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Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YA. Show all posts

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Blog Tour: Every Big and Little Wish



Title: Every Big and Little

Title: E C Moore

Genre: YA Romance

Book Blurb:
E.C. Moore’s young adult novel, Every Big and Little Wish, opens in late spring 1970. Sixteen-year-old Jacy Wilbert’s Mom got promoted, so her parents sold their Victorian home in California and moved to a townhouse in Oregon.
Torn away from the only home she’s ever known, forced to leave her beloved German shepherd behind, Jacy feels misplaced. Exacerbating an already terrible situation, her dad runs off with the bombshell real estate agent who sold them their townhouse. And, just when it seems things can’t get any worse, her mom loses the stupid job they left California for in the first place and begins to drown her sorrows with pink wine, night after night. Jacy’s caught in the middle, struggling to maintain a relationship with her AWOL dad while tolerating his annoying, much-younger girlfriend.
Missing old friends back in California, and feeling like an outsider, Jacy needs to build a new social life in a new school. Not the sort of girl to wait around for what she wants to come her way, she sets her sights on Neil Wilder, the best-looking boy around.
Everything changes when Jacy Wilbert knocks on the wrong door.


Purchase:


About the Author


When Elizabeth’s not writing feverishly, you will find her out walking or sightseeing. She’s crazy about coffee, books, cooking, good wine, cairn terriers, miniature ponies, historical houses, tapas, and witty people.


She resides in a fifties bungalow in Southern California, with her creative-director, hubba-hubba husband, a yappy blonde dog, and one feisty Chihuahua.


Author links:

Elizabeth Moore on Book-to-Film Adaptions


Two of the best book-to-movie adaptions have to be The Godfather and To Kill a Mockingbird. Two stinkers are The Great Gatsby and Memoirs of a Geisha.
I love a good mob story. With that said, The Godfather is an entertaining book, but the movie is much better. It’s Artsier. Marlon Brando at his best doesn’t hurt. The scene where he dies in the garden while playing with his grandson will stay with me forever.
Blame my passion for the film version of TKM on Gregory Peck in his prime, and Kim Stanley’s excellent but uncredited narration. As the narrator, Stanley does a stellar job of voicing Scout as an adult. The scene in the forest when Scout is being chased barefoot in that ham hock Halloween costume is movie magic. To Kill a Mockingbird is sheer perfection when it comes to adaptions.

Moving right along to the dreck, I’ve heard it said that The Great Gatsby is unfilmable, and history backs this premise up. Roger Ebert wrote of the 1974 Robert Redford version: The Great Gatsby is a superficially beautiful hunk of a movie with nothing much in common with the spirit of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel. I found the 2000 TV version downright odd, who thought it was a good idea to cast Mira Sorvino as Daisy? Buzz Luhrmann’s 2013 musical version has been called shallow, trashy, and tasteless. Maybe Hollywood should give up on bringing Jay Gatsby’s tragic tale to the silver screen. Maybe.

I had high hopes for Memoirs of a Geisha. Arthur Golden’s stunning novel knocked my socks off, so impressed I read it twice. Sadly, the lavish production did not deliver. The kimonos were the highlight.

Why do so many movie adaptions of beloved books fall short? So much has to do with time. The scope of some novels is just too vast and nuanced to condense down to 120 – 160 or so minutes, consequently characters, plot lines, and many fine points get omitted by the time the screenplay is complete. It makes more sense to turn longer novels into series for cable. Are you listening, Hollywood?




Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Blog Tour: The Key of Alanar



Title: The Key of Alanar

Author: Rory B Mackay

Genre: YA Fantasy

Book Blurb:
Lasandria: an ancient, advanced civilization, consigned to oblivion by the greed and power-lust of its own people. The coming apocalypse heralds the arrival of a new evil that will ravage the world of Alanar for an entire age. Yet on the eve of Lasandria’s destruction, the ethereal overseers of the mortal realm grant a dispensation—a promise of hope for the future.

That hope lies with an orphaned teenager named David, born some ten millennia later; a boy whose isolated and uncertain existence leads him on a journey upon which hinges the fate of not just his world, but countless others.

On the run from a brutal military force, David’s quest is one born of shattered dreams and tainted by the thirst for revenge. As an inter-dimensional war that has been waged since the beginning of time threatens to consume his world, the dark force that destroyed Lasandria lurks in the shadows, ready to take possession of the one thing that will either save Alanar or destroy it: David.

Goodreads | Amazon | Barnes and Noble


Guest Post from the Author: Top 10 Favorite Book to Movie Conversions

With so many films to chose from, I’ve decide to stick to my genre with this list, and select some of my favourite fantasy/sci-fi movie adaptations! 

Blade Runner One of my favourite films of all time, and such an incredibly immersive experience. Based upon Philip K Dick’s novel ’Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?’, this movie is beautifully realised on just about every level. Every time I watch it, I feel myself being completely pulled into the world Ridley Scott created. I also love the soundtrack by Vangelis.

Lord of the Rings Peter Jackson’s stunning adaptation of the ‘Lord of the Rings’ trilogy wildly surpassed my expectations. It’s a remarkable cinematic achievement and so vividly brought Tolkien’s work to life for the big screen. I’m a little less impressed by the unevenness and padding of his subsequent ‘Hobbit’ movies, but they are still enjoyable.

2001: A Space Odyssey Simply stunning cinema, and based upon a short story by Arthur C Clarke, which was then developed into a book of the same title, written concurrently with the movie. Watching this film is a meditative experience and the ending still fascinates me.

The Wizard of Oz One of my earliest movie memories! I will always love this film, and its magic seems utterly timeless. It's different in tone to the books, but no less remarkable. When I was a little child watching this at Christmas, I was really spellbound by it. I think it may have given me the inspiration to create my own magical fantasy worlds.

Harry Potter These films did a good job bringing JK Rowling’s books to vivid life. I enjoyed some more than others, but the magic is definitely there.

Charlie and Chocolate Factory I’ve always liked Tim Burton, who seemed the perfect match for Roald Dahl’s deliriously dark and fairytale-like stories. I also have a soft spot for the 1971 adaptation starring Gene Wilder. It genuinely scared and yet captivated me as a kid!

A Christmas Carol There have been so many adaptations of this timeless story. This might sound crazy, but one of my very favourites is the Muppet version.

The Jungle Book A wonderful Disney adaptation of Rudyard Kipling’s classic book. I loved this when I was a child, and the songs are a real highlight.

James and the Giant Peach I loved Roald Dahl’s quirky and subtly macabre books. This was always one of my favourites, and I loved the animated movie version.


The Princess Bride A funny, charming, deliciously deranged film version of the 1970’s novel of the same name, with so many memorable lines. Inconceivable!


About the Author
A natural born writer, thinker and dreamer, Rory Mackay was born in Glasgow, Scotland in 1979. As an ardent student of Vedanta, Zen and Taoism, one of Rory’s true passions is exploring the potential of fiction and art to elevate mood and expand consciousness.

Rory is the author of the visionary fantasy/sci-fi novels “Eladria” (2013) and “The Key of Alanar” (2015), as well as a translation and commentary of the Tao Te Ching (2014) and several short stories. He is in the process of writing a self help book and writes a regular blog at http://beyondthedream.co.uk. His website is http://www.dreamlight-fugitive.co.uk.



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Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Book Tour + Guest Post + Giveaway: Soul Warrior


About the Book

Twisted myths. Discretion advised. 

Fight fate, or succumb to destiny?

In the dark Age of Kali, the Soul Warrior alone stands guard over the Human Realm, protecting its denizens from evil-willed asuras or demons. When a trick of fate appoints him guru to a motley crew of godlings, he agrees to train them as demon hunters against his better judgment. Suddenly, Lord Karna is not only battling the usual asuras with sinister agendas, but also rebellious students and a fault-ridden past.

Spanning the cosmic realms of mythic India, here is a tale of a band of supernatural warriors who come together over a singular purpose: the salvation of Karna’s secret child.






Book Links



Recommended Reads by Falguni Kothari

Isaac Asimov, when asked to explain the difference between science fiction and fantasy, replied that science fiction, given its grounding in science, is possible; fantasy, which has no grounding in reality, is not.

While most fiction is a fantasy of sorts, let’s stick to my favorite SFF reads. As you will see, I tend to read series. There’s something about a series—its limitless length, the intricate casting of details, the slow pace, the worldbuilding—that impresses me, that begs me to wallow between its pages and make the characters a part of my daily routine. That’s not to say that I don’t love and appreciate a well-written stand alone novel, but let’s start with one of my favorite paranormal romances.
1)    Bec McMaster’s London Steampunk series:

If you love regency romance, sci-fi, some paranormal and lots of action, then you must check out this series. Of Silk and Steam was the first steampunk romance I’d ever read. It wasn’t the first book in the series, and though there were spoilers in it for the three or four previous books, I loved the book enough to go back and read the whole series.

2)    JD Robb’s In Death series:
You’d think reading all forty plus books that already make up this series of futuristic crime novels—some of them multiple times—I’d grow tired of the characters, the formulaic setups of the books, the sheer number of times Eve Dallas, the heroine and homicide cop extraordinaire, looses her freaking gloves. But no. I haven’t. Eve and Roarke are a book couple to stalk for all time.

3)    George R R Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series:
Raw, gruesome and shocking. I love the multiple POVs that a reader gets to see through. It’s fantastic that Martin is unafraid to kill off beloved characters to advance plot. Or maybe he simply wants his readers to lose all sense of peace and run screaming into the night. That aside, the sheer scope of the novels reminds me of the Indian epic, the Mahabharata, which happens to be the jumping off point for my newly released the Age of Kali series.

4)    Robin Hobb’s The Farseer Trilogy:
I fell in love with the protagonist, FitzChivalry Farseer, from the first page of the first book in this series when, at the tender age of five, he’s abandoned by the only family he’s known at the gates of his unknown father’s keep. Hobb’s turn of phrase and her effortless worldbuilding only enhance the truly sympathetic characters she’s brought to life in these fantasy books.

5)    Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series:
Five words: James Alexander Malcolm McKenzie Fraser. An epic hero is a must for an epic series. He is why I read this series. He is why I’d leave my husband. Luckily, He isn’t real. And since He was created by Ms. Gabaldon, she will forever hold a special place in my reader heart. All her books hold prime spots on my bookshelf. And that’s the story.

Read an Excerpt


CHAPTER ZERO
DWANDA-YUDDHA: THE DUEL

The Himalayan Mountains.

Five thousand years ago.
Absolute darkness shrouded the Human Realm, and had for three days and three nights. Some believed the occurrence was prophetic, like the prolonged amavasya or new moon night that had heralded the Great Kuru War two thousand years ago. The war had given birth to the dark Age of Kali, the age of asura. In contrast, hope was ripe that this event would trigger the Age of Light. But the Bard wasn’t here to succumb to superstition. 
The first day without the sun’s light had spread confusion and chaos across the realm. The second day had brought desperation in the breasts of humans and fear in the belly of Celestials. The third day—today—was a feast for the asuras. Death lay everywhere. 
The human world burned without its sun. How soon before the Heavens went up in flames?
The Bard’s troubled eyes reread the last line. Then he deliberately scratched it off, lifting his long, pointed talon from the parchment made of dry palm leaf. With a sigh, he rested his aching hand on his trembling thigh. He would spare a moment to ease his body, and his mind from the strain of observation and due recordkeeping. If he didn’t, he’d forget his duty as Witness of the Cosmos, and begin to question fate. 
Despite the fire that crackled close to his right knee, and the feathered form of his upper body, he was cold. An icy wind had settled around the Pinnacle of Pinnacles, where he sat cross-legged on a seat made of rock and snow. He’d chosen this perch because it gave him an impartial view of the events happening in the world. He was the Bard, entrusted with keeping the Canons of the Age of Kali, just as the Soul Warrior was entrusted with keeping the Human Realm safe from asuras. Would they both fail in their duty today?
The Bard shook off the heavy despair the darkness had brought into the world. He mustn’t judge. He shouldn’t question. He would sharpen the talon on his forefinger, dip it into the vessel of ink kept warm by the fire, and write this tale. That was all he could do. Be the witness to history.
So he raised his feathered hand and began to write again while his eyes, sparked with power, knowledge and magic, saw clearly events unfolding from great distances. A thousand kilometers to his right, Indra, the God of War and Thunder, fought the Dragon. Indra did not fare well. But that didn’t concern the Bard as much as the clash between the Soul Warrior and the Stone Demon. Over and over, his eagle eyes were drawn to the duel taking place in the heart of the world, not only because it was a magnificent battle to behold, for it was, but because its outcome would decide mankind’s destiny.
The Soul Warrior was more than a great warrior. Karna was a great soul. Fair, honorable, brave and resilient, he was the perfect protector of the Human Realm. Of course, there were other reasons he’d been chosen to fill the office of Soul Warrior—there always were when Gods and demons were involved. But Karna’s existence was a testament to righteous action and if anyone could bring back the day, it would be him. 
But how did one vanquish stone, the Bard wondered?
Avarice and cruelty, two nefarious desires, had made Vrtra and Vala attack the Human Realm. Three days ago the Dragon had swallowed the Seven Rivers in the north, and the Stone Demon had imprisoned the Sun God, his daughter, and all the cattle of the region in his cave.
The Bard paused his writing as a thin vein of lightning winked across the skies, but without the accompanying roar. Indra’s strength waned. His thunderbolt hadn’t left Vrtra screaming in pain this time. The Bard spared a moment’s attention on the duel, just enough to note that the Maruts, the Celestial Storm-gods, waited in the clouds to rescue their god-king in case of a calamity. Indra would survive even in defeat. Of that, the Bard was sure.
But Karna had no one at his back. His might and god-powers had depleted without the sun’s healing warmth and light. His divine astras, weapons, had not slowed the Stone Demon down, at all. Only the conviction that he could not fail his godsire, his sister, and the innocents under his protection drove him now. His birth family had once abandoned him to his fate, but he would not abandon them to theirs—such was the greatness of Karna.
The Bard crossed out the last observation. No questions. No judgment. No praise, either. The canons would be free of all emotion. He wasn’t here to embellish history or glorify the history-makers, as some bards were wont to do. 
It wasn’t embellishment to write that the foothills of Cedi were drenched in the Soul Warrior’s blood. Or observe the gushing wounds on his body, despite his armor, that would make the hardiest of warriors bellow in agony, but not him. It wasn’t embellishment to write that the Heavens were empty for the Celestials had come to Earth to watch the battle, firelight cupped in their palms to light the warrior’s way. 
The Naga, the Serpent People, also looked on, hissing from the mouth of the portal that led to their underground realm beneath the hills. The Serpent King will not choose a side. Vrtra and Vala were half Naga, after all. All across the Human Realm, demons roamed free, taking advantage of the darkness and preying on human flesh and human souls. It was a terrible moment in history. The asuras had the upper hand in the eponymous age of Demon Kali.
Vala did not have arms and half a leg, but still he came at Karna. He had an ace up his sleeve. There were plenty of creatures about, an entire mountain close at hand. He began to chant the spell of soul transference. It was the darkest of all magic, the possession of another’s soul. Soon, he would be whole again and stronger than before.
Battered and bleeding, the Soul Warrior veered away from the Stone Demon. He leapt over boulders and charred vegetation. The onlookers called him a coward. Had he forfeit the duel? Has he forsaken mankind? 
Karna dove for Manav-astra, the spear of mankind, he’d thrown aside yesterday after his bow, Vijaya, had shattered under repeated use. In one smooth motion, he rolled, picked up the astra, coming up in the spear-thrower’s stretch. His tattered lower garment billowed about him as a gust of wind shot through the air. His muscled torso glistened with blood and sweat, tightened as he pulled the arm holding the spear back. 
He meant to throw Manav-astra at Vala. A futile attempt, to be sure? As long as Vala was made of stone, broken or not, his body was impregnable. Karna should have waited for Vala to transfer his soul to an onlooker. Then Karna should have vanquished the possessed creature. 
Taunting laughter reverberated through the foothills of Cedi. Vala had reached the same conclusion. The Celestials looked at each other in angry silence, unable to interfere. A dwanda-yuddha duel was fought between two opponents of equal size and strength alone. The humans hadn’t stopped screaming in three days, the din simply background noise now. 
The Bard scribbled the observations onto the parchment in no particular order. He wished he was a painter, for surely this was a picture worth a thousand words.
The demon hobbled toward the warrior, who stood still as stone with his arm drawn taught behind him. Then finally, with a roaring chant the Soul Warrior shifted his weight from his back leg to his front and let fly Manav-astra at the Stone Demon with all his remaining might. 
Karna didn’t wait to see the ramifications of his action. And there were plenty to come. He ran into the mountain cave to free Vala’s hostages. Within moments the rock face rent in half, and bright streams of light speared through the terrible darkness. A new day had dawned on the Human Realm after three days of perpetual night.
The sun’s power was too bright, too full of hope. Yet, the Bard looked on pensively, wondering if the Soul Warrior knew this wasn’t a victory. It was merely a reprieve.


About the Author

Falguni Kothari is a New York-based South Asian author and an amateur Latin and Ballroom dance silver medalist with a semi-professional background in Indian Classical dance. She’s published in India in contemporary romance with global e-book availability; Bootie and the Beast (Harlequin Mills and Boon) and It’s Your Move, Wordfreak! (Rupa & Co.), and launches a mythic fantasy series with Soul Warrior (The Age of Kali, #1)

I’m embarrassed to admit how many social media accounts I own :

Website * BlogTwitter * Facebook * Goodreads * Pinterest





Giveaway

One $10 Amazon gift card and 5 Sun Pendants. Open Internationally!


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Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Book Review: Beautiful Curse


Title: Beautiful Curse

Author: Jen McConnel

Reviewer: Aly

Genre: YA Romance

Book Blurb:
Sixteen-year-old Mya Jones is cursed.

She is, hands down, the most beautiful creature on earth. But beauty can wound, and Mya finds herself reviled and shunned by her peers. If there is even a chance that she could start over, Mya longs to take it, no matter the risks.

So when the strange Mr. Merk offers her a new life away from home, Mya is hesitant but hopeful. Only she didn't count on the mysterious Ross, or her feelings for him.

BEAUTIFUL CURSE is a contemporary retelling of the myth of Psyche and Cupid.

Review:

Before reading Beautiful Curse, I was already interested in Greek Mythology, and so when I was given the opportunity to read and review Beautiful Curse, I quickly jumped on it! Although I did do a quick review of the myth of Cupid and Psyche because all of the details weren’t coming back to me as I thought they had. It wasn’t necessary to do so but I remembered the myth and wanted to make sure that I wasn’t confusing things if I happened to get lost. Which at no point did I. In fact I really didn’t need to do a quick catch up on the myth as the story was pretty much retold in Beautiful Curse. It was interesting seeing the tale retold in a bit more modern sense, especially seeing the reactions of the main characters. I loved how the author showed the emotions of the characters through their thoughts, although we are only given Mya’s perspective. I would have liked to see some of the story from Ross/Cupid’s point of view. It would have added something more to the book.

The writing itself was interesting and the plot as mentioned already was intriguing especially to someone who might have already had a knowledge of the myth of Cupid and Psyche although don’t let that stop you if you don’t know the myth. Even if I hadn’t known the myth, Beautiful Curse still would be an interesting story. 

I really enjoyed the take that the author had on the story, and the different ways she incorporated the Greek gods and the tasks assigned to Mya as well as the new characters that were introduced. It was different from the ancient myth and I think modernizes the myth for those who might not be interested in Greek mythology. 

I enjoyed taking the time to read Beautiful Curse and recommend it to anyone and everyone!

Rating:


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PURCHASE
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About the Author
Jen McConnel first began writing poetry as a child. A Michigander by birth, she now lives and writes in the beautiful state of North Carolina. A graduate of Western Michigan University, she also holds a MS in Library Science from Clarion University of Pennsylvania.  When she isn't crafting worlds of fiction, she teaches college writing composition and yoga. Once upon a time, she was a middle school teacher, a librarian, and a bookseller, but those are stories for another time.  Her fiction titles include DAUGHTER OF CHAOS (YA), THE SECRET OF ISOBEL KEY (NA), and the recently released sequel, HER SECRET INHERITANCE. Visit http://www.jenmcconnel.com to learn more.

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