For What It's Worth


Thursday, July 28, 2016

Whatever.: or how junior year became totally f$@ked by s.j. goslee


25819490Hilarity ensues when a slacker teen boy discovers he's gay, in this unforgettably funny YA debut.

Mike Tate is a normal dude. He and his friends have a crappy band (an excuse to drink cheap beer and rock out to the Lemonheads) and hang out in parking lots doing stupid board tricks. But when Mike's girlfriend Lisa, who knows him better than he does, breaks up with him, he realizes he's about to have a major epiphany that will blow his mind. And worse--he gets elected to homecoming court.

It's like the apocalypse came, only instead of nuclear bombs and zombies, Mike gets school participation, gay thoughts, and mother-effin' cheerleaders.

With the free spirit of The Perks of Being a Wallflower, the raw voice of Winger, and characters reminiscent of Freaks & Geeks, this debut YA offers a standout voice and a fresh, modern take on the coming-out story. ~
Goodreads

Source: ARC provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review

Review:

This seems to be the summer of light yet poignant coming of age stories (joining my recent reads: The Great American Whatever and A Week of Mondays) My short attention span summer addled brain could not be happier.

After Mike Tate’s girlfriend unceremoniously dumps him - and informs him that they weren’t even dating – Mike’s comfortable but clueless world is about to get rocked at his realization that he might be bisexual and he just might be attracted to his mortal enemy.

Whatever. does an excellent job of navigating Mike's sexuality and how that effects his friendships. Not everyone has the perfect, supportive response to Mike's news and his friends mixed reactions combined with Mike's inner conflict felt real.

Mike is not cutesy YA perfect – he gets high, drinks (there's a lot of *acting like a girl* as something negative talk) but it’s all pretty much normal teen stuff. What won me over to Mike so utterly and completely is how he treats his little sister Rosie. She’s a little odd – marches to the beat of her own drummer if you will – and Mike absolutely adores her. He builds Lego castles, turns their living room into a giant tent to watch cartoons, finds her missing hermit crabs every time they disappear. He’s just an A+ brother. And even though he stumbles with his friendships and is a little clueless at times it’s hard not to see that in his heart he’s a good guy, trying to work out some difficult and scary things.

The one downside that might give readers pause is the 3rd person narrative. It took me a while to get used to it and until I fell hard for Mike I found it distracting. It’s almost like he’s narrating his own life from above. I wish the author made a different choice but I loved the core story, humor and how it focused on friendships, family and sexuality enough to give it a pass.

The 3rd person narrative is a bit distracting at first but if you can make it past that, Whatever was a fun read with compelling characters and relationships that were flawed yet authentic to the teenage experience.

Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Review: A Duke to Remember (Season for scandal #2) by Kelly bowen




27416037Love takes the stage...

Elise deVries is not what she seems. By night, the actress captivates London theatergoers with her chameleon-like ability to slip inside her characters. By day, she uses her mastery of disguise to work undercover for Chegarre & Associates, an elite agency known for its discreet handling of indelicate scandals. But when Elise is tasked with locating the missing Duke of Ashland, she finds herself center stage in a real-life drama.

Noah Ellery left the glamour of the London aristocracy to pursue a simpler life in the country. He's managed to avoid any complications or entanglements—that is, until he lays eyes on Elise and realizes there's more to this beautiful woman than meets the eye. But when Elise reveals her real identity—and her true feelings for him—the runaway duke must confront the past he left behind . . . to keep the woman he loves forever. ~
Goodreads

Source: ARC provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review

Review:

Scandal, intrigue, romance! What’s not to love with this series?

Elise deVries is a partner with her brother Alexander and  Ivory Moore (the heroine of book #1, Duke of My Heart) in Chegarre & Associates. A master of disguise, it’s Elise’s job is to discreetly help the elite disentangle from their various scandals. One day she could be a ravishing French socialite – the next a bumbling male Doctor. Her latest assignment is on behalf of Lady Abigail Ellery. Her brother Noah has been missing, and presumed dead, for over 20 years. After their father dies, a cousin tries to take over the family estate, committing Abigail’s mother to Bedlam subjecting her to horrific abuse. To save the family, Elise needs to prove that Noah is alive and bring him home to claim his rightful spot as the Duke of Ashland.

Noah, has no intention of going back home to save anyone – least of all his mother – after their treatment of him as a child. His willpower is shaken after he meets Elise and starts to see that facing his demons might help make him whole again.

I loved how the romance between Elise and Noah played out. This isn’t one of those stories where you *think* the parents were awful but it was some weird misunderstanding and everyone reunites, happily ever after, the end. Noah’s parents were awful and Elise respects Noah’s pain. She does want Noah to go home and free his mother because she thinks the conditions are cruel and because she thinks it will give Noah closure but she never forces him to do anything or diminish his feelings about his past.

This was a really lovely story about two forthright and mature people who struggle to do the right thing vs. what feels safe for their hearts.

The ending was perfect. Elise and Noah get their HEA but not everything with Noah’s family is wrapped up in a tidy bow. And that’s how it should be. Things were very bleak for him – and his story actually gives insight to another recurring character in the series – that I hope gets his own book soon.

I highly recommend any of Bowen’s novels if you’re looking for mature, complex character’s (especially her heroines!) and stories that pack a punch beyond even the romance.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Review: the great american whatever by Tim Federle


25663382Quinn Roberts is a sixteen-year-old smart aleck and Hollywood hopeful whose only worry used to be writing convincing dialogue for the movies he made with his sister Annabeth. Of course, that was all before—before Quinn stopped going to school, before his mom started sleeping on the sofa…and before Annabeth was killed in a car accident.

Enter Geoff, Quinn’s best friend who insists it’s time that Quinn came out—at least from hibernation. One haircut later, Geoff drags Quinn to his first college party, where instead of nursing his pain, he meets a guy—a hot one—and falls hard. What follows is an upside-down week in which Quinn begins imagining his future as a screenplay that might actually have a happily-ever-after ending—if, that is, he can finally step back into the starring role of his own life story. ~
Goodreads

Source: Finished copy provided by Simon & Schuster Books at ALA16

Review:

The Great American Whatever is a quirky coming of age story that’s often laugh out loud funny, despite all the overwhelming grief the protagonist, Quinn, is feeling.

After the death of his sister, Annabeth, Quinn has closed himself off from school, friends and most importantly his film making. Once an obsession, Quinn can’t seem to finish his screen play without the A to his Q in Q&A Productions.

His best friend Geoff finally drags him out of the house to a college party where he meets the very sexy Amir, forcing Quinn back into the world and to face things he’s been avoiding for years. His sexuality, his self absorption, his future, Annabeth’s death and most importantly what is real vs the script for life he always has running in his head.

Quinn has a way of viewing everyone as as actors and life as a series of acts as a way of seeing the world and people as he wants them to be rather than how they are. He experiences a seismic shift once reality and truth can’t be avoided anymore.

Quinn’s grief is palpable but somehow not overwhelming because of his self deprecating humor. It seems odd to find humor in that much grief but it was this that made me connect to Quinn the most. I just got him – and his coping mechanisms – because that’s what I did when my mother died when I was in HS. You just want to form a protective shield around yourself and not be *that kid that lost someone* and avoid the awkward questions and well meaning conversations that follow. And it’s also difficult to move on and be happy when the person you loved can’t.

The book isn’t perfect. The writing could be a little precious in that way that YA book teens seemingly always have a witty comeback or know loads and loads of trivia but I think it works for Quinn. As a movie buff, I believed that he would be that quirky, awkward, smart and funny.

The book is also rooted in reality. That not everything works out perfect. Sometimes a first love is just that – the first – one of many to come and that’s ok. That maybe your sister was never as high on the pedestal that you tried to put her on. That your mom is flawed but she’s your mom and she’s trying.

There’s a bit of drama with Qunn’s best friend, Geoff, that acts as a catalyst for some things but, to me, opened a whole can of worms that the book didn’t quite have the time to explore fully but it’s a minor complaint.

The Great American Whatever is an easy, breezy type of read that nonetheless contains profound moments. It reminded me of a somewhat more grown-up version of Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda with a bit of that John Green type dialogue.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

#ala16 book spotlight–the keepsake/special books: Pax and Finding Winnie


It will take me awhile to make my way through reading and reviewing all my ALA16/Orlando books but I want to make sure they still get attention in the meantime.

I spotlighted the creepy books last week and this week I have a few that are special to me.

The first book is Pax by Sara Pennypacker, illustations by Jon Kassen. I had heard wonderful things about this book but it was this post by author Tammara Webber that sold me on Pax. When I saw it ALA I was so excited and got in line for the autographing session. Sara was wonderful and signed the book then I was moved down the line and illustrator Jon Klassen started drawing this little fox and I just about melted into a puddle of goo. HOW FREAKING CUTE IS THAT??? It’s probably my favorite book I got at the event. The cover – the autograph – the drawing. Gah! I want to hug it forever!

The next book is Finding Winnie: The True Story of the World’s Most Famous Bear by Lindsay Mattic, illustrations by Sophie Blackall. I’m a HUGE Winnie-the-Pooh fan. I have collectibles, clothes, sheets – you name it. So when I saw Finding Winnie – the story of the bear that inspired Winnie I had to buy it! They had an autographing session with the illustrator and I was all over that. Sophie was very nice and chatted to me about how the original Winnie-the-Pooh & friends stuffed animals are going to be restored after years of neglect.



IMG_20160625_122940


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***



22098550Pax by Sara Pennypacker, Jon Klasses (illustrations)
Publisher: Balzer + Bray
Published: February 2, 2016

Pax was only a kit when his family was killed, and “his boy” Peter rescued him from abandonment and certain death. Now the war front approaches, and when Peter’s father enlists, Peter has to move in with his grandpa. Far worse than being forced to leave home is the fact that Pax can’t go. Peter listens to his stern father—as he usually does—and throws Pax’s favorite toy soldier into the woods. When the fox runs to retrieve it, Peter and his dad get back in the car and leave him there—alone. But before Peter makes it through even one night under his grandfather’s roof, regret and duty spur him to action; he packs for a trek to get his best friend back and sneaks into the night. This is the story of Peter, Pax, and their independent struggles to return to one another against all odds. Told from the alternating viewpoints of Peter and Pax. ~ Goodreads


24819508Finding Winnie: The True tory of the WOrld’s Most Famous Bear by Lindsey Mattick, Sophie Blackall (illustrations)
Publisher: Little Brown for Young Readers’
Published: October 20,2015

Before Winnie-the-Pooh, there was a real bear named Winnie.
In 1914, Harry Colebourn, a veterinarian on his way to tend horses in World War I, followed his heart and rescued a baby bear. He named her Winnie, after his hometown of Winnipeg, and he took the bear to war.

Harry Colebourn's real-life great-granddaughter tells the true story of a remarkable friendship and an even more remarkable journey--from the fields of Canada to a convoy across the ocean to an army base in England...

And finally to the London Zoo, where Winnie made another new friend: a real boy named Christopher Robin.

Here is the remarkable true story of the bear who inspired Winnie-the-Pooh. ~
Goodreads

Monday, July 18, 2016

Review: nowhere but here (thunder road #1) by katie mcgarry


23492282An unforgettable new series from acclaimed author Katie McGarry about taking risks, opening your heart and ending up in a place you never imagined possible.
Seventeen-year-old Emily likes her life the way it is: doting parents, good friends, good school in a safe neighborhood. Sure, she's curious about her biological father—the one who chose life in a motorcycle club, the Reign of Terror, over being a parent—but that doesn't mean she wants to be a part of his world. But when a reluctant visit turns to an extended summer vacation among relatives she never knew she had, one thing becomes clear: nothing is what it seems. Not the club, not her secret-keeping father and not Oz, a guy with suck-me-in blue eyes who can help her understand them both.

Oz wants one thing: to join the Reign of Terror. They're the good guys. They protect people. They're…family. And while Emily—the gorgeous and sheltered daughter of the club's most respected member—is in town, he's gonna prove it to her. So when her father asks him to keep her safe from a rival club with a score to settle, Oz knows it's his shot at his dream. What he doesn't count on is that Emily just might turn that dream upside down.

No one wants them to be together. But sometimes the right person is the one you least expect, and the road you fear the most is the one that leads you home. ~
Goodreads

Review:

I adored Pushing the Limits – McGarry’s debut novel but haven’t connected to another one by her since. I keep trying and kind of decided that Nowhere But Here would be the *decider novel*. If I didn’t like it I would just throw in the towel with this author.

The males in her books are pretty much over protective, arrogant shits that treat girls like glass in need of body guards and that's what has turned me off so much. Even though this is a motorcycle club series, and actually about a guy whose job is to protect the heroine, the men are surprisingly less misogynistic than any of her previous books. The hero, Oz, is a truly good guy who respects Emily, and women in general. I was kind of blown away by and impressed by that.

Emily has a lot of fears and is the your typical innocent McGarry heroine – paired with the more experienced hero but overall, Emily is a well developed character that doesn’t come off as a special snowflake that everyone wants to hit on or deflower. I really liked her. Despite screaming BAD BOY FALLS FOR INNOCENT GIRL tragedy setup, I’m happy to report the romance was good! It’s not at all like the summary suggests. Oz and Emily are probably the two most level headed people in the whole book.

And that’s where things went south for me. *face palm* – the adults in this book have lost their ever loving minds! So many lies and ridiculous cover ups and nonsensical *clues* to chase!

Emily’s whole life  with her mom and adoptive father is a lie. Then another lie brings her face to face with her biological father and his family. Then more lies, meant to protect her, almost get her killed.

Then certain people want her to know the truth. Instead of just telling her – they want her to figure it out on her own - sending her on a wild goose chase that only puts her in more danger. It was just crazy! Stay with your father – it’s safer. Go home to your mother – it’s safer. Make up your f*cking minds already!

I really only hung in there to find out the secret. It is a big reveal but nothing that couldn’t have been revealed over an extended breakfast and an extra cup of heavily caffeinated coffee.

Then there’s the motorcycle club element. McGarry has the characters bend over backwards to explain why this isn’t one of those bad biker clubs and sure they have a legitimate business but that’s a bunch of hooey. It’s a controlling group where you have swear allegiance, need protection, no girls allowed crap, lie to the cops, and get kicked out if you violate any rules. Everyone is always in danger because of their lifestyle. Whatever. It’s just not my thing.

So…I was completely surprised by and enjoyed the hero and romance but the adults and their secrecy made me want to throw things and the MC thing isn’t for me. I think I need to accept that PTL was a one time thing and move on.
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Blogger Shame

Nowhere But Here is part of my Blogger Shame review Challenge
hosted by Herding Cats & Burning Soup to clear out those older books that keep getting pushed aside because...Ooh! New! Shiny!

Friday, July 15, 2016

Stars so sweet by Tara dairman blog tour: Review & series giveaway!

SWEET blog button2

Joan Bauer meets Ruth Reichl in this charming middle grade foodie series. 

As the summer winds down and Gladys Gatsby prepares to start middle school, she is nervous about juggling schoolwork and looming deadlines from her secret job as the New York Standard’s youngest restaurant critic. When her editor pushes for a face-to-face meeting to discuss more opportunities with the paper, Gladys knows she must finally come clean to her parents. But her perfectly planned reveal is put on hold when her parents arrive home with a surprise:  her Aunt Lydia, one of the only adults who knows her secret, fresh off the plane from Paris. Gladys and Aunt Lydia try one last ruse to fool her editor at the Standard, but even with her aunt’s help, Gladys just can’t manage the drama of middle school and a secret life. It’s time for Gladys to be true to herself and honest with her friends and family, regardless of what those around her think.
~ Goodreads

Penguin * B&NAmazon * BAM * Indigo (Canada) * Book Depository

Source: ARC provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review

Review:

It’s always so difficult for me to write my reviews for this series. I just want to spin and twirl and say things like It’s delightful! & call it a day. Not because I don’t have a lot of wonderful things to say about the All Four Stars trilogy, because I do. It’s just that once I set each volume down, I’m so happy (& hungry) that I would rather shove the book in everyone’s hand and say READ THIS, rather than try to come up with the words to explain the love that this series inspires.

A quick recap: Gladys is a pint size aspiring chef and part time, secret food critic for the New York Standard. Her parents don’t know – or understand Gladys’ food obsession. The series follows her as she struggles to meet her review obligations, while doing 12 year old things like summer camp, going to a new school and making friends all while finding time to follow her passion – cooking.

The All Four Stars trilogy is mid-grade but don’t let that deter you. This is a series for all ages. Dairman never talks down to the reader and whether you are 8 years old or 80, you will find something that appeals.

Stars So Sweet concludes Gladys Gatsby’s adventures as a secret restaurant food critic. Things have reached a tipping point with Gladys entering 7th grade, her favorite aunt moving in after losing her job in France, trying to handle her first crush and a job offer that she can’t refuse – but also can’t tell her parents about.

I can’t think of a better book to sit down and read with your kids. It opens your eyes to different cultures, foods, languages and is an excellent jumping off point to discuss diversity, responsibility and relationships of all kinds.

And of course there’s the food! Each book has centered around a certain type of food/culture and I have tried to make a recipe inspired by Gladys each time. Stars So Sweet went out with a bang, foodie wise. There’s French food, bake sales (pumpkin bars, brownies, doughnuts!) Cuban, Salvadoran and Peruvian dishes. Then there’s the challenge her neighbor, and best friend, Sandy, takes on to find the ugliest, stinkiest food.

Since I just purchased a rice cooker, I decided to try a traditional Peruvian dessert – rice pudding – Arroz con Leche. The website LimaEasy had a fun guide to Peruvian Desserts and Cakes. I did a combination of their recipe with my basic rice cooker recipe, adding the orange zest and cinnamon stick for flavor. I hope I did Gladys proud with my farewell recipe.




I’m so sad to see her go but also happy she went out on a high note. Perfect end to the perfect series!



tara-dairman-headshotTara Dairman is the author of the middle-grade foodie novel ALL FOUR STARS(Putnam/Penguin) which was named an Amazon Best Book of the Month and won a 2015 SCBWI Crystal Kite Award. THE STARS OF SUMMER followed in 2015, and STARS SO SWEET (7/19/16) completes the series. Tara grew up in New York and holds a B.A. in Creative Writing from Dartmouth College. After surviving the world’s longest honeymoon (two years, seventy-four countries!), she now lives in Colorado with her family. Website | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram
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Monday, July 11, 2016

ALA16 Book spotlight: the creepy crawlie, heebie jeebie books



I plan on reading/reviewing all of ALA16 Orlando books but it will take awhile to accomplish so I’m planning on giving the books an extra spotlight so the reach those who might be interested in buying or pre-ordering, in the case of arc’s.

I don’t read a lot of horror or thrillers but I’ve heard a lot about The Hatching and Frances Hardinge, an Australian author, was at ALA signing two of her books, with all money going to charity, so I decided to give these three a try.


creepy



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The Hatching by Ezekiel Boone

Publisher: Atria/Emily Bestler Books
Published: July 5th 2016

Goodreads

An astonishingly inventive and terrifying debut novel about the emergence of an ancient species, dormant for over a thousand years, and now on the march.

Deep in the jungle of Peru, where so much remains unknown, a black, skittering mass devours an American tourist whole. Thousands of miles away, an FBI agent investigates a fatal plane crash in Minneapolis and makes a gruesome discovery. Unusual seismic patterns register in a Kanpur, India earthquake lab, confounding the scientists there. During the same week, the Chinese government “accidentally” drops a nuclear bomb in an isolated region of its own country. As these incidents begin to sweep the globe, a mysterious package from South America arrives at a Washington, D.C. laboratory. Something wants out.

The world is on the brink of an apocalyptic disaster. An ancient species, long dormant, is now very much awake.

My quick thoughts/why I want to read it: I’m curious as to whether this will creep me out. I’m not really all that afraid of insects and I actually save spiders all the time. Doesn’t mean I want them crawling all over me of hatching inside of me though so we’ll see how this one plays out for me.



26118377The Lie Tree by Frances Hardinge
Publisher: Amulet Books
Published: May 7 2015

Literary awards: Costa Book Award for Children's Book (2015), Carnegie Medal Nominee (2016), Costa Book of the Year (2015),YA Book Prize Nominee (2016)
Goodreads

To earn a secret so profound, I would need to tell momentous lies, and make as many people as possible believe them…

Faith Sunderly leads a double life. To most people, she is modest and well mannered—a proper young lady who knows her place. But inside, Faith is burning with questions and curiosity. She keeps sharp watch of her surroundings and, therefore, knows secrets no one suspects her of knowing—like the real reason her family fled Kent to the close-knit island of Vane. And that her father’s death was no accident.

In pursuit of revenge and justice for the father she idolizes, Faith hunts through his possessions, where she discovers a strange tree. A tree that only bears fruit when she whispers a lie to it. The fruit, in turn, delivers a hidden truth. The tree might hold the key to her father’s murder. Or, it might lure the murderer directly to Faith herself, for lies—like fires, wild and crackling—quickly take on a life of their own.

My quick thoughts/why I want to read it: I’m not familiar with this author but several people I was with told me that I NEEDED to read this. And for some reason everyone seems to have thing for Aussie authors so who am I to resist book pushers?



23344750Cuckoo Song by Frances Hardinge

Publisher: Amulet Books
Published: May 8th 2014

Literary Awards: British Science Fiction Association Award Nominee for Best Novel (2014), Milwaukee County Teen Book Award Nominee (2016), British Fantasy Award for Robert Holdstock Award (best fantasy novel) (2015),Carnegie Medal Nominee (2015), James Herbert Award Nominee (2015)
The Magnolia Award Nominee for 9-12 (2017), ALA Notable Children's Book (2016)

Goodreads

When Triss wakes up after an accident, she knows something is very wrong. She is insatiably hungry, her sister seems scared of her, and her parents whisper behind closed doors. She looks through her diary to try to remember, but the pages have been ripped out. Soon Triss discovers that what happened to her is more strange and terrible than she could ever have imagined, and that she is quite literally not herself. In a quest to find the truth she must travel into the terrifying underbelly of the city to meet a twisted architect who has dark designs on her family-before it's too late . . .

Set in England after World War I, this is a brilliantly creepy but ultimately loving story of the relationship between two sisters who have to band together against a world where nothing is as it seems.


My quick thoughts/why I want to read it: Out of the three, this looked the creepiest to me. I was already in line for The Lie Tree and thought I would buy this one as well. Then everyone kept telling me that The Cuckoo Song was more mid-grade (The Lie Tree, also by Hardinge, is YA). Whaaaa??? I’m totally intrigued because that cover is scary as hell! lol

Have you guys read any of these books? Would you? Or are they too scary for you?

Friday, July 8, 2016

Blog Tour: A Gentleman Never Tells by Eloisa James: Review, Excerpt & Giveaway!


Y:\Spring 2015\Girl Who Wrote in Silk\9781492608332-PR.jpgA Gentleman Never Tells

By Eloisa James

Avon Impulse

June 28, 2016

E-ISBN 9780062573063 * $.99


About the Book


A witty, sexy novella about a virgin widow and a rake with something to prove.


Eighteen months ago, Lizzie Troutt’s husband died in his mistress’s bed, leaving her determined to never marry again….and unfortunately virginal.


Eighteen years ago (give or take a few) the Honorable Oliver Berwick blackened his own soul, leaving him hardened and resolutely single.


When the chance for redemption in the form of a country house party invitation comes his way, Oliver is determined to prove himself a gentleman.


Until he breaks all the codes of gentlemanly behavior…once again.


Review:
It’s been a few years since I’ve read a Eloisa James novel. Oh how I’ve missed her delightful heroines and witty dialogue!

A Gentleman Never Tells is filled with wonderful characters, romance and familial relationships. There isn’t much angst or drama but that’s what makes this the perfect, quick summer read.

Lizzie was a tough cookie and a bookworm so of course I loved her immediately. As did Oliver. Sure this was kind of insta-love-ish – on his side anyway – but the actual romance was very slow building so that you believed in both their love and that they had what it takes to make it last.

Despite the wonderful slow build to their relationship - the end came on pretty suddenly - but was saved by a solid epilogue.

I have to make sure I don’t make the mistake of staying away from James for so long again.

Source: e-arc provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review

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Read an excerpt from A GENTLEMAN NEVER TELLS:


August 13, 1826
Telford Manor
Fontwell, Sussex

“I would prefer to take supper on a tray.” Lizzie didn’t look up from her book, because meeting her sister’s eyes would only encourage her.
She should have known Catrina wouldn’t back down. “Lizzie Troutt, your husband died over a year ago.”
“Really?” Lizzie murmured, turning a page. “How time flies.” In fact, Adrian had died eighteen months, two weeks, and four days ago.
In his mistress’s bed.
Lizzie,” Cat said ominously, sounding more like an older sister—which she was—with every word, “if you don’t get out of that bed, I shall drag you out. By your hair!”
Lizzie felt a spark of real annoyance. “You already dragged me to your house for this visit. The least you could do is to allow me to read my book in peace.”
“Ever since you arrived yesterday, all you’ve done is read!” Cat retorted.
“I like reading. And forgive me if I point out that Tolbert is not precisely a hotbed of social activity.” Cat and her husband, Lord Windingham, lived deep in Suffolk, in a dilapidated manor house surrounded by fields of sheep.
“That is precisely why we gather friends for dinner. Lord Dunford-Dale is coming tonight, and I need you to even the numbers. That means getting up, Lizzie. Bathing. Doing your hair. Putting on a gown that hasn’t been dyed black would help, too. You look like a dispirited crow, if you want the truth.”
Lizzie didn’t want the truth. In fact, she felt such a stab of anger that she had to fold her lips tightly together or she would scream at Cat.
It wasn’t her sister’s fault. It wasn’t anyone’s fault except her late husband’s, and he was definitely late—i.e., dead.
“I know you feel ashamed to be in company,” her sister continued, energetically digging her own grave, as far as Lizzie was concerned. “Unfortunately, most people are aware the circumstances of your marriage, not to mention the fact that Adrian was so imprudent as to die away from home.”
That was one way of putting it.
Imprudent.
“You make it sound as if he dropped a teacup,” Lizzie observed, unable to stop herself. “I would call the fact that Adrian died in the act of tupping Sadie Sprinkle inconsiderate in the extreme.”
“I refuse to allow you to wither away in bed simply because your husband was infatuated with Shady Sadie,” Cat said, using the term by which the gossip rags had referred to Adrian’s mistress. “You must put all that behind you. Sadie has another protector, and you are out of mourning. It’s time to stop hiding.”
“I am not hiding,” Lizzie said, stung. “I take fresh air and moderate exercise every day. I simply like reading in bed. Or in a chair.”
Or anywhere else, to tell the truth. Reading in a peaceful garden was an excellent way to take fresh air.
“Moderate exercise,” her sister said with palpable loathing. “You used to ride every day, for pleasure. We would practice archery on a fine day like this, or roam about the countryside, not sit inside reading.”
“Adrian’s stables were part of the entail, and went to his cousin,” Lizzie said, turning the page. She hadn’t read a word, but she was hoping that a show of indifference would drive her sister from the room.
“Not the mare that Papa gave you when you turned fourteen!” her sister gasped.
Showing masterly control, Lizzie didn’t roll her eyes. “A wife has no true possessions,” she said flatly. “Under the law, they belong to her husband, and Perdita was, therefore, transferred to the heir.”
“Oh, Lizzie,” Cat said, her voice woeful.
“It wasn’t so terrible,” Lizzie said, meaning it. “I went to the auction, and Perdita went to a family with a young girl. I’m certain that she is well cared for and happy.”
“Do you realize that by staying home and wearing black, you give the illusion that you are grieving for your husband?”
Lizzie’s hands tightened around her book. “Do you know what being a widow entails, Cat?”
“Wearing ugly black dresses for the rest of your natural life?”
“It means that I never again need put myself under the control of a man—any man. So, no, I have no interest in joining you at dinner. I know perfectly well that Lord Dimble-Dumble has been summoned to audition as my next husband. I don’t want him. I’d be more likely to come to dinner if you had invited the butcher.”
“I couldn’t do that,” Cat said, in a sudden digression. “Mr. Lyddle has developed a most unfortunate addiction to strong ale, and he’s regularly found lying about in the gutter singing, rather than butchering meat.”
“Who does the butchering now?” Lizzie asked, deciding to take a walk to the village and see this interesting musical event herself.
“His wife. My housekeeper says that she can get better cuts at a lower price these days. You’re trying to distract me with talk of singing drunkards,” Cat said, unfairly. “Let’s discuss your future.”
“Let’s not.”
“We might begin with the fact that you were never in love with Adrian.” Cat began walking around the bedchamber, waving her hands as she waxed eloquent about her late brother-in-law’s flaws.
She was preaching to the choir, so Lizzie stopped listening and just watched Cat pacing back and forth. How could it be that her older sister was positively frothing with life and energy and passion, while Lizzie felt like a tired, pale shadow?
Her hand crept toward her book. It wasn’t the most interesting novel in the world, but it had the inexpressible charm of being new.
Over the last eighteen months, Lizzie had read every novel she owned three times over. She would be quickly bankrupted if she bought more than two books a week, so one of the best things about visiting Telford Manor was access to her sister’s library.
Cat appeared to be hopeless at arranging a refurbishment of the manor—which desperately needed it—but she was very good at ordering novels. And clothing. If Lizzie looked like a black crow, Cat was a chic French peacock.
Lizzie raised her knees, surreptitiously propped her book against them, and slipped back in the story of Eveline, a sixteen-year-old girl being forced to marry an old man. She herself had been twenty when she walked down the aisle.
On the shelf.
Beggars can’t be choosers, her father had told her.
Her book suddenly vanished. “No reading!”
Cat was holding the novel above her head, for all the world as if they were children again. Lizzie used to hope that someday she’d grow up to be as commanding as her sister, but she had given up that idea long ago.
It wasn’t just a question of height. Her sister was the type of person who gathered everyone in a room around her, and Lizzie was the type of person whom they walked over on their way to be with Cat.
That sounded resentful, but Lizzie didn’t actually feel bitter. She would hate to be the center of attention. She wound her arms around her knees and propped her chin on them. “Cat, may I have my book back, please? It was a hard journey, and I’m tired.”
“What do you mean, a hard journey? It can’t have been more than a day and a half!”
“My coach is over twenty years old and the springs are worn out. It bounced so hard on the post road that I couldn’t keep my eyes on the page, and my tailbone still hurts.”
“If your jointure won’t extend to a new vehicle, Joshua or Papa would be happy to buy you a coach.”
Lizzie turned her head, putting her right cheek on her knees, and closed her eyes. “No.”
She heard her sister drop into the chair by the side of the bed. Then she heard a sigh. “Papa is getting old, Lizzie. He made a terrible mistake, and he knows it. He misses you. If you would just pay him a visit . . .”
“No.”
Why would she visit the father who had turned her away when she ran to him in desperation? The father who had known precisely what a disaster her marriage would be, but didn’t bother to warn her?
An hour or so after their wedding ceremony, Adrian had brought Lizzie, still wrapped in her bridal veil, to his mother’s faded, musty house, and informed her that he had no intention of living with her.
Not only that, but he was late to meet his lover for tea.
It had happened almost six years ago, but she could still remember her stupefaction. She’d been such a silly goose.
“But where do you live?” she had stammered.
“I bought Sadie a house, and we live there,” Adrian had said casually. When she frowned in confusion, he had added impatiently, “Sadie. Didn’t your father tell you her name?”
“Sadie? ”
For the first time—and in her experience, the last time—her husband had been a little defensive, even a trifle ashamed. “I never lied. He knows perfectly well that we will lead separate lives.”
“Perhaps you should explain to me,” Lizzie had said, “because my father unaccountably forgot to mention it. As did you, I might add.”
Adrian had unemotionally laid out the terms of her marriage. It seemed her father had paid a great deal of money to buy his daughter the title of Lady Troutt. For his part, Adrian had wed her for her dowry, and because he needed someone to care for his mother.
“The estate is entailed,” he had told her, glancing around the musty sitting room. “It goes to some distant cousin, along with the title, of course. I told your father that I wouldn’t be averse to trying for a child, once we’ve had time to get used to each other.”
Lizzie had just gaped at him.
“But we can’t bother with that now,” Adrian had told her briskly. “Sadie is upset about this mess, naturally enough. I promised her I’d be home by four. My mother takes her luncheon on a tray. There are a couple of maids, but it would be good if you could bring it in yourself. She complains of being lonely.”
After that, he left.
A few minutes later, Lizzie left as well. She went home.
Only to be sent back to her husband’s house.
There was no point in revisiting her father’s line of reasoning. Suffice it to say that no woman—even one who had abundant sensuality and beauty, which Lizzie did not— was capable of seducing a man who didn’t return to the house for a fortnight.
A man who doesn’t bother to consummate his marriage until he’s suffered a heart seizure and has, as the vulgar might put it, been given notice to quit.
A man who despises his lower-class wife, and never bothers to hide it.


\\hcus_ny03\data\depts\M-PUBLICITY\My American Duchess\Eloisa James new photo.JPGAbout the Author
ELOISA JAMES is a New York Times best-selling author and professor of English literature who lives with her family in New York, but can sometimes be found in Paris or Italy. She is the mother of two and, in a particularly delicious irony for a romance writer, is married to a genuine Italian knight. Visit her at www.eloisajames.com


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Tuesday, July 5, 2016

ALA16 Orlando highlights

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We (Kevin & I) headed to ALA in Orlando a few weekends ago. We usually go to BEA but with it being in Chicago vs ALA being in my backyard this year – ALA won.

ALA was a very different experience than BEA. It is FAR more mellow and low key but there’s less variety when it comes to books/authors as is skews more children's, middle grade and YA. And not as many authors or celebrities attend.

For example – most writers groups are still represented at ALA – such as the Horror Writers Association or the Romance Writers Association - but they just have a few books/authors to showcase. At BEA, there is a full schedule of author signings running during the whole event. That wasn’t a huge deal for me but if you wanted more romance/horror/mystery etc., this probably isn’t the event for you.

BEA is better organized and has a greater number and variety of author signings and book drops. You can’t really plan in advance for ALA (unless you are going to the librarian conferences and meeting – but then you need to pay the full conference price for that. We paid $60 for general attendance to the floor) However, it’s so freaking laid back that you don’t need a plan. Most book drop lines were no more than 10-15 minute waits with few exceptions. Th publishers were very nice and were willing to discuss their catalog of books – which were all on display – and give you a copy of an ARC if you asked. Librarians were often given head of the line privileges which seemed completely fair to me since it’s their conference.

There weren’t many bloggers but I did finally get to meet one of my most favorite people ever – Brooke from Brooke Reports ( & her super nice finance, Tom) and I met Michelle from Book Briefs & Audris from YA Bookmark. Also met quite a few booksellers. Always the best part of these events!

All ARC’s were free but they also sold already released books. Usually $10 for hardcover and $5 for paperback. Most $$’s went for charity – either for libraries or the Orlando shooting victim fund.

I posted my book pics the other day and I’ll be spotlighting them over the next month or so but ALA had some really cool educational things and swag so I’ll give you a peek at that here.

So kind of the generic hype machine YA promo display. Caraval was one of the busiest book signings – the author was super nice!

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These events always involve LOTS of walking ( & standing) so it’s nice to be able to able to get my #fitreader steps in with this handy convention guide

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NASA was in attendance with talks running every hour or so – Kevin was excited. There was a lot of emphasis on Global Warming. We really enjoyed this area – Nice place to sit down and rest our feet and still get to see something fun.

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Because ALA is all about libraries there were cool product showcases like…
3D printers. That hand came out of the printer! SO COOL

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Library furniture

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And fun posters:

READ TO COMBAT THE DARK FORCES & LIBRARIES ARE MY WEAPON OF CHOICE

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And it’s me – so you know I had to squeeze some weird food in there somewhere lol

Nitrogen popcorn. You end up looking like a fire breathing dragon with smoke coming out your nose – but it tastes good!

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And lastly – some fun swag!

T-shirt – What happens in storytime stays in storytime (bought that) Crooked Kingdom socks/tattoos/chapter book from Macmillan, and various buttons/bracelets. There was a lot of rainbow/diversity swag!

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So that’s a wrap!

I’m probably more of a BEA girl – even with the chaos –  because I like meeting up with my blogger friends but this was a nice break.

P.S. June/July/summer is kicking my ass! So posting will be a little sporadic this month as I try to get back into some kind of reading rhythm again. But I’ll still be vising blogs so feel free to leave a link in the comments.

Saturday, July 2, 2016

Stacking the Shelves



Stacking the Shelves is hosted by Tynga’s Reviews to showcase the books we’ve added to our shelves this past week.

This is a pretty generic – stack of books picture – post. I went to ALA16 in Orlando last weekend and I’ve been exhausted ever since. I’ll try to get a wrap-up and more detailed book spotlight posts up next week.

They’re mostly stacked by release date. Let me know if you’ve read any or if there are any that are on your TBR!

This pile are books releasing from August – September

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These are books releasing in October – November with a few 2017 titles thrown in. (Pax – the top book is already out)


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These are hardcovers/paperbacks that are already out

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Most titles (& all arc's) were free but several cost anywhere between $5-$10 with the money going to charity. Either for libraries or the Orlando shooting victims.

HAPPY 4th everyone!!!