Tuesday, July 16, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 8 - Things that appeal to me on blogs



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

15 quick bullet points of things that appeal to me on blogs is the task for Day 8, so let's see...

  • semi-regular posts (but not too many!)
  • pics of the cover that are neither too big nor too small
  • clear titles (I want to know up front if it is a review, cover reveal or whatever)
  • ratings aren't necessary as long as the text tells me enough
  • similar reading tastes
  • reliable reviews
  • a nice selection of non-review posts
  • some regular posts I can look forward to
  • personal posts - I like to get to know the person behind the blog
  • comments
  • audiobooks - admit to reading them, they count too!
  • NO music, sound effects or anything similar - I absolutely despise this "trend"
  • no fancy color schemes for the text, easy to read really appeals to me (I want to be able to read without my glasses if I feel like it
  • No captcha!
  • I can easily find what I'm looking for


What about you? What appeals to you? Is there anything you would recommend I change?


Monday, July 15, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 7 - Blogging Quirks



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

Today is Day 7 and we have a full week of the 15 Day Blogger Challenge behind us. Today is all about blogging quirks and I have to admit, I am not sure what my quirks are.

I cannot write a review right after finishing a book. The book may be fresh in my mind, but I would never be able to get it all in, in fact, I usually forget something if I write the review right away.

I try to steer clear of too many I's in my posts, especially in the reviews, because it feels odd, but there are many, many cases where I miserably fail.

I am constantly late and usually only manage to schedule a handful of posts. When you see blog posts, usually I really just finished writing them.

Do those count as blogging quirks???


Sunday, July 14, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 6 - Book Shopping



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

Today's Day 6 already and I'm surprised. What happened??? Anyway, today, I am going to introduce you to my kind of book shopping! This will be a short entry because I think I'm fairly easy.

I do not buy exclusively at one place, but usually look around wherever I am when I feel like getting a new book. This can be online (TBD or the big yellow A) or in stores wherever I am. Sometimes, I already know what I'm looking for, so I will simply seek out that particular book and I'm done, other days I have no clue and just want the book shopping experience. Those are the days when I will spend quite a while looking around, maybe disappearing behind a stack of books or a row of opened windows with book summaries before I make my ultimate decision.

That's me, very random, I guess...

How do you shop for books?


Saturday, July 13, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 5 - Tear Jerker



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

Today, on Day 5, I am supposed to recommend a tear jerker to you. For me, there is a combination of two books that created a really bad tear jerker. I cried and cried for a majority of the second book, but the first book is already oh so sad, I do not want to exclude it.

The books are:



Richelle Mead's Shadow Kiss and Blood Promise really made me cry a lot. You have the tragedy around Lissa and at the same time the sad, sad events revolving around Rose and Dimitry. I know even reading this a second time will not make it easier. I will certainly start crying again!

Can you recommend a tear jerker? I would love to hear about it!

Friday, July 12, 2013

[Review] The Rules for Disappearing by Ashley Elston



Ashley Elston: The Rules for Disappearing
[YA mystery/thriller]
Disney Hyperion
ISBN: 978-1-4231-6897-3
312 pages

You can buy it here:
The Rules for Disappearing

Summary: (from Goodreads.com)
She’s been six different people in six different places: Madeline in Ohio, Isabelle in Missouri, Olivia in Kentucky . . . But now that she’s been transplanted to rural Louisiana, she has decided that this fake identity will be her last.

Witness Protection has taken nearly everything from her. But for now, they’ve given her a new name, Megan Rose Jones, and a horrible hair color. For the past eight months, Meg has begged her father to answer one question: What on earth did he do – or see – that landed them in this god-awful mess? Meg has just about had it with all the Suits’ rules — and her dad’s silence. If he won’t help, it’s time she got some answers for herself.

But Meg isn’t counting on Ethan Landry, an adorable Louisiana farm boy who’s too smart for his own good. He knows Meg is hiding something big. And it just might get both of them killed. As they embark on a perilous journey to free her family once and for all, Meg discovers that there’s only one rule that really matters — survival.

My thoughts:
My thoughts about this book may be quite choppy, but I will try my best.

I have seen various shows and movies and read books about the witness protection system. Usually it is either portrayed as a flawed system that has problems keeping the people brought in safe and you can see the problems the witnesses have with their life, but hardly ever do we get to see a book from the point of view of a minor in the system (off the top of my head, I vaguely remember one other book from long, long ago, but there the premise was entirely different). Ashley Elston instead concentrates on Meg, the minor who is in the witness protection program, and through her eyes shows the trials and tribulations Meg's entire family goes through. It is not easy for either of her family members, and we see it all. Elston does not sugarcoat anything. The many changes of lives in the family due to possibly being found out, the small mistakes that can cause a change of address (and name) for Meg's family - through flashbacks and Meg's memories, we find out what happened in her previous locations.

The one thing we are kept in the dark about is the why. Why is Meg's family in the program? What happened that made them have to disappear, to fear for their lives? Slowly, almost at the same time as Meg do we uncover bits and pieces of what happened, what got them in the situation.

The suspense and tension kept me aboard throughout the book and the more light-hearted moments kept a nice balance. I enjoyed that many of the fun moments included Ethan and that he was a loyal friend to Meg no matter what. In fact, the loyalty the teenagers in this book showed was impressive and I believe it is a step into the right direction, even though they sometimes went a bit overboard.

Nonetheless, I think the suspense could have been kept up a bit longer. My main issue was the quick resolve of the family's place in the witness protection program.

If you are looking for a good young adult novel where the parents are finally not only not absent, but also try to do the best for their children, this book should please you. They have problems of their own and try to deal with them as best as they can, but they are also there for the children in their own way. Not everyone may agree with their ideas of how to deal with certain situations, but the situation is an extreme one and with the issues that are later revealed, I can in part understand and sympathize with the parents' actions.

Rating:
4/5

FTC: I received an e-galley from the publisher through Netgalley and I bought a hardcover copy with my own money.


[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 4 - Flinging it



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

On Day 4, I'm supposed to tell you about the last book I flung across the room.

I'm having a hard time coming up with a book for this one. I rarely fling books anywhere because far too often, the books I end up not liking are on my e-reader or on my e-reader app on my phone and I have to admit I like them both a lot. I will close the book, delete it and console myself with another book I hopefully like better.

Usually, when I buy a paperback or a hardcover, I am pretty certain I will enjoy it, so disappointment in those books only happens in very few occasions. If it happens, I will usually try to find a good home for it somewhere else because when I buy paper copies they come highly recommended and I figure it is me, not the book.

How do you treat disappointing books? Do you actually fling them? I have to admit, I would love to experience that feeling of flinging a book across the room. I think it might be a very liberating feeling...

Thursday, July 11, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 3 - Blogging BFFs



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

Day 3 lets me show off my Blogging BFFs. Incidentally, I really have my Blogging BFFs, thanks to the last Bout of Books, where I met my Book BFFs. They are: Rie of Mission To Read , Melissa of Harley Bear Book Blog, Lindsay of The Novel Life, and Melina of The Pretty Nifty YA Reader. The girls are wonderful people, friends and I love talking to them about all things books and blogs. I hope you will check out their blogs and maybe leave a short note, if you feel like it.


Wednesday, July 10, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 2 - Bedtime Reading Ritual



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in.

On Day 2 everything revolves around bedtime reading rituals.

I usually go to bed whenever I start feeling a little (a lot, actually, most of the time!) tired. Depending on the time, I will bring my current book to bed with me and read until I fall asleep. Luckily, the mister is nice enough to clear off the bed when I fall asleep before I can move the book to my nightstand.

When I don't feel like leaving the light on, I usually take my phone and open the Kindle app on it. This works quite well because I tend to dislike light when I'm really, really tired already. My phone's screen automatically shuts off if I haven't been reading for a while, so it's easier for me. Another option, if I feel I cannot concentrate on a book, I head over to the Bloglovin' app to read a few blog posts.


[Waiting on Wednesday] Tandem by Anna Jarzab



Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature hosted by Jill of Breaking the Spine that spotlights upcoming releases we're eagerly anticipating.



Summary: (from amazon.com)
Everything repeats.
You. Your best friend. Every person you know.
Many worlds, many lives--infinite possibilities.
Welcome to the multiverse.

Sixteen-year-old Sasha Lawson has only ever known one small, ordinary life. When she was young, she loved her grandfather's stories of parallel worlds, inhabited by girls who looked like her but led totally different lives. Sasha never believed such worlds were real—until now, when she finds herself thrust into one against her will.

To prevent imminent war, Sasha must slip into the life of an alternate version of herself, a princess who has vanished on the eve of her arranged marriage. If Sasha succeeds in fooling everyone, she will be returned home; if she fails, she'll be trapped in another girl's life forever. As time runs out, Sasha finds herself torn between two worlds, two lives, and two young men vying for her love—one who knows her secret, and one who believes she's someone she's not.


Release Date: October 8, 2013


Tuesday, July 09, 2013

[15 Day Book Blogger Challenge] Day 1 - Bookish Confessions



April from Good Books and Good Wine is doing the 15 Day Blogger Challenge for the next few days and I decided to join in. I am already a tad bit late, but the mister wanted my help with his German class, so I closed my laptop yesterday without finishing this blog post. Instead of rushing and posting two days today, I have decided to just stay a day behind.

For Day 1, the task is (ahem, was) to come up with 15 bookish confessions...

1) My bookshelves are sorted - first by read & unread books and books for university, and then by author's last name.

2) I laugh and cry in public when I'm reading - and I only feel a little bit embarrassed by that!

3) I hate the ending of a series I love, I usually have a hard time reading those last pages.

4) Occasionally, I love TSTL heroines - but I need to know up front that this is what I am in for. They can be funny!

5) I am bad with names - no matter how much I enjoy a book, I usually have to look up the name of the characters again when I write a review or when I talk about it.

6) However, I usually remember the plot of a book I read and kept - a relative tested me because he couldn't believe it. My memory is very selective, I guess?

7) I ditch books - and I don't have a real set rule for when and why.

8) Of the top of my head, I cannot come up with a single movie adaptation of a book I would truly support and admit to loving.

9) Other people touching the books on my shelves can make me freak out. I usually try to suppress the urge to jump them and make them take a step back, but it really bothers me.

10) I have many hyped YA novels on my shelves that are still waiting to be read. It's like, I know I should read them, but something's keeping me, because it may just not be what I like.

11) I hate, hate, hate cover changes! Especially within a series it really bothers me. I just bought the first (couple) book(s) with one cover style and now you change it? That is so uncool!

12) I love classics, but hardly ever the ones I need to read for school.

13) I desperately need to get my personal library down to a smaller number of books, because we don't have all that much room left. The problem: I hate parting with my books.

14) I can read books in German, English and French, but usually, I stick to English and German. I wish I skipped between languages a bit more evenly.

15) Thinking about my Mt. TBR almost causes anxiety attacks. It is way too big and it is the one part of my shelves I really should reduce, but I don't have the heart to give away those books, because I keep thinking I'm actually interested in reading them - eventually...

Bonus confession

16) My bags are all big enough to carry at least a paperback or my smartphone (with an e-reader app) so that I am always with something to read if I get stuck with some extra time. Most of my bags are in fact big enough to carry a hardcover. Do you have any bookish confessions? Let me know!