Showing posts with label blog tour. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog tour. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Pinoy Book Toure: Proxy by Alex London (EXCERPT and GIVEAWAY)



EXCERPT

 That was his first mistake.
The next two came in quick succession.
The car swerved slightly toward the guardrail when he took his right hand off the wheel. At that speed, on manual drive, it took both hands to keep the vehicle straight. He’d have known that if he had ever taken a manual driving class.
He hadn’t.
He overcompensated for the swerve, jerking the wheel toward the center lane. That was his second mistake.
His heart skipped a beat as he felt himself losing control. If he hadn’t shut off the augmented reality driving, it would have taken over right then. These cars drove themselves if you let them.
Instead, he tried to brake.
Mistake number three.
An alarm sounded. The car jackknifed, spun sideways, and flipped over at 162 mph.
Airborne.
The stabilizer engine screeched helplessly at the sky.
Or maybe that was the girl.
He felt the car hit the ground and roll. The entire universe shattered into blinking lights and screaming metal. He heard a crunch, a snap of bone. He felt like he’d been punched in the throat.
There was heat, an intense heat, and an invisible fist pulled the air out of his lungs and ripped the sound from his ears. He couldn’t hear anything now, no screaming, no screeching, just the blood rushing to his head. He thought he was upside down. Twisted metal pinned his arms to his sides. He felt the urge to laugh. There was a warm wetness on his face and he tasted something metallic.
And then darkness.
GIVEAWAY TIME!!
Join: Here

Monday, August 11, 2014

Summer Bloggin' Blog Tour! Sticky Fingers: DIY Duct Tape Projects and The Green Cookbook: Recipes for All Seasons



BOOK DESCRIPTION: Sticky Fingers: DIY Duct Tape Projects

Any crafter from novice to expert (of all ages), will enjoy these 70+ fresh duct tape project ideas from the fully illustrated guide, Sticky Fingers DIY Duct Tape Projects (Zest Books; ISBN 978-1-936976-54-6; $16.99 PB), by Sophie Maletsky. Making everything from cell phone holders to room dividers, backpacks, jewelry, bags, wallets and more! 

Sticky Fingers is essentially a step-by-step by step guide for realizing one’s potential as a duct tape crafter.  Beginning with the basics of brands and types of tapes, through essential techniques, and on to detailed projects for home, for school and to wear, this book gives the reader everything they need to know to create fantastic-looking duct tape projects. Having worked with duct tape crafters for many years, Sophie has developed a teaching method—applied in this book—that makes even the most complicated projects doable.Sticky Fingers provides the reader with the building blocks – all that’s needed is imagination! 

Thoughts
"I love this book immensely. It's for all ages! From wallets, desk organizer, backpack, lunch bag, headband, landyards and many more... This book is amazing! No more boring duct tapes. So many clever ideas that will certainly catch your attention." 

BOOK DESCRIPTION The Green Teen Cookbook

The Kitchen can be one of the trickiest places for young adults to navigate—add trying to be healthy, eco-minded, and budget-conscious, and things get even more complicated! Now there is The Green Teen Cookbook (Zest Books; ISBN 978-1-936976-58-4; $14.99 PB) to help guide teens through the mysteries of the kitchen and create some amazing meals. With inspiring tips on how to cut through the chaos of going green as well as master over 70 recipes, including a seasonal key that ensures optimal freshness (and a minimal carbon footprint), any teen can become a green culinary expert and learn how to: shop on a budget; get the most out of your pantry; cook more consciously; eat healthier, and more! Featuring full color photos throughout, The Green Teen Cookbook is an all-in-one guide for eating green and eating well—by teens and for teens! 

Thoughts
"Everything about this  green book is  fresh! What I like is that it was written/made by teens. 
Not only that the recipes are quick and easy, it is also healthy. 
My personal favorite are the Breakfast and Brunch recipes. It's energizing, healthy and appetizing. It's not hard to prepare.  

I recommend this book to healthy eaters and aspiring chefs. "

summer bloggin banner
*Photos from Zest Books
Buy The Books
Sticky Fingers: DIY Duct Tape Projects Amazon/Book Depository
Green Teen Cook Book Amazon/Book Depository

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Blog Tour: Bad Luck Girl (The American Fairy #3) by Sarah Zettle (Plus GIVEAWAY)

Buy The Book
Title: Bad Luck Girl  (The American Fairy #3)
Author: Sarah Zettel
Publication: May 27th 2014 by Random House Books for Young Readers
Book Description:
Fans of Libba Bray's The Diviners will love the blend of fantasy and jazz-hot Chicago in this stylish series.

After rescuing her parents from the Seelie king at Hearst Castle, Callie is caught up in the war between the fairies of the Midnight Throne and the Sunlit Kingdoms. By accident, she discovers that fairies aren't the only magical creatures in the world. There's also Halfers, misfits that are half fairy and half other--laced with strange magic and big-city attitude. As the war heats up, Callie's world falls apart. And even though she's the child of prophecy, she doubts she can save the Halfers, her people, her family, and Jack, let alone herself. The fairies all say Callie is the Bad Luck Girl, and she's starting to believe them.

A strong example of diversity in YA, the American Fairy Trilogy introduces Callie LeRoux, a half-black teen who stars in this evocative story full of American history and fairy tales.

Read Chapter One: HERE

Win a copy!
US/Can only


Wednesday, February 26, 2014

Blog Tour: Forever (Temptation #3) by Karen Ann Hopkins

 
 Buy The Book
Guest Post!
Give us 5 interesting/weird facts about you.

1)      The only writing experience I had before the Temptation series, were the 4H horse club and farm activity articles that I’d submit to the local newspaper.  I never took a writing class in my life and learned the process through trial and error and the wonderful suggestions given to me by professionals along the way.
2)      I have five children, ranging in age from 8 to 19. 
3)      I have quite the menagerie of animals living on the farm, including; 15 horses, 7 goats, 4 dogs, 6 cats and an assortment of rabbits, ducks, chickens and peacocks.
4)      I traveled to Australia twice and Europe once as a young adult.
5)      I’m currently addicted to the Game of Thrones HBO series and books by George R. R. Martin.

I’m also excited to say that I’ve written an adult Amish mystery that will be available on Kindle this year!  Lamb to the Slaughter is a story about the intertwining lives of three unlikely people in an Indiana Amish Community and the devastating results when a rebellious teenage girl is found shot to death in a corn field during the harvest.  Serenity Adams is the newly elected young sheriff in the country town of Blood Rock and besides dealing with the threatening behavior of her predecessor, she now has a dead Amish girl on her plate.  At first glance, the case seems obvious.  The poor girl was probably accidently shot during hunting season, but when the elders of the Amish community and even the girl’s parents react with uncaring subdued behavior, Serenity becomes suspicious.  As she delves deeper into the secretive community that she grew up beside, she discovers a gruesome crime from the past that may very well be related to the Amish girl’s shooting.   Serenity enlists the help of the handsome bad-boy building contractor, Daniel Bachman, who left the Amish when he was nineteen and has his own dark reasons to help the spunky sheriff solve the crime that the family and friends who shunned him are trying desperately to cover up.  Serenity’s persistence leads her to a stunning discovery that not only threatens to destroy her blossoming romance with Daniel, but may even take her life in the end. 
Thanks for having me on your blog!
I love to hear from my readers!  Please contact me on Facebook with your thoughts on the Temptation series or any questions about the Amish you may have.  Thanks!

Karen Ann Hopkins


The final book of the Temptation Series

Giveaway!
 $100 Amazon Gift Card and a $50 Amazon Gift Card, plus copies of the following Harlequin TEEN titles: Heartbeat, The Queen’s Choice, White Hot Kiss, Anything to Have You, Secret Diamond Sister and Grim. Giveaway is open to US/Canada.
Enter the Giveaway: Here 
 Check out the Tour Stops Here
Wednesday, February  26th -  A Bookish Escape - Review
Thursday, February 27th - That Girl Reads - Review

Friday, January 17, 2014

Blog Tour: The Unseemly Education of Anne Merchant by Joanna Wiebe


Published January 14th 2014 by BenBella Books
So many secrets for such a small island. From the moment Anne Merchant arrives at Cania Christy, a boarding school for the world’s wealthiest teens, the hushed truths of this strange, unfamiliar land begin calling to her—sometimes as lulling drumbeats in the night, sometimes as piercing shrieks.

One by one, unanswered questions rise. No one will tell her why a line is painted across the island or why she is forbidden to cross it. Her every move—even her performance at the school dance—is graded as part of a competition to become valedictorian, a title that brings rewards no one will talk about. And Anne discovers that the parents of her peers surrender million-dollar possessions to enroll their kids in Cania Christy, leaving her to wonder what her lowly funeral director father could have paid to get her in… and why.

As a beautiful senior struggles to help Anne make sense of this cloak-and-dagger world without breaking the rules that bind him, she must summon the courage to face the impossible truth—and change it—before she and everyone she loves is destroyed by it.

4 More Fun Facts about The Unseemly Education of Anne Merchant

Factoid 1: Anne’s dad Stanley is based loosely on my dad
Stanley Merchant is a quiet mortician – and my dad was a lively French teacher. So they’re not exactly the same dude. But, without question, Stanley was inspired by my dad, whose middle name was Stanley.
One of the best compliments I’ve had about the book came from my sister Sarah, who, after reading a scene featuring Stanley, called me and said it felt like she now had a new memory of my dad (who passed away nearly a decade ago). Stanley’s big, burly and a great hugger – just like my dad was.

Factoid 2: I wrote the book from a spot overlooking Port Angeles, of Twilight fame
I live at the southern tip of Vancouver Island, and, while writing the first draft of The Unseemly Education of Anne Merchant, I lived in a house with a view clear across the water to Port Angeles.
This is important to me because, in truth, reading Twilight opened my eyes to the possibility of writing something that was purely fun and not too serious. So seeing Port Angeles from my window during those late night and early morning writing sessions was like a daily reminder to have fun with it!


Factoid 3: I first wrote about Cania Christy nearly 15 years ago
 In university, I took creative writing classes – which were my favorite. I mean, it hardly feels like you’re going to school when the assignment is either to read a story or write one!
In my fourth year, I wrote a story called “Prep School Boys Last Chance to Dance”, about the first-world problems that a group of prep school boys face the night before their graduation. The school was called Compton Christy. It never really left my mind.
When my agent and I were editing the book, he noted that Compton is a particularly bad part of LA; given that Anne comes from California, we thought the presence of Compton in the school’s name might act as a red herring for readers, so I modified it.

Factoid 4: The story’s original setting was not Maine
 In the first draft, Anne went to school in Cape Ann, Massachusetts (north of Boston). I set it there primarily because I was in love with this snippet of Anne Sexton’s poem “The Truth the Dead Know”, which features a cape:
We drive to the Cape. I cultivate
myself where the sun gutters from the sky,
where the sea swings in like an iron gate
and we touch. In another country people die.
Eventually, when the story transformed to a point where it was clear the school would have to be somewhere more isolated than Cape Ann, I ‘relocated’ everything to the fictional Wormwood Island, Maine.
Joanna Wiebe is the author of The Unseemly Education of Anne Merchant, now available in bookstores and online. Amy Plum called it “deliciously dark”, and VOYA said it’s great for fans of Anna Dressed in Blood.

15 finished copies of The Unseemly Education of Anne Merchant up for grabs.
Giveaway is open to US/Canada.


http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/207d1c459/" rel="nofollow">a Rafflecopter giveaway

Thursday, January 16, 2014

Blog Tour: Where You'll Find Me by Erin Fletcher



Published January 7th 2014 by Entangled: Teen
When Hanley Helton discovers a boy living in her garage, she knows she should kick him out. But Nate is too charming to be dangerous. He just needs a place to get away, which Hanley understands. Her own escape methods (vodka, black hair dye, and pretending the past didn't happen) are more traditional, but who is she to judge?

Nate doesn't tell her why he's in her garage, and she doesn't tell him what she's running from. Soon, Hanley's trading her late-night escapades for all-night conversations and stolen kisses. But when Nate's recognized as the missing teen from the news, Hanley isn't sure which is worse: that she's harboring a fugitive, or that she's in love with one.




Interview: Erin Fletcher
1. Describe your book in one sentence.
After discovering a boy living in her garage, Hanley isn’t sure which is worse: harboring a fugitive, or falling in love with one.

2. Tell us a little something about Hanley and Nate?
Both Hanley and Nate have secrets. They’re both running from different situations in different ways. Hanley’s escape is drinking and going to parties with her friends. Nate’s escape is living in Hanley’s garage.

3. In writing books, do you have any rituals?
My absolute best time to write is first thing in the morning. On days when I’m working on a book, my alarm goes off at 4:39 (yes, 4:39 a.m.). I take a shower, make coffee, and hit the computer around 5:00. I write until 6:30, when it’s time to get ready for my day job. When I’m on a deadline or feeling inspired, I’ll write on my lunch break or after work, but most of my writing is done before the sun comes up.

4. Books this 2014 you are excited to read?
So many! Blackfin Sky by Kat Ellis, Between by Megan Whitmer, NIL by Lynne Matson, Being Sloane Jacobs by Lauren Morrill, Panic by Lauren Oliver, Side Effects May Vary by Julie Murphy, and Isla and the Happily Ever After by Stephanie Perkins are just a few! I think 2014 is going to be a great year for books.

5. Any new projects this year?
I wrote another contemporary YA manuscript that I have no definite plans for yet, but I’m really excited about it! And I have another contemporary YA story that I’m just starting. 

GIVEAWAY TIME!

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Blog Tour: Heart Beat by Elizabeth Scott (Plus Giveaway)

Title: Heart Beat
Author: Elizabeth Scott
Published: January 28th 2014 by Harlequin Teen
Book Description: 

Life. Death. And...Love?
Emma would give anything to talk to her mother one last time. Tell her about her slipping grades, her anger with her stepfather, and the boy with the bad reputation who might be the only one Emma can be herself with.
But Emma can't tell her mother anything. Because her mother is brain-dead and being kept alive by machines for the baby growing inside her.
Meeting bad-boy Caleb Harrison wouldn't have interested Old Emma. But New Emma-the one who exists in a fog of grief, who no longer cares about school, whose only social outlet is her best friend Olivia-New Emma is startled by the connection she and Caleb forge.
Feeling her own heart beat again wakes Emma from the grief that has grayed her existence. Is there hope for life after death-and maybe, for love?



About Elizabeth Scott


ELIZABETH SCOTT grew up in a town so small it didn’t even have a post office, though it did boast an impressive cattle population.
She’s sold hardware and panty hose and had a memorable three-day stint in the dot-com industry, where she learned that she really didn’t want a career burning CDs.
She lives just outside Washington, D.C., with her husband, and firmly believes you can never own too many books.
Be One of the 10 Lucky Arc Winners

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Blog Tour: Little Fish: A Memoir from a Different Kind of Year by Ramsey Beyer + Review


 Book Description:
Told through real-life journals, collages, lists, and drawings, this coming-of-age story illustrates the transformation of an 18-year-old girl from a small-town teenager into an independent city-dwelling college student. Written in an autobiographical style with beautiful artwork, Little Fish shows the challenges of being a young person facing the world on her own for the very first time and the unease—as well as excitement—that comes along with that challenge.
                               
      Goodreads  Twitter  Website  


Ramsey Beyer
Interview

1. What inspired you to write/create Little Fish: A Memoir from a Different Kind of Year?

I’ve always written about my life as it’s happening. I never think “this will be a book one day,” rather, I just share it in small chunks in whatever way seems fun or fitting. Sometimes that means writing on a blog. For a long time it meant writing in my Livejournal. Most often now it means writing a bunch of short comics and putting them out in a zine. A zine is a self-made “magazine” of sorts, and often they’re small, autobiographical, and just meant to share stories without the need for a publisher or editor giving you their approval. They’re a fun, hands on way to share things that you create, and the end result is a little photocopied booklet filled with whatever you want. I wrote a lot of what you find in Little Fish in my zine that I put out throughout college. 

My zine was called List, and I put out 15 different issues. I didn’t think about it as “writing the story of my freshman year,” rather, I thought of it as “writing about what I’m thinking and feeling right now to try to sort through all of it and use it as a way to try to relate to other people.”  Over time, I had collected all sorts of stories, thoughts and feelings – years worth! Zest Books had the idea to compile a story just about my freshman year in college, because it’s such a formative and challenging time for a lot of young people. So after they had seen my zine, they asked me to pick out things I had written during that year, or about that year, and try to piece together a story from that stuff. From there, I added in new comics to try to fill out the story a little more. In a way, it’s a collage of things I had already made, and things I had made just for the book.

I’m really interested in telling personal, true stories as a way to connect with other people – whether it’s a way for people to think “wow, I went through that exact same thing and had those same feelings” or a way for them to contrast it to their own experiences that were totally different from mine. It’s a really great way to learn about yourself and others. It gives me a lot of perspective when I read true stories about other people, and I like to be able to participate in that.  

2.  Little Fish is your story of your journey from high school through your first year of college. It’s “back to school season” now – can you share a memorable “back to school” memory or experience with us?

The first one that popped into my head was a “back to school” situation that happened when I was going into the 4th grade. We arrived on the first day of class and after we settled in and found our desks, put away our things, and met our teacher, she began the first activity. Our teacher had prepared handouts for each person in the class based on their gender. The boys had an outline of a boy head (a profile view of a person with short hair), and the girls had an outline of a girl head (a profile view of a person with a bob-style haircut and bangs).  We would each draw inside the outline to make a self-portrait that we would hang up in the classroom. The teacher had already gone through and written our names on each piece of paper based on our gender. As she took roll, she would call out each of our names, and hand us the piece of paper with the boy or girl outline. Everything was going great until she got to my name. She called my name, acknowledged me, and then looked down at the paper she was holding, uncomfortably. She mumbled something about how they had me listed as a boy on the official school roster and she hadn’t made any extra handouts. She had a boy outline for me. It was only 4th grade, and being mistaken for a boy in 4th grade is mortifying – not to mention the fact that I was already terribly shy and hated having attention called to me. The whole class laughed and I sank into my chair, turning bright red. She quickly recovered and modified the outline with a sharpie marker so that it would have long flowing hair, and moved on. But clearly this has stuck with me to this day! Somehow, the school district listed me as a boy until the 6th grade, even though surely my teachers every year prior to that had marked down that I was, in fact, a girl. I guess they just made assumptions based on my name.  There are all sorts of bigger reasons not to do gendered activities for young people – let this story be yet another reason why you shouldn’t. 

3.  Please let us know about any book/s you are looking forward to reading in the coming months.

I just came home from a big comic book festival called the Small Press Expo, and I bought a big stack of books there – so most of the books I’m excited about right now are graphic novels. I’m really excited to read The Property by Rutu Modan, American Elf Vol. 4 by James Kochalka, March by Rep. John Lewis (drawn by Nate Powell) and Alone Forever by Liz Prince (which comes out in February).


Check out the Tour Schedule here


Monday, July 15, 2013

Blog Tour: Viral Nation by Shaunta Grimes

Book Description:
After a virus claimed nearly the entire global population, the world changed. The United States splintered into fifty walled cities where the surviving citizens clustered to start over. The Company, which ended the plague by bringing a life-saving vaccine back from the future, controls everything. They ration the scant food and supplies through a lottery system, mandate daily doses of virus suppressant, and even monitor future timelines to stop crimes before they can be committed.

Brilliant but autistic, sixteen-year-old Clover Donovan has always dreamed of studying at the Waverly-Stead Academy. Her brother and caretaker, West, has done everything in his power to make her dream a reality. But Clover’s refusal to part with her beloved service dog denies her entry into the school. Instead, she is drafted into the Time Mariners, a team of Company operatives who travel through time to gather news about the future.

When one of Clover’s missions reveals that West’s life is in danger, the Donovans are shattered. To change West’s fate, they’ll have to take on the mysterious Company. But as its secrets are revealed, they realize that the Company’s rule may not be as benevolent as it seems. In saving her brother, Clover will face a more powerful force than she ever imagined… and will team up with a band of fellow misfits and outsiders to incite a revolution that will change their destinies forever.


Interview
Shaunta Grimes


What inspired you to write Viral Nation​?
I was inspired by a lot of things when I wrote Viral Nation. One thing that really inspired the character of James Donovan, the father of the main characters Clover and West, was the execution of Ronnie Lee Gardner in Utah in 2010. Gardner was put to death by firing squad. So many people wanted to be on the firing squad that they had to hold a lottery. At the time I lived close to where he was executed, and I was really affected. I started thinking about the men on the firing squad, and how at least some of them probably had families at home and how it would affect someone to fire a gun at a target on a human being's chest, no matter what that person was convicted of doing. James Donovan grew out of those wonderings.

Is it Dystopian?
I think of Viral Nation as a story about a broken Utopia. Most modern dystopian stories take place during the apocalypse or just after, or if they take place years later they deal with the collapse of society as a result. In my story, society has had 16 years to rebuild. The world looks different, and people are still struggling, but everyone works, everyone has just enough, and thanks to time travel there is very little capital crime. But things aren't what they seem. So, yes, Viral Nation is a dystopia. Clover and West and Jude and the rest of the Freaks uncover the broken parts of their society that the Company is trying so hard to hide.

Can you tell us a bit about the main character, Clover?
Oh, Clover. I love her so much. She was such a joy and such a pain the ass to write. She has autism in a world where differences are even less tolerated than they are in our society today. Her service bulldog Mango helps her get through school and gives her the unconditional support and friendship that she absolutely needs. Her brother might get frustrated with her and with the sacrifices he's had to make to take care of her, but he is her rock. Writing her relationships with West and with her new friend, Jude, were the best parts of writing Viral Nation. Clover is brilliant and a little weird and a real mix of strength and fragility that I think readers will connect with.

What books do you look forward to reading this year?
I'm a full time student, studying English, so during the school year I don’t have a lot of time for pleasure reading. I love the summers, where I get to dig in and read the long, epic books that I love. This summer, I'm reading George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire books. They're magnificent! The world building is awe inspiring.

Any advice to aspiring authors?
I think any writer would tell someone who aspired to be one to keep writing, and to read a lot. Those are the two basic building blocks. Learn to read like a writer by asking questions about why you love certain books, what about them make them resonate with you, and try to figure out how to incorporate what you learn into your writing. Everything you write is an opportunity to become a better writer. Also, try to insert yourself into a community of writers. Find a local writers group, hang out with other people you know who want to be writers, go to conferences, readings, take classes.

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