Cozy Reading Corner


Signing recap: Jen E. Smith and Lissa Price in Manila + giveaway!

 tháng 9 27, 2014     book signing, feature, giveaway, jennifer e. smith, lissa price, recap     No comments   

My fangirl heart was overflowing with joy when I found out that Jen E. Smith, one of my favorite YA contemporary authors ever, was coming to Manila. I've been talking to friends and fellow bookworms about my desire to see her here and voila! She arrived with Lissa Price for a signing.


I've said this a lot of times before, but I am a really big fan of Jennifer E. Smith ever since I've read The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight. She's amazing and her stories are something I can always relate to. And add to that, Lissa Price, who has written this intriguing set of books, so I was sure we'll have a good time when I see them. And then they're there:


I just had this huge grin on my face (I was sitting in front, so I see them up close!) while looking at them! I loved seeing their faces as they answer questions about their writing and their books.


My question for Lissa was:
Starters' core is very complex (seniors being able to rent bodies of teenagers in order for them to live/feel young once more). Did you already have an idea of how you were going to work around the complexity of it all or did everything simply flow in the process of writing?
Her answer: Lissa is a planner so she has this post it notes where she writes her middle, high points, ending so she has a skeleton of her plot line sorted. But as her characters change, she follows them. It's a delicate back and forth between what she planned and what she discover as she writes.

A few points of the Q&A:

Lissa Price's process in world building of Starters and Enders: 

She went to Costco to get a flu shot but they didn't have enough vaccine for everybody, and so the government set up a triage system where only the very old and the very young will get the vaccine because they're the most vulnerable members of society. Lissa thought if it was a killer disease, then all that was left standing would only be the very old and the very young. What kind of world would that be? And she thought "Ah! That's the kind of world I'd put it in a book". Thus, Starters was born.

Was there ever a time when their editors wanted to remove some parts in their story which happens to be their favorite? 

Jen is an editor so she sees both sides of the process, and she's a believer of it. What's good in the book comes out as you go through draft after draft. But there are times she'll say no, but most of the time she tries to treat it as a perspective she can't see as the writer. She'll take 75 to 80% of suggestions.

For Lissa, the notes a writer gets from the editors oftentimes "stink". She sets them aside for a few days and gets back to it the next time around and sees it more clearly. Editors suggest fixes but it isn't always right, and for her what's important is the characters "work" and she makes her story better her own way.

Lissa doesn't have the cliffhanger ending of Starters in her original draft, her editor asked for it.The line in Statistical “It's not the changes that will break your heart; it's that tug of familiarity.” which is one of the most quoted line among her book? She was right to retain it. :)

On Lissa's writing process and when she decided she wants her book to be published:

Every writer who writes want their books to be published. It took Lissa 9 months to write Starters. She got an agent in 24 hours and the book sold in 6 days. It was quick!

Would Jen want to: meet a British guy in the airport, having a long distance relationship or being friends with a movie star?

She doesn't want a long distance relationship, it's not ideal for her. She'd want to meet a cute British boy on a plane! She loves Graham, but Oliver is her favorite.

Did Lissa intended Enders to be a duology?

Yes she did. When she first started writing, she thought she'd write a trilogy because it was like what she was reading at the time (Hunger Games), but her editor suggested she make it a duology because publishers might be getting tired of trilogies and at the time there aren't a lot of YA duology.

Lissa is entertaining the idea of writing a third book because so many fans asked for it! But nothing is confirmed yet.

How does Jen balance her work as a writer and as an editor?

Not very well. She wrote her first 5 books while working full time and it was just about really wanting it. Getting up really early and staying home for the weekends to meet a deadline, it was a challenge for her. She doesn't think her work as an editor as a day job. And she doesn't edit YA so it's nice for her to be in another genre. Now she has a flexible schedule and she thinks she's a better writer now.

The biggest challenge Lissa had to overcome while writing a book set in the future post war?

It was the whole process of writing a book before she got published, because it's a whole different thing after you get published. You have your editor, guidelines and expectations and the challenge itself is the beauty of it. Everything will change once one gets published!

If you want to listen to the rest of the Q&A, check the recording below:


I had a really fun time meeting both authors, and Jen E. Smith was such a sweetheart! For once I was able to hold a proper conversation with an author that I love! I told her I was tweeting about NBS bringing her here and she was just full of thanks to everyone who made it possible. And oh! You should've seen how cool Lissa Price was when she told us a friend had a first edition of Starters and she gave us pointers on how to take care of a first edition book because it's precious and collectors want them.


And as always, it's twice as fun because I see my friends and fellow book bloggers and really just get to hang out with them and talk about anything we want. And books, of course.


As a bonus, I recorded a video with Jen E. Smith and Lissa Price's message, check it out below!


I can't thank National Bookstore enough for making this possible! Meeting Jen E. Smith was a dream, and having Lissa Price as well? AWESOME! And congratulations for another successful book event. Keep it up!

Lissa Price was generously giving away swag to everyone because she brought a ton, and she told us we can use them as giveaways, so I am giving away some! You can win 2 signed bookmarks, a bookplate and a button!

Rules:

Open to PH residents only
Must be at least 13 years old
Ends October 10


a Rafflecopter giveaway


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Goddess Offerings (46) / Stacking the Shelves (28)

 tháng 9 19, 2014     goddess offering, meme, stacking the shelves     No comments   

So here's my book haul for the week! I'm so excited for the Jen E. Smith and Lissa Price signing happening today (and tomorrow!) here in Manila. Watch out for my recap soon! In the meantime, check out the pretties I got in the mail. And bought. I might've had a wee bit of a problem controlling myself and ended up buying more books. And then there's also MIBF so... watch out for my haul. :D


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

For review:


The Memory Keepers by Natasha Ngan
Heir of Fire (Throne of Glass #3) by Sarah J. Maas
The 100 Society by Carla Spradbery


The Dolls (Dolls #1) by Kiki Sullivan
Messenger of Fear by Michael Grant
Feral by Holly Schindler

Bought:


A Little Something Different by Sandy Hall (Kindle ebook and paperback)
Cryer's Cross by Lisa McMann


Red Rising (Red Rising Trilogy #1) by Pierce Brown

* This copy had a 7 page excerpt of Golden Son (!!!!!) and my IG posts, which Pierce Brown liked. Day. Made.

(From National Bookstore's sale)


Dualed by Elsie Chapman
The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jen E. Smith
Geography of You and Me by Jen E. Smith
Starters by Lissa Price

Habagat and Typhoon Mario struck the greater part of Metro Manila and nearby provinces yesterday, I hope everyone affected are staying warm and safe. Take care, guys!

And thanks very much to HarperCollins International, HotKey Books, Bloomsbury UK, Hachette UK!

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ARC Review: The Girl from the Well by Rin Chupeco

 tháng 9 10, 2014     4 stars, arc, review, rin chupeco, the girl from the well     No comments   

A shivery tale based on the popular legend that spawned Sadako, guaranteed to make the hairs at the back of your neck stand quite a few times, with an unlikely protagonist and an unusual style of storytelling. Strange yet not without a satisfying ending. All of the words before this just means I loved the book.

Title: The Girl from the Well by Rin Chupeco
Release Date: August 5th 2014
Published by: Sourcebooks Fire
Source: Author (Thanks Rin!)
Buy: Amazon | Book Depository

Summary:

A dead girl walks the streets.

She hunts murderers. Child killers, much like the man who threw her body down a well three hundred years ago.

And when a strange boy bearing stranger tattoos moves into the neighborhood so, she discovers, does something else. And soon both will be drawn into the world of eerie doll rituals and dark Shinto exorcisms that will take them from American suburbia to the remote valleys and shrines of Aomori, Japan.

Because the boy has a terrifying secret - one that would just kill to get out.

What to expect when you know you're reading a book that sounds frightful? Be scared, of course. But the thing is, The Girl from the Well will not bombard you at the get go with gruesome, gory scenes. Instead it introduces you to a girl who has spent hundreds of years in the dark, quietly watching, waiting for the right time to strike, making sure that the children, kidnapped and killed, will be avenged. Her name is Okiku, and she is the girl from the well.

Rin Chupeco convinced me to look closer into the story behind this infamous ghost, and Okiku convinced me to look closer into who she was before she became known as that spiteful spirit. Both combined made me enjoy the story tenfold. Okiku is a ghost unlike any other. It's fascinating to see the story unfold on her perspective, because that's what was most interesting to me: it's the thoughts of a ghost, mingling with what she sees and occasionally blending with bits and pieces of her life before she died and what happened after. Rin Chupeco has given Okiku a smart, catching voice in the story, but still managed to stay true to what she is supposed to be: a vengeful ghost.

Tarq and Callie are two other characters in the story that are worth looking at. Their dynamics as cousins are enjoyable to see, and the mystery surrounding Tarq's condition is something one would want to discover. Why the tattooes? I viewed Tarq not as a potential love interest at first, but as a child who needs protection, like Okiku does. Children are her domain after all. And the unusual fascination sustained the intrigue for me. Why this particular boy?

And then Rin Chupeco masterfully weaves in Japanese folklore and legend into the story, Shinto rituals and exorcisms, mikos, shrines and dolls, creating a dark, unsettling effect and gradually upping the creepy factor to a breaking point. There are things that are quite scary in this book, and bit by bit it turns into the chilling, horror story you expect it to be. I was gasping quite a few times, the hairs at the back of my neck stood up on quite a few scenes, but it just added fuel to my reading fire, to know what happens next. What little romance this book has was also catching in its uncommonness, and the way it ended was something you rarely expect. A tormented boy and a ghost, what a strange combination, but the author made it work.

With my love for anything Japanese quite big, my expectations for this book is high and I am quite impressed. The Girl from the Well is quite good in its unusual set-up, the charm stemming from the fact that it was a one of a kind take on a Japanese story we are all quite familiar of. Rin Chupeco's style of writing gave life to a fascinating ghost. The suspense and mystery was sustained throughout the story, and the ending will just make you feel torn and conflicted. Was it good or not?

Kai's favorite quote:
“It is not in my nature to be interested in the living.
But there are many things, I have found, that defy nature.”

Content (plot, story flow, character):
.5 off because there are Japanese terms that readers might not be familiar of and might confuse those who aren't knowledgeable with Japanese. Since I am reviewing an ARC, I'm not sure if there's a glossary of terms included in the finished copy. It should help.
.5

Shining: Worthy of a Goddess' Love!

Book Cover:
That cover should give you an idea on what to expect while reading the book.


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Signing recap: Alex London in Manila!

 tháng 9 02, 2014     alex london, book signing, feature, guardian, proxy, recap     No comments   

Days before, I didn't know what to expect for this signing, but surprisingly this is one of the most fun events I have attended this year so far. Why? Check my recap below for the reasons. But really, Alex London is just AMAZING!


I didn't arrive late! Some of my friends from NBS and a few bloggers were still teasing me because of my blunder (a.k.a my late arrival) at Steph Perkins' Q&A, so I made sure I arrived early this time around. I am proudly the second person who was there at the venue. Admittedly, I have only read Proxy because of my busy schedule at work, it was my first LGBT YA themed book in quite a while and I had no idea how to approach Alex when I ask my question. But all my fears went kapoof when I saw him! He was such a fun person! He had a lot to say and share to us and I find myself sitting there just enjoying while I listen to him speak.

Alex looking all suave and hunky before the Q&A starts.

He was all smiles and waving at us. Around 10 - 15 minutes before the event started, he was checking the shelves for books he wanted to buy. The result of his brief browsing? He carried a book towards the stage, which he jokingly said he wanted to buy. We burst out laughing when we saw the title. A very sexy paranormal romance book called How to Seduce a Vampire (Without Really Trying).

Alex holding Kerrelyn Sparks' book.

When the laughter died down (and after we got over the initial shock of faulty microphones and feedback), we got down to business and asked Alex questions about his books, his writing and his life. My question was:

"I've read in an interview that you got a Masters in Library Science. Did being a librarian help while you were writing Proxy and in what way?"

He said being a librarian helped him a lot, but he wasn't consciously using it while he was writing. Alex was a teen librarian, so he knew the literature, and he had a strong sense of what teens are reading, what books he enjoyed reading in the teen space and what wasn't there. He wanted to write a book for his teenage self, and he wanted to write a book for teens who didn't get to be heroes in the sort of books they read.

Important points of his Q&A:

- Asked if Alex has determined if there will be no middle class from the very beginning, he said that there's no need for them in the story. There's robotics, computers developing in his story, so there's no need for "middle workers", as there are no good jobs and if there are, they're being done by machines.

- A fellow blogger (who has a degree in Molecular Biotechnology) asked what kind of research he did for the biotechnology part of his books, Alex said he did almost no research, he was terrified people will read it and say "he is an idiot!". Alex started writing Proxy around 2008, and initially the characters had really advanced cellphones called "tablets" but then Apple came up with the iPod so he had to come up with new ideas. He took what existed in nano technology and bioengineering and pushed it into an imagined possible future, with the scariest version of it. It was mostly daydreaming.

- If he lived in the world Proxy is set on, what will be on his purchase history? Alex said there will be a lot of books (he spends too much of his money buying them) and take out food (he likes Thai food!). He's a curious person so there will be strange, embarrassing things from goofing around and his research for writing. He tries to make his buying history unpredictable as he hates being treated as a data point, like how Syd is in Proxy.

- Asked what made him write Proxy as a story set with a person as a "back-up", as what the word itself means, it's an idea that happened throughout history, like the "whipping boys", poor children who were sold by their own family to the Royalty and if the Prince or children of these families misbehave, the poor children were whipped in their place, or if there's a need for conscription, these kids go in place of these rich children. He took that idea and projected it to the future with debt, economics, religious references and the idea of sacrifice to repay debt all mixed in on one pot.

- He feels horrible when he kills off characters in his books. As much as it hurts his readers, it hurts him much worse, as he's like their parents and lover at the same time, he spends more time with these characters than his family. When they die, he feels hurt, and he knows it's his fault. He even tried rewriting a death scene because he didn't want it to happen, then he wrote it 3 times and it became worse so he decided to just go with the 1st version. After that, he poured himself a stiff drink of whiskey and cried. He didn't want his story to be sugar coated so he did what he did. It wasn't planned though, but Alex was setting up the story for it to happen.

- Egan is the most based on a real person. He's very much like Alex's best friend in high school, Tim. When Syd was outed to his class, it was something that had happen in Alex's life minus the technology.

- Punishment (a prequel) was written because Alex just wants to hang out with his characters more and get to know Knox more.

- Knox is based on who? Alex said it was based on a classmate. He went to a very fancy school in Baltimore and there was a kid like Knox who was rich, obnoxious and Alex, for some reason, liked him. He wondered what it would be like to be that confident, with swagger, a person who gets what he wants, so he got to live the experience through writing Knox.

- Are the characters in Proxy hinged on his teenage self? Alex said very much, as he was an angry teenager before. He was afraid and very reserved because people might find out his one big secret of him being gay and he would miss a lot in his life and he was angry because of that fact too.

- If he's Knox, would he want his Proxy to take the fall for him? Alex said no, that he's a much better person than that. But at 16, he would have behaved like the way Knox behaved but be more guilty. But with maturity, he wouldn't. He's not evil. He can't watch his Proxy suffer and he'll probably be good after the punishment, which is the idea of the system. He'd like to believe he'd be better. If he was Syd though, he wouldn't be as generous, as honorable as he was. He'll be average.

- There's a wide representation of LGBT in YA books in the US. What is it in the publishing in the US that does that and can it be replicated here? Alex said yes, and that it's a process. It started 10 years ago when brave editors and publishers stepped up. It started with Boy Meets Boy, David Levithan's book, as well as Malinda Lo. They worked hard to bring out the LGBT voice to publishers. Pop culture also goes a long way and opens up the space more to allow editors and publishers and let them know that there's a market for LGBT books. But there's still a long way to go. The Diversity conversation is still ongoing, it's an endless process.

Fun side facts:
- Alex was supposed to be in his honeymoon on his visit here. He just got married!
- Alex tried beat boxing when our mics didn't work because of too much feedback. He failed miserably.
- When asked what he's done with the Hunger Games ARC he got, he said he just gave it away. He had no idea it was going to be big at the time he'd read it. If he did, he could've hold on to it and maybe sell it on eBay.
- He buys his underwear online.
- Alex was interested in reading Sangu Mandanna's The Lost Girl as Proxy is somewhat similar to that.
- Alex dyed his hair green when he was 16.
- Alex said he will dye his hair green (again) and get a tattoo when his book becomes the #1 New York Times betseller. It was the first time he was glad he didn't sell 10,000 copies of his books at once.


A recording of the Q&A session:


As always, I got to hang out with my book blogger friends! It's always fun seeing them all and talk about books that we liked, we've read and what we would like to read in the future.


We went to the public signing as well and I was so happy that there were people who supported Alex and his signing! There were a lot of readers who hung out, excitedly waiting for him and I loved how he shared his stories with us, more than what he had already shared at the Q&A.



Alex shared this heart warming story when he was still a journalist overseas, during the public event, which I think you all need to listen to. Check out the recording I attached below. It's worth a listen, I promise.


I can honestly say, and this one comes from the bottom of my heart, that this is one of the most memorable book signings I've been to. Alex London is such a wonder to watch, and I can just listen to him speak all day. He's also a funny guy, so what can I say? He's adorable!



Thanks very much, National Bookstore, for the opportunity to meet such an amazing person!

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