Spring Blog Tour

Spring
Lele Iturrioz
(Seasons Within #2)
Published by: Acorn Publishing
Publication date: September 1st 2017
Genres: Fantasy, Romance, Young Adult

Gaia finally knows who she is and what she’s meant to do. It’s only been a few weeks since the earth element woke in her. Now that she’s embracing her role as Mother Nature, she must journey with her group of power-wielding friends in a race against time to get back home before Azazel reaches them.

With the awakening of a brand new element, her true past with Edan, a dangerous decision that could change the very essence of who she is, and a traitor among her group, the broken road back to Terra will be a test of strength.

After all, even if Gaia doesn’t know it, war is closer than she thinks.

Goodreads / Amazon

Book One is on sale for $0.99 during the duration of this tour. Buy it here

Since I received both books for free, I will be reviewing both of them. When I first heard of these books, I thought it would be hard for me to keep up with the storyline because the plot seemed so complex.

These stories completely blew me away! I was not expecting it to be as addicting as it was, and I completely flew through these two books.

There were so many characters that sometimes I got confused, but they were all so interesting to learn about. Even the side characters had important roles in this story and felt fully fleshed out. The entire team worked so well together and each member got their spotlight. I absolutely loved G’s development and her figuring out her powers. 

Though I was afraid of it being too fast-paced and confusing, the books was not hard to follow, which I liked so that I could really meet the characters. I felt that the second book also had a more even pace to it. Some chapters were long and intensive, and others were fast and fun!

There’s definitely a lot more romance in the second book than in the first, but it still was not the main focus, which I appreciated.

The writing was okay in book one, but I saw so much improvement in book two. I love seeing authors grow as much as the characters they create!

 I will definitely be picking up the third installment of this series. It’s a super fun and interesting read with well-developed characters and plot. The second book is even better than the first in terms of writing, plot, and characters. I definitely recommend!

Final Rating: 4.5/5 stars

Author Bio:

Major geek by day, hermit writer by night! Love books, sugar gliders and everything that comes in a delicious taco.

I’m the author of the YA fantasy series, Seasons Within

I spend my time writing, planning on writing, reading, drinking coffee like there was no tomorrow, MMA and chilling with my friends and loved ones.

Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter

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Moribund Blog Tour

Moribund
Genevieve Iseult Eldredge
(Circuit Fae #1)
Published by: Monster House Books
Publication date: September 12th 2017
Genres: LGBTQ+, Urban Fantasy, Young Adult

Dark Fae. Romance. Evil Plots. High school. Our heroines could be in for the greatest adventure ever.

If only they could decide whether to kill or kiss each other.

High school sophomore Syl Skye is an ordinary girl. At least, she’s trying to be. School photographer and all-around geek, she introverts hard and keeps her crush on sexy-hot glam-Goth alt-rock star Euphoria on the down-low. But when a freak accident Awakens her slumbering power, Syl is forced to accept a destiny she never wanted—as the last sleeper-princess of the fair Fae.

Suddenly hunted by the dark Fae, Syl’s pretty sure things can’t get any worse. Until she discovers her secret crush, Euphoria, is really a dark Circuit Fae able to harness the killing magic in technology. Even worse, she’s been sent to destroy Syl.

With mean girls and magic and dark Fae trying to kill her, it’ll take more than just “clap if you believe in fairies” to save Syl’s bacon—not to mention, her heart.

Perfect for readers of romance, urban fantasy, fairy stories and LGBT.

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble / Kobo / iBooks


Review:

This seemed like a super interesting read full of action and adventure. The main things that sold me were the modern fantasy with LGBT!

Ahhh, the characters were so adorable! In addition, they seemed to pop out of the pages. The romance also wasn’t unrealistic at all, which happens often in fast-pasted stories. 

I was a little uncertain about this book at first because of the complex plot, but the world building was so well done and I felt myself on the edge of my seat most of the time!

This story was so beautifully written and crafted. I can tell this author put a lot of heart into this book.

This was an intense and grappling introduction to this series. I definitely hope to read more in the future!

Final Rating: 4.5/5 stars

Author Bio:

Raised by witches and dragons in the northern wilds, GIE writes angsty urban fantasy YA romance–where girls who are mortal enemies kick butt, take names, and fall in love against all odds.

She enjoys long hikes in the woods (where better to find the fair folk?), believing in fairies (in fact, she’s clapping right now), dancing with dark elves (always wear your best shoes), being a self-rescuing princess (hello, black belt!), and writing diverse books about teenage girls finding love, romance, and their own inner power.

She might be planning high tea at the Fae Court right now.

GIE is multi-published, and in her role as an editor has helped hundreds of authors make their dream of being published a reality.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter


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ReWired Blog Tour

ReWired
S.R. Johannes
Publication date: August 27th 2017
Genres: Thriller, Young Adult

YA cyber thriller, ReWIRED, by Shelli Johannes-Wells (writing as S.R. Johannes), which offers a fresh and exciting new take on the genre, and could be described as Ally Carter’s HEIST SOCIETY meets THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO for teens.

Sixteen-year-old Ada Lovelace is never more alive and sure of herself than when she’s hacking into a “secure” network as her alter ego, the Dark Angel. In the real world, Ada is broken, reeling from her best friend Simone’s recent suicide. But online, the reclusive daughter of Senator Lovelace (champion of the new Online Privacy Bill) is a daring white hat hacker and the only female member of the Orwellians, an elite group responsible for a string of high-profile hacks against major corporations, with a mission to protect the little guy. Ada is swiftly proving she’s a force to be reckoned with, when a fellow Orwellian betrays her to the FBI. To protect her father’s career, Ada is sent to ReBoot, a technology rehab facility for teens…the same rehab Simone attended right before killing herself.

It’s bad enough that the ReBoot facility is creepy in an Overlook-Hotel-meets-Winchester-Mansion way, but when Ada realizes Simone’s suicide is just one in an increasingly suspicious string of “accidental” deaths and “suicides” occurring just after kids leave ReBoot, Ada knows she can’t leave without figuring out what really happened to her best friend. The massive cyber conspiracy she uncovers will threaten everything she cares about–her dad’s career, her new relationship with a wry, handsome, reformed hacker who gets under her skin, and most of all–the version of herself Ada likes best–the Dark Angel.

With a deliciously twisty plot, the topical bite of Cory Doctorow’s LITTLE BROTHER, ReWIRED delves into technology addiction, internet privacy, and corporate/government collection of data, as it vividly illuminates the universally human questions about ethics, privacy, and self-definition that both underpin these socio-political issues and dovetail with classic coming-of-age themes. Ultimately, ReWIRED is about the daily choices we all make about who we want to be, how much of ourselves we choose to share with others, and the terrifying risks and exhilarating rewards of being ourselves, online and off.

Goodreads / Amazon

My favorite thing about this story was the format. I absolutely adored the different fonts and chat room parts! It really made me feel fully immersed in the story.

I wasn’t sure about Ada at first, but I ended up really enjoying reading from her perspective. It was super interesting gradually learning about the other characters with Ada.

The plot was super action-packed and interesting! I was expecting this book to be a cookie-cutter sci-fi novel but it was far from that. I did have a small problem with the world building, since it was a little difficult for me to imagine the entire world, and I wish I could’ve seen more hacking.

I was not a fan of the random attraction to Ada that the boys appeared to have. I don’t like romance in books usually, so it was not a surprise that I cringed a little every time Ada made out with the love interest.

When reading, the author’s writing is always something that stands out to me. For Reboot, the writing was far better than I had expected. The author’s writing was super easy to read and had me flying through this book.

In full, this was an exciting science fiction novel that had me staying up all night reading.

Final Rating: 4/5 stars

Author Bio:

S.R. Johannes is the award-winning author of the Amazon bestselling Nature of Grace thriller series (Untraceable, Uncontrollable, and Unstoppable). She is a winner of the IndieReader Discovery Award in YA, an IPPY a Silver Medalist for YA Fiction, a Finalist in The Kindle Book Review’s Best Young Adult Fiction, and a Finalist in US Book News Best YA Book.

Since leaving Corporate America, she has followed her passion for writing and conservation by working with The Dolphin Project, the Atlanta Zoo, other animal rescue organizations, and by weaving conservation themes into her books.

Currently, she lives in Atlanta, GA with hEnglish-accented husband and the huge imaginations of their prince and princess, which she hopes- someday- will change the world.

Website / Goodreads / Facebook / Twitter


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Little Forevers by Katie Kaleski


Publication date: June 6th 2017
Genres:Contemporary, Romance, Young Adult
How I obtained it: ARC
Blurb:
Phoebe likes Gage, but there’s a problem—he’s her brother’s best friend.
As the result of an extra-marital affair, Phoebe Bautista has had little contact with her dad, none with her step-mom, and her siblings have just recently learned of her of her existence. Now she goes to stay with them while her mom is on assignment in The Yukon for three months. As she tries to find her place and navigate the developing and rocky relationship with her temporary family, she begins to spend time playing music with her brother, Oliver, along with his best friend, Gage.
Gage is cute, smart, has selective mutism, and makes Phoebe’s heart skip a beat, but she knows she has to fight her feelings for him, so she doesn’t ruin her growing bond with Oliver. But the more time the three of them spend together, the harder it becomes to ignore what she feels for Gage, especially when she learns he might like her too.
And with her dad pretending everything’s fine, the fact that she might never belong anywhere, and knowing that she only has so much time with her new family, Phoebe might not make it out with her heart intact.

Review:
I received a copy from Xpresso Book Tours in return for an honest review.

This story was a pure guilty pleasure. It was super adorable and fluffy, and it featured one of the most adorable couples I've seen in a long time!

Phoebe, the main character, admitted her feelings for Gage early on in the book, which I appreciated. I absolutely hate when there's a bunch of denial from the main character! Gage was super adorable, and it was really fascinating to learn about him since he's mute. Phoebe's siblings were also extremely interesting! Each of them had their individual struggles and flaws that readers get to find and explore.

Probably my least favorite part of this book. There were way too many sentences that didn't add at all to the story.

The romance was so cute! I absolutely love secret relationships, and I adored Phoebe and Gage! I just wanted them to be happy. More important than the romance was the familial relationships in this novel. Phoebe is constantly conflicted with her family, and it was so interesting to see those relationship evolve.

The plot dragged a ton at the beginning, but it did pick up towards the end. I loved the incorporation of a band in this novel. I felt like it really pulled the plot points into one cohesive story.

In all, this story was a fun and adorable young adult novel full of interesting characters and plot. Though I didn't love the writing, I look forward to reading more from Katie Kaleski.

Final rating: 3.5/5 stars

I Stop Somewhere by T.E. Carter | Xpresso Tours Book Blitz

I Stop Somewhere
T.E. Carter
Published by: Feiwel & Friends
Publication date: February 27th 2018
Genres: Contemporary, Young Adult

THE LOVELY BONES meets ALL THE RAGE in a searing, heartbreaking contemporary story of a lost teenager, and the town she leaves behind.

Ellie Frias disappeared long before she vanished.

Tormented throughout middle school, Ellie begins her freshman year with a new look: she doesn’t need to be popular; she just needs to blend in with the wallpaper.

But then the unthinkable happens and Ellie is trapped after a brutal assault. She wasn’t the first victim and now she watches it happen again and again. She tries to hold on to her happier memories in order to get past the cold days, waiting for someone to find her.

The problem is, no one searches for a girl they never noticed in the first place.

TE Carter’s stirring and visceral debut not only discusses and dismantles rape culture but also makes you slow down and think about what it is to be human.

Goodreads / Amazon / Barnes & Noble

EXCERPT:

Later, I remember how my dad would stand in my doorway, watching me. Trying to reach me across so little space, yet so much. He stared at me like you look at a museum display or a creature in the zoo. I was the coelacanth and he was awed by my strangeness.

“I brought you something,” he said, holding a bag out across the threshold to my bedroom.

My room was an experiment. Posters and magazine pages and images covered the walls and the vanity and my dresser. All the people I wanted to be, wanted to look like. They were the people who mattered. I stared at myself in the mirror, hating how I looked. I hated how the curves made the boys poke me through the back of my chair in class, and how they made the girls call me fat. I hated how far the people in the magazines were from me. I thought I would never count, because I wasn’t them.

“What is it?” I asked my dad, gesturing toward the bag he was holding.

“I thought you might like it.”

It happened every few nights. He’d show up, presenting an offering in a plastic bag. Makeup. Clothes. Hair bands. He tried. He tried and so I tried, but the discount stickers said it all.

They were marked down, because the lipstick was too orange. The tank top wasn’t cut right. The hair pins would have been perfect for a girl my age – ten years ago. But I wore them for him and he smiled, because he didn’t know the difference.

“Thanks, Dad. I love it,” I lied.

“You’re beautiful, Ellie.”

I was a markdown girl.

I did know the difference.


Author Bio:

TE Carter was born in New England and has lived in New England for pretty much her entire life. Throughout her career, she’s done a lot of things, although her passion has always been writing. When she’s not writing, she can generally be found reading classic literature, obsessing over Game of Thrones (she’s one hundred percent Team Lannister), playing Xbox, organizing her comic collection, or binge watching baking competitions. She continues to live in New England with her husband and their two cats.

Website

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Dumplin’ by Julie Murphy | Review


Publisher: Balzer + Bray

Release Date: September 15, 2015

Pages: 384

How I Obtained It: Free eBook

Goodreads Description: 

Self-proclaimed fat girl Willowdean Dickson (dubbed “Dumplin’” by her former beauty queen mom) has always been at home in her own skin. Her thoughts on having the ultimate bikini body? Put a bikini on your body. With her all-American beauty best friend, Ellen, by her side, things have always worked…until Will takes a job at Harpy’s, the local fast-food joint. There she meets Private School Bo, a hot former jock. Will isn’t surprised to find herself attracted to Bo. But she is surprised when he seems to like her back.

Instead of finding new heights of self-assurance in her relationship with Bo, Will starts to doubt herself. So she sets out to take back her confidence by doing the most horrifying thing she can imagine: entering the Miss Clover City beauty pageant—along with several other unlikely candidates—to show the world that she deserves to be up there as much as any twiggy girl does. Along the way, she’ll shock the hell out of Clover City—and maybe herself most of all.

With starry Texas nights, red candy suckers, Dolly Parton songs, and a wildly unforgettable heroine—Dumplin’ is guaranteed to steal your heart.
Initial Thoughts: I had heard quite a bit of buzz about this book. A lot of the reviews were mixed, but I was still interested in this book. In fact, Julie Murphy has come to speak at a local library, but I was unable to attend. Then I got an email asking to fill out a survey and that I would receive a free eBook in return. And that’s how I came to read Dumplin’.

Thoughts:

Willowdean, the main character, struggles with her weight throughout the novel. In addition, we see other characters that have disabilities. I loved seeing these characters slowly come to terms with what they view as flaws and become more confident people.

Even though this was about a beauty pageant, a lot of the book instead centered around the romance. I did enjoy the ending, when the pageant actually took place, but the other parts just seemed like filler chapters.

There’s a bit of a love triangle in this book. Not only that, the romance shows how insecure Willowdean is with her weight. Some of the romance was unnecessary but for the most part it was really cute and fluffy.

The writing was pretty standard for first person contemporary. It was simplistic, with few literary devices.

Even though I enjoyed this book, I have no urge to pick up another Julie Murphy book, but if I’m offered one for free then I’d happily enjoy more of her stories.

Final rating: 3/5 stars

Gate Of Air By Resa Nelsor | Xpresso Book Tours Book Blitz

Gate of Air
Resa Nelson
(Dragon Gods, #1)
Publication date: June 19th 2017
Genres: Fantasy, Young Adult

Frayka must find and convince the dragon gods of the Far East to appease the gods of her Northland heritage. If she fails, her own Northlander gods will destroy all the mortals who once promised to worship them.

The Far East is a mysterious place of legend to Northlanders like Frayka. Only an old map can show her how to get there. Once she arrives, all of Frayka’s sensibilities put her in danger. And every dangerous turn delays her from finding the dragon gods whose help she so desperately needs.

Although Frayka looks like a Far Easterner, she is a powerful Northlander warrior who is quick to voice her thoughts. She is trained to fight and won’t hesitate to do so.

But everything about Frayka puts her in deadly peril in the Far East, where the laws are strict and the punishment cruel.

Especially when the one being punished is a woman.

Goodreads / Amazon

CHAPTER 1:

How did my life become so turbulent?

As the pale blue and pink light foretold the dawn of a new day, Frayka walked the narrow length of the Northlander ship, a long and sleek vessel that looked like a sea dragon slicing through the choppy ocean waves. The oars piled on the center of the deck rattled against each other. The scent of fish and brine permeated the air. The taste of salt in the air gave her a thirst that seemed impossible to quench. Frayka focused on the horizon instead.

She approached the rail and leaned on it, barely noticing the sound of her sweetheart Njall grunting while he adjusted the sail. After several days at sea, Frayka recognized the coast of her homeland, the Land of Ice, in the distance ahead. But instead of filling her heart with happiness or even meager content, the sight made her stomach twist into knots.

All her life, Frayka had given no thought to the fact that she looked like no other Northlander. Everyone in her homeland—including her own family—stood tall with long blond hair and blue eyes. While Frayka stood as tall as any Northlander woman, she inherited her looks from her father’s grandmother, a woman from the Far East who must have died many years ago.

Although Frayka’s skin looked similar to everyone else’s during the winter months, too much exposure to the sun simply turned Frayka’s skin a golden brown while the skin of all other Northlanders burned bright red. And her long black hair, straight as rain, made her stand out, as well as her dark brown eyes.

Njall joined her side and draped an arm across her shoulders. “Home at last.”

Exhausted from the journey and lost in worry about the days ahead, Frayka didn’t respond.

Njall squeezed her shoulder. “Why so glum?”

“No one told me I’d be meeting a Northlander god,” Frayka said. “I’m still reeling from what the All-Father told me.”

Weeks ago, a shaman led Frayka to the ethereal world of the gods. The god of all Northlander gods—the All-Father—singled out Frayka because she dared to live as a Northlander despite her Far Eastern looks.

To appease the anger of all Northlander gods, the All-Father tasked Frayka with the duty of finding the dragon gods of the Far East. The All-Father told Frayka she then must figure out how to make peace between those dragon gods and the Northlander gods. If Frayka failed, the Northlander gods would kill her.

Why did all gods have to act so foolish and petty?

Why should it be her problem that Northlanders had once worshipped the dragon gods instead of their own gods?

Why should the Northlander gods involve her just because they felt angry and rejected by the mortals who adopted the dragon gods in their absence?

Frayka knew the dragon gods destroyed the Northlands and surrounding countries, even though she’d been an infant at the time. The full blame for that destruction fell on the true Northlander gods, who were enraged first for being ignored and then for being faulted for something they didn’t do.

Why should I care that mortals blame the Northlander gods for the sins of the dragon gods?

The task given to Frayka by the Northlander gods overwhelmed her. Frayka wished she could crawl below deck, curl up in a corner, and sleep until her life felt normal again.

But Northlanders never talked of such feelings. If Frayka admitted to any of them, she would appear weak in Njall’s eyes. He loved her because of her strength and courage. And right now, only Njall knew about the task she’d been given. If no one else believed her, she’d still have Njall by her side.

I can’t afford to lose him, too.

Njall laughed. “You’re spoiled by your own portents. Welcome to the ordinary world that the rest of us live in.”

Frayka knew Njall was right. Since birth, her portents gave her regular glimpses into the future, something no other Northlander could do. She’d known for years that Njall would someday marry her, and her faith never waived. Years ago, he teased Frayka about her portents. Thinking about those days, she said, “Remember when you used to call me Frayka the Freak?”

“Be fair,” Njall said, failing to hide his shame. “I don’t call you that anymore.” He ran his rough hand against her silky black hair. “Not since I saw you become a brave warrior. Not since you saved my life. Once I tell everyone what you’ve done, everyone will love you as much as I do.” Njall hesitated. “Wait. That’s a terrible idea. Someone might try to marry you before I can.”

“If anyone tries to get between you and me, I’ll kick him in the shins.” Frayka laughed briefly before worry overtook her again. “But it’s not my portents I’m worried about. It’s what the gods want me to do. What I have to do.”

“This isn’t like you. You never worry.”

Frayka cleared her throat, knowing the time to keep secrets had to end. “I had a portent last night after you fell asleep. A portent about the gods.”

His arm tensed. “What kind of portent?”

Frayka looked at the sea. “I saw what will happen if I fail. If I don’t do what the gods ask.” When Njall stayed silent, she continued. “They will kill every Northlander who still survives. They will kill you and me and our families and everyone in the Land of Ice.”

“But your portents,” Njall said. “Sometimes they give you an idea of the future. They’re not always exact.”

“This one was,” Frayka said. “Very exact and very clear. I have to find the dragon gods and figure out how to make peace between them and the Northlander gods. Otherwise, we all die.”

Njall shifted his weight when the ship tilted. “Then let’s fight the Northlander gods. Let’s kill them before they can kill us.”

Frayka shook her head. “You don’t understand. All the stories we heard about gods are lies. Northlanders thought the dragon gods were their gods, but it’s not true. Mortals thought the Northlander gods forced the dragon gods to destroy our homeland, but that’s not true either.” She frowned. “Not entirely. Even if we could find the Northlander gods—which is impossible—it wouldn’t solve anything. The All-Father told me what I have to do, and nothing else will satisfy him.”

Njall wrapped his arms around Frayka and held her close. “You’re not alone, you know,” he said. “You’ve got me, and I’ll walk by your side every step of the way.”

His words comforted Frayka. For a moment she found hope and felt excited about the chance to make a difference in the world. She felt no fear of the danger she might face.

Njall pointed at the coastline, now close enough that Frayka saw its black sandy beaches glitter and sparkle in the sunlight. “We’re home,” Njall said. “Look how beautiful it is.”

Taking his advice, Frayka stared at the waterfalls falling from the high cliffs standing behind the beaches. Pointing, she said, “There’s Blackstone.” The settlement of small stone houses rested a short distance from the shore, and grassy hills stretched behind it. In the far distance, a mountain of ice glinted. “What are we going to tell them about why we left?” Frayka said.

“The truth always strikes me as a good idea,” Njall said.

But the truth would involve stories about Frayka’s portents and gods and strange lands.

“What if they don’t believe me?”

“Be yourself!” Njall said. “This is your home! Your family knows you. Everyone in Blackstone knows you. And I know you, too.”

But I befriended someone who suffered because she looked different. Because she came from a different world than the people she lived with. Because she walked with one foot in each world: the one she came from and the one she lived in.

And if I do what the gods ask me to do, won’t I have to do the same?

“Frayka?” Njall said. “Did you hear me?”

“Of course.” Frayka straightened her spine and drew again on her new-found hope. “Let’s go home.”


Author Bio:

Resa Nelson is the author of the 4-book Dragonslayer series: The Dragonslayer’s Sword (nominated for the Nebula Award, finalist for the EPPIE Award), The Iron Maiden , The Stone of Darkness , and The Dragon’s Egg . Her 4-book Dragonfly series takes place after the Dragonslayer series.

Her standalone novels include the mystery/thrillers All Of Us Were Sophie and Our Lady of the Absolute .

Resa has been selling short stories professionally since 1988. She is a longtime member of SFWA (Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America), and she is a graduate of the Clarion SF Workshop. Resa was the TV/Movie Columnist for Realms of Fantasy magazine for 13 years as well as a regular contributor to SCI FI magazine. She has sold over 200 articles to magazines in the United States and the United Kingdom.

Website / Goodreads / Twitter


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Defacing Books?!

I’ve seen so many videos on BookTube that center around defacing books by writing in them, painting on the cover, etc. I decided that I would also like to deface some books!


I was so scared the first time I picked up my paints and started defacing This Savage Song. Once I got going, however, I absolutely loved doing it! I’m definitely going to do more defacing in the future!

I made a video with my thoughts on defacing books and some progress videos for these projects. You can find that video here.

This is a super short post, but I hoped you enjoyed.

Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda | Review

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Description:
Sixteen-year-old and not-so-openly gay Simon Spier prefers to save his drama for the school musical. But when an email falls into the wrong hands, his secret is at risk of being thrust into the spotlight. Now Simon is actually being blackmailed: if he doesn’t play wingman for class clown Martin, his sexual identity will become everyone’s business. Worse, the privacy of Blue, the pen name of the boy he’s been emailing, will be compromised.
With some messy dynamics emerging in his once tight-knit group of friends, and his email correspondence with Blue growing more flirtatious every day, Simon’s junior year has suddenly gotten all kinds of complicated. Now, change-averse Simon has to find a way to step out of his comfort zone before he’s pushed out—without alienating his friends, compromising himself, or fumbling a shot at happiness with the most confusing, adorable guy he’s never met
Thoughts:
I read this book for the #ReadThemAllThon, and I read it very quickly. I had pretty high expectations for this book. Not only does it have a page full of rewards, I hadn’t heard a single bad thing about it prior to reading. I’m also not a big fan of contemporary, but I was nonetheless excited about reading it.
Unfortunately, the book fell a bit short of its hype, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t like it. Actually, I really enjoyed it. Maybe it was because I was expecting a grand, John Green-like book. It simply isn’t that. It’s actually a really good novel for a first book. But, again, it was not as amazing as I had heard. It felt a bit like a cookie-cutter contemporary. The writing wasn’t great, the plot was slow at times; but the characters were fun, and the romance was cute. I can understand why people love this book and even why it won so many awards, but it just wasn’t for me.
Rating: 3.75/5 stars

Top Ten Tuesday | Best Audiobooks

Top Ten Tuesday is an weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish in which bloggers can share lists. This week’s topic is audiobooks!

As an all-around avid reader, hearing people preach that audiobooks “aren’t actual book” gets under my skin. Around summer last year, I started listening to audiobooks in addition to reading physical books, and I simply fell in love. In the past year, I’ve listened to some good(and some not-so-good) audiobooks. And, let me tell you, audiobooks don’t take anything away from actually reading the books. If you’re trying to get into audiobooks, or you already have a love for them, here are my top ten favorite audiobooks!

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10. The Diviners by Libba Bray

Read by: January LaVoy

This is probably one of the best, if not the best, audiobooks I’ve listened to. January LaVoy is a master of voices. I believe she was the one that made the story come to life. You need to listen to this audiobook. Believe me, you won’t regret it.

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9. The Restaurant at the End of the Universe by Douglas Adams

Read by: Martin Freeman

When I listened to this audiobook, I had no idea it was read by the Martin Freeman. When I found out, I was giddy. Martin Freeman is such a great actor(and a good narrator, too!). Granted, this is the second book in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy series. I believe the first book is narrated by someone else. Still, these books are so fun to listen to!

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8. Graceling by Kristin Cashore

Read by: Emma Powell

A combination of good story, music, and voice acting really made this book. I had gone into it with high expectations, and all of those expectations were met!

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7. We Were Liars by E. Lockhart

Read by: Ariadne Meyers

This was one of the first audiobooks I listened to, so maybe I liked it so much just because I couldn’t compare it to anything else. The story probably made this book the most memorable. And, holy shiz, that plot twist!

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6. The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern

Read by: Jim Dale

Jim Dale is probably my favorite narrator. His voice acting makes every story come to life! This book was no exception! Even though I now want to read the physical book, the audiobook was amazing!

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5. The Raven Cycle series by Maggie Stiefvater

Read by: Will Patton

Even though I put the entire series on this list, I’ve only listened to the second and third books. Not only is the story exciting, Will Patton is such a great narrator! It’s hard crafting voices for each character(and there are a lot in this series), but he managed to do it!

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4. The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer

Read by: Raul Esparza

One aspect that really stood out to me was the way the reader did the best voices for the characters. It felt as if they were coming to life! Each character had his or her own unique voice.

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3. Cress by Marissa Meyer

Read by: Rebecca Soler

Originally, I wasn’t going to continue on with the Lunar Chronicles. After I read Scarlet, which I really disliked, I considered leaving the series there. But then I saw the audiobook for Cress. That and the high praise I had heard urged me to pick it up. I am so happy I did. This book is really what made me fall in love with the Lunar Chronicles!

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2. The Coldest Girl in Coldtown by Holly Black

Read by: Christine Lakin

This is one of my more recent audiobook listens. I had tried reading this as an ebook last year but never finished it. The audiobook was so well done! If you couldn’t already tell, I love audiobooks that have music, because they make the book seem like a movie!

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1. Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling

Read by: Jim Dale

It is said that Jim Dale is the voice of Harry Potter, and I believe it! He really made this series come to life and settle itself onto my favorites shelf! If you haven’t listened to this series, you should put that on your to-do list!

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I use OverDrive for my audiobooks, though audible is also good if you don’t mind paying a membership fee. See any favorites? Comment 🙂 See you in my next post!