Showing posts with label Giveaway. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Giveaway. Show all posts

BLOG TOUR: Saint Death

SAINT DEATH
by Marcus Sedgwick


Pages: 260 paperback
Publisher: Orion Children's Books
Publication Date: Paperback - 7th April 2017
Received From:  Orion Children's Books


Summary 

A potent, powerful and timely thriller about migrants, drug lords and gang warfare set on the US/Mexican border by PRINTZ MEDAL winning and CARNEGIE MEDAL, COSTA BOOK AWARD and GUARDIAN CHILDREN'S FICTION PRIZE shortlisted novelist, Marcus Sedgwick. 
Anapra is one of the poorest neighbourhoods in the Mexican city of Juarez - twenty metres outside town lies a fence, and beyond it, America - the dangerous goal of many a migrant. Faustino is one such trying to escape from the gang he's been working for. He's dipped into a pile of dollars he was supposed to be hiding and now he's on the run. He and his friend, Arturo, have only 36 hours to replace the missing money, or they're as good as dead. 
Watching over them is Saint Death. Saint Death (or Santissima Muerte) - she of pure bone and charcoal-black eye, she of absolute loyalty and neutral morality, holy patron to rich and poor, to prostitute and narco-lord, criminal and police-chief. A folk saint, a rebel angel, a sinister guardian. 


Review

Saint Death is one of those books that sticks with you well after you've read the final page. I've only read one of Marcus Sedgwick's books before - Blood Red Snow White - which is a completely different kind of story and yet he has this rhythm and soul to his writing that makes his books captivating from the very first page. 

Saint Death is the story of Arturo, a boy living in the shadow of one of Mexico's poorest neighbourhoods as he finds himself on a dangerous mission to help save his childhood friends life. The story takes place over the course of a day and a half and follows Arturo as his faith is tested, his morals bent and his life becomes all too expendable. 

This is one of those books that opens your eyes to a culture you might not be all that aware of. It brings to the forefront the injustice and struggle of poverty on the Mexican boarder. It speaks of friendship and faith as if they are interlinked and you see just how far one individual will go to do what he believes is right. 

This isn't one of those stories that promises a happy ending. It is raw and all too real, yet the way in which Marcus Sedgwick writes makes you hope for the best. He writes characters that make you route for them, which with Saint Death is paramount. Arturo's story is heartbreaking from start to finish and the last page had my jaw on the floor. It was gripping, tragic and above all else beautifully written. 


Q&A
Marcus Sedgwick 




Where did the inspiration for Saint Death come from?

Two things. First, seeing the migrant camp in Calais growing each time I passed by. Something stopped me from writing about it directly (too close to home, maybe?) and so I waited for something else to come along. Which was the second thing; a chance meeting with a Mexican academic and writer who told me about Sante Muerte – Saint Death – the burgeoning-but-banned-by-the-pope new(ish) folk saint of Mexico. Along the Mexican-US border, I could see the clarity of the imbalance of the rich with the poor. This is where Arturo’s story is set, right on that border.

Who was your favourite character to write and why?

To choose just one: Siggy, the co-owner of the bar, El Divan, where Arturo hangs out and plays Calavera. He’s miserably loveable, wisely sad, and deep-down, a good guy. He’s also Sigmund Freud. Or at least, a lot of what he says is, and his sadly cynical yet somehow still positive nature came about through my reading of Freud’s own writings.


What was the most challenging thing about writing this book?

A few things – perhaps the hardest was actually getting there to see Anapra and Juárez for myself. After a year or more of remote research, I finally made it, and I’m very glad I did. It was a surreal kind of experience, I had studied Anapra for so long on google earth and streetview that I could find my way around the town without needing directions – like walking into a recurring dream.  It was also hard not to be too angry when writing it – some of that anger has come across on the page, which is good, but it could have got out of control. It’s very hard to read about constant injustice, corruption, brutality and violence without feeling frustrated and powerless, and thus angry.

Every author has a different way of writing. What is your favourite part of the writing process?

I love it all. I like staring into space and calling it work. I like going places. I like reading things. I like interviewing people. I like planning the books. Most of all I guess I love the moments (of which there are not enough) when you disappear into your writing space and disappear into the book, as you finally start to put words onto paper, one by one. The hours drop by without notice – a book appears. It’s magical.


Lastly, describe Saint Death in one sentence!


An Aristotelean tragedy from the Mexican borderland.




GIVEAWAY 

Thanks to the lovely publishers I have THREE signed copies of Saint Death to giveaway! Enter bellow and good luck!! 
(UK Only)


a Rafflecopter giveaway

BOOK BLITZ: Romeo & What's Her Name

ROMEO AND WHAT'S HER NAME
by Shani Petroff

Published by: Swoon Reads
Publication date: February 7th 2017
Genres: Contemporary, Romance, Young Adult

Summary 

Understudies never get to perform
. . . which is why being Juliet’s understudy in the school’s yearly “Evening with Shakespeare” is the perfect role for Emily. She can earn some much-needed extra credit while pursuing her main goal of spending time with Wes, aka Romeo, aka the hottest, nicest guy in school (in her completely unbiased opinion). And she meant to learn her lines, really, it’s just:
a) Shakespeare is HARD,
b) Amanda, aka the “real” Juliet, makes her run errands instead of lines, and
c) there’s no point because Amanda would never miss the chance to be the star of the show.
Then, Amanda ends up in the hospital and Emily, as the (completely unprepared!) understudy, has to star opposite the guy of her dreams. Oops?




EXCERPT


I stood there like a lump, waiting for my line. Finally, I turned toward Kayla and repeated, “I said, LOUDER-ETH.”
She fed me the line again. Supercrazy loud this time. “I would not for the world.”
It was so loud, the crowd heard it and started to laugh. Not the snickers from before, but those evil, full belly laughs people get when watching home videos of someone getting kicked in the groin. Wes was going to hate me for putting him through this. This torture needed to end.
“Methinks,” I said, “I could use-eth a book-eth.” Come on, Kayla. Take the hint. “You know-eth. A BOOK-ETH where-est I can recite-eth beauteous words to thee . . . thou . . . whatever. I NEED THE BOOK-ETH.”
As I was shouting that last book-eth, I got my wish. The script came sailing from off stage left and hit me in the back of the head. “Ow,” I unintentionally yelled, to the delight of the crowd. It weighed a ton.
“Sorry,” Kayla whispered. “My bad.”
I didn’t care. I’d get over the pain faster than the embarrassment I was suffering. I was just happy to have the script. At least I was until I realized Kayla hadn’t bookmarked the page I needed. It was the complete works of Shakespeare. There was no way I would find the right page. Not to mention that since the book was with me, Kayla couldn’t even feed me lines anymore. R&J wasn’t a tragedy. My life was.
I was so flunking English.
“Would thou like some help, my sweet Juliet?”
Did Wes just call me sweet? I swung around to face him, but I wasn’t paying attention to where I was stepping and my foot went right off the balcony. Wes lunged forward to catch me, but why would anything go right for me? So instead of Wes stopping me from hitting the floor, I took him down with me.
I was lying on top of Wes Rosenthal. Only, this was not like any of my daydreams. This was mortifying. I rolled off him and jumped up. “Are you okay?” I was visibly shaking.
Wes stood up, too. “Don’t worry-eth, Juliet,” he said without any anger in his voice. He even smiled at me. For a second I thought that meant he didn’t hate me for the craziness I was causing. But then I remembered he was acting. He actually took what he was doing seriously, and right now his part called for him to be in love with Juliet.
Wes said some line I assumed was to get us back on track. But I had no response. I couldn’t take it anymore. The laughter of the audience. The panic coursing through my body. The thought of making Wes suffer more. It needed to end.
So I did the only thing I could think of—something super Elizabethan. I put the back of my and to my forehead, pretended to swoon, and let my whole body fall back to the ground with a loud thump.
“I am so sorry-eth, Romeo.”
“It’s okay.” He sat down on the ground next to me and took my hand. I felt little sparks fly through me.
I shook my head. I couldn’t let him go through this anymore. “No, I know how-eth this play end-eth. I think I shall stab-eth myself now to save-eth us both.”
“Finally,” someone in the audience yelled out.
I picked up an imaginary dagger and began to plunge it into my heart.
“No,” Wes said, stopping me before I committed imaginary suicide. “Our story is not over yet. So let’s just say, ‘Parting is such sweet sorrow, that I shall say good night ‘til it be morrow.’”
I was pretty sure that was supposed to be my line. But I decided I probably shouldn’t point that out. Then he stood up and walked off the stage.
After a moment, someone finally took mercy on me and brought the stage lights down.
The scene was over. But I knew all too well that my embarrassment was just beginning.


Author Bio

 
Shani Petroff is a writer living in New York City. She's the author of the “Bedeviled” series, which includes Daddy’s Little Angel, The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly Dress, Careful What You Wish For, and Love Struck, and is the co-author of the "Destined" series which includes Ash and Ultraviolet. She also writes for television news programs and several other venues. When she’s not locked in her apartment typing away, she spends a whole lot of time on books, boys, TV, daydreaming, and shopping online.



XBTBanner1

Review: The Art of Lainey

THE ART OF LAINEY
by Paula Stokes


Pages: 384
Publisher: HarperTeen
Publication Date: May 20th 2014
ISBN: 0062238426

Summary 

Soccer star Lainey Mitchell is gearing up to spend an epic summer with her amazing boyfriend, Jason, when he suddenly breaks up with her—no reasons, no warning, and in public no less! Lainey is more than crushed, but with help from her friend Bianca, she resolves to do whatever it takes to get Jason back.
And that’s when the girls stumble across a copy of The Art of War. With just one glance, they're sure they can use the book to lure Jason back into Lainey’s arms. So Lainey channels her inner warlord, recruiting spies to gather intel and persuading her coworker Micah to pose as her new boyfriend to make Jason jealous. After a few "dates", it looks like her plan is going to work! But now her relationship with Micah is starting to feel like more than just a game.
What's a girl to do when what she wants is totally different from what she needs? How do you figure out the person you're meant to be with if you're still figuring out the person you're meant to be?

Review

"Standing up for yourself is about more than flinging barbed-wire insults around. It's about picking your battles, knowing when to fight, knowing exactly what and who is worth fighting for."

What do you do when your seemingly perfect boyfriend walks straight up to you - at work, in front of EVERYONE - and dumps you? Well, I think if that happened to me there would be a sprinkling of anger and a whole heap load of wallowing. But for Lainey Mitchell it's all about getting her boyfriend back. And with a little help from her best friend and a certain warlord it looks like she might just be able to pull it off. But here the thing, does Lainey really want him back?

The Art of Lainey is by far one of my favourite contemporary reads of 2014. I was a little dubious going into it because there had been so much hype in the blogging world about this soccer (correctly known as football) playing protagonist but I'm happy to announce that it definitely lives up to the name it's carved out for itself! The story and the characters were both fun and intriguing to read about. The mix of social circles made for an interesting hook to the plot and the way in which the characters progressed and developed throughout the book was really kind of moving.

Being a devotee of The Bad Boy movement I have to say that this book stole my heart a little. Micah is hot! Full stop end of story hot that makes you wan to head to a heavy metal concert and find yourself your own mohawked boyfriend. He's a sexy punk book boyfriend with a big heart and I couldn't get enough of him. He has his flaws, which I think makes him all the more endearing and his character compliments Lainey's perfectly making them all the more likeable.

"I Just figured instead of obsessing about what is out of your hands, why not control the things you can?"

Lainey has to try and find a way to accept her new reality in this book and that reality is one without her seemingly perfect boyfriend Jason. She has to be able to change and adapt to new friends and opportunities otherwise they might pass her by leaving her to come to terms with all the changes in her life on her own. Lainey's development throughout the story was probably my favourite part. The plot had the occasional cliche but it was the way that Lainey discovered who she was and was able to look outside of little bubble and find happiness and contentment that really made this book special.

"I know what you're saying I guess I'm just wondering how we know when to give up and move on."

This book is about Lainey learning who she is. It's about her gaining perspective on her life and seeing that maybe the way she is isn't the best she can be. Again it's Lainey inability to change that stops her from really enjoying herself and it's a constant threat throughout the book. From a lover of lists myself I get needed to make a plan and stick to it, but if only she had been more susceptible to Micah in the beginning she could have saved herself a whole lot of heart ache.

The Art of Lainey is an enjoyable, funny and endearing book that is perfect for the end of summer. I highly recommend this book and for any of you going through a rough breakup it will help remind you that maybe, just maybe it wasn't the worst thing in the world. Everything happens for a reason right? 
"All the ladies love the mohawk."

GIVEAWAY (UK)

Paula was very lovely and send a large bag of Lainey swag my way and there was plenty to split between a couple of giveaways. SO if you didn't win last time here's your second chance! 
I also have a copy of The Art of Lainey to giveaway too.
ONE winner will win both swag and book! 
Good Luck xx

a Rafflecopter giveaway

#5Questions


 photo ScreenShot2014-07-18at110316_zpsbe8f4ac3.jpg



Amazon UK || Amazon US

About Paula

Paula Stokes is half writer, half RN, and totally thrilled to be part of the world of YA literature. She grew up in St. Louis, Missouri where she graduated from Washington University and the Goldfarb School of Nursing. When she's not writing, she's kayaking, hiking, reading, or seeking out new adventures in faraway lands. Paula loves interacting with readers! Find her online at www.authorpaulastokes.com or on twitter as @pstokesbooks.



Title: The Art of Lainey
Author: Paula Stokes
Publishing Date: 20th May 2014
Publisher: HarperTeen

Soccer star Lainey Mitchell is gearing up to spend an epic summer with her amazing boyfriend, Jason, when he suddenly breaks up with her—no reasons, no warning, and in public no less! Lainey is more than crushed, but with help from her friend Bianca, she resolves to do whatever it takes to get Jason back.

And that’s when the girls stumble across a copy of The Art of War. With just one glance, they're sure they can use the book to lure Jason back into Lainey’s arms. So Lainey channels her inner warlord, recruiting spies to gather intel and persuading her coworker Micah to pose as her new boyfriend to make Jason jealous. After a few "dates", it looks like her plan is going to work! But now her relationship with Micah is starting to feel like more than just a game.

What's a girl to do when what she wants is totally different from what she needs? How do you figure out the person you're meant to be with, if you're still figuring out the person you're meant to be?





1. How did you get into writing?


I was always into reading and writing. I remember writing stories about talking tigers when I was 6 or 7. After I graduated from college, I applied to a lot of fancy MFA schools and I didn't get accepted anywhere. It messed with my confidence and I quit writing for a few years. That's one of my biggest regrets, but maybe I needed to spend a few years really living before I could learn to translate my experiences and feelings to the page in a meaningful way. The first books I wrote (that got published, anyway) were through the book development company Paper Lantern Lit. Working with PLL was a great way to learn a lot about the publishing industry and hone my skills alongside established professionals.

2. When starting a book how much of it comes straight from your imagination and how much is research?


It really depends on the book. The Paper Lantern Lit books required a ton of research because they were set in a historical time period. The Art of Lainey is set in present day where I used to live, so it was less research, but I still looked up all kinds of facts about Venus flytraps, shock generators, vintage cars, tea leaves, The Tragedy of Faust, astronomy, reality TV, etc. Liars, Inc. (Feb, 2015) is a murder mystery set in Southern California. Among other things, I had to research surfing, legal stuff, guns, chloroform, burned bodies, Indian culture and cystic fibrosis. (That totally makes you want to read it right this second, doesn't it?)

3. Who is your favourite character you have written and why?


My favorite character, so far, is Parvati Amos, who you haven't met yet. She's the main character's girlfriend in Liars, Inc. I wrote her with a mild personality disorder so I suspect some people might find her hard to love at first, but to me she is just such a cool chick. She's very smart and does martial arts and writes for the school paper and is learning all these languages because she wants to work for the CIA someday.

4. Do you go into a book knowing how you want it to end?


Yes, almost always. Quite frequently I even have the words I want to end with when I write an outline or synopsis. Of course things can always change throughout the writing process and characters can take different paths, but they pretty much end up where I want them.

5. What 5 books would you recommend for your readers?

Books on writing:
On Writing, by Stephen King
Bird by Bird, by Anne Lamott

Fave Fiction:
Going Bovine, by Libba Bray
Holes, by Louis Sachar
Odd Thomas, by Dean Koontz


GIVEAWAY (UK)

Paula was very lovely and send a large bag of Lainey swag my way and there was plenty to split between a couple of giveaways. SO if you don't win this one keep an eye out and you could win some, along with a couple of The Art of Lainey later on in the month. 


Prize include: 
x2 Lainey bookmarks - one signed by Paula
x3 Lainey Magnets
x2 Lainey badges
x1 Signed Lainey book plate (post card) 


a Rafflecopter giveaway

Review: BOY21

BOY21
by Matthew Quick

Pages: 277 (paperback)
Publisher: Headline
Publication Date: June 19th 2014
ISBN: 9781472212900
Received From:  Headline Publishers via BookBridgr

Summary 


It's never been easy for Finley, particularly at home. But two things keep him going: his place on the basketball team and his girlfriend, Erin - the light in even the darkest of his days.
Then Russ arrives. He answers only to Boy21, claims to be from outer space, and also has a past he wants to escape. He's one of the best high school basketball players in the country and threatens to steal Finley's starting position.
Against all the odds, Russ and Finley become friends. Russ could change everything for Finley, both for better and for worse. But sometimes the person you least expect can give you the courage to face what's gone before ...and work out where you're going next.

Review

"Whenever I think the world is ugly - that life has no meaning at all - I remind myself that this is here, always waiting for me."

I think that even if I combed through every word in the English language I wouldn't be able to find the right ones to describe just how amazing this book is. It's Epic with a capital E! The story itself is relatively simple and yet it's characters are complex and the writing effortless. Boy21 drags you into its pages from the very first sentence and doesn't let you go until the very end. Which was. In fact. Awesome! If you hadn't guess already, I kinda liked this one.

Finley and Erin have been best friends since they were kids. They know each other's strengths and they know their weaknesses and they love each other for that. Even if Finley is a little quiet. They have each other and they don't need anything or anyone else. However, one day Finley gets a knock at the door from his basketball coach and everything changes. Coach wants him to get to know a boy named Russ, however Russ believes he's from outer space and will only answer to Boy21. Boy21's arrival into Finley's life will change the way he sees things and he'll have to question what is really important to him.

These characters are just phenomenal. They are all incredibly diverse and flawed. They make the story come alive. Finley, our main protagonist, is quiet and hardworking. I loved that fact that at times - like once or twice - his trail of thought could come across as selfish, it made him seem more relatable and real. He's an honest character with a huge heart and the way in which is takes Boy21 in and lets him become an interrogated part of his life was beautifully written.

This story is about finding ways to deal with impossible situations and learning that whatever way you chose to cope is okay. If you need to keep to yourself, that's fine. If you need to make up some elaborate backstory that explains what is happening to you, that is also okay because as long as you have the right people around you to help put you back together you've got nothing to fear. It's a story about trust and it's a story that I found both touching and memorable.

And I didn't even mention all the Harry Potter references... if there is a way to my heart, Harry Potter is it.


All in all this book was just incredible and I know this seems like a bit of a gush fest but I honestly can't think of a bad word to say about it. I think this is a book for everyone. It covers some intense issues and yet still keeps it's warm-hearted nature. I highly recommend this one lovelies, you won't regret it!

"Maybe we were both playing roles just to get by."



 photo 5moons_zps5956ef9e.jpg

**I received this book as an ARC from Headline & BookBridgr to read & review. This is a 100% honest review.**

The lovely people at Headline were kind enough to give me an extra copy of BOY21 to giveaway! So to be in with a chance at winning just enter bellow. 
UK only I'm afraid. 

a Rafflecopter giveaway