Happy World Book Day!!

Happy world book day, fellow book obsessives! This has got to be the coolest day of the year, except for Christmas (when book lovers also get books (; ). What did you do for world book day? I didn’t get to dress up, being in secondary school *sniffs*.

Anywayy, this year, we have a brilliant line up of books to get with our awesome book tokens:

2013′s £1 Books

I’m especially looking forward to buying four- The Diamond Brothers (Anthony Horowitz), Bitter Sweet (Cathy Cassidy), Ruby Redfort- Hang in there Bozo! (Lauren Child), and the Tom Gates Best Book Day ever! (Liz Pichon)- at the weekend. What about you?

Also, there’s a brilliant YA app to download to an Apple Device this year- the World Book Day/Movellas app. Movellas is a great young writers app and site where you can share your writing pieces, and now if you download the world book day app version you can read some exclusive YA world book day books, including one by Josephine Angelini, author of Starcrossed and Dreamless!

Tall Tales From Pitch End

By Nigel McDowell, published by Hot Key Books.

Tall Tales From Pitch End

The town of Pitch End is ruled by the powerful Elders, and the citizens are watched over be clockwork sentries. Ten years after the end of a rebellion and the death of his father, nearly fifteen year old Bruno Atlas lives just like any other Pitch Ender- except that he has a secret. He has a forbidden book, called Tall Tales from Pitch End, and he doesn’t know that  this book will change his life forever.

After he discovers a chilling, scary truth about the Elders, he runs from the town, and finds out that there are still rebels of the town, lurking in the mountains. As he teams up with them, Bruno begins an exciting journey, full of rebellion and adventure, with the Tall Tales book to guide him. Can he and his new team of rebels take down the evil Elders?

Before I review this book, can we just take a moment to stare in awe at the amazing, steampunky cover of this tale above? It is AMAZING. Possibly one of the coolest covers I have seen this year. Okay, moment over.

Tall Tales from Pitch End was brilliant. Right from the start it hooked me in- the opening was really powerful and exciting, and that excitement stayed consistent throughout the book. The plot was pretty brilliant and unpredictable, and I really enjoyed reading it. The events in the book were exciting,original, and well constructed, and kept me reading. Tall Tales from Pitch End was an imaginative, Steampunk adventure with some great twists. It was beautifully written, too!

Bruno was a really adventurous protagonist who I really enjoyed reading about. He was a well developed, and loveable character. The evil dudes, the Elders, made great and imaginative bad guys; seriously ruthless people who kept so many secrets from their town. I loved reading Bruno’s rebellion against them!

Overall, I really enjoyed this. Tall Tales was a great debut. The story was great, and I so want to read more. Highly recommended for young teens!

Stray

By Monica Hesse, published by Hot Key Books.

Stray

Lona Sixteen-Always has spent all of her life in part of a unique virtual reality experiment called The Path, which claims that it will bring up orphans in better ways than foster homes. Lona spends twenty-three hours a day inside a ‘Pod’, re-living the childhood and teenage years of a boy called Julian, who lived fifty years ago and apparently had a perfect childhood. Lona is not allowed to be in love… but during the one-hour-a-day she getts ‘Off Path’, she falls for Fenn. A few months after he leaves for a real life adulthood, Lona is rescued from her virtual life by Fenn  and his rebellious, Stray friends.Upon beginning a new, dangerous life as a Stray from The Path, Lona discovers dark truths behind The Path, finds love again, and embarks on a journey to find out what it really means to live. Can Lona and her new group of friends, the Strays, spark a rebellion against The Path?

This book has to be one of the best debuts I’ve read in a while! The plot was thrilling, with great, unexpected twists and shocks. Monica’s writing was brilliant; her story structured expertly. I especially loved how every few chapters, the scene would switch back to who was, at the beginning, a minor character (Talia), and how Lona and Talia came together at the end to try to put a stop the The Path’s ways. The idea was just genius- it’s one I really wish I’d thought of! The author has generated a dark, technologically advanced possibility of a future America that I really loved and want to read more about. 

The characters were great; I really loved Lona and Fenn. Although I didn’t know anything about their pasts, or their real names (Lona Sixteen-Always and Fenn Eighteen- are Path-Generated names), I really connected with them and enjoyed reading their adventure. I liked the character of Talia, too, and how she came from being a normal Path Staff-member who I guessed would be a bad guy to playing a totally unpredictable part in the start the rising up against The Path!

Overall, I seriously enjoyed this. It’s got to be one of the best Debuts of the year, and I really really really want a sequel. Keep writing, Monica Hesse!

Hot Key Books Blog- young bloggers week!

This week over on the blog for Hot Key Books, there’s a new thing happening called young bloggers week. Every post this week on their Key Note Blog will be written by teenage and child bloggers from the blogosphere! Today, I started, with a short thing on the good things about e-Books. You can read my piece at the link here- http://hotkeyblog.wordpress.com/2013/03/04/ebooks-the-good-things/- and be sure to stick around all week for the other posts; I can’t wait to read the next pieces!

Mila 2.0

By Debra Driza, published by Harper Collins

MILA 2.0 (MILA 2.0, #1)

Mila has just moved to a new, quaint town after a house fire which killed her father. She’s lost her memory, and is still trying to recover it. However, upon falling out of a car and cutting herself, she discovers wires instead of veins in her arm… and finds out that she is not like any other people. In fact, she never had a father, or lived in a house before the one in the quiet town in Minnesota- those memories were programmed by her mother in order to keep Mila from learning the truth… that she was a part of a confidential military experiment, and that her mother saved her from further experiments and termination. Now Mila knows the truth about herself, no place is safe. The military want her back, and they will stop at nothing to retrieve her and drag her back to the laboratory she came from. Mila and her mother embark on a terrifying journey, and Mila loves, loses, and realises what it truly means to be human.

WOW. Just wow. I loved this so much! Debut novels really don’t get more exhilarating than this. From the front cover and the blurb, this looked truly amazing, and it lived up to my expectations. It was gritty, fast-paced, terrifying, and crammed with action. Mila was a brilliant main character- I really connected with her and her story was an epic one. I think Mila made a solid, great protagonist, and the story of her discovering who she really is, is a really interesting one to read.  All of the characters, from the love interest to the evil military generals, were extremely brilliant! I  loved every second of Mila 2.0, as it was a real thrill ride to compete with I am Number Four and similar to Unremembered. The plot was brilliant; with a brilliant, strong narration. Some parts were edge-of-your-seat action scenes, others were tear-jerkingly-sad. I couldn’t stop reading… this book is a must for any YA book lover, and now I’m (rather impatiently) waiting for the sequel!

 

Tempest

By Julie Cross, published by Macmillan

“Time will tear them apart…”

It’s 2009, and Jackson has a secret- he can jump back in time and relive moments in his past, and only he and his geeky friend know. Jackson has a girlfriend, the beautiful, blonde hair and blue eyed Holly, and he would do anything for her. When two mysterious men burst in on Jackson and Holly and Holly is shot, Jackson immediately jumps back in time, determined to undo it all. But, when he’s catapulted back, he ends up in 2007. after many tries, Jackson realises that he is stuck, two years from Holly being shot, and can only jump further backwards. Can he work out how to save Holly, whilst he digs up a terrifying truth about his father?

This book was good, but not exactly brilliant. The plot was an original, clever idea, and I really enjoyed it- it was a bit like groundhog day and was fun to read. However, the beginning of the book was so confusing- one minute they were in one place, the next minute Jackson was years in the past- the time travel was pretty hard to grip at first, but I came to understand it after a while. Another thing I disliked was that towards the end, the whole story was taken over with the ‘Tempest’ Time Travel Agency, and I think the whole ‘save Holly’ thing was kind of dropped. 

Bad stuff aside… The character of Jackson was a real adventurous one, and he had a well developed personality and background. I liked the character of Holly, too, but I wish it would have gone more in depth to her background because I didn’t really get to know anything about her except for the fact that she had an overprotective mother. 

Overall, I quite enjoyed Tempest. It was thrilling, with some cool plot twists and I liked the romance side of things, too- how Jackson kept falling in love with a past versions of his girlfriend Holly – it was a real twist on a teenage love story. It’s great for sci-fi fans!

City of Bones

By Cassandra Clare, published by Walker Books.

Teenager Clary Fray is at a club with her best friend, Simon, when she sees demons and Jace and Isabelle, the shadowhunters, for the first time. Upon coming home, she finds her house ransacked and her mother kidnapped… by demons. Joining the strikingly attractive Jace and his step-siblings, all demon hunters, she is determined to track down her mother’s kidnapper, the evil shadowhunter-turned -evil Valentine,  and find her mum. Clary meets faeries, demons, vampires, and werewolves along the way, on a terrifying and exciting journey. She finds herself falling in love with Jace, but a twisted truth involving Valentine and Clary’s mother will tear Jace and Clary apart from each other…

I’ve always wanted to read the Mortal Instruments series, and I finally got the chance to start it, and City of Bones was brilliant! It has EVERYTHING in it- City of Bones has so many mythical creatures in it, I lost count! The plot was great, and kept me guessing throughout. There were lots of extreme plot twists too, the most shocking being how Clary discovered that she (*SPOILER ALERT*) was actually related to Jace- that was shocking, twisted, and totally unpredictable! I loved the setting, as it was based in modern day New York City, which has a hidden, supernatural side to it. Clary was a brilliant protagonist, and was confident and adventurous. I liked the love triangle, which developed throughout the story- Simon loved Clary, and Clary loved Jace. I loved the characters of Simon and Jace, and they made great competitors!

City of Bones was beautifully written, and packed with suspense and drama. I really, really enjoyed it, and will definitely be watching the movie and reading the rest of the series!

Geek Girl Blog Tour!

I really loved Geek Girl, Holly Smale’s brilliant debut, and you can read my review HERE. I was so happy to be a part of the blog tour! Today, it’s a Q and A between me and Holly Smale about…

How Holly got published!

B&WJNR: Did you use to enter writing competitions as a child?

H.S: I didn’t, actually. I attempted my first bit of creative writing when I was seven – a poem called “The Unicorn” – but I was far too shy to show it to anyone but my family. I wrote a huge amount of poetry and short stories (by the time I was seventeen I had an entire book of them) but I would never have considered entering them into any competitions or letting strangers see them. I kept them in a very pretty box under my bed: I think they were too important to me, and I couldn’t face having them shot down or laughed at or rejected.

 When I sent Geek Girl to my (now) agent, she was the first person outside of my family or boyfriend who had ever seen anything creative I’d written.

  Geek Girl

If so, were any of these published in any form?

 Nope. Although obviously I have high hopes for “The Unicorn”. It has goblins and everything. 🙂

You’ve had a history with journalism from the age of six, what kinds of articles did you write and who for?

For some reason I found it easier to share journalistic pieces than creative writing: maybe because it was less personal and scary. My first published article was inBunty magazine when I was six years old. I got a cheque for five whole pounds, which I spent on pens and paper and apples because I thought I was Louisa May Alcott. When I was seven I did some bizarre features for the Parish magazine, and then was overwhelmed with the “pressure of journalism” and didn’t publish anything else until I went to University. At that point I took a deep breath and wrote some comedy features for the student newspaper, won an award for it and accepted a position editing the paper. I then scribbled bits and pieces over the following years here and there: random columns for Company magazine, The London PaperItchyguides, Venue, Decode. Anyone who would have me, basically. I also started up my (now sleeping) blog – The Write Girl – which was read in 28 countries and was one of the most fun and productive things I’ve ever done, writing-wise.

 I guess I’ve always veered towards writing about everyday things with a comic edge, although sometimes the humour is unintentional (my piece in Bunty was hysterical, but totally by accident).

When you began writing Geek Girl, did you ever dream of it getting published?

 I’d be lying if I said I didn’t write it with that intention, but I didn’t actually believe it would happen. Saying that, I had a good feeling from the very first sentence (which is still the same): obviously I’d been creative writing since I was a very little girl, and had started and abandoned dozens of novels, but I’d never had that “hairs standing up on the back of the neck” sensation before. I did with Geek Girl: it felt right and natural, and I was suddenly desperate to tell the story in a way that I hadn’t been before. So although I didn’t necessarily think it would be published, I trusted my instincts enough to keep going until it was finished. I knew I had to write it regardless of anyone buying it or not.

I read that your book was sold in a ‘hotly contested’ auction between five publishers! How did that feel?

I’m a pretty quiet person, but when I found out five publishing houses had made offers for Geek Girl I did shout a few times and hop round the garden, squeaking, before bursting into rowdy tears. Nobody expects a situation like that: I’d thought – best case scenario – one editor might be brave enough to take a chance on my book, and that would have been all I could possibly hope for. As it was, I think I went into a state of shock. I got to spend an entire week visiting brilliant publishers who had created some of my very favourite books of all time, and they were all so incredibly lovely and enthusiastic about what I’d written. I still pinch myself, to be honest. I got my dream, and it’s still hard to believe I got so lucky.

If you’d like to check out the past blog tour posts or want the blog addresses for the next blog tour posts, click HERE for the blog tour poster! 🙂

Geek Girl, Holly’s book, will be out in bookstores on the 28th of February (Paperback). Also available in eBook formats.

The School for Good and Evil

By Soman Chianani, published by HarperCollins.

The School for Good and Evil

“Sophie had waited all of her life to be kidnapped…”

Sophie is one of the prettiest girls in her village; and she has waited all of her life to get kidnapped by the rumored ‘schoolmaster’ in the hopes of being taken away to the Good part of the fantastical ‘School for Good and Evil’. She makes a friend, Agatha, the quiet, dark haired, pale girl who lives in the graveyard. When both are kidnapped and taken away to the special fairy-tale school, they expect that Sophie will be put into Good, and Agatha into Evil. But when they arrive, they are put into the opposite schools! Agatha is taught lessons for princesses, and Sophie taught how to be ugly- as the school is designed to train up the good and the evil to become fairy tale characters. Desperate to escape the castle of princesses, Agatha tries to escape along with the Evil-School placed Sophie who has fallen for a Good prince. But they cannot escape, unless they solve a riddle. A riddle that, in solving, will cause havoc in the school!

Will Agatha and Sophie escape, or will they become merely characters in another fairy tale? Read The School for Good and Evil to find out!

Judging by the covers I’d seen online, this book looked awesome. So I was absolutely over the moon when this book arrived! It was absolutely brilliant- a twisted tale for girls who likes their fairy tales with a bit more action.

Sophie was, really, a mean, stuck up girl who wouldn’t take ‘no’ for an answer. She made a really great character, just like Agatha- who was in fact the kind, pure-hearted one. They were both very different girls will well developed personalities and backgrounds, and I loved reading their story. The moral of this story was ‘don’t judge a book by its cover’- as Sophie and Agatha looked very different to the normal Good and Evil pupils.

I really loved the story line- It was clever, with lots of unexpected plot twists that kept me hooked. It was predictable how the two girls would be forced to become enemies in their own fairy tale story, but I really loved how the author played it out. There were lots of witty bits, and many of the arguments between the characters made me crack up. There was also an essence of True Love, as Sophie was determined to get the handsome prince, Tedros, but Agatha ended up with him as she was the real princess. The ending was brilliant, and fast paced, but I think the part where they found out who the schoolmaster was and what his purpose was with Sophie was a little too rushed. In think it could have been explained a bit more. Apart from that, I really loved this, and hope there a sequel, or another tale from Soman Chianani soon!