Add in Pig's kind-heartedness, his determination not to look like a Softie Pig and his inability to leave any scrap of food uneaten and you've got a great book. The cartoons on nearly every page and the well-spaced writing make this a book that even reluctant readers will enjoy. Not to be missed.
******
If you like the sound of this book, then you will definitely want to enter the giveaway for it. Scholastic have kindly offered to give away two copies of this book. All you have to do is leave your email address in the comment box. The competition closes on the 7th December.  This is a UK only competition.

Friday 29 November 2013

The Dark Inside by Rupert Wallis

Disclaimer: This post is being sponsored by Grammarly, an online automated proof reader. To find out more about them, please click on the word proofreading below.
I am using Grammarly for proofreading today because lately I am having as many bad typo days as I do bad hair days!
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Run.
And James did. Out the back door. Through the gap in the garden fence. Not stopping even after the bellowing of his stepfather had wasted in the wind and there was nothing but the whip of grass across his shins.
Published by Simon and Schuster in January 2013
Pages – 360
Book Summary
When thirteen-year-old James discovers a homeless man in an abandoned house, the course of his life changes dramatically. Hoping to find a 'cure' for a dark curse inflicted on the homeless man, the pair embark on a journey together not knowing that what they discover will impact them both in ways they never imagined...
*******
This book is being heralded as ideal for fans of Patrick Ness and David Almond and I would whole heartedly agree with that. Within these words, be prepared to find a mixture of darkness and sadness entwined. I kept thinking of Skellig by David Almond as I read it, because one of the main characters, Webster,  has that deep hidden hurt, covered over by the oncoming darkness of his situation. You are frightened of him to begin with, but soon see the real person hiding behind the mask.
James was utterly adorable. His strength of character for someone so young, astounded me and I was rooting for him all the way through the book. He had suffered enough to know what suffering looks like in another person and could trust them as a kindred spirit.
I loved the inclusion of the gypsies and fair ground life. The old woman who doesn’t ever appear to be named is an interesting character. She is scary and evil to a certain extent, but when her maternal instinct kicks in, she can be loving and caring just like any other mother.
The story is hard to describe. There is a paranormal element to it, but it feels very contemporary. The paranormal element isn’t over elaborated and always occurs out of scene, so we don’t actually see any evidence of it. So I really want to call this contemporary!!! But it isn’t.
The plot is a journey of sorts. A journey to discover the truth along side a journey to freedom. Within the story, there are many mirroring threads of finding freedom as different characters try to break from either their present situation or break away from the ties of the past that haunt them.  The story is heavier on dialogue, action and emotion than setting and back story, but I felt that fitted well with the intensity of the escape from the situations they found themselves in.
I really enjoyed this debut and I look forward to reading more from Rupert Wallis in the future.  I found myself racing through the pages, to find out what would happen next. I was totally lost in the story of James. If you loved Skellig by David Almond, then this is the book for you.

Thursday 28 November 2013

The Write Way with Nicola Morgan

To celebrate Passionflower Massacre and Sleepwalking being published as one eBook, I am pleased to welcome the rather talented author, Nicola Morgan (also known as Crabbit) onto the blog to talk about how she writes.
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1) You are about to republish two of your previous published books, Passionflower Massacre and Sleepwalking as one eBook. Why have you taken the decision to release them in this way?
Several reasons. The reason to release them as eBooks at all is simple: because, like Everest, they are there. They did well when they were first published and then I moved publisher and they went out of print, as often happens. So, now that I have the rights back I want to find new readers for them. As to why release them as one book: because they fit nicely together, appealing to similar readers, and because it makes it really good value for readers. And it’s easier for me! (But not for my cover designer!)
2) You are known for writing fiction as well as non-fiction, which do you prefer to write and why?
I find writing non-fiction a million times easier, so it satisfies the lazy me. But I find writing fiction twice as satisfying (partly because it’s harder) so it satisfies the high-reaching me.
3) I know you have been very busy writing your non-fiction books recently, do you have any plans on the go, to write more fiction?
Yes, I’m writing fiction. I’ve had a few false starts and not managed to write something I’m satisfied with but I’ve got something very juicy in the pipeline, at an advanced stage. Not for teenagers, though; this time it’s for 9-11s. I don’t know if it will be published but I’m working hard to make it so! It needs a really good publisher, though, and I will not self-publish it.
4) Your writing non-fiction books are very popular among other writers; do you follow your own writing advice?
Well, I guess much of the advice is based on what I wish I’d known a lot earlier, so I do tend to follow it. On the other hand, the advice isn’t really about how to write (as in process) as I believe people have to find their own way of making their words work. My advice is mostly about being ruthlessly critical of what you write, listening to the inner reader, not being delusional, understanding the industry. And yes, I definitely follow all that advice. I do also recommend eating chocolate….
5) You are also well known for public speaking, do you enjoy doing this as much as writing? Does it create a balance in your working life?
I enjoy them both differently. I’m not sure I can say which I enjoy more – it would be like comparing a roast guinea fowl dinner with a seafood and lime starter.  But, yes, I think it does create a good balance – well, it would if I did a bit less speaking and more writing! It’s very easy to say yes to speaking engagements and then not leave any time for writing. Which is one reason why I don’t have a fiction contract just now, because I spent too much time last year and this year on speaking.
6) Do you find that the writing gets easier or harder with each book you publish?  
Harder. So very very much harder. Arghhhh.
7) Do you plot everything out in detail first, or do you tend to fly by the seat of your pants as you write?
I’d love to plot but I can’t seem to do it. So it’s seat of the pants every time. I terrifies me every always justify this by saying that it’s more exciting. It’s not: it drives me nuts and time!
8) Do you set yourself a time limit or a word goal to achieve each day? 
Word goal. (A time limit would be dangerous – I could spend three hours and write three words.) On a “writing day” the word goal would be 3000 words for fiction or 4-5000 words for non-fiction. If it was going well. (But then I’d also spend many days revising. And many more re-revising. Etc. So there’d be no word goal on those days, but maybe a page goal.)
9) Do you have a preferred time to write during the day?
No. Ideally, I’d write first and do the other writer’s tasks later, but the tasks are easier so I usually do them first. I’m weak!
10) How do you deal with your internal editor, waiting to jump on every mistake you make?
I never switch off my internal editor. I long ago gave up trying to tell her anything. Theoretically, switching her off is often a good thing to do but I don’t do it. (As I say, I don’t agree with setting rules of process.) My internal editor is a very effective tool for stopping me going down too many cul-de-sacs.
11) How do you feel about the growing demand for writers to have a greater online presence these days?
I have several things to say about that.
A. It just is part of the job, so we have to deal with it. Make the most of it.
B. However, if we are doing it unwillingly, it’s not going to work very well as there’s a level of dishonesty which doesn’t marry well with social media and which in the end will be a risk or a sticking-point.
C. Therefore, I really dislike the pressure that some publishers put authors under to engage in online activity. The problem is that publishers, being businesses, don’t always realise that doing this as an individual and having to sell yourself is not the same as doing it as a business and selling someone/something else.
D. The opportunities are fantastic and as long as we stay true to ourselves there is more upside than downside. As long as it doesn’t stop us writing the flipping book!
12) What is the one piece of advice you would advise unpublished writers NOT to do? 
Listen to the wrong people. (For clarity: DON’T listen to the wrong people!) Too many unpublished writers (and others, tbh) listen to what they want to hear, without weighing it against other factors, such as reason, or wisdom, or relevant experience; too many are prone to listen to one loud-shouting naysayer or cynic, rather than absorbing the more measured views of those who have seen a variety of experiences and who have learned from them. 
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Thanks Nicola for such honest and interesting answers.
To find out more about Nicola Morgan:

Wednesday 27 November 2013

Waiting on Wednesday–Sleeping Angel by Mia James

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Waiting On Wednesday is a weekly event, started by Jill at Breaking The Spine, highlighting future book releases everyone is waiting on!
Sleeping Angel
Sleeping Angel by Mia James
Published by Indigo in December 2013
Stupidly excited for this one. I’ve been waiting for this book to come out for AGES, so I can’t wait to finally find out what happens in this conclusion of the trilogy.
Summary
The gripping conclusion to a brilliant, supernatural mystery series…
April Dunne has survived murder, tragedy and the near-complete destruction of her life as she knew it.  Now, to save everyone she loves she must find her way through a web of secrets and solve the Ravenwood mystery once and for all.  What she will discover will make your skin crawl and this time she may not make it out alive.  Creepy and mysterious, Mia James carries the story to a hair-raising finale.

Tuesday 26 November 2013

Dark Satanic Mills by Marcus and Julian Sedgwick

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Book Summary
Set in a near-future Britain, Dark Satanic Mills tracks a young girl's journey from the flooded landmarks of London to the vast, scorched and abandoned hills of the north. Framed for a murder she did not commit, the innocent and beautiful Christie has no other choice but to run for her life. Both a cautionary tale and a rip-roaring road trip, Dark Satanic Mills is altogether an intelligent, captivating and thrilling ride – The Wizard of Oz for a new generation, told in exhilarating shades of light and dark.
Published by Walker Books in November 2012
Pages – 176
******
This is a rather dark tale of a London from the future full of maniacal fascistic church members who take it upon themselves to to beat the crap out of any atheists that cross their path. The church has employed an army of believers,now known as the Soldiers of Truth, determined to convert everyone to their religion when they see the light that shines eternally.
At times the story did lose me a little and I found I had to reread certain parts to get a full picture of what was really going on. This book requires your full attention as the story is based heavily on religion and heavily influenced by William Blake’s poem, Jerusalem, which forms the backbone for the plot.
It is a very clever interpretation and shows an extremely intelligent mind at work. The graphics are extremely dark and depict violent scenes at times. It has all the Gothic
trademarks often associated with the writing of Marcus Sedgwick. The book has been described as a ‘punked up version of The Wizard of Oz’ and on reflection I can see how it earned that title. The characters are on a  dangerous journey towards the truth. The ending leaves you questioning the future, and I get the impression there might be a follow on from this book.
For all you graphic novel fans, this will definitely appeal to you, as you take a journey with these brave characters in search of the truth.

Monday 25 November 2013

The Day I Met Holly Black And Sarah Rees Brennan

Earlier this month, I was invited by Nina Douglas, from Indigo (an imprint of Orion Children’s Books) to Foyles along with three other book bloggers to interview Holly Black while she was in town. She was in London to promote her new YA book, The Coldest Girl in Coldtown and was due to be interviewed that evening by one of her best friends as well as interview extraordinaire, Sarah Rees Brennan. If you haven’t ever seen Sarah interview at Foyles then you are truly missing out!
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I am a huge Holly Black fan, in fact she was the first paranormal YA author I ever discovered. So I was a  little author struck to be sitting in the same room, but both Sarah and Holly quickly put us at ease. Holly was simply gorgeous. She looked just as I imagined she would with her striking blue hair and beautiful maroon velvet jacket. She was very down to earth and really easy to talk to. Sarah was hilarious and kept us all amused with her quirky sense of humour.  She kept trying to get a sneaky peak at my questions so she could prepare her answers in advance, but I was too quick and disappeared to the other side of the room. You have to be careful of these tricksy authors.
We were interviewing as a group. We all hoped that we had differing questions, although Sarah did give us permission to punch each other if someone said our question before we got chance to! In this post, I will only be showing you the questions I asked as well as some snippets from the general interview with the audience in the Foyles theatre. 

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Me: You’ve written children’s books as well as Young Adult books, which age group do you prefer writing for?
Holly: When I started out, my first book was a Young Adult book and I thought of that as being my natural voice in fiction. Though saying that I didn’t think of it as a Young Adult book, I only saw it as a fantasy novel. I had read so many fantasy novels growing up, where there were sixteen year old protagonists.  A teen librarian friend of mine read it and told me that it would fit into the YA market, which was different from what I grew up reading. So she gave me Tamora Pearce and Garth Nix to go away and read. I found it really different and I was excited by it. So that was natural to me to write.
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When I sat down to write The Spiderwick Chronicles it was because I was inspired by the stuff Tony (DeTerlizzi) was doing. He had this Field Guide he wanted to make and I had been doing all this research about fairies, so I was like, YES, I want you to do this and I will do what ever it takes to help. So when I actually sat down to write it, I really didn’t know if it was something I could actually do. It has been a surprise to find out I really like doing it. However even though I love writing for younger children, I always think of my voice more as YA.
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Me: I know you are both good friends with Cassandra Clare (author of City of Bones). Is there any plans to write something all together?
Holly: We already have. Not a series. But we have written a short story.
Sarah: We volunteered to do it. There were meant to be two authors and we said how about three. The editor was like, whatever.
Holly: It was for anthology called DARK DUETS. The editor asked me to do it and then  he asked Cassie. So we both told him we would be writing with Sarah.
Me: Did you argue about the story?
Holly: It all worked out more or less.
Sarah: It was fun. We wrote about three evil witches, whose initials began with H, C and S. Three quarters of the way through the story, Holly asked if the characters were us. So you will hear of their adventures soon.
Me: Is that out now?
Holly: No it will be out in the anthology, Dark Duets, edited by Christopher Golden (published by Harper Collins in January 2014).
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Me: I want to go back to before your got your publishing contracts. Were there times you both thought you wouldn’t ever be published and how did you get past that?
Sarah: Here is a tale. A tale that concerns me and a friend of mine. I was in Brighton, on New Years Eve with a friend, over a decade ago. You know one of those parties, where you only know one person – the wing man you went with. Well my wing man had hooked up with someone else and gone off into the garden. Apparently no one was allowed in the garden but they didn’t care. I was looking around at all these strangers who seemed really weird to me. It wasn’t a great party. It sucked. The worst New Years Eve. And I was convinced I would never be a writer. So I went off into the kitchen and met a little red head. She told me her friend had gone off to mess with someone in the garden. Well that was my friend she was messing with. We got talking. She told me she wanted to be a writer but it probably wouldn’t ever happened. I agreed and told her I wanted to be one too. That was Cassandra Clare and look, it worked out for the both of us.
A quote I saw on Tumblr, although I can’t remember who wrote it, stated that for years and years and years, no one will care what you write. And that is the case for all who write. But if you can keep going in the face of total indifference from the whole world, people will eventually care and that will totally awesome. Even if it is only sharing it with three other people. The only ones who will understand how you feel are the ones who go through the same journey. And that is how you get through it, knowing that  to get through it the only way  to get to where you want.
Holly: To me, it felt like a vast wall, between getting published and being published. And it was strange to get to the other side and realise it wasn’t a wall at all. That very little had changed.  I grew up in New Jersey, in a place where I didn’t know any adult who had ever done the thing they really wanted to do. I knew painters, musicians and a very serious amateur historian. The people I knew didn’t get their dreams, that was part of my growing up.
So when I talk to people now, I tell them that they have to believe in themselves, even though I think that is horrible advice, because when I heard it, I would tell myself that I didn’t believe in myself. I think it is too much to ask to do that as well as write. You just have to write. You don’t have to believe it will work. I did it knowing that it would never work. So when I sold my first book it was such a profound and shocking experience; it was the thing I had always wanted and I thought it would be my life’s work to get. I was happy for two months straight. Nothing could upset me. However, that summer after I went into the only depression of my life.  I think I messed up my brain so much, because I convinced myself I was going to die. And much later, when I met Cassie, she said this is something that happens to a lot of lottery winners. Basically your brain has reached a point which you have never planned beyond. I never planned to write a second book. So my brain told me there was nothing left for me, only death.
A few years later I went to a SCWBI conference and told this story. At the end of it, a woman came up to me and was so pleased that I told this story, because the same thing had happened to her. So really this is my bizarre warning.
What I really want to say is you don’t have to believe it will work, you just have to keep going. And sometimes it is easier to keep going by telling yourself it won’t happen. No one will ever read it, no one will ever have to see it. This is just for you. And keep doing it.
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Me: Do you try to write a certain amount every day? Even when you are travelling?
Holly: I try to. Even though there are times when I know there is no way.
Me: Do you get anxious if you don’t write?
Holly: I don’t except from the perspective of deadline. I know people who do write every day even when they are travelling. I just can’t always do that. I try.
Sarah: I was a panel and an author told me she had only written 2,000 words today and I told her I had only just got up.
Me: Now surely that must make you feel anxious, if someone else is saying that to you?
Sarah: I feel just fine until someone else displays a work ethic. It’s like being at school and someone tells you they have been studying for a test all week. You then start to panic.
Everybody has different ways of writing. Some people rise before their kids get up and write. That seems like a horror to me. But I will stay up really late to finish my writing. Some days I don’t feel like it. The TV calls. The deadlines get met.
Holly: Sarah should never feel bad about how much she writes, because she can do up to 5,000 words a day, when I am lucky if I can do a 1000.
I’ve used work out breakdowns since Red Glove and I was pretty good about them. Not sure what my breakdown will be for the new book because I’ve ripped so much out of it. Previous to that I was really good at breaking down what I had done every day. I think it was useful for others to see. Especially how little and often it was. The books just staggered along.
Me: How long does it take for you to write a book that way?
Holly: It depends on the book, and how much time I have. Also how easily it came together. Six months probably for first draft. Maybe a little bit more. I have a terrible process where I will revise the beginning a lot. Each time I get stuck I go back and revise.

Sarah: It doesn’t matter how you put in the work, it is what works best for you.
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After the interview with Holly and Sarah, we were all lucky enough to get our books signed. It was really lovely to finally meet Holly and Sarah. Thanks ever so much to Nina Douglas at Orion for organising such a fantastic event.

Saturday 23 November 2013

A Letter To Her Younger Self by Alison May

I’m delighted to welcome Choc Lit debut author Alison May onto the blog to celebrate her forthcoming publishing debut, Much Ado About Sweet Nothing, which is out at the end of this month. I met Alison about a year a go on a writing course along with Laura E James and I am so pleased to see such talented writers reaching publication.
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Dear Alison (aged 5), 
I’m not really sure what to say to you at this age. Explaining why you are, sadly, never going to be a cowgirl would be sour grapes, and you’d probably ignore me anyway. Clearly, cowgirl and Wonder Woman are the only sensible career options, and who am I to claim to know better?
Oh - one thing I will tell you. Just ignore that reception class teacher who says you’re too little to be reading. You are all over that whole cat-sat-mat territory, and the delights of the Village with Three Corners books await. You will, I’m afraid, also have to read Peter and Jane but listen carefully to Mummy when she reads them with you though. Some of those comments about how Jane doesn’t have to make the tea and can help her daddy with the car if she wants, aren’t actually in the book. Mummy does tend to try to feminist-up the reception class reading matter. And, why not? Reading and feminism are habits that are going to stick with you - you might as well embrace them early on.
Will write again soon. 
lots of love, 
grown-up Alison xx
Dear Alison (aged 15),
Wow. 15. We’re a teenager. Ok, so I know I said I would write again soon, but ten years is sort of soon-ish, you know if you’re counting ‘soon’ in terms of the overall age of the universe. 
Anyway, what’s new with you? GCSEs? Trust me. They’ll be fine, but you know that, don’t you? You know you’re good at exams. They’re basically just writing stuff with a ridiculous deadline, which is going to be a useful skill later anyway.
I do know, though, that you’re kind of lonely at the moment. Not all the time. You’ve got all sorts of friends and people around you, but sometimes. Those girls at school don’t want to be your friend anymore, do they? I should tell you that that’s ok, and that you don’t need them, but I think we both know that that isn’t how school works. So all I can tell you is that there’s not much longer. Sixth Form will start soon, and although the friends you have there won’t necessarily be your everyday bosom buddies for the rest of your life, they will be just what you need now, and they’re coming. They’re coming really soon. In the meantime, just stick your nose in a book and make it all go away.
And then, after sixth form, it’ll be university - what do you mean you don’t know if you’re going to go to university? So you don’t know what you want to do with your life. The cowgirling didn’t work out, and you’ve not come up with another idea yet? Well don’t panic. Go to university. I don’t want to give away too many spoilers, but one of the people you meet there really will change your life. Thinking of which, could you do me a tiny favour and stop telling people that you’re never getting married? We’re going to look kind of stupid on that point later,
lots of love, 
Alison x
Dear Alison (aged 25),
How’s the wedding planning going? Don’t look at me like that. I did warn you. He’s all right though, isn’t he? Once you’ve sorted his hair out a bit he’ll be a proper keeper.
Anyway, the whole wedding thing is very exciting and all, but I know that you are absolutely sick of talking about it, so let’s change the subject. Tell me about that little evening class you’ve just signed up for. Creative writing? Just a little evening class, just for a few months, a bit of a creative outlet, something a bit different from work? That’s what you’re saying about it, isn’t it? 
Yeah, well that’s not how it’s going to pan out. It’s not just a little evening class. It’s a degree, a full six-year part time degree, and for most of that you’ll be working full-time. In fact, you’ll change career partway through for a more challenging, more time-consuming job, because you are, apparently, a bit of a masochist and you get bored far far too easily. 
And then, you’ll jack in that perfectly good, perfectly interesting job to write a novel. It’s a good thing this new husband of yours is an understanding soul, because it’ll be ten years from starting this course to getting your first publishing contract. Ten years. Ten years ago, you were fifteen. It feels like a lifetime, doesn’t it?
But it’ll be worth it. It turns out you love writing. You love putting words into characters’ mouths. You love the eureka moment when you see a way through a knotty plot problem. You even love editing. When you write you can go anywhere you want, be anyone you want. You might even get to be a cowgirl one day after all. 
Enjoy the ride, 
Alison x
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About Alison May
Alison May was born and raised in North Yorkshire, but now lives in Worcester with one husband, no kids and no pets. There were goldfish once. That ended badly.
Alison has studied History at the University of York, and worked as a waitress, a shop assistant, a learning adviser, an advice centre manager, and a freelance trainer, before settling on ‘making up stories’ as an entirely acceptable grown-up career plan. 
Alison is a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, and won the Elizabeth Goudge Trophy in 2012. Alison’s debut novel, Much Ado About Sweet Nothing, is a contemporary romantic comedy, and is published by Choc Lit, under their digital first Choc Lit Lite imprint, in November 2013.
You can follow Alison on Twitter @MsAlisonMay, and find out more about her at www.alison-may.co.uk

Friday 22 November 2013

Crayon By Simon Rickerty

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Summary From Simon and Schuster
Pink and yellow and orange and green – colouring is fun! Only… What if your friend colours all over your picture? And then colours all over you?!
Find out how two crayon-crazy creatures resolve their colouring catastrophe in this hilarious follow-up to the totally brilliant MONKEY NUT.
Published by Simon and Schuster in January 2014
Pages – 32
*****
You're probably wondering why I haven't included an excerpt from this picture book at the start of my review. The reason is, there are hardly any words in it because the illustrations say it all. 
On the surface, the quirky story is all about colouring, but it's about friendship, too, and sharing, and about how to resolve quarrels. A red creature is colouring with a blue crayon; a blue creature is colouring with a red crayon. All is well until red decides to colour on blue's page. In the ensuing battle, a crayon is broken. But don't worry, there's a happy ending!
The creatures may look like fuzzy blobs, but Simon Rickerty manages to convey their emotions with clear facial expressions. The simple story will strike a chord with young children and the bright illustrations will help to encourage colour recognition. An unusual and original book, but there's nothing wrong with being different.

Thursday 21 November 2013

Pharaoh by David Gibbins

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The man carrying the staff of a high priest and the ankh symbol of a pharaoh stood at the entrance to the temple, watching the shaft of light from the setting sun rise up the body of the statue that loomed out of the far wall.  Ahead in the gloom the others stood aside to let him pass forward, sprinkling incense and mouthing incantations as they did so.  They were all present, the priests of this cult and also the priests of the god Amun from Thebes: those who had grown fat on the wealth that was rightfully his, and had doubted his allegiance to the gods.  They had come here, a thousand miles to the south of the pyramids, to the edge of the known world, believing that he had chosen this place to prostrate himself before them, to recant his heresy and purify himself before the gods, to arise once again with the trappings of priesthood that had weighed down his father and generations of pharaohs before that.  He passed them now, men with shaven heads and pious expressions who wore the gold-hemmed robes and upturned sandals that showed wealth, and he felt nothing but contempt.  Soon they would know the truth.
Published by Headline on 26th September 2013
480 pages
1351 BC
Akhenaten the Sun-Pharaoh presides over Egypt…until the day he casts off his crown and mysteriously disappears into the desert, his legacy seemingly swallowed up by the sands beneath the Great Pyramids of Giza.
AD 1884
A British soldier serving in the Sudan stumbles upon a submerged temple containing drawings of a terrifying god fed by human sacrifice.  The soldier is on a mission to reach General Gordon before Khartoum falls.  But he hides a secret of his own.
Present Day
Jack Howard and his team are excavating an incredible underwater site, but dark forces watch to see what they will find.  Diving into the Nile, they enter a world three thousand years backing history, inhabited by a people who have sworn to guard the greatest secret of all time…
*****
David Gibbins has written seven bestselling novels, and Pharaoh is his eighth.  I love an adventure story, and anything about Egypt, so it seemed that this book would be a win-win choice.  Having not read any of his previous novels, I didn’t know that the main character, Jack Howard, is an archaeological diver, which was an interesting premise.  I don’t know anything about diving so I initially wondered if this book would suit me.  The detail that Gibbins goes into is not so technical to be boring, but explanatory enough that I was immediately interested and could also imagine what it would have been like under the Nile exploring for treasure.
Pharaoh is split into three distinct parts, ancient Egypt, wartime in 1884 and the present day. The section on ancient Egypt immediately captivated me and I avidly turned the pages immersing myself in the reign of Akhenaten.  Now, I’m not a great fan of wartime novels, but have to say that the parts where this was the primary focus were as captivating as the others and I soon found myself reading on to find out what the ending would be once the book concluded in the present day.  Gibbins is sure to have found himself with another bestseller amongst his fans, and I’ll definitely be reading more of his previous work after this.

Wednesday 20 November 2013

Santa Baby by Ali Cronin

Santa Baby
I watched them pile in, their posh-boy flush even more pronounced after their first day on the slopes. Hats, gloves, padded jackets and trousers were pulled off and left in a heap by the door, each man ruffling and raking his hair through his fingers.
Pages – 76
Published by Unlocked Books in November 2013
Book Summary
It's Christmas, and also the end of Annie's first few weeks as a chalet girl up in the Swiss mountains. Her boyfriend back home has gone off travelling, and Annie's not exactly feeling full of festive spirit. She really isn't in the mood for the stag party of posh-boys who've just arrived...
And sure enough, it isn't long before one of the party - alpha male George - is coming on a little too strong, and making it clear he'd relish getting Annie under the mistletoe, and into his bed.
She's almost tempted. George is funny, in a loud, arrogant kind of way, and he's certainly attractive. But Annie is more interested in someone else... the shy, quiet one of the group, who doesn't quite seem to fit in with the rest of the public school boys. Pity he's got a girlfriend - according to George, that is.
But the days roll on, and despite the freezing temperatures on the slopes, it's hotting up in the chalet, and Annie is close to boiling point. The question is, does a certain person feel the same way...
******
I love how different each Unlocked novella is, even though they all feature Christmas romance. This one whisks us away to the Swiss mountains, where our main character is trying to work out what is going on with her relationship, which her boyfriend has put on hold. Not looking for any type of romance, George attempts to persuade her into a quick fling.
I hated George; he epitomised all the things I don’t like in a man; thinking he is God’s gift to women, and that every girl should be clinging to his ankles in a desperate attempt to gain his attention. When he doesn’t get the detention, he feels he deserves, he gets nasty.
Sam on the other end, was just gorgeous. A real tonic for Annie, during a storm of upsetting events. It just goes to show, the shy ones should never be underestimated.
Another delightful little Christmas romance to tinsel up your taste buds in preparation for the most romantic time of year. Tight plotting and brilliant characters ensures a lovely novella that can easily be read in one night.

Waiting on Wednesday–A Boy Called Hope by Lara Williamson

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Waiting On Wednesday is a weekly event, started by Jill at Breaking The Spine, highlighting future book releases everyone is waiting on!
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A Boy Called Hope by Lara Williamson
Published by Usborne in March 2014
I am super excited for Lara’s debut novel. I’ve read the first chapter and already fallen in love with Dan, a child with a gorgeous view on life. If you would like to read the first chapter too, please click here.
Book Summary
I'm Dan Hope and deep inside my head I keep a list of things I want to come true.
For example, I want my sister, Ninja Grace, to go to university at the North Pole and only come back once a year.
I want to help Sherlock Holmes solve his most daring mystery yet. And if it could be a zombie mystery, all the more exciting.
I want to be the first eleven-year-old to land on the moon.
I want my dog to stop eating the planets and throwing them up on the carpet.
And finally, the biggest dream of all, I want my dad to love me.
A Boy Called Hope is a brave, bold and funny debut about family in all its shapes and sizes.

Tuesday 19 November 2013

Secret Serendipity Seven with Laura E. James

To celebrate the digital publication of Truth or Dare by debut Laura E. James, I am so pleased to welcome Laura onto the blog to tell us all her secrets! I met Laura over a year ago at a creative writing course with Julie Cohen and I am over the moon to see her dreams of publication finally realised.
Choc Lit
Thank you so much for inviting onto you beautiful site, Viv. I could frame your backdrop and hang it on my wall.
As the title suggests, there are many secrets within my debut novel, ‘Truth or Dare?’, but I’ll keep them for the readers to discover. What I have for you today are seven secrets surrounding the story’s creation.
Secret Number 1:
‘Truth or Dare?’ started life as Cabbage or Mother? The main character, Katherine Blair, playing a truth game with her two best friends, Mickey and Rosie Jenkins, (a brother and sister duo) had been asked to choose between the two things in her life for which she had the least regard – cabbage or her mother. She disliked both in equal measure but at least cabbage was considered good for her and however awful its smell, it was still preferable to the stench of stale alcohol, not to mention she could chop and quarter the vegetable without repercussions.
Secret Number 2:
‘Truth or Dare?’ was six years in the making. With a young family, and a disabled mother for whom I cared, writing time was limited. It’s impossible to know how much actual time I spent writing, but many months whizzed by, as I created my imaginary world. The first time I logged the file as complete was 20th March 2010, still with the title of Cabbage or Mother, and with a word count of 115,287. I confess, I have lost track of how many drafts the story went through, but it was somewhere in the region of eight. Possibly nine. The word count dropped to 77,000, before adding the hero’s point of view, and it now stands at approximately 92,000.
Secret Number 3:
Originally, ‘Truth or Dare?’ was hand-written in four A4, spiral-bound, hard-back note books, which I still have. On the day I decided to write that novel I always said was inside me, my left arm was in plaster. Not up to sitting at my desk, and prone to losing control of the heavily slabbed limb, resulting in many annoying and quite frankly, embarrassing thuds to my forehead, it was safer to snuggle on to my sofa. I had my favourite pen, a brand new notebook, and an imagination fuelled by post-operative fuzziness. I started writing.
Hands 8
Secret Number 4:
My hero was called Stuart Smith, until a very good friend, who is an excellent author and respected tutor, suggested a rethink of the name. There is nothing wrong with either Stuart or Smith, but I needed something to reflect the hero’s heritage. Declan O’Brien was born. It wasn’t until the editorial stage I changed some of the minor character’s names, realising too many started with the same letter. It seems I have a penchant for names beginning with L. I wonder why?
Secret Number 5:
The character of Mickey Jenkins was written for an entirely different purpose to the one he now fulfils.
Imagine, if you will, one of our great serial dramas – the postman – a bit-part for an unknown supporting cast member, who then auditions for the role of a regular character, and gets the part. That’s Mickey. Except, he’s not a postman.
Secret Number 6:
Eleanor’s Gate, a large Georgian house on the edge of a new development, owned by Lilian and Jonathan Willis, does not exist. It is ‘situated’ on the land occupied by three detached houses, in the village of Portesham, not far from the beautiful Abbotsbury Subtropical Gardens. The house is at the top of an incline, and the road leading to it, windy. I used to live in one of the houses.
Secret Number 7:
I am a huge Paloma Faith fan. That’s not the secret, but Paloma’s song ‘Black and Blue’, gave me a terrific shot of inspiration when I was struggling to give Declan a way out of a situation. One day, I may reveal the Paloma line that solved a major plot problem, but there are no spoilers today.
That can be my eighth secret.
Laura x
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Truth or Dare?
Love’s a dangerous game … 
Kate Blair’s sick of unrequited love. She’s quietly waited for Mickey for the past six years and finding a compass-carved heart, with their initials scratched through the middle, only strengthens her resolve: no more Mickey and no more playing it safe.
It’s time to take a chance on real love and Declan O’Brien’s the perfect risk. He’s handsome, kind, and crazy about her so it’s not long before all thoughts of Mickey come few and far between.
But old habits die-hard. Kate may have started to forget … but has Mickey?
‘Truth or Dare?’ was nominated for the Festival of Romance Best Romantic Ebook 2013. 
It is published by the award-winning, independent Choc Lit: http://www.choc-lit.com and is available from Amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Truth-Dare-Choc-Laura-James-ebook/dp/B00G3I4PHM/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1382540337&sr=8-1&keywords=laura+james+truth+or+dare
You can follow Laura at www.lauraejames.co.uk  
or on Twitter @Laura_E_James  and on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/LauraE.JamesWriter

Monday 18 November 2013

Shine by Candy Gourlay

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This is not a ghost story even though there are plenty of ghosts in it. And it's not a horror story though some people might be horrified. It's not a monster story either, even though there is a monster in it and that monster happens to be me.
Published by David Fickling Books/Random House in September  2013
304 pages in hardback – also available as an e-book
Summary condensed from Hive.co.uk and randomhouse.co.uk
Thirteen-year-old Rosa suffers from a rare condition that renders her mute. Forced to hide herself away from the superstitious island community of Mirasol, Rosa seeks solace online. There she meets Ansel95, and as the friendship moves from virtual to real, Rosa discovers that she's not the only one with something to hide. As Rosa's social life blossoms, how will she seize the freedom to be who she really is?
******
SHINE is the second book by the award-winning Candy Gourlay. Although it is quite distinct from Tall Story, it still has family relationships at the heart of it. There is also a fascinating sense of a culture refreshingly different from the standard Hollywoodesque High School set-up in many works for younger readers.
This is a facet of Candy’s work I find particularly appealing – how she blends a particular culture and its myths and legends to create an almost fable-like tale and all of it well-suited to a modern audience.  In fact, I admit that I looked up Mirasol so convincing did I find the fictitious island! 
Readers who enjoy experiencing a new setting through the eyes of someone unusual will get a real buzz from SHINE. The story involves prejudice and superstition – but never becomes an ‘issues’ book. The condition Rosa inherits– the Calm- as far as I can tell, is entirely made-up. Nonetheless, so well does it come across, you really feel for its sufferers.
This story also has two main distinct voices like Tall Story but would suit slightly older readers, I think. In SHINE, there is a time difference in their two tales and a powerful central mystery which is not solved until late in the book. There are some likeable and well-rounded characters [Yaya in particular], and a fair amount of peril and angst that they go through – both of which are nicely off-set by the humour in Rosa’s online relationship.
This story will suit a reasonably confident reader emotionally robust enough to appreciate an intense family thriller.  If they also love an intriguing and well-realised contemporary setting, then they will thoroughly enjoy SHINE.

Sunday 17 November 2013

The Orphan Choir by Sophie Hannah

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It’s quarter to midnight.  I’m standing in the rain outside my next-door neighbour’s house, gripping his rusted railings with cold wet hands, staring down through them at the misshapen and perilously narrow stone steps leading to his converted basement, from which noise is blaring.  It’s my least favourite song in the world: Queen’s ‘Don’t Stop Me Now’.
     There’s a reddish-orange light seeping out into the darkness from the basement’s bay window that looks as unappealing as the too-loud music sounds.  Both make me think of hell: my idea of it.  There are no other lights on anywhere in my neighbour’s four-storey home.
Published by Hammer on 10th October 2013
336 pages
Summary
Louise is bereft.  Her seven year old son Joseph has been sent away to boarding school against her wishes, and she misses him desperately.  
And the neighbour from hell is keeping her awake at night by playing loud intrusive music.
So when the chance comes to move to the country, she jumps at it as a way of saving her sanity.
Only it doesn’t.
Because the music seems to have followed her.
Except this time it’s choral music, sung by a choir of children that only she can see and hear…
    *****
All Louise wants is a good night’s sleep.  Unfortunately, her neighbour, nicknamed ‘Mr Farenheit’ by Louise and her husband has other ideas.  He doesn’t want to sleep, he wants to play his music, and loud.  After another night without sleep, after her request to her neighbour to turn his music down goes unheeded, Louise takes things further – she reports him to the council for noise disturbance.  She begins by keeping a diary of the music that is played; only it becomes apparent after time that the sounds she hears aren’t the same of those of her husband.  
After another night of broken sleep, Louise spies an advert in the paper for a new housing development, Swallowfield that promises to be the solution to her problem; for it is an estate where noise is practically forbidden.  Suddenly Louise can only dream of escaping her Victorian city home in Cambridge and moving to the countryside.  It becomes somewhere for her to take her son, Joseph too, once he is on holiday from school.
Seven year old Joseph is a boarder at St Saviours and is part of their choir.  Louise misses him desperately and Swallowfield seems to ideal place for them to spend quality time together.  The only problem is that once they arrive at their second home, after an idyllic start, Louise starts to hear singing again and this time, it seems more sinister.  Whilst I would argue that The Orphan Choir isn’t a horror novel, in my opinion, it is genuinely creepy and builds up to a dramatic climax.  I really enjoyed the story, and thought that both the characters and location were really well developed.  This is definitely worth a read.

Saturday 16 November 2013

Allegiant by Veronica Roth – DNF

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I pace in our cell in Erudite headquarters, her words echoing in my mind: My name will be Edith Prior, and there is much I am happy to forget.
Pages – 526
Published in October 2013
Goodreads Summary
The faction-based society that Tris Prior once believed in is shattered—fractured by violence and power struggles and scarred by loss and betrayal. So when offered a chance to explore the world past the limits she’s known, Tris is ready. Perhaps beyond the fence, she and Tobias will find a simple new life together, free from complicated lies, tangled loyalties, and painful memories.
But Tris’s new reality is even more alarming than the one she left behind. Old discoveries are quickly rendered meaningless. Explosive new truths change the hearts of those she loves. And once again, Tris must battle to comprehend the complexities of human nature—and of herself—while facing impossible choices about courage, allegiance, sacrifice, and love.
*******
This is the first book that I could not finish this year and quite frankly I’m annoyed with myself for not finishing. However I have to be really honest and admit that this book bored me senseless. To the point, it has made me reluctant to read anything, because I felt like I invested so much time in this one book, attempting to plough myself through.
I don’t want to stand here and criticise Veronica Roth, because I do think she is an extremely talented author. The first book, Divergent, blew me away and I enjoyed the second book, Insurgent, but this book left me unimpressed. For nearly two hundred pages into the book, nothing really happens. I didn’t feel as though the  plot or the characters really moved forward in the story and I lost interest. I actually got to the point where I really didn’t care what happened in the end and I rarely give up on books!
I really think that this series would have been stronger and more action packed if it had been a dualogy instead of a trilogy. There wasn’t enough in the plot to fill a trilogy.  If that had happened, I don’t think I would be writing this post now.
So apologies to all of you who loved it and everyone who urged me on to the end; all I can say is this book wasn’t for me.

Friday 15 November 2013

Exciting Books from Templar Fiction for 2014

Last week I showed you all the books coming from Hot Key Books in 2014, this week it is the turn of Templar Fiction.
I’m going to start with the books in series followed by the standalone books.  So sit tight, and get ready to drool over the fabulous fiction coming our way.
Independent Study – The Testing 2 by Joelle Charbonneau ( January 2014)
This futuristic trilogy started with The Testing, where the Seven Stages War had left the planet a wasteland and few are chosen to help rebuild it. In order to be chosen they must pass The Testing first.  This book continues Cia’s story after she passed The Testing, and although she should have put it to the back of her mind, but as Cia remembers things that happened, Cia realises she must either stay silent or expose The Testing for it really is. Definitely a series for fans of The Hunger Games.
Suzy P. and the Trouble with Three by Karen Saunders (January 2013)
For fans of Cathy Hopkins books, this is definitely a series for you. We follow Suzy P. on more misadventures  as  she sets off camping with her family and best friend Millie. Only they end up stuck in a caravan all week as the weather takes a turn for the worse. It doesn’t help that Isabella, Mum’s best friend’s daughter is staying with them too and seems to be taking Millie away from Suzie. Will their friendship survive when another person is involved.
Arcadia Falls by Kai Meyer ( February 2014)
The shattering conclusion to the trilogy translated from German. Rosa and Alessandro, both the teenage heads of rival Mafia clans and secretly in love with each, no longer want to keep their feeling hidden from the outside world. But when Rosa discovers she is at the centre of a conspiracy, the world of Arcadians won’t be the same again.
New Fiction
Fleeced
Fleeced by Julia Wills (January 2014)
I am really excited by this book. Not only do I love the cover, but I love the whole concept of the book. I love the fact it is all about Aries, the ghost of the ram of the Golden Fleece fame, who remains furious at the loss of his beautiful coat, stolen by Jason and the Argonauts, centuries ago. Described as rip-roaringly funny and high spirited, I can’t wait to read it.
Monkey and Me by David Gilman ( February 2014)
This is one of those heart-warming stories, yet it has a comical caper added in for good measure. Nine year old Beanie is coping with leukaemia, however he isn’t bothered by it. He just wants to be part of his older brother’s gang. To show he can be brave, he stays in a scary, deserted house where he finds a young chimpanzee, who  can do sign language. With elements of Project X, this is definitely a book to look forward to.
Bombmaker
Bombmaker  by Claire McFall ( February 2014)
I loved Claire’s debut novel, Ferryman, last year, so I can’t wait to read Claire’s new novel. This is completely different to her first book; described as a topical YA thriller which deals with terrorism, separatism and national identity. Britain is in an economic crisis and has shut down the borders with their Celtic neighbours. Any Celt found in England will be branded with a tattoo and if they return they will be executed. Scottish Lizzie is the property of a psychopathic gang boss and is used as his bombmaker. Can she escape his clutches and still continue to live in England.
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Daughters of Time – edited by Mary Hoffman (March 2014)
If you are familiar with the blog The History Girls then this book will truly inspire you. Written by some of Britain's greatest historical YA writers, the book has been edited by Mary Hoffman, to bring us a fresh look at some of the greatest women in Britain’s history. From Boudica, to the Greenham Common women, their stories are brought to live by authors such as Celia Rees and Katherine Langrish. A fabulous anthology to look forward to.
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Stitch-up by Sophie Hamilton (May 2014)
I am intrigued by this book! Dasha Gold’s parents have destined her for a live of privilege, but unfortunately it comes with a price. She must suffer constant image management, including cosmetic surgery to make her the perfect living logo for their company, Gold Rush Image Inc. When the train she is travelling on crashes, Dasha has a means of escape and sets off to hide from her parents. But they have the money to find her. An urban thriller, set in a media controlled world.
So some really exciting books from Templar Fiction for next year. Which books are you looking forward to reading from the ones shown?

Since You’ve Been Gone by Anouska Knight

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It was supposed to be a day off. He’d promised me he wouldn’t be gone long. He just needed to check that the lads were behaving themselves, staying safe; he didn’t want to be writing up any more incidents of severed anythings for a while, and that meant keeping on top of them. I’d promised to make his favourite, lemon and basil linguine, and he promised to be home on time, before it had chance to spoil.
Published in July 2013 by Mills and Boon
Pages – 386
Summary
In one tragic moment, Holly Jefferson's life as she knew it changed for ever. Now to the external world, at least she's finally getting back on her feet, running her business, Cake. Then she meets Ciaran Argyll.
His charmed life feels a million miles from her own. However, there's more to Ciaran than the superficial world that surrounds him, and he too is wrestling with his own ghosts.
Will Holly find the missing ingredient that allows her to live again and embrace an unknown and unexpected tomorrow?
How do you learn to love again?
******
 This book feels like a serendipitous find. When I received it, I was a little reluctant to read it. I was convinced it probably wasn’t my thing and I was positive that the main character had a cheating husband. I couldn’t have been more wrong if I tried and as I embarked on reading it, I was completely sucked in. I found myself desperate to read more every time I put it down.
Within the first few chapters I quickly invested a lot in the main character, Holly. She was on the verge of leaving the very dark tunnel she had lived in for a couple of years and I desperately wanted to hug her. She was brave on the outside and didn’t want anyone to feel sorry for her, but sometimes in the deepest, darkest hours, the things we hold dear come back to haunt us.
I loved Ciaran as soon as he showed up, even if he was a little bit of a unwelcome character. The more I got to know him, the more I fell in love with him. He was just right for Holly,  a welcome respite to her darkest hours. The chemistry between Holly and Ciaran was electrifying and I was so sad to finish the book. It is one of those books you want to hug and read again and again.
For a debut novel, I would say it is extremely well written with an excellent well paced story line that would give established authors a run for their money. It has you desperate to find out what will happen next between Ciaran and Holly, reminding me of Jilly Cooper’s classic novels. I am now a life long fan of Anouska Knight and I can’t wait to read her next book.

Thursday 14 November 2013

Under The Mistletoe by Kate Kingsley

Under the Mistletoe
‘Of course I love you, Ness,’ Jay whispers. He strokes the small of my back, that special spot only he knows, and I press against his naked chest, closing my eyes for his kiss. His gentle, hungry…
Published by Unlocked Books in November 2013
Book Summary
Ness is looking forward to hanging out in Brooklyn with her girlfriends over Christmas, while also deciding what to do with her life, and getting over her split with Jay the jerk.
She's not thrilled then, when her mum tells her that she's bought her a ticket to England to spend some time with her dad in the countryside. Spending the festive period with a bunch of sheep and cows is not Ness's idea of a good time. And though her arrival does nothing to change that, she soon has a major distraction in the form of Dominic Dumont, whose parents own the massive stately home where her dad is caretaker.
Despite being upper class, arrogant, selfish and reckless, Dominic soon starts to work his charm and Ness begins to find it difficult to ignore him. A game of 'Seven Minutes in Heaven' results in the hottest kiss Ness has ever had in a cupboard full of coats, and when the two of them get lost in the mist out in the grounds, they cling to each other - with and without their clothes on...
*******
Out of all the novellas from Unlocked Books this Christmas, this is by far my favourite. I think it must be the gorgeous setting of an old mansion decked out for Christmas and covered with snow. It oozes Christmas romance.
The book is only a novella but it doesn’t take you long to understand the way Ness is feeling. She feels like her mother and step father couldn’t wait to see the back of her, and she is shipped her off as soon as possible to England. Her dad doesn’t even let her get over her jet lag before setting her up in with a baby sitting job, where she quickly runs into the rather hot headed, yet very sexy Dominic. And when I say sexy, I mean SEXY! Dominic is the exact opposite of Ness, never really had to work hard for a living as his dad is absolutely loaded, while Ness’s dad is the caretaker for Dominic’s home.  Yet these two have something in common, they are both not really wanted around by members of their immediate family and it isn’t long before things begin to hot up between them. As the story progresses, you realise Dominic hasn’t had it as easier as you first might have thought and you warm to him even more.
A feel good, Christmas gem to easily be read in one evening.
After reading this book, I felt like I had indulged in a rather expensive box of chocolates and eaten them all in one go. I was sad when it ended, and I really hope we get to meet Dominic and Ness in the future, because I really do think there is more of their story to tell. They relationship is screaming with difficulties they will have to face as it progresses. More Ness and Dom, please Unlocked Books!

Wednesday 13 November 2013

A Letter To My Younger Self by Sally Gardner

To celebrate the publication of Tinder, I am so pleased to welcome one of my favourite authors Sally Gardner, back on to the blog, with an open letter to her younger self.
Sally Gardner
Dear Sarah,
You are fourteen years old and still battling to read and write. You can’t even spell your name. Sarah. It has an irritating H in it, one with big boots. It marches to the front of the word. Or to the back. You are never quite sure where it will be so soon after you decided to change it altogether to Sally.
Last year, after you were expelled from that nice school in Kensington, a word was given to your parents by way of an explanation as to what was wrong with you. The word was dyslexia. Hopeless, really, because you can’t even say it, let alone spell it. So if anyone asks – which they rarely do – you say, ‘I am word blind.’ 
I see you sitting on that hard, small and uncomfortable bed in that narrow dormitory, amazed to find you are able to read the book you are holding. Although it is with very great difficulty and a lot of words are missing, this is a beginning. You’re waiting to see the headmistress to read to her from The Times, to prove you have managed the impossible. No one believes you will ever catch up, let alone pass an exam or go to art school. I have known you through all this and you have survived by living mostly in your head, in a world full of stories which have helped to make sense of the unexplainable. It is your imagination which has spent fourteen years foraging for stories as others forage for food that has kept you going. It is the reason that you search out solitude so that you can tell yourself your story again and again, find the moment when it makes your heart beat faster, when the world you live in fades away.
What advice shall I give you? Have more confidence. That quiet little belief you have in yourself – make it bolder. Don’t take everything so seriously, laugh more and don’t be shy. Never start smoking. Life isn’t as long as people say. 
You will always have trouble with spelling, some days the words will flow, other days they will run away from you. Dyslexia will never run away, it’s a part of who you are. I have news for you, my fourteen-year-old self: one day you will love language, love the sounds it makes, you will realise you can paint with words. All those stories will have an outlet and – here’s the surprising bit – people will want to read them. For all the wrong turns you think you’ve made – and will make – the path you are on is the right one and it will lead you here.
With love,
Sally  
Tinder
Tinder is available to buy now. To read our review, please click here.


To find out more about Sally Gardner:

Waiting on Wednesday–After The End by Amy Plum

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Waiting On Wednesday is a weekly event, started by Jill at Breaking The Spine, highlighting future book releases everyone is waiting on!
After The End
After The End by Amy Plum
Published by Harper in May 2014
(no UK release date as of yet)
I’m a huge fan of Amy Plum and I am really excited to see she is embarking on a new series.
Here is the description from Amy’s website.
World War III has left the world ravaged by nuclear radiation. A lucky few escaped to the Alaskan wilderness. They’ve survived for the last thirty years by living off the land, being one with nature, and hiding from whoever else might still be out there.
At least, this is what Juneau has been told her entire life.
When Juneau returns from a hunting trip to discover that everyone in her clan has vanished, she sets off to find them. Leaving the boundaries of their land for the very first time, she learns something horrifying: There never was a war. Cities were never destroyed. The world is intact. Everything was a lie.
Now Juneau is adrift in a modern-day world she never knew existed. But while she’s trying to find a way to rescue her friends and family, someone else is looking for her. Someone who knows the extraordinary truth about the secrets of her past.

Tuesday 12 November 2013

Lockwood and Co by Jonathan Stroud

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Of the first few haunting I investigated with Lockwood and Co. I intend to say little, in part to protect the identity of the victims, in part because of the gruesome nature of the incidents, but mainly because, in a variety of ingenious ways, we succeeded in cocking them all up. There, I’ve admitted it!
Published in August 2013 by Doubleday, an imprint of Random House
Pages – 440
Book Summary
When the dead come back to haunt the living, Lockwood & Co. step in . . .
For more than fifty years, the country has been affected by a horrifying epidemic of ghosts. A number of Psychic Investigations Agencies have sprung up to destroy the dangerous apparitions.
Lucy Carlyle, a talented young agent, arrives in London hoping for a notable career. Instead she finds herself joining the smallest, most ramshackle agency in the city, run by the charismatic Anthony Lockwood. When one of their cases goes horribly wrong, Lockwood & Co. have one last chance of redemption. Unfortunately this involves spending the night in one of the most haunted houses in England, and trying to escape alive.
Set in a city stalked by spectres, The Screaming Staircase is the first in a chilling new series full of suspense, humour and truly terrifying ghosts. Your nights will never be the same again . . .
*******
This is my first book by Jonathan Stroud and I can guarantee it won’t be my last. Instantly I fell in love with Jonathan’s sense of humour. He really is a very witty writer and the banter that jumps between his three main characters kept me entertained all the way through the book. There is a certain Britishness to their tone and manner. Their need to think things through over a cup of tea had me nodding my head in agreement.
The book appears to be set in an alternate London. A London where it is normal for every kid to see ghosts, but it still holds elements of the London we have now.
Lucy is an extremely strong character. She doesn’t suffer fools gladly and she comes across as more capable and in control than either of her male companions.  Lockwood gives me the impression, that if offered the job, he would make an excellent Dr Who. There is an air of mystery surrounding him; visible through the way he thinks and works. I don’t think we’ve seen the real Lockwood quite yet. I felt he was hiding something. George, bless him, he comes across like a bumbling snail. Plodding along, working through the details while Lockwood and Lucy race into everything head first.
The story has lots of scary elements to it. Not sure I would be heading to Combe Carey in a hurry. There was so much evil emanating from it, I’m surprised by the bravery of these three characters.

I thought the plot was brilliant and I was completely entertained all the way through the story, even to the nail biting end. This is the first book in the series and I don’t know why it took me so long to read it, but I shall definitely be waiting with baited breath for the second book.

Monday 11 November 2013

All I Want For Christmas by Esme Taylor

All I Want For Christmas
I’m on my hands and knees in a bar full of German businessmen.
‘Baby’ I mouth as I crawl towards Lee.’Oh-oh, baby…
Lee plays air guitar.
Published by Unlocked Books in November 2013
Pages - 73
Summary
Sometimes the best gifts are unwrapped…
Ella is dreading Christmas. She vowed to change her life this year, and although breaking up with her boring boyfriend was the first step, she’s been too scared to take the next, and her life has become small.
But then, when working at a Christmas party, Ella meets Joe. The attraction is instant and convenient: neither is interested in more than a fling. While Ella’s been stuck, Joe’s been running. He’s been travelling for a year and has no plans to stop, but he’s home to spend Christmas with his huge, loud family. His father wants him to stay and join the family business, but Joe’s not yet ready for that kind of commitment and isn’t sure he’ll ever be. But as the snow and the presents pile up – and Ella and Joe’s clothes come off – Ella realises she needs to start living again. And that maybe all she wants for Christmas is Joe…
*****
I have to say before reading this book, I love the whole concept behind Unlocked Books from Hot Key Books. All the books in this imprint will be digitally printed for now, but I am guessing that at a later stage the books will be bound by a theme and published in paper back format in the future, though don’t quote me on that.  Each quarter they will be publishing another set of books which will deal with different genres. I am already hooked on the New Adult ones.
I love Christmas books! Christmas itself – not so much. As it tends to be one of the busiest and most stressful times of the year, what more could I want but  a little nugget of Christmas romance, easily readable in an evening, when time tends to be short.
This book is written under a pseudonym for reasons which I can’t work out as everyone knows that Keris Stainton wrote it. I am presuming it is because of her YA books but as this is the next step up from YA, I don’t actually get it. However, I do love the name – Esme Taylor!!
Ella and Joe are a great couple of characters. Ella has had a hard year and she is struggling to get past the things that have happened. Joe comes along and quickly becomes the antidote to her state of mind, quickly wheedling his way into her feelings. They are exact opposites of each other, yet attractions draws them together to create a promising future.
I loved Movieoke!!! I definitely want to find somewhere to pretend I’m in scenes of my favourite films.
There are some sexual scenes in this book, so don’t go downloading it for your twelve year old daughter as a little extra present. I would imagine it would appeal from 14 years up, even with the mild sex scenes.
There is a lovely Christmas feel to this book and I do think it blends romance, Christmas and sexual content really well. If you want just a slice of Christmas, then this is the book for you.