Friday, November 18, 2011

"Breaking Dawn, Part I" Opens Today!!!!!!!




THE WAIT IS OVER!!!!!


"Breaking Dawn, Part I"
opens today,
November 18, 2011!!!!!


And here are some stills
from the movie!!
























I absolutely can't wait
to finally see
the wedding of Edward and Bella!!!!!



Be still, my vampire heart.....








Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Waiting On Wednesday #18: Fallen In Love, by Lauren Kate





This is a weekly book meme, hosted by
which features future releases that we book bloggers
are eagerly anticipating!



Here's my pick for this week!!







Hardcover, 160 pages
Delacorte Books for Young Readers
Expected Publication Date:
January 24, 2012
Genres: YA Paranormal Romance,
Urban Fantasy, Historical Fiction


From the Goodreads Synopsis


Unexpected. Unrequited. Forbidden. Eternal. Everyone has their own love story.

And in a twist of fate, four extraordinary love stories combine over the course of a romantic Valentine's Day in Medieval England. Miles and Shelby find love where they least expect it. Roland learns a painful lesson about finding-and losing love. Arianne pays the price for a love so fierce it burns. And for the first -and last- time, Daniel and Luce will spend a night together like none other.

Lauren Kate's FALLEN IN LOVE is filled with love stories . . . the ones everyone has been waiting for.

True love never says goodbye . . .




Since I'm a big fan of the Fallen series,
I definitely have to complete
my collection
with this book, as well as the upcoming
fourth novel, Rapture!!
This book also contains one story about
Daniel and Luce,
so that's another reason I have
for wanting to make it part of my personal library!!
It's too bad it's not being published
in December instead...
That way, I could give myself a nice
little Christmas present!!

(And did I mention that I love this cover?)



What wonderful books are you all
eagerly anticipating this week?







Monday, November 14, 2011

Musing Mondays #4



This is a weekly book meme hosted by Miz B at

Each week, she poses an interesting question
related to books and reading preferences.

To join in, simply visit her blog, grab her logo,
and add your blog link in the comments section.



Here's today's question!


Are you currently collecting any authors?
Why?
Do you have all of their books?
If not, why not?
Did you buy all the books in the collection
at the same time,
or did you buy a book here, a book there?
Have you actually read all of the collection?
If not, why not?


Oh, my gosh!  This is such a fascinating topic!!  I'm an obssessive collector, but not really a systematic one.  I buy whatever interests me at the moment. 

So I'm not currently collecting any particular author's books, but if I were, they would have to be those of Charles de Lint.  I read one of his short-story collections about a year ago.  The book is titled Dreams Underfoot, and I absolutely loved it!  I have bought several of his other books, but haven't read them yet.  There are so many, many wonderful books in my TBR pile I'd like to get to...  I guess I should really prioritize reading his, since I enjoyed that first book so much.  I know that de Lint has several series, and I definitely would be very happy to have them all!  However, the one I would get first, since it's the first one I came in contact with, is the Newford series.  All of the books in it revolve around a fictional town named Newford, whose characters are totally enchanting, quirky, and magical.  The plots of the stories in Dreams are utterly spellbinding, as well as written in absolutely beautiful prose.  They are also completely unforgettable!

I really must commit to reading this entire series!  Maybe I'll make a New Year's resolution...

De Lint is a Canadian urban fantasy writer.  This happens to be one of my favorite genres!!  He's also very prolific, so it just might take me a lifetime, if I wanted to read all of his books!






(1951 - )


These are some of the books from the Newford series.
I'd really like to have them all!!






Trade Paperback, 416 pages
Orb Books
August 1, 2003







Trade Paperback, 400 pages
Orb Books
February 20, 2007
(first published August 23, 1994)








Hardcover, 544 pages
Tor Books
November 23, 2002







Hardcover, 560 pages
Tor Books
May 16, 2006






Hardcover, 320 pages
Tor Books
December 8, 2009













Sunday, November 13, 2011

Book Review: Isle of Night, by Veronica Wolff

Title: Isle of Night
Author: Veronica Wolff
Format: Trade Paperback, 302 pages
Publisher: NAL Trade
Publication Date: Sept. 6, 2011
Genre: YA Paranormal Romance



Naturally, it was the cover that first drew me in.  I especially like the right-hand side of said cover.  The model chosen definitely has the requisite mesmerizing, sultry eyes... Unfortunately, a gorgeous cover is not always a guarantee that the story hidden inside will be equally appealing.

I usually enjoy reading vampire romances, especially those of the young adult variety.  Not this time. 

The reason for this has a lot to do with the unethical underpinnings of this particular tale.  The novel includes kidnapping, forced detention on a gloomy island far away from even the remotest civilized area, and brutal murder.  I totally detest blood and gore when it's treated as just part of the way things are supposed to be.  You simply grin and bear it, or you might just end up very, very dead.  Kill or be killed.  Well, that's just not my cup of tea, which is why I've avoided reading The Hunger Games so far.  However, it goes beyond not being my cup of tea.  It's simply unethical, and totally immoral.

I do like the way the plot is handled, paradoxically enough.  The novel is very well-written, and the main character is very likable.  Annelise Drew lives in Florida, USA, like me, although she hails from a very small town by the name of "Christmas".  She's a genius, too.  Not that I'm claiming to be one, but I can definitely relate to her love of learning.  I can also relate to her lonely existence.  She's an outcast at school, where she's deemed a freak, a weirdo.  Sounds familiar...

What is not so familiar is her family background of abuse.  Her father is physically and emotionally abusive, her mother is dead, and her stepmother is emotionally abusive, although she herself gets slapped around by Annelise's father.  

Annelise has been dreaming of the day she would escape to college, and she's ready when that day finally arrives.  She slips out of the house unseen, driving north to Gainesville, where she plans to register at the University of Florida.  Her plans are altered, however, by an unexpected glitch, and she is unable to complete the registration process.  To make matters worse, her car suddenly won't respond, and a mysterious-looking, sexy guy who's been watching her offers to help.  She reluctantly accepts, and, not long afterward, finds herself being whisked away on a private jet.  She can't understand how she was able to go along with this, but later realizes that the man's mesmerizing, emerald-hued eyes, together with his light touch on her arm, must have somehow hypnotized her, clouding her judgement.  Nevertheless, she's flattered that he would want to take her away with him.

Her romantic little fantasy bubble abruptly explodes when she boards the plane, to find two other girls already seated inside.  Then she finds out the awful truth -- she has in fact been kidnapped, and is being taken to that strange island I mentioned earlier.  She has an inevitable feeling of having been betrayed...

It turns out that she has been 'enrolled' at a special type of school at which girls are trained to be Watchers.  These are vampire companion/helpers whose main purpose is to assist vampires on their secretive, dangerous missions. 

Annelise is wildly attracted to Ronan, the young man who 'recruited' her for this school.  He's a Tracer, which is someone who locates and brings in girls (and boys) to be trained at the school.  Throughout the novel, there's sexual tension between Annelise and Ronan, but he remains aloof, unapproachable, especially since he's her teacher in two subjects -- fitness and swimming.   Her hopes of having a romantic relationship with him are continually dashed.  Perhaps this will be expanded on in the sequel, Vampire's Kiss.  It's quite obvious that Ronan does care for Annelise.  Although he's stern with her at times, at other times, he advises her on how to excel so that she will survive, for not many girls make it to Watcher status.  Many die during the training process.

One of the other girls on the plane is the inevitable cruel, Playboy Bunny-type stereotype who immediately becomes the heroine's nemesis.  Her name is Lilac von Straubing, although Annelise dubs her "von Slutling" in response to Lilac's own nickname for Annelise -- "Charity Case.   

As the novel continues, we meet other characters, and a few of them are surprisingly appealing.  There's Yasuo, a Vampire Trainee (only boys and men can become vamps in this paranormal world, an incredibly sexist situation no one seems to even notice), Emma Sargent, a kind-hearted fellow classmate of Annelise's, and Josh, another Vampire Trainee, who looks deceptively like a jock.  He was a pre-med student at Harvard when he was picked up by a Tracer.

The brutal murder I have referred to takes place pretty early in the novel, shortly after Annelise arrives on the island.  Although the murder itself is totally shocking, the way it's dealt with by the school authorities is just as much so -- the body is disdainfully disposed of, and the victim is never mentioned again, by anyone.  Of course the girls present all scream, but there is no hysterical, mass attempt to escape.  I suppose they realized the futility of such an attempt, but still, their sense of human decency should have prompted them to try.

I couldn't keep on reading for a few, totally shocked minutes.  Then I tried to go on, and failed.  I had to put the book down, and stopped reading it for a few days. 

It was when I picked it up again that I met the secondary characters.  I also went through Annelise's cruel hazing, administered by the Initiates, girls who are further along in their studies. 

Finally, in desperation, I read ahead, to the equally shocking climax.  Annelise has completed her training, and is now an accomplished assassin....  And she is congratulated for it.

I actually had to force myself to keep reading as long as I did.  I even postponed writing this review, since I was still struggling with the book.  As I read, I could feel the heavy, oppressive, and sinister atmosphere of the Isle of Night.  This pervading feeling was one that just wouldn't go away.  In spite of Annelise's often humorous, snarky remarks, and the kind support given to her by Ronan, as well as by Yasuo and Emma, I simply had to stop reading the novel, a few chapters short of the ending.

Strange as it might sound to those who do not enjoy the paranormal genre, there are vampires who are ethical, who abhor taking human lives to slake their hellish need for blood.  The prime example is the Cullen family, in The Twilight Saga, but I have found others, such as those in the novels of Amanda Ashley, Kerrelyn Sparks, and Lynsay Sands.  The vampires in Isle of Night (and yes, I see some similarity here to the House of Night series, which is another one I detest) are, well, of the traditionally-horrifying sort.  They are ruthless, amoral, remorseless killers, and their human female aides must live with the knowledge of who it is they serve, on a daily basis.

There are PNR fans out there who love this book, who mention, in their reviews, that they "couldn't put it down".  I'm not one of them.  Not only was I able to put it down, but also will probably never pick it up again, in order to finish it.  In spite of the likable characters, the smooth writing, I can only say that, for the most part, this book was revolting.  And the icing on the cake was the appearance of the F-bomb, at least three times!  And this is a YA novel?

Needless to say, I won't be buying any of the forthcoming sequels. 


MY RATING:

Saturday, November 12, 2011

On My Bookshelves #8 (11/12 - 11/14)




This new weekend feature highlights the books
that we have purchased, and put off reading
until we finished our current ones...
except that we somehow never did get to them!

This book meme will also highlight
those wonderful books we have already read,
and would love to re-read!!

If you'd like to join in, write your own post,
grab my meme button (or create your own),
and add your post link to the list!
Have fun hopping over to other blogs to see what
books others want to either read or re-read!




Here's my list for this week!






(The Original Shannara Trilogy #1)
Terry Brooks
Trade Paperback, 736 pages
Orbit
January 3, 2006
(first published in 1977)
Genre: Fantasy

From the Goodreads Synopsis

 Long ago, the wars of the ancient Evil had ruined the world and forced mankind to compete with many other races--gnomes, trolls, dwarfs, and elves. But in peaceful Shady Vale, half-elfin Shea Ohmsford knew little of such troubles.

Then came the giant, forbidding Allanon, possessed of strange Druidic powers, to reveal that the supposedly dead Warlock Lord was plotting to destroy the world. The sole weapon against this Power of Darkness was the Sword of Shannara, which could be used only by a true heir of Shannara. On Shea, last of the bloodline, rested the hope of all the races.


This book's cover was created by
the Hildebrandt brothers, who also did
a lot of Tolkien LOTR calendars,
so of course it pulled me in right away!
Then I postponed reading the novel because I thought
it sounded too much like Tolkien's
great fantasy trilogy.
Well, it's probably time for me to
give this author the benefit of the doubt,
since this was the start of a very succesful series!






Editors: Lester del Rey, Rita Kessler
Hardcover, 336 pages
Del Rey/Ballantine Books
(compilation by Random House)
October 23, 1991
Genre: YA Fantasy


From the Amazon Synopsis

This collection of 10 well written stories nicely illustrates the concept that fairy tale themes are universal, and that modern fantasy writers can give them a sophisticated, psychological and realistic approach while still providing a sense of wonder for all ages. In Barbara Hambly's Changeling, a hard-working Marchlord slays the dragon devastating his countryside and brings home to his wife and children what he finds in its lair: a mute child with two unusual companions. Anne McCaffrey's "The Quest of a Sensible Man" features a prince who seeks a suitable mate for his flying horse.

The eponymous "Thistledown" in Susan Dexter's tale is a unicorn colt saved from from predatory hounds by a mute boy suspected of witchcraft. The spoiled princess in "The Fairy Godmother," by Lester del Rey, learns the rudiments of wise rule when she is taken in by an old couple after an attempted abduction. In Wayland Drew's "The Old Soul," an old woman's tale of the fall of a powerful city jolts three travelers out of their self-important lives.



This is another treasure I have yet to read!
How could I have postponed this one?
It's a collection sure to delight
the heart of every fantasy lover,
among which I proudly count myself!!
Maybe if I wave my Harry Potter wand around,
I will magically have more time to read
all the wonderful books I have in my
personal library....







Marge Piercy
Mass Market Paperback, 384 pages
Fawcett
November 12, 1985
Genre: Science Fiction


From the Goodreads Synopsis

Connie Ramos, a woman in her mid-thirties, has been declared insane. But Connie is overwhelmingly sane, merely tuned to the future, and able to communicate with the year 2137. As her doctors persuade her to agree to an operation, Connie struggles to force herself to listen to the future and its lessons for today....

From an Amazon Editorial Review

The novel shifts between the horrible conditions in psychiatric wards and the year 2137, as Connie at first talks to, then time travels with Luciente, a person from that future time. Luciente lives in a non-sexist, communal country where people's survival is ensured based on need, not money. A sense of freedom, choice, and safety are part of Luciente's world; Connie's world is the complete opposite. Though Connie struggles to stand up for herself and others in the treatment centers, she knows that the drugs she is forced to take weaken her in every way. She knows she shouldn't be there, knows how to play the game...But she knows she is stuck. Connie spends more time "away" with Luciente, trying to develop a way out of her hell. Ultimately Connie makes her plan of action, and the book leaves us with our own questions about Connie's insanity and decisions. -- From 500 Great Books by Women; review by Holly Smith




It really bothers me that I haven't
gotten to this novel yet!!
The plot sounds absolutely rivetiing,
not just because there's a lot of conflict,
but because this is a novel of ideas
as much as it is one of action.
The status of women in society is a topic
dear to my heart,
and I love reading novels that include
psychological themes.
So I have to promise myself that
this book will soon be in my "already read" pile...







What wonderful books are waiting
for you to read them?
What beloved books would
you like to re-read?