Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Review: Anastasia's Secret




On July 1918, the Romanov family was executed, but Anastasia's remains were only found in 2007. For years her popularity grew, as people wondered if she escaped from a terrible death. And of course, Susanne Dunlap focused the climax of Anastasia's Secret on that.


Anastasia, Mashka, Tatiana. Pic taken from Alexanderpalace.org
If like me, you read Historical Fiction only for the history lesson, you will not be disappointed. The author really stuck with the original story of their captivity. Since Anastasia had no influence with the political aspect, she gives us in details what it was like for her and her siblings to be stuck in a house not knowing what is going on.


Rasputin is mentioned a couple of times, and of course, her brother's illness. But it's the love story that holds this book together and that provides us with a surprising twist.


Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Jump on It

 



TOP FAVORITE INNOVATIVE WAYS TO TRAVEL


Last week I did a piece on airplane travels, so to spice things up, today I will discuss innovative ways to travel.

The Floo Network


Oh, yeah. Although not always precise, this mode of transportation will get you to there fast and in one piece. However, if you are claustrophobic, I would suggest...


Wings 


Just look up at the sky and bat your eyelashes for a sweet angel to come and lift you away to -- well not paradise -- but somewhere nice. 


Arms


Give a new meaning to getting carried away by succombing to Jacob Blacks arms. He is strong and able to run very very fast. No pun intended when I say that this will be a bumpy ride.


Water Horses


Don't you dare snuggle with this horse, because it will bite you. The fun part is getting it to bite someone else. Like annoying neighbors and that lady in the supermarket that gives you the evil eye for buying frozen pizzas. What does she care what you eat?!? 





Monday, June 3, 2013

Tour Stop: Holding On and Letting Go by Lucy Kelly



I signed up for the tour for one reason: The premise.A good contemporary book provides us with real issues that make great lessons to prepare us for our own hardships. Holding On and Letting Go fits perfectly in that category. 


Is there a way to describe the ties that bind us together? What happens when one of those ties is unexpectedly severed? Can everything else remain the same? Will the other ties hold strong?

Two years after her little brother's death, sixteen year old Emerson Caulfield returns to a home that she spent the last two years missing. In theory, everything should be the same. Her best friend, Matt, still lives next door. Her house is in the exact same condition as they left it. The scenery and hallways haven't changed, yet for Emerson, everything is completely different. The place may be the same, but Emerson is most certainly not. She returns home hurt, angry, and miles away from the girl she once was.


The 60,000 word novel alternates between the perspectives of Emerson, who is struggling to keep breathing on a daily basis, and Matt, who wants to have his old best friend back so badly that he is willing to overlook the fact that she has completely changed. Though their friendship and relationship is a major part of the story, it takes backseat to the unique bonds between siblings, what happens when your worst enemy is in fact yourself, and the hardships that come with growing up and changing.

Find it



What Makes Lucy Kelly Real



1) I like making lists. It's weird, and I never actually scratch things off of the list.
2) I sing and dance in the car like a maniac.
3) For the first six years of my life, I truly believed a shark lived under my bed. I watched Jaws at too young of an age.
4) Without a doubt, I am a night person. I am enormously grumpy when first woken up in the morning.

5) When I was younger, I read almost every Nancy Drew book, both new and old. I had a notebook, and I would take notes to see if I could figure out who the "bad guy" was before Nancy did. We probably tied.

You can find her on:   Facebook     Twitter   and    Goodreads






Tour organized by Irresistible Reads Book tour

Review: The Rules for Disappearing


Poor Meg has no clue why she is in the witness protection program. She got home one night, and bang, the cops were there to relocate the entire family. To make matters worse, there are so many rules: no making friends, no school clubs or fancy jobs, no calling any attention to oneself....

Ugh! Forget about losing phone privileges. Not being allowed to have your own personality is by far the worst punishment ever. But does this mean Meg is a whiny, bitter, cold character? No.

Instead, Ashley Elston gives us a strong willed, kind, and hardworking female lead. Not only does Meg take care of her younger sister; she takes care of her alcoholic mother too. All while working and attending school. In a lot of ways, Meg is a role model.

The actions scenes are well paced and the love meter is very high, even making this BookCupid blush.

Bring on the sequel.

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Hot Covers: The Island by Jen Minkman





Jen Minkman, author of Shadow of Time is back with a brand new novel entitled The Island. This time she tackles Dystopia while providing us with a hot delicious cover that is too heavenly for my Cupid eyes (hence the shades).



‘I walk toward the sea. The endless surface of the water extends to the horizon, whichever way I look.

Our world is small. We are on our own, and we only have ourselves to depend on. We rely on the Force deep within us, as taught to us by our forefathers. 


If I were to walk westward from here, I would come across a barrier – the Wall. Behind it, there are Fools. At least, that’s what everyone says.


I have never seen one.’


Leia lives on the Island, a world in which children leave their parents to take care of themselves when they are ten years old. Across this Island runs a wall that no one has ever crossed. The Fools living behind it are not amenable to reason – they believe in illusions. That’s what The Book says, the only thing left to the Eastern Islanders by their ancestors. 


But when a strange man washes ashore and Leia meets a Fool face to face, her life will never be the same. Is what she and her friends believe about the Island really true?


Or is everyone in their world, in fact, a Fool?



The book came out June 1st 2013.  Feel free to check it out on Goodreads.