Showing posts with label adult fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adult fiction. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

COVER REVEAL: #LondonFalling by @ChanelCleeton


Have I got a cover reveal for you today! I read the blurb for Chanel Cleeton's New Adult romance, London Falling, a while back and I thought "This is something I want to read!". Mark your calendars for July 7th! 




BOOK BLURB: 
We weren't a relationship, we were a ticking time bomb...

Maggie Carpenter walked away from the hottest encounter of her life when she left the seductive glitz of England for summer break in her South Carolina hometown. Now that she’s returned to the International School in London—and sexy, privileged Samir Khouri is once again close enough to touch—she can’t help but remember the attraction, the drama … the heartbreak.

She can’t help but want him even more.

Samir can’t afford to fall for someone so far removed from his world, not when his time in London is running out. It's his senior year—his last chance at freedom before he returns home to Lebanon. There, he’ll be expected to follow in his father’s footsteps—not follow his heart to Maggie. But when a scorching secret hookup becomes a temptation neither can resist, they’ll both have to fight to survive the consequences … and find a future together.

Don’t miss this explosive sequel to I See London, and the riveting conclusion to Maggie and Samir’s story. This is a New Adult romance recommended for readers 17 and up.



LONDON FALLING PRE-ORDER LINK:
I SEE LONDON (book #1) BUY LINKS:
Barnes & Noble:  http://bit.ly/1khLGx1
iTunes:  http://bit.ly/1fBFzRj 
Harlequin:  http://bit.ly/1nENamw 

AUTHOR BIO: 

Originally a Florida girl, at seventeen Chanel Cleeton moved to London to attend an international university. In the four years that followed, she received her bachelor's and master's degrees, learned how to dance, travelled through Europe, and made lifelong friendships. Chanel fell in love with London and planned to stay there forever. But fate intervened on a Caribbean cruise, when an American fighter pilot with smooth dance moves, swept her off her feet.

Now, a happily ever after later, Chanel is living her next adventure in South Korea. An avid reader and hopeless romantic, she is happiest curled up with a book. She has a weakness for handbags, puppy cuddles, and her fighter pilot husband.
Chanel is the author of the New Adult books I See London and London Falling with Harlequin HQN. Learn more about her on her website at www.chanelcleeton.com. Keep up with Chanel's latest news, book giveaways, and more on her monthly newsletter at www.chanelcleeton.com/mailing-list/.



Sunday, February 16, 2014

Now That I'm Stronger by @ValinaRudolph

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 What Would You Do If, In One Moment, You Learned Your Entire Life Was A Lie? 

"I did it." These three words, uttered by Brianna's father, changed her life forever. Confident in her father's innocence, Brianna had been convinced that the jury had made a mistake. Instead, with her father's admission of guilt, everything she believed to be true is suddenly called in to question. 

Heartbroken and confused, Brianna sets out to find out the truth about her past. But what she discovers is more than she could have ever imagined. From the aunt who helped raise her to the new love in her life, it seems as though everyone in her life has a secret agenda. Shattered a little more by each revelation, Brianna finds herself alone with no one to trust. 
Now That I'm Stronger invites you along on Brianna's journey as she courageously uncovers the truth about her past and finds the strength to embrace her future.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Valina Rudolph knew two things from a very young age: she wanted to be a lawyer and she loved to write fiction. She attended John Jay College in New York City, where she majored in Legal Studies and English and she received her law degree from Hofstra Law School. Rudolph currently works as an attorney in New York City. Her love of fiction writing has never waned and Now That I’mStronger is her debut novel. Rudolph lives in Far Rockaway, New York with her husband.


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This giveaway is open internationally and is available for anyone over the age of 13 years old. Good luck!

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

The Taste of Apple Seeds - Interview, Giveaway, and Excerpt

Big treat for you today! I have an interview with Katharina Hagena, author of The Taste of Apple Seeds, plus a giveaway and an except of the book. You get it all today!

I was initially attracted to The Taste of Apple Seeds, because the main character has the same name as my beloved great-grandmother, Iris, and because Iris is a librarian. I thought this was fate! Only after a little digging did I find out that The Taste of Apple Seeds was originally published in German and has been making a splash all over Europe! Also, look at the beautiful cover! I have also been a big fan on contrast in photographs and the image of the young girl's blue coat and stockings against the brown is absolutely stunning to me. Ok, enough about the cover and on to the interview. 

Interview with Katharina Hagena 

1.The Taste of Apple Seeds is a beautifully written book full of love and loss - what originally sparked your interest in writing?

My interest in writing has been sparked by reading. I don't think I am one of these writers who feel that their life has been so interesting that others have to know about it, too. But I have always had an insatiable greed for stories. However, sometimes there are stories that I urgently want to read but, unfortunately, they don't exist. And so I have to make them myself.

2. Can you tell us a little about your average writing day? 

It takes me a long time, years in fact, to finish a book. The writing stage comes last and since I don't want it to be interrupted by further research, by major changes of maybe the structure or the ending, I have to be very well prepared before I start writing. Indeed, I only allow myself to write when the pressure has become so high that it will push me through the whole book in one go. This means that after all the research is done and the narrating voices are chosen, the characters and the plot have been sketched and the net of images spread out I need a certain amount of time all by myself so I can do nothing but write. I write from morning until the early afternoon. In the late afternoon I prepare for the next day's writing. It is wonderful, torturing, intoxicating, dead boring, exhilarating, hard work.  I can only do this during the school holidays when I can throw the whole family out of the house for a week or so. It is quite amazing what one gets done when one knows that one's unfragmented time is so limited! After this intense beginning I have usually found my stride and can or have to adapt my writing hours to the school hours of my children. I won't write when there are people in the house.

3.      This book is full of many different female characters with a wide range of personalities. Was there any inspiration from any women in your life?

Yes, of course. The story-telling in my family has always been undertaken by women - at least the stories one wanted to hear. There are usually several versions of family stories, one official one and one or two other ones.
In this particular novel, the grandmother Bertha looks a little like my own grandmother. In the book Bertha gradually loses her memory - so maybe as a writer I am also something of an archivist. Only a deeply unreliable one - after all, I invent things, I don't write " true stories" with "real people" in them - indeed nothing would bore me more. I do try to write truthful stories though.

4.      Could you give readers a closer glimpse into Iris Berger?

Iris is a young librarian who does no longer read. She has lost her faith in the written word. She thinks that what you write down is what you no longer need to remember. Like a shopping list: You write it down so you can forget about it. And Iris is afraid of all that not-remembering that has gone on in her family for decades.
Every character in the book has his or her own individual story of forgetting.  But it is Iris who inherits the big old family house and all the stories that come with it. And while Bertha is slowly losing her memories Iris, in the course of the story, is forced to confront hers.

5.         Do you find solace in the country, the main setting of the novel, or does a big city capture your heart?

Well, I live in Hamburg and it is a big city and it seems that I will stay here for a while. But I was brought up in a more rural part of the country and I cannot deny that I miss it. We used to play in the woods and swim in the lakes at night, climbed on derelict buildings, ran through cornfields and went everywhere on our bikes. But I fear I might just be nostalgic about my childhood. And I push aside how infinetely bored I sometimes was. How oppressive the neverchanging  rituals, people and routines of a village can be. So I shouldn't get too soppy here. But I still miss it.
  1. What advice would you give aspiring writers looking to get into the publishing industry?
I have NO advice to any aspiring writer in the United States! The publishing industry in your country is different from ours. I don't even have an agent - unthinkable in England and probably in the USA , too. To me it seems harsh that a writer has to find an agent, who, of course, has his own interest in mind, before he can find a publisher. I wonder if excellent texts that might not have great economic success, will ever find their readers. Would James Joyce have ever found an agent? Strangely,  I do think he would always have found a publisher. But maybe it is the other way round? As I said, I don't know the American system at all. But I do know this: Parts of Joyce's  Ulysses were first published in the United States and the whole book (minus some "obscene" passages) was first published in Paris - by Sylvia Beach from Baltimore, Maryland.
7.      Is there a particular author or book that has influenced your writing?
Oh yes, many, many books and authors. I believe that reading is the only kind of education you need in order to become a writer. It is tiresome to read books by authors who haven't read much and thus think they have just re-invented the wheel, or modernism or whatever. But before I sound too much like Waldorf and Statler I'd rather list the ones I love: I do hope I have been influenced by Virginia Woolf and by Heinrich Kleist, by Jane Austen and James Joyce, by Gabriel Garcia Marquez and by W. G. Sebald - but influenced not in the sense of imitation but of an attention to language, to sound, rhythm and expression.
  1. Tell us about you - what do you like to do when you're not writing?
I read. I answer questionnaires. I love being outdoors. My mother was a sports teacher so not doing one's sports is like not brushing one's teeth. I am still trying to get some scholarly work done but it is hard not to lose touch - I used to teach English literature before I became a writer. And I have two children, 11 and 14 years old. So I do all that mothers' stuff like cooking and baking and screaming and applying sun screen lotion onto anything that isn't fast enough on the trees.
9.      What can fans of The Taste of Apple Seeds look forward to next?


I hope very much that my second novel "On Sleeping and Disappearing" will be translated into English.

Here is a brief excerpt of The Taste of Apple Seeds 

Great-aunt Anna died from pneumonia when she was sixteen. They couldn’t cure it because her heart was broken and penicillin hadn’t yet been invented. It happened late one July afternoon. Anna’s younger sister, Bertha, ran howling into the garden and saw that with Anna’s rattling, dying breath all the red currants in the garden had turned white. It was a large garden; the scores of old currant bushes groaned under the heavy weight of the fruit. They should have been picked long before, but when Anna fell ill nobody gave a thought to the berries. My grandmother often told me this story, because it was she who had discovered the currants in mourning. Since that time there had only ever been black currants and white currants in my grandmother’s garden, and every attempt to plant a red bush had failed—only white berries would grow on the stems. But nobody minded: the white ones tasted almost as sweet as the red, when you juiced them they didn’t ruin your apron, and the jelly they made
had a mysteriously pale translucent shimmer. “Preserved tears,” my grandmother called it. The shelves in her cellar still housed jars of all sizes with the currant jelly from 1981, a summer particularly rich in tears, Rosmarie’s final one. Once when my mother was looking for some pickled cucumbers she came across a jar from 1945: the first postwar tears. She donated it to the windmill association, and when I asked her why on earth she was giving away Granny’s wonderful jelly to a local museum she said that those tears were too bitter. My grandmother Bertha Lünschen, née Deelwater, died long after Great-Aunt Anna, but for many years she hadn’t known who her sister was, what her own name was, or whether it was winter or summer. She had forgotten what shoes, wool, or spoons were for. Over a decade she cast off her memories with the same fidgety ease with which she plucked at the
short white locks of hair at the nape of her neck or swept invisible crumbs from the table. I had a clearer recollection of the noise the hard, dry skin of her hand made on the wooden kitchen table than of the features of her face. Also of the way her ringed fingers always closed tightly around the invisible crumbs, as if trying to catch the shadows of her spirit drifting by; but maybe Bertha just wanted to cover the floor with crumbs, or feed the sparrows that in early summer loved taking dust baths in the garden and were forever uprooting the radishes. The table she later had in the care home was plastic, and her hand fell silent. Before her memory went completely, Bertha remembered us in her will. My mother, Christa, inherited the land, Aunt Inga the stocks and shares, Aunt Harriet the money. I, the final descendant, inherited the house. The jewelry and furniture, the linen and the silver were to be divided up between my mother and aunts. Bertha’s will was as clear as springwater—and just as sobering. The stocks and shares were not particularly valuable, nobody except cows wanted to live on the pasture of the north German lowlands, there wasn’t much money left, and the house was old.


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THE TASTE OF APPLE SEEDS is available now at Amazon B&N iTunes IndieBound

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

The Registry & The Collection by Shannon Stoker


Let me tell you about The Registry and The Collection!

Shannon Stoker has created a dystopian society where women in the US are prized beyond anything. They are raised and groomed to be the perfect daughter and wife. They are made to believe that their whole existence is to serve their fathers and then their husbands. On their 18th birthday they are evaluated, given a price, and entered into the Registry. Men, who have completed their mandatory 4 year service in the military, are able to view the women and purchase their bride. Life for 18 year old Mia Morrissey is perfect though. She is going to fetch the highest price ever from the Registry and that is all that matters to Mia. Everything changes though when Mia realizes that the Registry is no better than a slave auction that resulted in the murder of her sister. Her only chance is to run away to Mexico, even though her ruthless husband will stop at nothing to have her.

The Registry will suck you in! I was glued from the very first page and did not stop until it was over. As Mia and her friend Whitney escape from their horrifying futures they are helped by the reluctant Andrew, who wants nothing more to join the military and serve his county. As they make their escape, Mia begins to put together the pieces of what happened to the United States and how the Registry came about. The transformation of Mia, who starts as a naïve debutante, to a person who is curious and defiant is wonderful. Stoker takes her time developing Mia and the transformation continues into The Collection, which was published today.

The Collection resumes immediately where The Registry ends. Make sure you have The Collection readily available when you start reading The Registry, because you won’t want to leave Mia and Andrew’s story. Though there is a hint of romance, it is far from the front burner, which I think only enhances the story. I know there has been some discussion of which genre this falls under: young adult, new adult, or fiction? Though the characters are 18, I feel that this story and the characters are past the young adult stage. The setting of society during this time has hardened a lot of the characters, especially Andrew. I think this adds to their maturity level and is another reason why I would classify this as an adult novel or a new adult book. No matter what collection you place them in, both The Registry and The Collection will sweep you into a story filled with action, adventure, and self discovery! I hope you will run out and pick up a copy of The Registry and The Collection and if your library doesn’t have them, add them! They will quickly check out! 

Perfect for fans of Divergent and The Handmaiden’s Tale


Sunday, November 24, 2013

Well...you did ask

Generally my BF doesn't ask what I am reading. Every once in a while he might comment on a book cover, but for the most part he doesn't mention anything about my reading. Usually because I am always reading. Just like he is always studying up on football. It is an unspoken rule and I'm totally okay with it.

He works nights and I'm rarely up when he gets home (which is usually between 1am and 3am). Well the other night he was pretty surprised to find me still awake when he got off from work (2:30am) and inquired about what I was reading. He does ask from time to time and I usually just give me a quick answer (because hello, I'm reading!) regarding the book's genre. So you can imagine his surprise when he got waaaay more than he intended...

BF: Whatcha reading?

Me (without looking up from the book): Maya Banks' Colters' Woman. It is about a young woman, who is recently married but running away from her abusive husband. She ends up passing out in the snow outside of this ranch in the middle of nowhere, only to be found by this hunky dude and his equally hunky 2 brothers. I guess the brothers are into sharing the same woman so they decide to make her their wife. I really don't know how all the details are going to work out. I just finished the first sex scene, which is kind of unrealistic to me because she screws all the brothers at the same time...and she was a virgin! That seems pretty impossible to me, because gosh wouldn't she be tired and sore? Granted there wasn't any anal, but they mentioned it so I can only imagine that it will be happening in the next scene. But I am kind of liking it so far. I really want to see how Banks develops the relationship. I'm just glad that she didn't write any anal into the first sex scene, because that would have been totally unbelievable.

At this point, I look up.....


I do not think he will ask me anything...ever again. 

Friday, April 6, 2012

Book Giveaway!

 So I totally forgot about this book. I had been meaning to use it for a Giveaway but it just got pushed under some things on my desk. Well no more! I am giving away an ARC of Making Piece: A Memoir of Love, Loss, and Pie by Beth M. Howard. Check out her awesome blog.
Here is a little bit more about the book from Goodreads,

"You will find my story is a lot like pie, a strawberry-rhubarb pie. It's bitter. It's messy. It's got some sweetness, too. Sometimes the ingredients get added in the wrong order, but it has substance, it will warm your insides, and even though it isn't perfect, it still turns out okay in the end."

When journalist Beth M. Howard's young husband dies suddenly, she packs up the RV he left behind and hits the American highways. At every stop along the way—whether filming a documentary or handing out free slices on the streets of Los Angeles—Beth uses pie as a way to find purpose. Howard eventually returns to her Iowa roots and creates the perfect synergy between two of America's greatest icons—pie and the American Gothic House, the little farmhouse immortalized in Grant Wood's famous painting, where she now lives and runs the Pitchfork Pie Stand.

Making Piece powerfully shows how one courageous woman triumphs over tragedy. This beautifully written memoir is, ultimately, about hope. It's about the journey of healing and recovery, of facing fears, finding meaning in life again, and moving forward with purpose and, eventually, joy. It's about the nourishment of the heart and soul that comes from the simple act of giving to others, like baking a homemade pie and sharing it with someone whose pain is even greater than your own. And it tells of the role of fate, second chances and the strength found in community
"

Remember this is an Advanced Reader Copy. 
Good luck and may the odds be ever in your favor (can't help it!)


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Tuesday, February 28, 2012

An Available Man by Hilma Wolitzer


288 pages
Published January 24th 2012 by Random House Publishing Group

     In An Available Man, Edward Schuyler is a sixty-two year old middle school teacher and an avid birdwatcher who is dealing with the death of his beloved wife, Bee. Though his world has stopped with Bee’s death, the rest of the world is still carrying on. According to his friends and even his children it is time for Edward to move on and find a new love.  Edward is finding out that being a widow means that you are quite a catch and he must suffer through endless matching making schemes. His stepchildren even put a newspaper personal ad out for him. Suddenly, Edward is swarmed with women.  To most men, this seems like a dream come true, but Edward is still dealing with the fact that he is an available man. In this tender and witty novel, Edward must learn to not only to accept his new single status, but also that it is ok for him to move on.
   Though this sounds like a real downer of a book, author Hilma Wolitzer creates a warm and humorous setting that leaves you feeling anything but sad. As Edward deals with the new stream of women in his life, children who mean well, nosy friends, and an old flame that resurface you began to understand his process of letting go and dealing with Bee’s death. There is one woman that I was waiting for her to go all Fatal Attraction on poor Edward. I just knew she was crazy and kept waiting for her to show her true colors. The women that come into Edward’s life, not just from a romantic angle, will have you cracking up to no end. Though Edward has his ups and downs with these women his story wraps up nicely by the end of the novel. This isn’t an impossibly long read, but you want to take your time so you understand the beauty of Wolitzer’s writing style.

Why did I check this book out? I routed a hold on this book to another library. When I checked the book in it told me that it was on hold for another librarian that I use to work with.  I had always thought this girl had style and a sense of confidence that I envied, so I thought I would see what she was reading.


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