Cozy Reading Corner


ARC Review: White Hot Kiss by Jennifer L. Armentrout + Giveaway!

 tháng 2 28, 2014     5 stars, arc, jennifer l. armentrout, review, white hot kiss     No comments   

If I were to describe this book using just a word, it's going to be: Roth.
Which is pretty much synonymous to the word HOT.
Scorching hot.

Title: White Hot Kiss (The Dark Elements #1) by Jennifer L. Armentrout
Release Date: February 25th 2014
Published by: Harlequin Teen
Source: Publisher (Thanks Tashya!)
Buy: Amazon | Book Depository

Summary:

One kiss could be the last.

Seventeen-year-old Layla just wants to be normal. But with a kiss that kills anything with a soul, she's anything but normal. Half demon, half gargoyle, Layla has abilities no one else possesses.

Raised among the Wardens—a race of gargoyles tasked with hunting demons and keeping humanity safe—Layla tries to fit in, but that means hiding her own dark side from those she loves the most. Especially Zayne, the swoon-worthy, incredibly gorgeous and completely off-limits Warden she's crushed on since forever.

Then she meets Roth—a tattooed, sinfully hot demon who claims to know all her secrets. Layla knows she should stay away, but she's not sure she wants to—especially when that whole no-kissing thing isn't an issue, considering Roth has no soul.

But when Layla discovers she's the reason for the violent demon uprising, trusting Roth could not only ruin her chances with Zayne…it could brand her a traitor to her family. Worse yet, it could become a one-way ticket to the end of the world.

Layla sees souls and tags demons. It's the only thing she can do to stop herself from thinking too much about how she's unwanted, not accepted and not really either of the two species she's from: Warden and Demon. The Wardens, shifters with pure souls who turn into Gargoyles, keep the human world safe and the Demons do a little mischief to keep the balance of the world between Good and Evil. That is, until Layla finds herself being hunted by creatures from Hell with a very powerful demon as her protector. Hell wants her for a reason, but her family, The Wardens, aren't telling her anything. Why is a scorching hot demon helping her and why is her being a Half Demon Half Warden suddenly very important?

I had issues with Layla. Admittedly, I didn't like her at the start. She's the sort of girl that I do not like, the type who cries easily, whiny and demanding, who pities herself all day long and it took a while for me to warm up to her. She's not the typical kick-ass girl I see in most of Jennifer Armentrout's novels, she's that girl who's always sad and lost. Layla earned my sympathy at one point with the struggles she was facing and the trials she had to go through, trying to show the world that she's good when the rest of it thinks she's nothing but evil. I came to like her when she showed signs that she's changing for the better, slowly growing a backbone, and the gradual snark and fierceness she showed brought to life her character.

I can give you a pretty long list why I love Roth from the bottom of my very girly and all too romantic, giggly heart. He makes me swoon with the mere mention of his name. He's the perfect representation of all that is naughty and not so nice in a Demon. Every single word that comes out of his mouth was designed to make a girl do very, very bad things. What I liked about him is that beneath all that haughty, playful persona lies something more. He doesn't claim to be someone he's not, and he's not lying when he said he's not really nice. But beneath it all is a heart, though tainted, that has the capacity to feel. And who says demons cannot fall in love?

This is also one of those times where I totally feel nothing for the other love interest. Zayne was automatically typecasted as the older brother in my book. He can't be anyone else. He's too good, and that goodness pales in comparison compared to Roth's deviousness. He is, however, swoon worthy in his own right.

Also, who wants to own a pet like Bambi? Or Fury, Nitro and Thor?

When I first read the plot, I find it intriguing how gargoyles, demons and angels can mix in a novel, and oddly enough, Jennifer Armentrout made it work. It was, admittedly, a very unusual combination, but the way Jennifer Armentrout spins such a tale made it sound so epic and believable. Zombies? Seeker demons? Giant snakes? It's fascinating how she was able to bring to life such a world without even sounding boring or preachy as it also touches base with words like free will, what is good and what is evil.

Jennifer Armentrout brings the HOT in White Hot Kiss. She has this uncanny ability to write such breath taking, heart racing scenes that you gradually get addicted to as you read. Entertaining, fascinating and over all a thrill of a read. To be able to craft such lively characters and a world filled with secrets and intrigue... where does she get inspiration to write stories like this? It's not just all about the sexual tension between Roth and Layla, it's about a girl's struggle to accept herself for who and what she is, and to be able to tough it out and see through what it's like to be in between. It's about seeing people for more than what they are and what they look like. Amidst the heart stopping action scenes, twisty developments and unexpected surprises left and right, there's that parting kick in the gut moments that just made the story all the more loveable. I was so engrossed in the novel that I almost ripped out the last few pages, hoping that there's more for me to read. Can I please have the sequel now?

GIVEAWAY TIME!!!

a Rafflecopter giveaway


My rating:

Content (plot, story flow, character):
For Roth, I will give all the butterflies he wants.

There is a need to mention Layla's awesome friends, Stacey and Sam. I am also so very intrigued with how their relationship will develop! Stacey may be a little too naughty for me, but she's a good friend. Sam was too cute for words!

Stunning: Worthy of a Goddess' Praise!



Book Cover:
That cover spells HOT.

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Waiting on Wednesday (142): Snow Like Ashes + Falls the Shadow

 tháng 2 25, 2014     meme, waiting on wednesday     No comments   

I was supposed to go with the theme "fairy tale retellings" but nope, found a more interesting book to feature.

Want to know what they are? Check them out below!

Waiting on Wednesday is hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine

Title: Snow Like Ashes (Snow Like Ashes #1) by Sara Raasch
Release Date: October 14th 2014
Published by: Balzer + Bray
Want? Add to your Goodreads list!
Summary (from Goodreads):

A heartbroken girl. A fierce warrior. A hero in the making.

Sixteen years ago the Kingdom of Winter was conquered and its citizens enslaved, leaving them without magic or a monarch. Now, the Winterians’ only hope for freedom is the eight survivors who managed to escape, and who have been waiting for the opportunity to steal back Winter’s magic and rebuild the kingdom ever since.

Orphaned as an infant during Winter’s defeat, Meira has lived her whole life as a refugee, raised by the Winterians’ general, Sir. Training to be a warrior—and desperately in love with her best friend, and future king, Mather — she would do anything to help her kingdom rise to power again.

So when scouts discover the location of the ancient locket that can restore Winter’s magic, Meira decides to go after it herself. Finally, she’s scaling towers, fighting enemy soldiers, and serving her kingdom just as she’s always dreamed she would. But the mission doesn’t go as planned, and Meira soon finds herself thrust into a world of evil magic and dangerous politics – and ultimately comes to realize that her destiny is not, never has been, her own.

Why I'm waiting for Snow Like Ashes:

Aside from that kick-ass sounding title? Please read the summary again and tell me that it's not as good, intriguing, interesting and beautiful as it sounds! Just give me a copy of this book and nobody gets hurt. But seriously, the only YA book that resembles YA high fantasy which I've ever read recently was The Burning Sky, and I loved that story with all my heart. This? This is another book to watch out for. I need it! And how cool is it that a General's name is Sir. How do you call him? Sir Sir? Okay, I'm kidding, but really. I WANT THIS NOW!

Title: Falls the Shadow by Stefanie Gaither
Release Date: September 16th 2014
Published by: Simon and Schuster BFYR
Want? Add to your Goodreads list!
Summary (from Goodreads):

When Cate Benson was twelve, her sister died.

Two hours after the funeral, they picked up Violet’s replacement, and it was like nothing had ever happened. Because Cate’s parents are among those who decided to grant their children a sort of immortality—by cloning them at birth. So this new Violet has the same smile. The same laugh. That same perfect face. Thanks to advancements in mind-uploading technology, she even has all the same memories as the girl she replaced.

She also might have murdered the most popular girl in school.

Or at least, that’s what the paparazzi and crazy anti-cloning protesters want everyone to think: that clones are violent, unpredictable monsters. Cate is used to hearing all that, though. She’s used to standing up for her sister too, and she’s determined to prove her innocence now—at whatever the cost. But the deeper she digs for the truth, the further Cate's carefully-constructed life begins to unravel, unveiling a world filled with copies and lies, where nothing and no one—not even her sister— is completely what they seem.

Why I'm waiting for Falls the Shadow:

What a very, very interesting concept for a sci-fi thriller. Clones, memory uploading technology. I am deeply intrigued with how well the world building is in this story. I need to find out how it's done since it sounds like it plays a really big role in the life of the protagonist. Imagine if this exists now... wow. I have a feeling this is another debut we need to watch out for. There will be so much to discuss about this story if it's done right and I can't wait to read it!

-----

Share your WoW picks please!


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Goddess Offerings (38) / Stacking the Shelves (20)

 tháng 2 21, 2014     goddess offering, meme, stacking the shelves     No comments   

I know it's still February, but I am so done with the books for this month and I'm preparing for March already. Check out what I got this week! They're all awesome sounding books!


Stacking the Shelves hosted is by Tynga's reviews! So leave a comment below and share your own haul!

For review:


Three (Article 5 #3) by Kristen Simmons
Resistance (Replica Trilogy #2) by Jenna Black
The Cracks in the Kingdom (The Colors of Madeleine #2) by Jaclyn Moriarty


The Rule of Three by Eric Walters
Something Real by Heather Demetrios
Cress (Lunar Chronicles #3) by Marissa Meyer

Bought:
Ignite Me by Tahereh Mafi
Solving for Ex by Leigh Ann Kopans
The Guard: A Selection Novella by Kiera Cass
Kids These Days (Stories from Luna East Arts Academy Vol. 1)



eARCs:
The Ring and the Crown by Melissa dela Cruz
Alpha Goddess by Amalie Howard
I Have a Bad Feeling About This by Jeff Strand
Stolen Songbird by Danielle L. Jensen

Thanks so much to Tor Teen, Macmillan Asia & Pan Macmillan AU, Tina of One More Page, Disney Hyperion, JKS Communication, Sourcebooks Fire & Strange Chemistry books!

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Cover reveal: Feral by Holly Schindler

 tháng 2 13, 2014     cover reveal, feature, holly schindler     No comments   

I am so so excited to be a part of the cover reveal for Holly's new book! I loved Playing Hurt, and I am so glad she has a new book coming out! Check out the summary below before you jump straight and check the cover out!

Feral by Holly Schindler
Published by HarperCollins on August 26, 2014.


It’s too late for you. You’re dead.

Those words float through Claire Cain’s head as she lies broken and barely alive after a brutal beating. And the words continue to haunt her months later, in the relentless, terrifying nightmares that plague her sleep. So when her father is offered a teaching sabbatical in another state, Claire is hopeful that getting out of Chicago, away from the things that remind her of what she went through, will offer a way to start anew.

But when she arrives in Peculiar, Missouri, Claire quickly realizes something is wrong—the town is brimming with hidden dangers and overrun by feral cats. And her fears are confirmed when a popular high school girl, Serena Sims, is suddenly found dead in the icy woods behind the school. While everyone is quick to say Serena died in an accident, Claire knows there’s more to it—for she was the one who found Serena, battered and most certainly dead, surrounded by the town’s feral cats.

Now Claire vows to learn the truth about what happened, but the closer she gets to uncovering the mystery, the closer she also gets to discovering a frightening reality about herself and the damage she truly sustained in that Chicago alley. . . .

With an eerie setting and heart-stopping twists and turns, Holly Schindler weaves a gripping story that will make you question everything you think you know.

And here is the lovely cover for FERAL:


Feral by Holly Schindler
Publish Date: August 26, 2014
Published by HarperCollins

Feral

Pre-order FERAL here:


About the author:

I can’t remember the last time I left the house without a spiral notebook or some pages folded up in a back pocket. And I don’t think I’ve ever returned without fresh ideas, titles, opening lines, or poetry fragments climbing every one of those pages, racing up the margins, crisscrossing in as many different directions as the highways and interstates on a road map of Missouri (my home state).

I’ve spent my life making those notes in the margins—even as a little girl, my favorite activity was to write books bound by strips of red ribbon…and to scrawl comments next to my paragraphs like the most critical of editors. Lessons learned from this childhood pastime served me well, especially in college—I received a BA and MA in English, and while I was a student, I wrote piles of poetry, literary critique, short fiction, and even attempted my first novel.

After college, I dove headfirst into writing. To pay a few bills, I taught piano and guitar lessons in the afternoons. This time, the margin notes on my back-pocket pages were character sketches, mannerisms, phrases all inspired by my students. It soon became clear to me that in addition to writing for adults, I also wanted to write for the children and teens who filled my home with music. My first two published works, A Blue So Dark and Playing Hurt, were both YA novels. My debut MG, The Junction of Sunshine and Lucky, will release with Dial / Penguin on February 6, 2014, and my next YA, Feral, is forthcoming from HarperCollins.

Even now, as I delight in spreading the news of my publications, I recognize that the steadiest constant in my life has been those illegible margin notes. That blissful inch of space where novels are born and revision plans are hatched, where titles are brainstormed and closing sentences are finalized.

Connect with Holly: Website | Twitter | Facebook | Tumblr | Goodreads

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ARC Review: Red Rising by Pierce Brown

 tháng 2 12, 2014     5 stars, arc, pierce brown, red rising, review     No comments   

His name is Darrow. Remember his name and remember it well.
He's a hero of sorts. A devastated man who lost everything for a dream.

Through him, the Reds will be rising.

Title: Red Rising (Red Rising Trilogy #1) by Pierce Brown
Release Date: January 28th 2014 (US) / February 2014 (UK)
Published by: Del Rey (US) / Hodder & Stoughton (UK)
Source: Publisher (Thanks Hodder!)
Buy: Amazon | Book Depository

Summary:

The war begins...

Darrow is a Helldiver, one of a thousand men and women who live in the vast caves beneath the surface of Mars. Generations of Helldivers have spent their lives toiling to mine the precious elements that will allow the planet to be terraformed. Just knowing that one day people will be able to walk the surface of the planet is enough to justify their sacrifice. The Earth is dying, and Darrow and his people are the only hope humanity has left.

Until the day Darrow learns that it is all a lie. Mars is habitable - and indeed has been inhabited for generations by a class of people calling themselves the Golds. The Golds regard Darrow and his fellows as slave labour, to be exploited and worked to death without a second thought.

With the help of a mysterious group of rebels, Darrow disguises himself as a Gold and infiltrates their command school, intent on taking down his oppressors from the inside.

But the command school is a battlefield. And Darrow isn't the only student with an agenda...

What was it that was so good about this novel? Every single person I know who've read it has raved about Darrow in some form and way. When I started Red Rising, I immediately knew it was going to be a difficult sort of book to get through. I never really liked Darrow at first and it's one of the reasons why I thought there was no point in reading further. Yes, he was a helldriver, a boy who had never seen the Sun and whose life was all about digging, because he thought he was a pioneer like everyone else, to make Mars a better place to live in and that's good enough for him. He wants a quiet life, peaceful, with his wife Eo and his family and even though life tends to be unfair in Lykos because he's a Red and the lowest kind at that, he bears with it because he doesn't want to end up like his father. I understand that, but I initially thought, is this the boy that will start a change? How? He was weak. I should have known better though, because Pierce Brown, you are one sinister writer. Everything changed when Eo died, but the pain and the hurt did not stop after that. There was more.

And then I came across this quote, and I know Darrow's journey is about to start and that it's going to be the harrowing kind. From then on, I started to look at him in a different perspective.
"Personally, I do not want to make you a man. Men are so very frail. Men break. Men die. No, I've always wished to make a god. So why not carve you to be the god of war?"
Red Rising has that deceptive kind of pace that makes you wonder where the story was going at first. it took me a while to get through the first 20% of the book, but then I see Darrow after his devastating loss and suddenly I find myself gritting my teeth and clutching a pillow as I read on. Reading about Darrow's eventual transformation was also one of the hardest things I had to get through in this book. It's not because it was boring or long, but because you feel every single emotion swirling inside of Darrow as it happens: white hot rage for the lies fed to him and his people, and the enormous pain of losing his love, the injustice in his life. A slave repeatedly dealt with unfair hands by the society's hierarchy that was prevalent in the world he lives in, Darrow's eventual transformation from being a young Helldriver to the Reaper was equally stunning and terrifying. Pierce Brown took his time shaping Darrow's character while building a world, a universe even, filled with unrest, ruled by colors, strength and power. He went through repeated changes, forged by hell and fire. And he was that very foolish boy at first, rash, short tempered, easily ruled by emotions. He's not the clever, calculating sort. He makes mistakes that has devastating consequences. He has moments he was unsure of, bitter, afraid, irrational, torn between his loyalty to his people and the truths he sees as a Gold. I had to remind myself that he's a boy, only just a boy, and yet he goes through test after test of not just his wit, his courage, but also tests of will and emotions until he becomes stronger, smarter, calmer, more powerful, methodical.

This story is grim and gruesome. Do not expect some laughable, fluffy moments to appear. There are none. Red Rising will overwhelm people with a powerful combination of cruelty, violence, bloody battles. Savagery. Gore. Mutilation. Death. This was all written in great detail, and Pierce Brown never held back. Mars, the Red planet, sets a grisly stage for Darrow. But do not expect the plot to unravel just like that. It's a merciless world Darrow lives in, and he gradually discovered that through the first step of his journey, when he tries to become one of them. The Golds, the best of the best, the ruling class, the one with power, wealth, money and influence. But you know what's fascinating in this set-up? The Golds are not what they seem to be. They lived in a world as brutal as the Reds, relentless, competitive, playing a high level game of politics and tactics, whose aim is to drive home lessons they must not forget. If they wanted to control the world, they should first learn to control themselves. And control comes in a hefty price. Sometimes you make friends, most of the time you need to kill them. Sometimes you're the leader, until you are betrayed in the worst way. It makes you wonder how wrong this world is, how unjust it can be and not just for the under privileged, but also for those who are deemed to be at the top.

I was prepared to see a full scale rebellion, but Red Rising plunged me in an even dizzying world of war, a simulation that was all too real, a game that was a small scale version of what is to happen  if Darrow was to achieve his purpose. There were secrets everywhere, clever exercises, alliances made and broken, tactics established, challenges issued, battles lost and won, unlikely friendships formed and untimely, budding, unexpected romance. Romance was the least bit of my concern in this book, because Darrow's heart will always be with Eo, but seeing Mustang changes things a little bit. Mercifully, Pierce Brown threw a little bit of positivity in the mix, because as you read, you'll start thinking whether Darrow's misery will ever end. And then when all things were said and done, I take a look at Darrow and I feel two things: I marvel at the boy he has become, and I become afraid for the person he was set to be.

Red Rising has set the bar high for a debut dystopia - science fiction book. It feels a little bit weird to think of it as a debut with how well Pierce Brown crafted this story. It was nothing short of brilliant. It was badass. It was gory. It was amazing. It was intense, heartrending, harrowing and agonizing. I have no idea where Pierce Brown got his inspiration and idea for a story like this, but it's such an incredible story. Here's a boy broken and put back together, with nothing but hatred and pain, thrown into the wolves' den in a body that wasn't his to begin with, with the fate of an entire planet in his hands. How does Pierce Brown do this? Red Rising is a kind of book I have never, ever, read of before. One of the best tales of revenge and vengeance ever told, and it's only the beginning.

To those with delicate conditions and are weak hearted, this book is not for you. There are countless moments that will be hard to digest in Red Rising, and you need a formidable resolve to get through most of them. But at the end of the book, you will see that it's all worth it.

My rating:

Content (plot, story flow, character):
Take all the butterflies in the Galaxy, Pierce. You've earned them.

Pierce Brown is as merciless as his story is. He breaks your heart a lot of times in this book. There's no shortage of killings here, and just when you begin to form a bond with a character, you see him dead. It's a repeating cycle. You hate some, you love some, you'll mourn for some, you cheer for some, you fear some. Let me just say this: Cassius is a character of note, and I am very excited to know more about him. What a potentially destructive character. And of course, I'm looking forward to seeing more of Mustang and her very scary older brother.

Stunning: Worthy of a Goddess' Praise!



Book Cover:
You will want to hug the book so hard once you see it in real life. SO BEAUTIFUL.

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Waiting on Wednesday (141): The Dare + Enmity

 tháng 2 11, 2014     meme, waiting on wednesday     No comments   

And while I write my raving review for Red Rising, here are my Waiting on Wednesday picks for the week, check them out!

Waiting on Wednesday is hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine

Title: Enmity by E.J. Andrews
Release Date: April 2014
Published by: Harlequin Australia
Want? Add to your Goodreads list!
Summary (from Goodreads):

Love vs Life.
Good vs Evil.
War vs Warfare.

Which would you choose?


After a solar flare wipes out most of the world’s inhabitants, it leaves behind nothing but a desolate earth and a desperate population. Existence is no longer a certainty. And with factions now fighting for the power to rule, people start to become reckless with their lives. The world has become a dangerous place.

Amongst the ensuing chaos, Nate and Hermia — two victims of the new world order — are taken against their will to The Compound. Joined by eight other teenagers all chosen for a specific reason, Nate and Hermia are forced to train as assassins to overthrow the current president and make way for a new leader of the free world. Here, they learn to plan, fight, and most importantly... to survive.

Except, despite the casual cruelty of their new existence, both Nate and Hermia — two very strong but very different people — begin to form fragile bonds within the group. But they soon realize their happiness is short lived...because their training is just the beginning.

A war awaits...regardless of how ready or willing they may be.

Why I'm waiting for Enmity:

It reminds me a little bit of Margaret Stohl's Icons. Doesn't it make you wonder how assassins in a world where solar flares threatening the civilization of the world fit in the story. And why the solar flare? Was it a conspiracy? And what is with this war? What kind of war is it? And for what? With all these questions, it's evident how curious I am about this story. I need to find out more!

Title: The Dare by Hannah Jayne
Release Date: July 1st 2014
Published by: Sourcebook Fire
Want? Add to your Goodreads list!
Summary (from Goodreads):

Two jumped off the pier that night...but only one came back alive

Bryn did everything with her best friend Erica. So when someone dared Erica to jump off the pier one night at Harding Beach, Bryn was right by her side. But when Bryn made it back to the surface, Erica was nowhere to be found. Bryn tries to make a fresh start by burying her memories of that awful night. But when a Twitter post from "EricaNShaw" pops up on her feed and a chilling voice mail appears on her phone, she realizes that someone isn't ready to let go of the past...

Why I'm waiting for The Dare:

Hannah Jayne's novels always have this dangerously mysterious vibe. The summaries for her books never fail to give me goosebumps whenever I read them, and The Dare's is no exception. It's got that wonderfully chilling potential and I'm pretty sure this is going to be a thrill of a read. It makes me a little bit afraid to be honest, and a little intrigued at the same time.What do you think?

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Share your WoW picks this week, please!~

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ARC Review: Heartbeat by Elizabeth Scott

 tháng 2 08, 2014     4 stars, elizabeth scott, heartbeat, review     No comments   

It's always been difficult to read books about loss, any form of it. The loss of a loved one, especially, because the grief can be overwhelming.
It can be something that sweeps you, because who hasn't lost a loved one at some point in their lives?
But to be dropped in the story while everyone was trying to deal with the aftermath? You find yourself smack dab in a vortex of pain, hurt and regrets and it's not something that's easy to get out of.

Heartbeat had that tendency, and I still think it was worth the read.

Title: Heartbeat by Elizabeth Scott
Release Date: January 28th 2014
Published by: Harlequin Teen
Source: Publisher
Buy: Amazon | Book Depository

Summary:

Life. Death. And...Love?

Emma would give anything to talk to her mother one last time. Tell her about her slipping grades, her anger with her stepfather, and the boy with the bad reputation who might be the only one Emma can be herself with.

But Emma can't tell her mother anything. Because her mother is brain-dead and being kept alive by machines for the baby growing inside her.

Meeting bad-boy Caleb Harrison wouldn't have interested Old Emma. But New Emma-the one who exists in a fog of grief, who no longer cares about school, whose only social outlet is her best friend Olivia-New Emma is startled by the connection she and Caleb forge.

Feeling her own heart beat again wakes Emma from the grief that has grayed her existence. Is there hope for life after death-and maybe, for love?

I was first hit by the raw pain emanating from Emma, and it was easy to get swept by it. I started reading the book feeling angry like her, for her, completely blinded by her emotions. Because who wouldn't be angry knowing that your mother is dead and she was only kept "alive" by machines long enough so the baby inside her could survive? Anyone would. And as I dive deeper into the novel, I see the Emma before and the current Emma and I can't help but feel the disconnect, what a waste it was. She was a girl with a bright future, and then she was nothing but a big pile of pain and anger. And it was destroying her from the inside out, eating away at her until she was practically nothing. She was lost in it. It hurt, and it shouldn't be like that for her.

I should know this by now, but grief is slippery, a tangle of thorns that dig in so deep you don't know where they stop and you start. You don't know where you are.

And that was it. I went through half the book feeling angry and confused, and I was so surprised by how Elizabeth Scott's writing got a hold of my emotions that easily.

I was wary of Caleb at first, and I didn't care much for his character, but I should've known better. Elizabeth Scott's deceptive way of building his character from being that shallow looking druggie, problematic boy to one that is hurting just as much as Emma does took me in for a ride and all of a sudden my heart is aching for him. It wasn't enough that I was absorbing Emma's grief and pain, I had to deal with Caleb's as well. Regrets, the self-loathing, the blame. Where Emma was there, existing and suffering through the fact that she was and her mother isn't, Caleb was the opposite. It's like he wasn't there. There's only wrath and wishing that maybe he shouldn't be the one who's alive. He'd done things he wasn't proud of, and he knew that, acknowledges that and I recognize it for what it was: a cry for help, for someone to see him and realize that he's alone, that he's there and he was hurting and he needs someone to help him through it all.

It's lonely. He didn't just lose his sister. He lost everything. He's alone. He's been alone for years and he's still here. He carries ghosts and blame that shouldn't be. He got twisted all around but never broke.

They say that people who have been broken by life tend to live stronger and more determined than anyone else. And though the process was harrowing, Caleb and Emma healed each other. It was an unlikely romance, and through the haze of the depressing, heavy emotions, they found each other. In the most unlikely of times with the most unlikely circumstances. There were times when I think of what they could have accomplish together, these two people broken by the losses they have incurred in life, but then I think of how they understand each other in a way no one else could and I think that maybe, just maybe, it could work. That they can make each other stronger, and be the anchor for when they get lost again.

There's not much else that I can say in Elizabeth Scott's writing, except that this was the best book she has written so far. I've always been on the fence and more often than not lukewarm with her stories, but the stark portrayal of grief and loss in this novel is just, simply put, quite amazing. Her writing just sweeps over you, brings you deep in the story, and you take in all of it until every single chapter you read becomes memorable. It was very tiring, and by no means an easy read as there were tears involved on my side, but it's a heart breakingly beautiful story. Heartbeat is worth the read. Death, the loss of loved ones, grief and the aftermath, the sense of loss, regrets, all of these are part of life, and more often than not, what changes us. How do you deal? How do you let go? How do you accept the fact that the one you love isn't here anymore? Heartbeat doesn't have all the answers to those questions, but it's one that can show you how it's like, and how it will be after.

I sit next to Caleb, waiting and thinking about what life really is. About how it has its own will. How it shows you things that rip you open, tear your world apart. How it unfolds even when you think it' can't. How it takes you places you never thought you'd be. Shows you things you never knew you wanted to see. Brings you pain- and joy. Where will it take me now? I don't know. And that's what life is. You can plan all you want, but you will never know what will be. Life just is, and I am here in it. I am waiting for what comes next.

Content (plot, story flow, character):
The story went around in circles at some point, with everything going back to Emma and her misconception and misunderstanding of things. I felt like the blame was all given to her because she doesn't understand. What about Dan? It would have been so much easier if she and Dan talked, but a lot of time was wasted when things could have been fixed easily. Also, I have mixed feelings over Dan, and was not entirely convinced of his character throughout the story. And what about Caleb's family? Was that it? If Emma and Dan can gather the strength to face what lies ahead for them, what about Caleb? Wasn't he going through the same process of healing like Emma? Or was he just done with his family, and there was no hope for them at all?

Shining: Worthy of a Goddess' Love!

Book Cover:
Quite a deceptive cover, but I like how it looks nothing like what the content is.


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Goddess Offerings (37) / Stacking the Shelves (19)

 tháng 2 08, 2014     goddess offering, meme, stacking the shelves     No comments   

I am back!!! I have a slew of reviews ready for posting soon, and I have my Kindle to thank for that! I've been requesting egalleys like mad and I am steady reading them one by one. Wow. Anyway here are the books that I got this week, check it out!


Stacking the Shelves hosted is by Tynga's reviews! So leave a comment below and share your own haul!


For review:

Anything to Have You by Paige Harbison
Fire & Flood by Victoria Scott
The Hit by Melvin Burgess
Better Off Friends by Elizabeth Eulberg


Won:

Hollow City (Miss Peregrine's Peculiar Children #2) by Ransom Riggs

Gifted:

Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell


From #LBYRPreview:

The Geography of You and Me by Jennifer E. Smith
The Prince of Venice Beach by Blake Nelson
Allies & Assassins by Justin Somper
Salt & Storm by Kendall Kulper


For Blog Tour:

16 Things I Thought Were True by Janet Gurtler
My Life with the Walter Boys (My Life with the Walter Boys #1) by Ali Novak
The Cellar (The Cellar, #1) by Natasha Preston


Thanks so Fully Booked, Jobert *cough* I mean Tina, MIRA Ink, Scholastic Philippines, Sourcebooks Fire and Little Brown Books for Young Readers!

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Review: Ignite Me (Shatter Me #3) by Tahereh Mafi

 tháng 2 05, 2014     5 stars, ignite me, review, tahereh mafi     No comments   

I can proudly say this: I HAVE SURVIVED.

All the fears.
All the gasping.
All the screaming.
All the frustration. (And mostly me hitting my mattress repeatedly.)
All the feels.

Every single blow Tahereh Mafi can give to her readers in this final installment of her wonderful, wonderful series.

I have survived them all, and still I wish it didn't end.

Title: Ignite Me (Shatter Me #3) by Tahereh Mafi
Release Date: February 4th 2014 
Published by: HarperCollins
Source: Bought (Amazon Kindle Store)
Buy: Amazon | Book Depository

Summary:

Juliette now knows she may be the only one who can stop the Reestablishment. But to take them down, she'll need the help of the one person she never thought she could trust: Warner. And as they work together, Juliette will discover that everything she thought she knew-about Warner, her abilities, and even Adam-was wrong.

Before I started reading Ignite Me, I have this really irrational fear of plunging to the novel head on and finding out everyone ends up dead at the end. I felt like I had to prepare myself for any possible thing that might blindside me. But the funny thing was, the moment I've read that first line? The fear just became a really strong desire to see the story to the very end, no matter what happens.

I've said this before, and I will say this again: Tahereh Mafi is a brilliant writer. What fascinated me with the entire series was more than just the plot, but Tahereh's ability to get into your head with her writing, those disconnected sentences without punctuation marks? The striked out words? She has this ability to make you unable to breathe just by writing. One moment you are happily soaking those warm fuzzy feelings and the next you want to hit your mattress repeatedly because of frustration.

A lot of things changed in this novel. I think Ignite Me is a story of change for everyone but ultimately for Juliette. I tend to think of her as this whiny, emotional girl in the first two books and I loved how in this book, she admitted her faults, looked deep inside and accepted the things she was lacking, the good and the bad. She thought of things in life and love, sorted them out even though it's hard and painful and opened herself to change. She examined her feelings carefully and made decisions for herself. Juliette grew up, and she grew stronger by embracing her faults and putting the effort to make herself better. That moment of self-realization, of finally letting go and breaking free from the walls she'd put up herself and not letting anyone stop her from doing so is one of the most satisfying points for me in the story.

The following quote just about sums up Juliette in this book. It was just a line, just a sentence with eight words, and yet the impact is so great.

"I am enough, and I always will be."

I've long since pledged my allegiance to Warner. From the very first book, there's something about that sinister, stoic facade that intrigued me, and I wanted to see who that broken, struggling boy behind the cold, seemingly merciless persona really was. Find out more about himself, the things that make him laugh and cry, his habits. And it was so hard to see him break even more. If he did so in Unravel Me, he bared himself more in Ignite Me. You see a different side of him, see the pain, the hurt, the doubts plaguing him, the uncertainty, his love for Juliette and the intensity of it, what he's willing to sacrifice for it. And I loved how I got to see more of his vulnerability, that human side, that unapologetic attitude, that acceptance of who he was and what he has done, that brilliance. Every so often I just go "Warner, oh Warner." and sigh. Because he is, by no means, perfect. But his imperfections are the things that made readers like me love him. The quote below is a good example, every single time Warner opens his mouth, the words he utters almost always gives the reader a more complete look at who he really is, the way he thinks and feels.

"I have never claimed to live by any set of principles," Warner says to me. "I've never claimed to be right, or good, or even justified in my actions. I have been forced to do terrible things in my life, love, and I am seeking neither your forgiveness nor your approval. Because I do not have the luxury of philosophizing over scruples when I'm forced to act on basic instinct every day."

Surprisingly, I find myself agreeing with the way the other characters changed in the novel. Reading Fracture Me somehow prepared me of the potential direction the story is headed, especially with Adam. I understand him, and sometimes I don't. Maybe because I loved the way Warner thinks, and it was drastically different from the way Adam does. The way he responded to a lot of things that happened in this book made me analyze his character as a whole, from the first book up to this one. And though he too is imperfect, I find that his imperfections are what actually made him unlovable at times. Also, if there's any other character in this book that I loved, it is, without a doubt, Kenji Kishimoto. He wasn't just the funny, happy go lucky Kenji that he was. He was a leader, a friend and a brother all at once. He had this ability to just make the most unbearable of times bearable for everyone. Those one liners, that strong personality. He was amazing and terribly funny!

People died, secrets were revealed, a new version of selves emerged, evil was defeated, things were destroyed to pave the way for a new beginning. Tahereh Mafi just went ahead and put together an amazing final book in a beloved series. I loved how everything just came together in a really good way in the end, and not just because I got the ending that I wanted, but because it was an ending that was satisfying and it made sense. Just when you thought you can't get enough of the romance, intense action scenes and sequences that will make you hold your breath appears and then moments where you just want to fan yourself pop up. I have never laughed, cried out of frustration and blushed as much as I did while reading this book. I was in a perpetual state of happiness long after I've flipped to the end and then I wondered "was all of it real?". It was like a dream. A very good dream I would gladly dream over and over.

And so I say thank you, Tahereh Mafi, for writing this series. Thank you for bringing to life such a wonderful world and a diverse set of characters. Thank you for the laughter, the tears, those evil moments when you don't know what's gonna happen anymore. It was hard to part with the characters I have loved, and bidding farewell to this world is a bittersweet experience.

Also, thank you for Chapter Fifty-Five.

My rating:

Content (plot, story flow, character):
I have overflowing love for Tahereh Mafi right now. She can have all the butterflies in the world.

Stunning: Worthy of a Goddess' Praise!



Book Cover:
YES. Just YES.


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ARC Review: Kids These Days (Stories from Luna East Arts Academy Vol. 1)

 tháng 2 02, 2014     arc, kids these days, luna east, mina esguerra, review     No comments   


Welcome to Luna East. Who are you in high school? The popular kid at the top of the social foodchain? The jock? The shy, library assistant? There's a story for each and every type of student you once were in this lovely collection of stories. Come read and tell me what's your favorite.

Title: Kids These Days (Stories from Luna East Arts Academy Vol. 1) by Chrissie Peria, Mina V. Esguerra, Jen C. Suguitan, Jayen San Diego, Stella Torres, Richard Cy, Jonnalyn Cabigting, Robert V. Wong , Ronald S. Lim, Miles Tan, Athena Claire Dueñas, M. Protacio-De Guzman, Kristel Villar, Alyssa Ashley Lucas, Addie Lynn C. Co, Anne Plaza, YK Marquez, D.R. Lee
Release Date: February 8th 2014
Source: Blog Tour

Buy a copy here: http://bit.ly/lunaeastv1

Summary:

The stories from LUNA EAST ARTS ACADEMY are about love. And also, friends, food, kissing, rumors, mean people, insecurities, birthdays, breakups, making up. We set it in an arts academy because we wanted everyone to have a talent, and know it. Because no one is ordinary, if you know them well enough.

Who are you, at LUNA EAST? Are you a popular kid, a wallflower, a drama club diva, a debate whiz? Visit lunaeastacademy.org to read more stories from #LUNAEAST, and submit your own. For readers 16 and up.

I always get nostalgic whenever I read stories about high school, given that it was such a fun time of my life. And the collection of stories in Luna East Academy brought out a lot of warm, fuzzy feelings in me while I was reading. There really is a story for anyone and everyone who've ever been through the good and the bad times, the crazy ups and downs and the confusing, exhilirating time that was High School.

Short but meaningful, each of the stories will bring out a different feeling from the reader the moment they finish reading. I started off feeling 'kilig', immediately responding to that sweetness that started off the stories in Luna East. It gradually pulled me in with the myriad of characters I meet in each author's work, each becoming a little more interesting as I navigate through the world of high school cliques, the social hierarchies, and the common denominator that binds all of the stories inside: friendship and love.

I really think the idea behind Luna East is brilliant! I love how I get to read works from different authors with different themes and writing styles and you not only get to see the contrasts in their works, but you get to know the lives of those within the fictional Academy that is Luna East. You are bound to meet a character that you will like and dislike, read a story that will make your heart ache or jump with joy, one that will fascinate you a lot and make you think of it even after you've finished reading. I love getting that wonderful, happy feeling.

All of the stories were really good, but some of them stayed with me long after I finished reading the Kindle ebook and they are:

Sitting in a Tree by Chrissie Peria

I've read this first on the Luna East blog, and it didn't get less sweeter or cuter after my second time reading. It makes one miss school fairs and all those booths that serves as "bridges" for some of the students to express what they feel for other fellow students.

Fifty two weeks by Mina V. Esguerra

I had a big smile pasted on my face by the time I finished reading this story. Anything Mina writes always seem to get under my skin, leaving me with extreme feels.

Yours is the First Face that I Saw by Ronald S. Lim

This story surprised me completely. I've read a handful of stories with LGBT themes, but Ron's just made me fall in love with his story immediately after reading the first few paragraphs. It's delightfully interesting and was written really well. My only complain: why does it have to end there? More!

Something Real by Miles Tan

My first taste of sadness in the world of Luna East. Gigi's story took time for it to sink in! There was something about her and what she's been through that makes me want to just hug her. The poor girl... and that guy. I have no words to express what I feel about James. It was a mix of frustration and disbelief and a little bit of sadness thrown in the mix. I love how this story brought out complex feelings from me. One of my top favorites!

The Rumor About Me by Kristel S. Villar

This has got to be my most favorite story in this collection! I just love anything that involves a shy, timid girl who learns to stand up for herself along the way and the jock who was completely different from what everyone thinks he really was. I wish it didn't end. I wish there was more.

Senpai’s #1 Fan by Anne Plaza

I was sold the moment the words "Kaname" and "Danny Choo" were mentioned at the start of the story, and later "Quatre Raberba Winner". Anne Plaza gave the readers a sneak peek into the world of Otakus, enough to give Jannie a good foundation for her character. If I was a character in Luna East's world I'd probably be hanging out with Jannie and her friends. I will thrive at anime conventions and fangirl over goods and cosplayers, and still be focused enough to notice someone like Adrian. I also love how it wasn't just about anime or mecha costumes, but the transition to music is a good addition too!

Wouldn’t Change a Thing by Jayen San Diego

"I am always the second best, and I hate it." After I've read that line I knew I was going to like this story. I love how stubborn Maan can be, and how that stubborn streak in her draws Nico helplessly closer. There's something good about getting inside Maan and Nico's head and knowing how they feel about those around them and each other, which made me love the point of view switching. And those sweet moments at the end? I had to re-read them over and over.

If you think of each story as a part of a world you've yet to fully see, you will find something worth exploring in Luna East. There's definitely a lot of room for new stories and characters to appear, all of them existing in a world where anything can happen. But more than that, these collection of stories urges everyone to come not just explore life in Luna East, but try to write their own story. Each and every single tale can inspire a reader to write something, anything, to contribute to the world of arts, music, money and sports. What a really lovely work this is! Kudos to each and every writer in this collection! You are all a talented bunch!

Content (plot, story flow, character):
The allure of this actually lies in meeting a new character connected to another person studying in Luna East. You discover secrets and back stories along the way and as you finish a story one after another, it contributes to the building of Luna East's world. I like that part of the reading experience very much.


Shining: Worthy of a Goddess' Love!

Book Cover:
Definitely fits the theme of the stories in the collection!

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