Tuesday, April 01, 2014

{Blitz} Of Silver and Beasts by @TrishWolfe {Giveaway} @NereydaG1003


Of Silver and Beasts (Goddess Wars #1)
Release Date:  April 19th 2013
New Adult Fantasy

Summary from Goodreads:
In the sand-covered queendom of Cavan, the goddess once saved a young Kaliope’s life, preventing the mercury her father attempted to hide in her blood from reaching her heart. Now, a cybernetic clamp filters it, but the silver streaks swirling faintly beneath her skin are a constant reminder that she’s different.

When nineteen-year-old Kaliope is chosen as head of the Nactue Guard, she becomes the sworn protector to her empress. In the midst of an invasion on a neighboring land, Kaliope is placed in charge of guarding Prince Caben, the last heir to his kingdom. But when they’re attacked by the feared Otherworlders, Caben and Kaliope are abducted and taken below to a realm where they must fight for their life in a caged arena.

Kaliope struggles to protect her princely charge, keeping him and herself alive while battling inhumanly opponents, and trying to save the stolen, sacred relic that will restore her empress’s life force and all of Cavan. And if she can somehow awaken the goddess within her, she may save what’s most important.

New Adult Dark Fantasy: Intended for readers 17 years of age and older.

Available from:
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Of Darkness and Crowns (Goddess Wars #2)
Release Date: September 1, 2013
New Adult Fantasy

***WARNING: MAJOR SPOILERS IF YOU HAVEN’T READ BOOK ONE***

Summary from Goodreads:
The moon goddess has taken up residency within Prince Caben, darkening his mind and soul. Now he hunts the very women he sacrificed his life to save, his conflicting desires for love and power raging a battle within him. Kaliope possesses the key to setting Bale free, and Caben will stop at nothing to see his goddess restored. Even if that means destroying the kingdom he’s sworn to protect, and the infuriating woman who torments his thoughts.

Kaliope, now the leader to the newly formed Nactue Guard, has vowed to save Caben. But with a traitor lurking among her people, and powers she’s unable to fully control, Kaliope’s mission becomes shrouded with doubt. Her new role as watcher over Caben’s kingdom brings a burden she’s unable to bear alone, and appointing the right person in charge of the prince’s affairs has turned a kingdom against the Nactue leader. Saving her stubborn, willful prince from the darkness overtaking him will be the battle of her life, and she needs people she can trust by her side. But bad blood between members of the Nactue obscure Kaliope’s journey, while her feelings for Caben cloud her judgment.

When the time comes to do what she must to destroy the goddess of chaos, will she be able to if it means losing Caben forever?


Book two of the Goddess Wars is told in dual point of view from Kaliope and Caben. New Adult Dark Fantasy, intended for readers 17 years of age and older. 

Available from:
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About the Author
From an early age, Trisha Wolfe dreamed up fantasy worlds and characters and was accused of talking to herself. Today, she lives in South Carolina with her family and writes full time, using her fantasy worlds as an excuse to continue talking to herself. For more information on Trisha Wolfe and her works, please visit: www.TrishaWolfe.com

***Author Links***
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***GIVEAWAY***
1 Caben Flask Necklace (US only)

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{Trailer} How to Get Ainsley Bishop to Fall in Love with You by @tm_franklin {Giveaway} @NereydaG1003


How to Get Ainsley Bishop to Fall in Love with You
Release Date: 06/12/14

Summary from Goodreads:
1. Join the Drama Club
2. Do Your Research
3. Provide Something She Needs
4. Make Her Feel Secure and Important
5. Pay Attention!
6. Be a Good Friend
7. Be More Attractive
8. Be Complimentary, But Not Obsequious
9. Establish Rapport

10. Be Encouraging and Supportive

11. Give Her Space

12. Admit When You’re Wrong and Apologize

13. Find the Perfect Birthday Gift

14. Tell Her How You Feel

Seventeen-year-old Oliver Wendell Holmes (Yes, his parents are just that peculiar, but his brother’s name is Sherlock, so it could have been worse) knows that he’s different. He’s quirky, awkward, and he’s okay with that. Oliver also likes making lists—meticulous procedures for achieving his goals, step-by-step. Whether it’s “How to Get an A in Chemistry” or “How to Get Accepted to MIT,” he has a process, and it’s worked for him so far. He doesn’t even care that the popular kids mock him. Oliver’s got his eye on the prize.

So when he decides it’s time to declare his feelings for Ainsley Bishop, the girl of his dreams, it’s only natural for him to make a list—a point-by-point strategy to win her heart. He knows it will take a grand gesture for her to see all he has to offer, and her approaching birthday provides the ideal opportunity for Oliver to put his plan into action.

Finding the perfect gift is a challenge Oliver meets with his usual dogged determination. He’ll need to watch her carefully for clues to pinpoint exactly what he should give her. And along the way, he might just learn that what Ainsley really needs is not quite what he expected.



About the Author
T.M. Franklin started out her career writing non-fiction in a television newsroom. Graduating with a B.A. in Communications specializing in broadcast journalism and production, she worked for nine years as a major market television news producer, and garnered two regional Emmy Awards, before she resigned to be a full-time mom and part-time freelance writer. After writing and unsuccessfully querying a novel that she now admits, “is not that great,” she decided to follow the advice of one of the agents who turned her down—write some more and get better at it. Her first published novel, MORE, was born during National Novel Writing month, a challenge to write a novel in thirty days.

She lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, Mike, is mom to two boys, Justin and Ryan, and has an enormous black dog named Rocky who’s always lying nearby while she’s writing. Whether he’s soothed by the clicking of the computer keys or just waiting for someone to rub his belly is up for debate.

In addition to MORE, Franklin penned the Amazon best-selling short story, Window, as well as another short story, A Piece of Cake, which appears in the Romantic Interludes anthology. The sequel to MORE, The Guardians, will be released November 7, 2013.

Connect with T.M. Franklin
Website | Facebook | Twitter  | Goodreads

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{Review} Witchstruck @VictoriaLamb1 {Published} @HarlequinTEEN

Witchstruck
If she sink, she be no witch and shall be drowned. If she float, she be a witch and must be hanged. 

Meg Lytton has always known she is different;that she bears a dark and powerful gift. But in 1554 England, in service at Woodstock Palace to the banished Tudor princess Elizabeth, it has never been more dangerous to practice witchcraft. Meg knows she must guard her secret carefully from the many suspicious eyes watching over the princess and her companions. One wrong move could mean her life, and the life of Elizabeth, rightful heir to the English throne. With witchfinder Marcus Dent determined to have Meg's hand in marriage, and Meg's own family conspiring against the English queen, there isn't a single person Meg can trust. Certainly not the enigmatic young Spanish priest Alejandro de Castillo, despite her undeniable feelings. But when all the world turns against her, Meg must open her heart to a dangerous choice. The Secret Circle meets The Other Boleyn Girl in Witchstruck ,the first book of the magical Tudor Witch trilogy.

Biography

Daughter of the bestselling novelist Charlotte Lamb, Victoria Lamb grew up in the Isle of Man off the north-west coast of England. There she enjoyed a vast library of books and a family of writers from which to take inspiration. She now lives with her own family in a three-hundred year old farmhouse on Cornwall's Bodmin Moor, where she walks every day and writes in a study overlooking fields of moorland ponies.

The Lucy Morgan series, beginning with The Queen's Secret, revolves around the intriguing life of Shakespeare's "Dark Lady of the Sonnets" and is set against the backdrop of theatrical London and the Elizabethan court.

Witchstruck is the first in the Tudor Witch trilogy published by Harlequin Teen in the States. It follows Meg Lytton, a teen witch in Tudor England struggling to serve the princess Elizabeth, imprisoned under suspicion of treason, and avoid the attentions of the witchfinder.





So after getting Witchfall to read.  I decided to go back and reread Witchstruck and let me tell you.  I just changed my old review!!  This series is so good!  Mystery, magic and Elizabeth's run for the throne!  It is a recipe for a great book and even better series.  It was fast paced, witchy, 370 pages of wonderful!  Lamb is such a talented author!


"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."


Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.


When the power falls on me, it buzzes in the warm, dark spaces of my skull. It stings like nettles at the tips of my fingers. The power is a fever I have felt since early childhood, a heat in the blood that leaves me flushed and unsteady, dreaming in daylight. My aunt once told me the power came from being born on the spring equinox under the martial sign of the Ram, with baleful Saturn rising. And truly my power is often strongest when Mars and Saturn clash in the heavens, as they did the day I was sent to serve the imprisoned Princess Elizabeth. Yet on that occasion I was unable to influence my own fate.

I felt the power that evening of the full moon in June though, sitting cross-legged in the ruins of the old palace at Woodstock. I stared across the candlelit circle at my aunt's narrow, slant-eyed face and hungered to be a witch, just like her.

Aunt Jane leaned forward, her fair hair wild and unbound about her shoulders. With her witch's dagger, a black-handled athame, she cut a jagged gash across a dead lamb's belly.

"By Hecate," she chanted under her breath, widening the gash with her fingers until the lamb's entrails began to spill bloodily onto the floor, "by our Lady of the Forest, strengthen our spell tonight. Let this dumb creature answer the question: Shall the Princess Elizabeth be Queen?"

Beside me, Elizabeth shuddered. The lamb had been dead three days and the smell from its innards was disgusting. Her pale, bejewelled hand gripped mine compulsively.

Though the princess was five years my senior, tonight I knew more than her, for this was her first attendance at a moon ritual. Elizabeth looked younger than her twenty years, even if the dark shadows under her eyes suggested otherwise. Yet she held herself very regally considering her recent stay in the grim Tower of London, accused of conspiring with the rebels against Queen Mary. Half-sister to the Queen, Elizabeth always looked as though she were holding court in one of her own great houses, when in truth she was little better than a prisoner in this ruined old palace in the middle of nowhere. Her gown of black velvet, no doubt splendid when new, looked worn and dowdy as she kneeled in the dust beside me. Yet the princess did draw the eye with the elegant length of her neck, and her hair—fair, though with a strong reddish glint—which peeped out from under her hood.

Her small dark eyes, hooded like a hawk's, were staring fixedly at my aunt through the smoke. Her mouth was also small, pinched at the corners, and her high forehead spoke of tremendous learning, though she knew little of the witch's craft her own mother had been accused of practising.

"Is the magick not working?" the princess demanded, her voice sharp with frustration.

"Hush, my lady, give it time." I looked back at my aunt, the fine hairs on my neck rising in horror. My head was spinning in the fragrant smoke from the candles, my mouth uncomfortably dry. Already I could see the blank stare of my aunt's eyes as the spell worked its magick on her. Soon Aunt Jane would fall into a trance and there would be no chance of questioning her after that. The princess squeezed my hand again and I spoke, catching her urgency. "What do you see in the lamb's innards, Aunt Jane?"

"I see a coronation," my aunt replied in her hoarse voice. Slowly, with delicate, bloodied fingers, she probed the slimy coiled intestines of the lamb. Its liver glistened in her hand and she bent over it, staring. "I see good fortune following bad, and a reward for long years of patience. I see the Lady Elizabeth walking through a great doorway with a crown on her head, and all the people on their knees."

"But what of my sister?" Elizabeth demanded. The exiled princess sat back on her heels, her face pale and tense, her usual caution abandoned. "Is the Queen going to die? When will my coronation come to pass?"

My aunt did not reply. She trembled, swaying where she sat, lost in the grip of prophecy.

"There is danger for all of us," she managed at last. Her voice grated in the silence. "No one is to be trusted. Beware a traveller who comes over water, over land."

Elizabeth and I both stared at her in horror, unable to move. Danger for us all? Then something tugged at the far edges of my hearing and I stiffened.

Turning my head, I caught the echo and scrape of booted footsteps downstairs in the old palace. Then the sound of a man whistling to keep away the spirits of the dead.

The Lady Elizabeth had heard him too. She looked round at me apprehensively, her eyes darker than ever. "It must be one of Bedingfield's guards, making his patrol. We must leave at once. I can't be seen here."

"Better to wait until he's gone, my lady."

"The fire!" My aunt suddenly gasped, terrifying me. "The fire…it burns me!"

The vision in her head must have changed, for her thin face had contorted with horror. My aunt's watery blue eyes were no longer staring at the bloody coiled innards, but over my head. She lifted her shaking finger to point, as though someone was standing behind me in the shadows. I glanced back over my shoulder, unnerved. But the three of us were alone in the dusty room.

Then my aunt gave a sudden, high-pitched cry and fell backwards on the soiled floorboards. She began flailing about and shaking as violently as the village idiot in one of his fits.

I gawped at her like an idiot myself, momentarily lost for what should be done.

"Keep her quiet!" the Lady Elizabeth urged me, her eyes wide with panic. "The guard will hear us!"

Tripping on the hem of my gown, I scrabbled round to where my aunt still lay thrashing, spittle on her lips, her eyes almost white in the shadows.

"Hush, Aunt Jane, for pity's sake," I told her urgently, my heart thundering at the possibility that we might be discovered. I stroked the hair back from her face, hoping to comfort her, and leaned close to her ear. "One of the princess's guards is downstairs. He may hear you."

For a moment I despaired of silencing her. But some grain of sense must have filtered through, for Aunt Jane's wild tossing gradually slowed and then ceased altogether. Her body lapsed into a kind of restless unconsciousness in my arms.

Shivering now, I stared about the old palace chamber. If we were caught here tonight, with these unholy instruments strewn about, we would be accused of witchcraft. And rightly so, for we were far from innocent. Even the princess would face execution if discovered like this, as her poor mother had gone to the block when Elizabeth was but a small child. Being the Queen had not saved Anne Boleyn from an accusation of witchcraft, any more than being of royal blood would save her daughter now.

I looked at the Lady Elizabeth. She was still on her knees, frozen in shock.

"My lady," I said softly, "these candles must be put out and all traces of the circle rubbed away before we leave. Will you help me?"

Elizabeth nodded, though I could see she was badly frightened. She leaned forward and began frantically rubbing at the circle my aunt had drawn in the dust, her hands soon filthy.

Ignoring the foul stench, I dragged the bloodied lamb back to the sack and pushed it inside, along with its entrails. My aunt's soiled knife lay on the floorboards beside her. The cup of ceremonial wine we had shared was empty now but its dregs were still potent if anyone should think to taste them.

Downstairs, the whistling had stopped. I listened intently for a while, but could hear nothing.

"Meg?" my aunt moaned, stirring as she came back slowly to herself.

I looked down into that white, drawn face. What had caused Aunt Jane to lose control like that? I had never seen her so wild. Perhaps she was growing too old to control the spirits we had invoked. I rubbed her hands gently between my own to warm them, as though she were the child and I her guardian.

"Better now?" I asked my aunt softly. "Are you able to walk? We must get out of the palace."

"No," she groaned, pushing me away. "Not yet. The spell was not finished in proper fashion."

Struggling weakly to her knees, my aunt cast about for her instruments. Then she saw the circle erased and the candles extinguished.

"Why have the candles been put out?" she demanded. "Where is my sacred knife? Help me. We must appease the spirits."

"Aunt, there is no time to relight the candles. We must return to the lodge before they discover that the Lady Elizabeth is missing. If anyone should find us with these"—and I indicated the remains of our magickal work—"it will be we who burn. Don't forget the Lady Elizabeth is a prisoner under threat of death. If her sister the Queen should ever hear of this…"

Aunt Jane seemed to grasp the truth in what I said, the crazed light slowly fading from her face.

"Yes, you are right," my aunt agreed reluctantly, and began to gather up her various tools instead. "But the spirits will not be happy."

I helped her tidy the last objects away, cleaning her ceremonial knife before wrapping it in its stained leather sheath.

Flashing me a weary smile, my aunt tucked the knife inside the bodice of her gown. "You are a good girl, Meg," she whispered. "If only my sister could have been more like you. But she had no time for the power once she met your father, only for marriage. And look where that brought her. To an early grave, never to see her daughter grow up so gifted and fair."

"I'm hardly fair, aunt."

She laughed then. "Fair to me, Meg. And you do have beauty of a sort—"

I shushed her, holding up a hand. I shot a warning look at the Lady Elizabeth too...

{Review} The Eighth Day by @diannesalerni {Published} @HarperCollins @Epicreads

The Eighth DayIn this riveting fantasy adventure, thirteen-year-old Jax Aubrey discovers a secret eighth day with roots tracing back to Arthurian legend. Fans of Percy Jackson will devour this first book in a new series that combines exciting magic and pulse-pounding suspense.

When Jax wakes up to a world without any people in it, he assumes it's the zombie apocalypse. But when he runs into his eighteen-year-old guardian, Riley Pendare, he learns that he's really in the eighth day—an extra day sandwiched between Wednesday and Thursday. Some people—like Jax and Riley—are Transitioners, able to live in all eight days, while others, including Evangeline, the elusive teenage girl who's been hiding in the house next door, exist only on this special day.

And there's a reason Evangeline's hiding. She is a descendant of the powerful wizard Merlin, and there is a group of people who wish to use her in order to destroy the normal seven-day world and all who live in it. Torn between protecting his new friend and saving the entire human race from complete destruction, Jax is faced with an impossible choice. Even with an eighth day, time is running out.

Stay tuned for The Inquisitor's Mark, the spellbinding second novel in the Eighth Day series.

Biography

Dianne K. Salerni is an elementary school teacher living in Chester County, Pennsylvania with her husband and two daughters.

Dianne's first novel, We Hear the Dead (Sourcebooks 2010), recounts the true story of Maggie Fox, a teenaged girl credited with the invention of the séance in 1848. A short film based on We Hear the Dead and titled The Spirit Game premiered at the 2013 Cannes Film Festival.

Her second novel, The Caged Graves (Clarion/HMH 2013), is inspired by a real historical mystery in the mountains of Pennsylvania and was named a Junior Library Guild Selection and a Best YA Historical Novel for 2013 by BookPage.

The Eighth Day, the first book of a middle grade fantasy series about a secret day of the week, is due to be released by HarperCollins in April, 2014.

Dianne received her Bachelor's Degree in Elementary Education from the University of Delaware. She subsequently earned a Master's in Language Arts Education at the University of Pennsylvania before taking a job teaching in the Avon Grove School District. She has now been teaching fourth and fifth grade at Avon Grove for over 20 years. 



I was kinda scared to read this one.  As I wasn't sure what to expect.  Recently I just grab anything to review and see where it goes from there.  Well I have to say that I was surprised to find out that this was a fantasy book.  Half way through I was worried it was going to be one of those books that is written like a series and nothing really happens in the first book.  But, I am happy to report that this is NOT one of those.  This book would be a great stand alone.  But, and even better series.  Which I am also happy that I found out that this IS going to be one.  Book two called The Inquisitor's Mark should I am hoping be out this time next year.  Goodreads doesn't have a date for even the book posted as of yet.  So author Dianne if you are reading my review PLEASE let me know of a tenitive date so I know when to start stalking for an ARC.  I REALLY wish Harper would have sent this one to me in print so I could have done a giveaway.  All well.  You guys will just have to buy it on April 22 when it releases.  IT will be so worth it.

Ok so now that I spewed all of that above.  I loved this book for a few reasons.  The story itself was very easy to understand.  But, not to simple that teens wouldn't love it to.  I really thing that this one would set well for those in older Middle school and lower Teen.  But my daughter whom will be 10 this year and of course not in Middle School loved it as well.  And she understood what was going on.  The setting is our time which was great for a change.  To  many people are setting things in the future and the past.  It was nice to have a normal every day setting.  The characters were even better.  You have Jax whom lost his mom and now his dad.  And he is stuck with this guy that he never even met before.  Then of course he wakes up on his first 8th day and thinks its the zombie apocalypse/end of the world.  So what does he do?  He breaks into a Wal-mart and steals food and water.  Smart kid if you ask me.  I think I would be a cross between the bad guys and the good guys in this book.  I would deff use 8th day to my advantage but then I would donate a lot of money etc. to those in need.

I know with an extra day I would deff be able to get more books read (if you have seen my calendar you know what I mean)  But all in all I think that would just be a neat time to spend reflecting on what is going on in the world and your life. That is when you aren't running around trying to save the world.

I think my fav. character in this book is Evangeline. Although she has been jailed she doesn't let that stop her from being herself.  Quick thinking and magic help her to survive in a world that either wants her dead or being used.  

This is deff a book for all ages.  and shouldn't be missed.  

PS crap man this is one of the longest reviews Ive written in a while.

My fav quote from this book: PS this is from the Arc so hopefully it don't get cut.

"I'll be freakin' Harry Potter if you need me to be."

"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own. OR I purchased the book on my own."
Disclaimer: Thanks to Goodreads and Amazon for the book cover, about the book, and author information.

Ps author Dianne if you are reading this I would love to bring you on my show called #ReadOn its a live author web show. 

{Review} Children of the Revolution by #PeterRobinson {Giveaway} @HarperCollins

Children of the RevolutionMultiple award-winning, New York Times and #1 internationally bestselling author Peter Robinson returns with a superb tale of mystery and murder that takes acclaimed British Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks back to the early 1970s-a turbulent time of politics, change, and radical student activism

"Robinson rolls out a police procedural with exquisite precision."-USA Today

The body of a disgraced college lecturer is found on an abandoned railway line. In the four years since his dismissal for sexual misconduct, he'd been living like a hermit. So where did he get the 5,000 pounds found in his pocket?

Leading the investigation, Detective Chief Inspector Alan Banks begins to suspect that the victim's past may be connected to his death. Forty years ago the dead man attended a university that was a hotbed of militant protest and divisive, bitter politics. And as the seasoned detective well knows, some grudges are never forgotten-or forgiven. 

Just as he's about to break the case open, his superior warns him to back off. Yet Banks isn't about to stop, even if it means risking his career. He's certain there's more to the mystery than meets the eye . . . and more skeletons to uncover before the case can finally be closed.

Biography

Peter Robinson's award-winning novels have been named a Best-Book-of-the-Year by Publishers Weekly, a Notable Book by the New York Times, and a Page-Turner-of-the-Week by People magazine. Robinson was born and raised in Yorkshire but has lived in North America for over twenty-five years. He now divides his time between North America and the U.K. 




Well this is the first book that I have read by this author. And although this is book 21 in the Inspector Banks series I didn't feel that I missed out on to much. I loved the setting of Yorkshire, England.  The story was very good the characters interesting and the ending was even better as there was no cliff hanger and everything was tied up pretty well.  This is a fast to start crime novel that will grab the reader with a finely tunes plot that they will find is hard to put down.

"*I received a copy of this book for free to review, this in no way influenced my review, all opinions are 100% honest and my own."

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