Author Archive
Radiant Reviews #10
It is time once again for my book review meme – Radiant Reviews!
It is so easy to take part and hopefully anybody who does take part will get more comments on their reviews, find lots of great books to read and find new blogs to follow! The only downside to participating in this meme is that your TBR pile may grow seriously out of control!!!
Radiant Reviews was inspired by Cym Lowell’s Book Review Party Wednesday.
OK, so here is how you can take part:
1. Place a link to your review of a book you have loved into Mister Linky below. It must be a book that you have really enjoyed and that you would like to recommend to other bloggers. In the section for your name, please put the name of your blog, the title of the book and its genre (all genres are welcome in Radiant Reviews). In the URL section, please leave a direct link to your review – not just your blog URL.
2. Place my Radiant Reviews button, or some other kind of link to Chrissie’s Corner, on the review that you have linked to. This is to promote the meme in the hope that more and more people will take part every week.
3. Visit other people’s reviews and leave comments if you can. I know that on my blog (and it might be the same for some of you other bloggers out there) it is the reviews that receive the least amount of comments and I think this is a real shame as they are the posts which take the most time and effort. So do please try to leave comments and show other bloggers some love!
And that’s all there is to it, so here goes…
Author Spotlight – Pamela Samuels Young
As you may have seen so far this week, I am participating in a blog tour to promote the novel Buying Time by Pamela Samuels Young. On Monday I reviewed Buying Time and you can read that review here. Then on Tuesday, Pamela took part in a guest post, giving advice to authors who are in a bit of a writing slump, and you can see this amazing advice here.
Today, I am doing an author spotlight on Pamela, so that we can all learn a little bit more about her and her book (Information taken from Pamela’s website).
About Pamela Samuels Young
Corporate attorney Pamela Samuels Young has always abided by the philosophy that you create the change you want to see. Fed up with never seeing women or people of color depicted as savvy, hot shot attorneys in the legal thrillers she read, the Compton Native decided to create her own characters. Despite the demands of a busy legal career, Pamela accomplished her ambitious goal by rising at four in the morning to write before work, dedicating her weekends to writing and even spending her vacation time glued to her laptop for ten or more hours a day. The Essence magazine bestselling author now has four fast-paced legal thrillers to show for her efforts.
Pamela’s debut novel, Every Reasonable Doubt (February 2006), won the Black Expressions Book Club’s Fiction Writing Contest, received an honorable mention in the SEAK Legal Fiction Writing Competition and was a finalist for USA Book News’ Best Books of 2006 awards in the mystery, suspense and thriller category. Her second novel, In Firm Pursuit (January 2007) was honored by Romantic Times magazine as a finalist for Best African-American Novel of 2007. Murder on the Down Low (September 2008), Pamela’s third release, was an “Editor’s Pick” by Black Expressions magazine and a finalist for the 2009 African-American Literary Awards in the mystery category. Pamela then published her first stand-alone novel, Buying Time (November 2009). The Black Caucus of the American Library Association honored Buying Time with its 2010 Fiction Award, calling the book “a captivating, suspenseful thriller.” Her short story, Setup, was selected for the 2006 Sisters in Crime anthology, LAndmarked for Murder.
Pamela has achieved a successful writing career while working as Managing Counsel for Labor and Employment Law for a major corporation in Southern California. Prior to that, she served as Employment Law Counsel for Raytheon Company and spent several years with the law firm of O’Melveny & Myers, LLP in Los Angeles. A former journalist, Pamela began her broadcasting career as a production assistant at WXYZ-TV in Detroit, where she was quickly promoted to news writer. To escape the brutal Detroit winters, she returned home to Los Angeles and worked at KCBS-TV as a news writer and associate producer..
A former Coro Foundation Fellow, Pamela has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from USC and a master’s degree in broadcasting from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. She received her law degree from UC Berkeley’s Boalt Hall School of Law and was formerly an adjunct professor at the University of Redlands’ School of Business. Pamela currently serves on the Board of Directors of the Southern California Chapter of Mystery Writers of America and is the Fiction Expert for BizyMoms.com.
Pamela is a frequent speaker on the topics of discrimination law, writing and pursuing your passion. She is married and lives in the Los Angeles area. You can find out more about Pamela by visiting her at her website / Twitter / MySpace.
About ‘Buying Time’
Waverly Sloan is a down-on-his-luck lawyer. But just when he’s about to hit rock bottom, he stumbles upon a business with the potential to solve all of his problems.
In Waverly’s new line of work, he comes to the aid of people in desperate need of cash. But there’s a catch. His clients must be terminally ill and willing to sign over their life insurance policies before they can collect a dime. Waverly then finds investors eager to advance them thousands of dollars – including a hefty broker’s fee for himself – in exchange for a significant return on their investment once the clients take their last breath.
The stakes get higher when Waverly brokers the policy of the cancer-stricken wife of Lawrence Erickson, a high-powered lawyer who’s bucking to become the next U.S. Attorney General. When Waverly’s clients start dying sooner than they should, both Waverly and Erickson – who has some skeletons of his own to hide – are unwittingly drawn into a perilous web of greed, blackmail and murder.
Teaser Tuesday – By Midnight
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by MizB over at Should Be Reading.
Here’s what you have to do:
1. Grab your current read.
2. Open to a random page.
3. Share two (2) teaser sentences from somewhere on that page.
4. Be careful not to include spoilers.
5. Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the books to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
My teaser this week is from By Midnight by Mia James:
Suddenly she felt a huge rush of deja vu. I’ve been here before, she thought, a split second before the penny dropped: it was the cemetery. Why’s he brought me back here? she thought with alarm.
Page 136
What is your Tuesday Teaser?
Author Guest Post – Pamela Samuels Young
Today I have the pleasure of welcoming Pamela Samuels Young, author of Buying Time, for a guest post. She is giving some great advice for writers who are feeling discouraged and are thinking of giving up.
You’ve been working on your novel for months, maybe even years, and lately you feel more discouraged than ever. Perhaps it’s the disappointment of not having finished the book yet. Maybe you don’t know where to go next with your story. Or it’s possible that you’re just physically and emotional drained from all the time and effort you’ve poured into this dream. I’ve been there!
Each time I fall into the writing dumps, I wonder if I’ll ever dig myself out. Fortunately, I always do. You’ve put too much time into this venture. Now is not the time to give up.
Here are my top five tips for re-energizing yourself when you feel like giving up.
Read Inspirational Stories About Writing and Writers
Take a writing break and read about other successful writers who weathered the storm. Here are two excellent books to get you started:
Knit Together: Discover God’s Pattern for Your Life by Debbie Macomber.
This book was such an inspiration to me. Macomber, a best selling writer with more than 100 million books in print, openly shares her story of writing rejection. Once you read about her writing journey, you’ll close the book anxious to get back to your own novel.
Rotten Reviews & Rejections, edited by Bill Henderson and Andre Bernard.
This book shares the rejection letters and stinging reviews received by many successful and prolific writers, from Stephen King to Upton Sinclair to James Joyce and more. You’ll scratch your head at the discouraging rejection letters these wonderful writers received. They didn’t give up, and you shouldn’t either.
Don’t Strive for Perfect Prose
Many new writers think that everything that flows from their computer must be golden. Hence, if they write a few pages which doesn’t sound worthy of a Pulitzer, they’re disappointed. Forget about writing a perfect first draft. The most important part of writing is rewriting. Just concentrate on finishing a first draft. Then revise until you’re pleased with the final product.
Set a Writing Goal
Make a commitment to write a set number of pages per week. Can you commit to writing 10 or 15 pages per week? Or maybe committing to write three hours a day or three days a week works better for you. Whatever goal you set, make sure it’s realistic. Start out small and once you get into the flow of things, increase the goal. And if you fall short one week, don’t beat yourself up. There’s always next week.
Start a Writer’s Group
Put the word out that you’re looking to start a writer’s group. Tell friends, family members and colleagues that you’re looking for three or four serious writers who would like to build a supportive writing environment for themselves and other writers. You’ll probably have a lot of interest in the beginning, but only the serious writers will be around for the long haul. Establish a regular meeting time (at least once a month) and require at least two members to produce work for the group to critique each month.
Think About Your Story
Most people assume that if you’re not putting words on paper, then you’re not “writing.” I don’t feel that way. The next time you’re taking a long walk, standing in a grocery store line, or stuck in traffic, use the time to mull over your story. Think about your characters or your plot. Imagine your protagonist having a conversation. Think about how you might describe a room. Challenge yourself to invent a predicament that creates conflict for your character. If you come up with some great ideas, don’t forget to write them down.
Hang in there!
Thank you Pamela for taking the time to pass on this amazing advice!
You can find out more about Pamela by visiting her at her website / Twitter / MySpace and you can read my review of her brilliant novel Buying Time, here.
Review – Buying Time by Pamela Samuels Young
Publisher – Goldman House Publishing
Publication Date – November 2009
Genre – Crime/Thriller
Source – Received from Pump Up Your Book! for a blog tour
Book Information – Waverly Sloan is a down-on-his-luck lawyer. But just when he’s about to hit rock bottom, he stumbles upon a business with the potential to solve all of his problems.
In Waverly’s new line of work, he comes to the aid of people in desperate need of cash. But there’s a catch. His clients must be terminally ill and willing to sign over their life insurance policies before they can collect a dime. Waverly then finds investors eager to advance them thousands of dollars – including a hefty broker’s fee for himself – in exchange for a significant return on their investment once the clients take their last breath.
The stakes get higher when Waverly brokers the policy of the cancer-stricken wife of Lawrence Erickson, a high-powered lawyer who’s bucking to become the next U.S. Attorney General. When Waverly’s clients start dying sooner than they should, both Waverly and Erickson – who has some skeletons of his own to hide – are unwittingly drawn into a perilous web of greed, blackmail and murder.
Review – This is the type of book that is pretty difficult to put down. It is written in an easy-to-read style with short chapters – which, for me, always makes for a quick, page-turning read. The mystery element of the story is intriguing and with many twists and turns, which meant that I was not able to guess where the story was heading. However, at times there were so many plots and counter-plots that it was sometimes a little bit confusing. But even so, this is still one of the most original novels I have read in a long time.
The characters are all well fleshed-out and believable, with some being likeable and others being the type of character that you love to hate. But what I love most about the characters is that they are complex, and so much more than just ‘The Good Guy’ or ‘The Bad Guy’ (of course with the exception of Lawrence Erickson, who has no redeeming features and who is currently holding the award for my ‘Most Hated Character in Fiction’!). This just made the characters so much more realistic and I found it really easy to relate to them.
Waverly Sloan is a lawyer who is about to be disbarred as well as being near bankruptcy – due to the elaborate spending habits of his wife. He is a slightly frustrating character at times – he is very sweet and always seems to have the best of intentions but whenever things get tough he has the tendency to bury his head in the sand in the hope that it will all go away. But he does manage to pull himself together when things start to go really wrong and he is definitely a likeable, if slightly flawed, hero.
Angela Evans is the Assistant U.S Attorney and she is heading the investigation into Live Now (the company that Waverly works for) when some of their clients seem to be dying sooner than expected. I really liked Angela. She is very strong and intelligent and she works hard to achieve what she wants out of life. She overcomes a lot of hardship during the course of this story and instead of crumbling under the burden, she comes out a better and stronger person.
As well as having a very strong storyline, Buying Time also tackles a lot of controversial subjects, such as sexual and domestic abuse, drug dealing and viatical settlements (the selling of life insurance policies), but the author does not shy away from these subjects and she treats them with sensitivity and respect. I found the subject of viatical settlements to be an incredibly interesting one. The author works well to point out both the advantages and disadvantages of this type of investment. The money received by someone with a terminal illness can give them peace of mind during their last months, whilst also allowing them the financial freedom to do the things that they have always wanted to do. But at the same time, it does mean that incredibly vulnerable people can be taken advantage of. Waverly really believes that he is helping each and every one of his clients and this gives him a purpose in life that he never felt before. However, he is too naive to realise that he, and his clients, are being used for financial gain by other people.
Overall, I really enjoyed this novel and I will be looking out for other works from this author.
It’s Monday! What are you Reading? (September 6th 2010)
What are you reading this week? is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finished this week. This meme is hosted by One Persons Journey Through a World of Books. I didn’t have time to do a monday post last week, so I will be covering the last two weeks in this post.
Books completed last week:
The Dead Girls’ Dance – Rachel Caine
Wicked Appetite – Janet Evanovich
Books reviewed last week:
Trash – Andy Mulligan
Hex Hall – Rachel Hawkins
Books I am currently reading:
By Midnight – Mia James
Up next:
Single in the City – Michele Gorman
Midnight Alley – Rachel Caine
Last week, I also found out about some great contests running over at some Facebook pages hosted by Orion Publishing Group. You can find more details about these AMAZING giveaways here. These pages are well worth a visit :)
In My Mailbox #29
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by Kristi at The Story Siren. Every week I’ll post about what books I have received that week – either through the mail for review, borrowed from the library or bought.
For Review:
Michele Gorman – Single in the City
It’s official. Hannah has left her friends and family in the US behind and is following her dream. To live in London. Unfortunately she’s completely unprepared for what’s in store.
She’s going to find:
1. Her dream guy. A prince or Hugh Grant would be nice. Or does she have to settle for her half-naked Australian housemate or an “English gentleman” with terrible hygiene habits?
2. Her dream job. Something fantastic in fashion. So how has she ended up being the mini-me for an evil party planner who doesn’t even trust her to arrange the paperclips?
3. Her dream friends. But everyone in London seems to have known each other for years and Hannah’s having trouble getting to know nice people. Who’s she going to have fun with?
Dream life? Should Hannah just dream on? Maybe it would have been simpler and cheaper to just get a new haircut. Was she mad to move 3,000 miles away from everyone she knows? Will she ever find love and her perfect life in England?
Mia James – By Midnight (Thanks to UK Book Tours)
April Dunne is not impressed. She’s had to move from Edinburgh to Highgate, London, with her parents. She’s left her friends – and her entire life – behind. She has to start at a new school and, worst of all, now she’s stuck in a creepy old dump of a house which doesn’t even have proper mobile phone reception. Ravenwood, her new school, is a prestigious academy for gifted (financially or academically) students – and the only place her parents could find her a place, in the middle of term, in the middle of London, on incredibly short notice. So she’s stuck with the super-rich, and the super-smart… and trying to fit in when the rest of the students seem to be more glamorous, smarter, or more talented than she is, is more than tough. It’s intimidating and isolating, even when she finds a friend in the conspiracy-theorist Caro Jackson – and perhaps finds something more than friendship in the gorgeous, mysterious Gabriel Swift. But there’s more going on at Ravenwood than meets the eye. Practical jokes on new students are normal, but when Gabriel saves her from… something… in Highgate Cemetery, and then she discovers that a murder took place just yards away from where she had been standing, April has to wonder if something more sinister is going on… and whether or not she’s going to live through it…
Purchased:
Robert Masello – Blood and Ice
Troubled journalist Michael Wilde takes on a commission to write a feature about a remote research station deep in the frozen beauty of Antarctica. On a diving expedition in the polar sea he discovers two bodies encased in ice. The pair, a man and a woman chained together, their dress from the nineteenth century, are brought to the surface – along with a trunk containing a strange, but sinister, cargo. As the ice around them begins to thaw, the mystery of these time-bound lovers begins to unravel. Michael is gradually drawn into a horrific story that starts in the London barracks in the 1850s and leads to the bloody battlefields of the Crimea and the tragic Charge of the Light Brigade. Now, in the Antarctic wastes, the Cavalry officer and his lover are reawakened into a world where the midnight sun lasts for months, where there’s nowhere to hide and no place left for the living to run… In this chilling supernatural thriller, spanning five continents and several centuries, Robert Masello weaves together an extraordinary tale of eternal life and undying love. Gripping and intensely moving, “Blood and Ice” will take its readers on an enthralling and unforgettable journey.
Lesley Pearse – Stolen
Sussex, 2003. When a beautiful blonde girl is found half-drowned on a beach, she has no memory of who she is or what horrors have left her there. But an article about her in a Brighton newspaper rings alarm bells for beautician, Dale, who shows the police photographs of Lotte Wainright. The girls met working on a cruise ship and their friendship blossomed as they sailed the seas of South America, until Lotte fell under the sinister influence of an older American couple. To her regret, Dale hasn’t seen Lotte since leaving the ship months earlier… but the girl on the beach – although badly bruised – is indeed her much missed friend. Their reunion only marks the beginning of a dangerous tidal wave of secrets, lies and nightmares. Where has Lotte been? Who is the man who seems to want to kill her? And what has become of the baby she’s recently given birth to? Dale and Lotte must dig deep and find the strength to hold on against the odds if they are to rebuild their friendship and survive Lotte’s stolen – and deadly – past.
Library:
Maggie Stiefvater – Linger
In SHIVER, Grace and Sam found each other. Now, in LINGER, they must fight to be together. For Grace, this means defying her parents and keeping dangerous secrets. For Sam, it means grappling with his werewolf past… and figuring out a way to survive the future. But just when they manage to find happiness, Grace finds herself changing in ways she could never have expected…
What was in your mailbox this week?
Review – Hex Hall by Rachel Hawkins
Publisher – Simon and Schuster Children’s
Publication Date – 1st April 2010
Paperback – 336 pages
Genre – Young Adult/Urban Fantasy
Series – Book 1 in the Hex Hall Series
Source – Library
Book Information -In the wake of a love spell gone horribly wrong, Sophie Mercer, a sixteen-year-old witch, is shipped off to Hecate Hall, a boarding school for witches, shapeshifters and faeries. The traumas of mortal high school are nothing compared to the goings on at “Freak High.” It’s bad enough that she has to deal with a trio of mean girls led by the glamorous Elodie, but it’s even worse when she begins to fall for Elodie’s gorgeous boyfriend, Archer Cross, and frankly terrifying that the trio are an extremely powerful coven of dark witches. But when Sophie begins to learn the disturbing truth about her father, she is forced to face demons both metaphorical and real, and come to terms with her own growing power as a witch.
Review – I have read a lot of great reviews about Hex Hall so I was a bit nervous about starting it in case it didn’t live up to the hype. But I am so glad that I did pick it up as this is one of my favourite books I’ve read so far this year! In Sophie, Rachel Hawkins has created an incredibly likeable and realistic main character. Sophie has been sent to Hecate ‘Hex’ Hall because of a love spell that she performed that went very, very wrong (with hilarious consequences!). One of the things that I liked most about Sophie was the trouble that she had with her magic. At the beginning of the book she was pretty inept at performing spells, and this helped me to really get a feel for her character. Sophie is also pretty clueless about the Prodigium (the name for supernatural beings, such as witches, warlocks, werewolves, fey and vampires) and this does lead to some ridicule from her fellow students at Hex Hall. She has been raised by her human mother and has never met her powerful warlock father, and whilst her mother has tried to give her as normal an upbringing as possible, the result of this is that Sophie now knows nothing about her heritage or how powerful she could really be. She is also one of the funniest characters I have come across for a while, and there were many times I found myself laughing out loud to this book.
When Sophie first arrives at Hex Hall she meets Archer Cross – a gorgeous warlock who manages to save her from a werewolf and then tells her that she is not a very good witch. Archer is a typical bad boy who everybody at the school fancies - including Sophie. But he already has a girlfriend - a witch called Elody. Elody belongs to a coven of dark witches who are trying to enlist Sophie as their fourth member. When Sophie refuses their invitation to join the coven, they then start making her life miserable (think Mean Girls but with supernatural powers!). Sophie then becomes even more of an outcast when she finds out that her roommate is Jenna, the only vampire at the school who also seems to be the main suspect in the murder of her last roommate and previous fourth member of Elody’s coven. However, Sophie doesn’t believe that Jenna was involved with the murder and when other members of the coven start being hurt in a similar way, she starts to investigate who else could be behind these incidents.
The mystery element of the story was well-written and fast-paced, with some twists and turns that I didn’t see coming. The style of writing was easy to read with some good descriptions of the characters and their surroundings. I found it very difficult to put this book down once I had started it. There is also an amazing cliff hanger at the end that has helped to ensure that I will be reading the next book in the series as soon as it is released. Overall, it was a highly enjoyable read with realistic characters, a great storyline and an brilliant ending. I highly recommend this book to any fans of Urban Fantasy books.
Some great contests being held by Orion Publishing Group…
If you head over to Facebook there are some AMAZING contests being held by Orion Publishing Group on their Facebook pages!!! And I thought you all might like to hear about them so that you can go over there and enter them straight away!
The first Facebook page I would like to draw your attention to is Cherry Picks. This is a page dedicated to all fans of Women’s Fiction. Their current giveaway is for Katie Agnew’s books – Saints V Sinners and Wives V Girlfriends. I love the cover of these books – very eye catching! All you have to do to win these books is become a member of the page and then send an email to Orion (details on Facebook).
The second Facebook page is called Fierce Fiction, which is dedicated to fans of YA fiction (something I have been reading quite a lot of lately). They are hosting a giveaway for The Adamantine Palace by Stephen Deas. Again, all you have to do is become a member of the page and send in an email to Orion.
Now, the last page (and my personal favourite) is the Gollancz Dark Fantasy page and they are hosting a very, very exciting giveaway! You could win the ENTIRE SET of Kitty Norville books by Carrie Vaughn!!! All you have to do is imagine that you are a supernatural creature with a problem that needs Kitty’s help. Email your problem to Orion and the most inventive entry wins the whole series!
![]() |
|
|
![]() |
|
| |
Radiant Reviews #9
It is time once again for my new meme – Radiant Reviews!
It is so easy to take part and hopefully anybody who does take part will get more comments on their reviews, find lots of great books to read and find new blogs to follow! The only downside to participating in this meme is that your TBR pile may grow seriously out of control!!!
Radiant Reviews was inspired by Cym Lowell’s Book Review Party Wednesday.
OK, so here is how you can take part:
1. Place a link to your review of a book you have loved into Mister Linky below. It must be a book that you have really enjoyed and that you would like to recommend to other bloggers. In the section for your name, please put the name of your blog, the title of the book and its genre (all genres are welcome in Radiant Reviews). In the URL section, please leave a direct link to your review – not just your blog URL.
2. Place my Radiant Reviews button, or some other kind of link to Chrissie’s Corner, on the review that you have linked to. This is to promote the meme in the hope that more and more people will take part every week.
3. Visit other people’s reviews and leave comments if you can. I know that on my blog (and it might be the same for some of you other bloggers out there) it is the reviews that receive the least amount of comments and I think this is a real shame as they are the posts which take the most time and effort. So do please try to leave comments and show other bloggers some love!
And that is all there is to it, so here goes…
Review – Trash by Andy Mulligan
Publisher – David Fickling Books
Publication Date – 2nd September 2010
Genre – Contemporary Fiction
Source – Received from publishers for review
Book Information – Raphael is a dumpsite boy. He spends his days wading through mountains of steaming trash, sifting it, sorting it, breathing it, sleeping next to it. Then one unlucky-lucky day, Raphael’s world turns upside down. A small leather bag falls into his hands. It’s a bag of clues. It’s a bag of hope. It’s a bag that will change everything. Soon Raphael and his friends Gardo and Rat are running for their lives. Wanted by the police, it takes all their quick-thinking, fast-talking to stay ahead. As the net tightens, they uncover a dead man’s mission to put right a terrible wrong. It’s three street-boys against the world…
Review – This book is written from multiple viewpoints and it tells the story of Raphael, Gardo and Rat who live and work on a dumpsite. One day Rapael finds a small bag that holds some money, a key and a map. This leads the three boys on a hunt to find what these clues will lead too. However, the police are also after this little bag and in Behala they are not the good guys. The three boys are on the run from the police with the information that they possess and it soon becomes obvious that they are running for their lives. They uncover a plot that involves corrupt government members and a large amount of stolen money and they must try to solve the clues before the police catch up to them.
I have to say that one of the things that I love about receiving review copies from publishers is it encourages me to read books that I might not normally pick up on my own. I don’t think I would have picked this book up in a bookshop or in the library, for instance, but now that I’ve read it I am so happy I was sent this book.
I instantly fell in love with Raphael, Gardo and Rat who are only fourteen years old and they spend all day every day looking through the rubbish brought to the dumpsite in order to find things to sell. Although they have nothing except for each other and a few family members, they never complain and they just get on with life. Raphael is a happy-go-lucky boy, whilst Gardo is a more serious boy who acts much older than his years. Rat lives on his own (he has no family) and is poor and starving. I found reading about the conditions in which they are being brought up inspirational and humbling and it made me realise that I have so much compared to a lot of other people in the world. My motherly instincts kicked in big time whilst reading this book – I just wanted to look after the boys so that they could be kids again for a little while.
I found some of the events in the book pretty disturbing though, but I think what made it so shocking was the knowledge that these things happen in some places in the world. For example, the way that Raphael is treated when he is questioned by the police (I won’t say too much as I don’t want to give anything away, but let’s just say he loses his happy-go-lucky nature and instead becomes a scared little boy who has nightmares so bad they make him wet the bed!) and the way the conditions inside the prison are described when Gardo goes to visit someone who may be able to help with the clues. There were many times I had a tear in my eye and gave thanks for everything that I have.
The story is well-written and even though it is told from multiple viewpoints, it is always clear who is telling the story. The mystery was intruiging and kept me hooked, while the characters are all loveable and believable. There is a beautifully happy ending, although at times I had to wonder if it was really worth everything they had to go through in order to reach that point.
Overall, I absolutely loved this book! It is the type of book that not only has a great storyline that will keep you hooked, but it will also make you think about other people who are not as fortunate and it certainly made me realise how lucky I am. The characters and their situation stayed with me for a long time after I had finished this book and I think that everybody should read this amazing, awe-inspiring, thought-provoking novel!
Teaser Tuesday – The Dead Girls’ Dance
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by MizB over at Should Be Reading.
Here’s what you have to do:
1. Grab your current read.
2. Open to a random page.
3. Share two (2) teaser sentences from somewhere on that page.
4. Be careful not to include spoilers.
5. Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the books to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
My teaser this week is from The Dead Girls’ Dance by Rachel Caine:
The biker was down. Claire stared at him in disbelief, then looked past him, to the figure standing there with the field hockey stick in both hands.
What is your Tuesday Teaser?
It’s Monday! What are you Reading? (August 29th 2010)
What are you reading this week? is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finished this week. This meme is hosted by One Persons Journey Through a World of Books. I didn’t have time to do a monday post last week, so I will be covering the last two weeks in this post.
Books completed last week:
Greywalker – Kat Richardson
Hex Hall – Rachel Hawkins
Trash – Andy Mulligan
Books reviewed last week:
Greywalker – Kat Richardson
Stop Me – Richard Jay Parker (plus author interview!)
Books I am currently reading:
Dead Girl’s Dance – Rachel Caine
Up next:
Last to Die – Kate Brady
In My Mailbox #28
In My Mailbox is a weekly meme hosted by Kristi at The Story Siren. Every week I’ll post about what books I have received that week – either through the mail for review, borrowed from the library or bought.
Gifts:
Stephenie Meyer – Breaking Dawn
To be irrevocably in love with a vampire is both fantasy and nightmare woven into a dangerously heightened reality for Bella Swan. Pulled in one direction by her intense passion for Edward Cullen, and in another by her profound connection to werewolf Jacob Black, she has endured a tumultuous year of temptation, loss and strife to reach the ultimate turning point. Her imminent choice to either join the dark but seductive world of immortals or pursue a fully human life has become the thread from which the fate of two tribes hangs. Now that Bella has made her decision, a startling chain of unprecedented events is about to unfold with potentially devastating and unfathomable consequences. Just when the frayed strands of Bella’s life – first discovered in Twilight, then scattered and torn in New Moon and Eclipse - seem ready to heal and knit together, could they be destroyed… forever?
Alyson Noel – Shadowland
Ever and Damen have travelled through countless past lives – and fought off the world’s darkest enemies – in search of each other. But just when their destiny seems finally within reach, a powerful curse falls upon them. A single touch of their hands, a soft brush of their lips will mean death for Damen – cast into the darkness of the Shadowland.
But as she seeks to break the curse, Ever meets Jude – a green-eyed, golden surfer boy who understands magick, and understands Ever better than she realises. She thought Damen was her destiny – but what if fate has other plans?
Contest Wins:
Nicole Peeler – Tempest Rising (Thanks to Carolyn at Book Chick City!)
Living in small town Rockabill, Maine, Jane True always knew she didn’t quite fit in with so-called normal society. During her nightly, clandestine swim in the freezing winter ocean, a grisly find leads Jane to startling revelations about her heritage: she is only half-human. Now, Jane must enter a world filled with supernatural creatures that are terrifying, beautiful and deadly – all of which perfectly describe her new ‘friend’ Ryu, a gorgeous and powerful vampire. It is a world where nothing can be taken for granted: a dog can heal with a lick; spirits bag your groceries; and whatever you do, never – ever – rub the genie’s lamp.
What was in your maolbox this week?
Review – Stop Me by Richard Jay Parker (Plus Author Interview!)
Today I have been joined by Richard Jay Parker, author of the crime novel, Stop Me. But before I ask him some questions I will be reviewing this fantastic novel.
Publisher – Allison and Busby
Publication Date – 11th January 2010
Paperback – 336 pages
Genre – Crime
Source – Received from the publisher for review
Book Information - Forward this email to ten friends. Each of those friends must forward it to ten friends. Maybe one of those friends of friends of friends will be one of my friends. If this email ends up in my inbox within a week, I won’t slit the bitch’s throat.
Can you afford not to send this onto ten friends?
Vacation Killer Leo Sharpe’s life is shattered when his wife Laura suddenly disappears. His desperate need to find her turns to obsession when he becomes convinced she’s the latest victim of The Vacation Killer who has claimed eleven lives already – is Laura going to be the twelfth? The MO is the same every time – a woman disappears and within hours inboxes around the world receive a threatening email. A few days later, grim evidence of the victim’s death is delivered to the police. But in Laura’s case, nothing is sent. Has the killer spared her life? Why? And for how long? For Leo, the clock is ticking – he needs to do everything in his power to stop the killer before it’s too late.
Review – I think that what really struck me about this book is the realism with which it has been written. Leo Sharpe is just an ordinary man who is being consumed with grief over his missing wife. For the first part of the book he is waiting for news from the police about Laura and he has become dependant on temazepam to help him sleep and to help block the pain and grief that he feels. This part of the book is written so well that you can almost feel the numbness caused by the drugs, but at the same time it is also possible to see the pain hiding just beneath the surface. I really felt for Leo and I became emotionally invested in his story right from the first page.
Fifteen months after Laura’s disappearance, the police are losing hope of ever finding her and the momentum of the case has slowed considerably. It is at this point that Leo receives a call from a doctor who claims that he knows where Laura is being held captive. The day that they are supposed to meet up the doctor is murdered, and this is the catalyst that Leo needs in order to take matters into his own hands.
He goes across to America to meet up with John Bookwalter; a man who confessed to the crimes of the Vacation Killer but was not charged due to a lack of evidence. John has since set up a website where he still claims to have committed the murders, and this is how Leo first gets in contact with him. Once he is in America, Leo meets John, who claims to have Laura hidden somewhere. John will let Leo see Laura if he agrees to a few conditions. However, Leo has never really believed that John is the real Vacation Killer so he starts his own investigation. It is at this point that Leo’s character really comes into his own. He has stopped taking the temazepam and he puts himself into some pretty dangerous situations in order to find out what has happened to Laura. He does all of this even though he is scared and this makes him an incredibly likeable and believable character.
I really enjoyed reading Stop Me. It was well-written and kept my attention right from the beginning. I found myself being surprised several times by the way that the events unfolded and I was completely shocked at the ending – I just would not have predicted it at all! It was, at times, quite a chilling read. The style of writing made me feel as though I was really there and it was such a realistic storyline that I had no doubt it could really happen. The other aspect that made it chilling was the chain emails that were sent by the Vacation Killer. I can’t really explain it but I have always hated chain letters/texts/emails because of the irrational fear I feel when I do not pass them on (I never pass them on as I don’t want to pass along the bad feelings that I get when I receive one!). So the fact that the consequences of the emails are so dire in this novel really struck a chord with me. The anonymity of the Internet would make this kind of action completely possible and this again added to the realism of the story.
I would definitely recommend this book to any fans of the crime/mystery genre. It was a gripping and enjoyable read that I found difficult to put down.
And now it is my pleasure to introduce Richard Jay Parker, who will be answering a few of my questions…
Can you tell us a little bit about yourself?
I was born in South Wales but worked in TV so moved to London for fourteen years before relocating to Salisbury in 2006. I still love returning to London to see friends and attend meetings but I’m happy to be a commuter now. I love books and movies with a dark, twisted or sexy edge.
When did you start your writing career and did you always know you wanted to be a writer?
The writing bug bit early. Have been writing full time since I was about eighteen (comedy scripts). I worked as a TV script writer, script editor and producer for about fifteen years but started penning novels when I felt I’d gone as far as I could go with that form of writing. I left my TV agent and managed to get a literary agent with my first book. It was a hard sell though. So hard that it was never published. I did get invited to my first literary party though and found myself mentioned in Publishing News as ’soon-to-be-published Richard Jay Parker’. Ten years later, STOP ME was published.
How did you come up with the ideas for your novel, Stop Me?
I get a lot of SPAM email that threatens me with loss of health or happiness if I don’t forward it. I wondered what would happen if I received one that threatened somebody’s life if I didn’t send it on. It was one of about four concepts that I had for books. I ended up using all of them in STOP ME.
Can you tell us a bit about your writing process – do you plan a storyline at the start or do you just start writing and see where the mood takes you?
I always like to know where I’m heading. With STOP ME I had the twist ending established and knew what the trajectory of my character would be. When I was writing it though the fun was leading him down a series of dark sideroads along the way.
What are you working on at the moment? Have you got any other novels in the pipeline?
Am currently working on two thriller projects for my agent which I hope to have completed in the next couple of months. I’m also writing scripts for some horror shorts – two of which have already been shot.
What other authors do you like to read and who has been you biggest inspiration?
I’ve got very varied tastes in books and rarely feel the need to read an author’s compete works. In terms of thrillers, I loved FALLING ANGEL by William Hjortsbeg. It’s a satanic noir novel that Alan Parker made into the movie ANGEL HEART.
Thank you very much Richard for taking the time to answer my questions!
If you would like more information about Richard, you can find it at his website / facebook / twitter / YouTube / myspace.
Radiant Reviews #8
It is time once again for my new meme – Radiant Reviews!
It is so easy to take part and hopefully anybody who does take part will get more comments on their reviews, find lots of great books to read and find new blogs to follow! The only downside to participating in this meme is that your TBR pile may grow seriously out of control!!!
Radiant Reviews was inspired by Cym Lowell’s Book Review Party Wednesday.
OK, so here is how you can take part:
1. Place a link to your review of a book you have loved into Mister Linky below. It must be a book that you have really enjoyed and that you would like to recommend to other bloggers. In the section for your name, please put the name of your blog, the title of the book and its genre (all genres are welcome in Radiant Reviews). In the URL section, please leave a direct link to your review – not just your blog URL.
2. Place my Radiant Reviews button, or some other kind of link to Chrissie’s Corner, on the review that you have linked to. This is to promote the meme in the hope that more and more people will take part every week.
3. Visit other people’s reviews and leave comments if you can. I know that on my blog (and it might be the same for some of you other bloggers out there) it is the reviews that receive the least amount of comments and I think this is a real shame as they are the posts which take the most time and effort. So do please try to leave comments and show other bloggers some love!
And that is all there is to it, so here goes…
Review – Greywalker by Kat Richardson
Publisher – Piatkus Books
Publication Date – 6th December 2007
Paperback – 352 pages
Genre – Urban Fantasy
Series – Book 1 in the Greywalker Series
Source – Purchased
Book Information - Harper Blaine was slogging along as a small-time P.I. when a two-bit perp’s savage assault left her dead. For two minutes, to be precise.
When Harper comes to in the hospital, she begins to feel a bit… strange. She sees things that can only be described as weird-shapes emerging from a foggy grey mist, snarling teeth, creatures roaring.
But Harper’s not crazy. Her “death” has made her a Greywalker – able to move between our world and the mysterious, cross-over zone where things that go bump in the night exist. And her new gift (or curse) is about to drag her into that world of vampires and ghosts, magic and witches, necromancers and sinister artifacts. Whether she likes it or not.
Review – When we first meet Private Investigator Harper Blaine, she is being attacked by one of her clients. When she wakes up in the hospital she finds out that she had actually died for two minutes and now her senses have been affected – she can see shadows in the corner of her eye, smell strange things and so on. The doctors perform tests on her but everything shows as being physically ok. But the doctor gives Harper the name of some friends of his who have experience of helping people who have died for a short time only to have strange things happen to them when they wake up. Mara and Ben Danziger take it upon themselves to help Harper understand what is happening to her and to help her control it. They explain that she is now a Greywalker - somebody who can see and enter the paranormal world, also known as the Grey. This means that Harper can now see ghosts and a whole host of other strange creatures.
To try to keep herself from going crazy whilst all of this is happening, Harper carries on with her job as a Private Investigator as she has two jobs that she is currently working on. One involves a mother looking for her missing son, and the other involves a strange European man looking for a parlor organ. However, both of this cases soon turn to the paranormal and Harper realises that, along with her new friends, she is the only P.I. who will be able to solve them.
I have to admit that this is the first book I have read that incorporates ghosts into the story, and I wasn’t entirely sure how to feel about that. But it was actually something different from the other Urban Fantasy books that I have read so it was a refreshing change, and I enjoyed the scientific explanations about the existence of ghosts given by Ben Danziger. But, as well as the ghosts, there were also vampires, witches and necromancers, so there is something for all Urban Fantasy fans.
I really liked the main character, Harper Blaine. At first she finds it hard to accept the changes that are happening to her and walks around in denial for a few days. But even when she does accept it, she still has trouble adapting as interactions with creatures from the Grey leave her feeling nauseous, dizzy and fatigued. However, Harper does not come across as weak because of these things. In fact she comes across as incredibly strong, as she fights these creatures despite the way they make her feel. It also helps to make her into a more realistic character, as she is a human being introduced to the paranormal world and I don’t think somebody would be able to go through these changes without some resistance or problems adapting, and I could really feel the struggles going on within her.
The mystery element of the book was well written and really pulled me into the story. It contained some good twists that I didn’t see coming, although there were also a few elements that I predicted correctly. The only thing that made this book slightly difficult to read was that in some places there were a lot of people involved in some quite complicated storylines, so there were a few times I had to go back and re-read pages to make sure I really understood what was happening. But this in no way affected my enjoyment of the book and I still found it to be a very enjoyable read.
Teaser Tuesday – Greywalker
Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by MizB over at Should Be Reading.
Here’s what you have to do:
1. Grab your current read.
2. Open to a random page.
3. Share two (2) teaser sentences from somewhere on that page.
4. Be careful not to include spoilers.
5. Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the books to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
My teaser this week is from Greywalker by Kat Richardson:
As I turned my back to the mirror, I noticed the redness: a large semicircle of small punctures, starting into shallow scrapes across my right side. It looked like an unsuccessful bite by a very large animal with needle teeth.
It’s Monday! What are you Reading? (August 23rd 2010)
What are you reading this week? is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being read, and the books to be finished this week. This meme is hosted by One Persons Journey Through a World of Books. I didn’t have time to do a monday post last week, so I will be covering the last two weeks in this post.
Books read and reviewed last week:
Moon Called – Patricia Briggs
Shadows – Amy Meredith
Books I gave up on:
None
Books I am currently reading:
Greywalker – Kat Richardson
Up next:
Trash – Andy Mulligan
Hex Hall – Rachel Hawkins
Blood Bound – Patricia Briggs
Review – Shadows by Amy Meredith
Publisher – Red Fox
Publication Date – 1st April 2010
Paperback – 240 pages
Genre – YA/Paranormal
Series – Book 1 in the Dark Touch Series
Source – Library
Book Information – Fifteen-year-old Eve Evergold is cute, sassy and enjoying a busy social life. What she doesn’t know yet is that someone close to her is an evil demon that only she has the supernatural power to defeat. She needs to work out who it is – and fast! Because although there’s something very attractive about the dark side… dating a demon? Pure hell!
Review – Eve Evergold is just a normal girl starting high school, who loves shopping and spending time with her friends. But when several people she knows start having nightmares, screaming about demons and moving to Ridgewood, the local psychiatric hospital, Eve realises that something very bad is happening. When strange things start happening to Eve she knows that she is the only one who can stop everything that is happening in Deepdene. With her best friend Jess, and new boy Luke, Eve starts researching the history of the town and they find some documents which suggest that a demon with a human appearance comes to Deepdene once every one hundred years to feed on the souls of the residents. Eve must figure out who the demon is and how to control her new found powers before the whole of Deepdene succumbs to the demon’s charms.
Eve and Jess are written in a believable way, and whilst reading Shadows it is easy to believe that you are reading a story told from the perspective of a fifteen year-old girl. However, I didn’t feel as though their characters were fleshed out well enough. We, as readers, do not really get much of an insight into Jess and Eve, and what we do find out about them gives them the appearance of being spoiled and shallow. This made the two main characters slightly unlikeable and left me unable to really connect with them, which did make the book slightly disappointing for me.
Mal and Luke are both new boys in town and are the topic of much speculation between Eve and Jess. Deepdene is only a small town where everybody knows everybody else, so the arrival of two new boys arriving at the same time brings a welcome distraction from all the problems around them. Luke is, in the words of Eve and Jess, a ‘player’. Although he has only been in town for a couple of weeks he has already dated a lot of the girls. But when he hears about what Eve is going through, he quickly drops everything to help them find out what is happening in Deepdene. Mal, on the other hand, is dark and mysterious and keeps himself to himself. He is also old-fashioned and rescues Eve on a few occasions, which leads Eve to fall for him pretty quickly. I enjoyed the air of mystery that these two characters brought to the story.
The premise of the story is interesting and well-written, although pretty predictable at times. It moves along at a fast pace and is written in a style that makes it very easy to read, allowing me to almost finish it in just one sitting. I only wish that Eve and Jess had been easier to connect with and were less two-dimensional. If this had been the case, then Shadows could have been a really enjoyable book.























