Friday Finds (August 28)

FridayFinds-ADailyRhythm2

FRIDAY FINDS is hosted by A Daily Rhythm and showcases the books you ‘found’ and added to your To Be Read (TBR) list.  Whether you found them online, or in a bookstore, or in the library — wherever! (they aren’t necessarily books you purchased).

My finds this week include a suspense, a women’s fiction/humor, a young adult/fairy-tale retelling, and a historical fiction:

1. A Necessary End by Holly Brown
51cOhYxOsrLI thought this book sounded really good, What wouldn’t a woman be willing to do when she’s desperate to become a mother and a baby is within her reach?

2. Pretty Much Screwed by Jenna McCarthy
81VivRea53LThis book has a bunch of good reviews so far on Amazon and to be honest half the reason I am excited about this book is I just love the cover.

3. Entwined by Heather Dixon
61e6TqqqxhLThere was a Top Ten Tuesday post a couple weeks ago on Top 10 Fairy Tale Retellings and I picked up this recommendation from one of the other blogs that participated in the posts, The Bucket List. This one is a fairy-tale retelling of the Twelve Dancing Princesses, and while I’m not super familiar with this fairy-tale I just love fairy-tale retellings and the cover on this book looks awesome.

4. Penmarric by Susan Howatch
51lRVBSk-FL._SX322_BO1,204,203,200_I found this book on a listing of books to read if you’re having Outlander withdrawals. And while I haven’t read the Outlander series yet, I already am fairly certain I will love it. And this book sounds really interesting too. Historical fiction with a bunch of family drama and mistresses mixed in!

So those are my finds this week! Please feel free to share your finds or leave a link to your own “Friday Finds” blog posting below! Happy Friday! 

Rebeccabookreview Recommends Library Book Display!

So I’ve been trying to come up with marketing ideas lately to work on getting my blog name out there and get more followers. And after visiting my local library one day I thought of all the different book displays that libraries put together. I mean no one really has time to browse through the adult fiction section, there are way too many books. So I know I personally will pay special attention to whatever book display has been put together for that month highlighting certain books. And I thought, well why wouldn’t I be able to do a book display??

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So there it is! Nothing fancy this first time, I am thinking though that I might try and get a colorful poster or tri-fold to display for next time to draw more attention. But I did put out bookmarks (great quality bookmarks that I was able to design myself on UPrinting.com) and while it wasn’t what I would call a “huge” success, a few people picked out books from the display and I hope they ended up enjoying them! For those interested, here is a close-up of the bookmark:

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ARC August – Check in #3 – 8/22

Three weeks down now, I’m a bit behind but I’m not exactly panicking at this point (only a little). I got even less done this week than last, hoping to have a little time to catch up over the next week! ARC August, which is hosted by Read.Sleep.Repeat is a reading challenge that centers around catching up on reading your ARC’s! And I definitely needed the encouragement this month since I have a long list of them to get done.

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My progress: 

1. Awake by Natasha Preston – Read & reviewed during Week 1
2. On The Way: A Working Woman’s Field Guide by Robin Lake – Read & reviewed during Week 1
3. The Guilty One by Sophie Littlefield – Read & reviewed during Week 1
4. Who Do You Love by Jennifer Weiner – Read & reviewed during Week 1
5. Imaginary Things by Andrea Lochen – Read & reviewed during Week 2 plus an author interview!
6. Steele Resolve by Kimberly Amato – Read & reviewed during Week 2
7. Melting Steele by Kimberly Amato – Read & reviewed during Week 2
8. 33 Cecils by Everett DeMorier – Read & reviewed during Week 2
9. Friction by Sandra Brown – Read & reviewed
10. We Never Asked For Wings by Vanessa Diffenbaugh – Read & reviewed
11. A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan
12. Goddess of Suburbia by Stephanie Kepke

Books read August 16th-22nd:

51-iNctMrSLFriction by Sandra Brown – 4 stars

51ETKpUBQzLWe Never Asked For Wings by Vanessa Diffenbaugh – 3 stars

That’s it for this week unfortunately! The Terryville Fair is coming up next weekend so that will be a busy time for me but I am hoping to get some reading done before then so hopefully I can catch up. Have a happy Saturday everyone!

2015 Book #89 – We Never Asked For Wings by Vanessa Diffenbaugh

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Title: We Never Asked For Wings
Author: Vanessa Diffenbaugh
Date finished: 8/22/15
Genre: Fiction
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Publication Date: August 18, 2015
Pages in book: 320
Stand alone or series: Stand alone
Where I got the book from: NetGalley NOTE: I received this book for free from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. This in no way affected my opinion of the book, or the content of my review.

Blurb from the cover:

From the beloved New York Times bestselling author of The Language of Flowers comes her much-anticipated new novel about young love, hard choices, and hope against all odds.
For fourteen years, Letty Espinosa has worked three jobs around San Francisco to make ends meet while her mother raised her children—Alex, now fifteen, and Luna, six—in their tiny apartment on a forgotten spit of wetlands near the bay. But now Letty’s parents are returning to Mexico, and Letty must step up and become a mother for the first time in her life.
Navigating this new terrain is challenging for Letty, especially as Luna desperately misses her grandparents and Alex, who is falling in love with a classmate, is unwilling to give his mother a chance. Letty comes up with a plan to help the family escape the dangerous neighborhood and heartbreaking injustice that have marked their lives, but one wrong move could jeopardize everything she’s worked for and her family’s fragile hopes for the future.
Vanessa Diffenbaugh blends gorgeous prose with compelling themes of motherhood, undocumented immigration, and the American Dream in a powerful and prescient story about family.

My rating: 3.0 stars out of a scale of 5

My review: This book will be counting towards my goal for ARC August reading challenge, it is #10 on list from my sign up post. I was provided a free copy of this book in exchange for an honest and fair review. I have seen this book a lot in the last month or two as a must read book for summer so when I saw it was available on NetGalley I thought I would try reading it. This is the story of Letty Espinosa and her two children, Alex and Luna. Letty’s mother has raised Alex and Luna since they were babies while Letty works three jobs. But when Letty’s parents suddenly move back to Mexico, Letty is forced to face motherhood in a way that she has never had to before.
I liked this book. It had an interesting story line and was different from anything I’ve read before. There are some political commentary undercurrents about immigration towards the end but mostly I think this book is about Letty’s character growing and discovering what it means to be a mother. I didn’t end up loving this book because I had trouble forming a deep connection with the characters. It was great to see the characters evolve through the story, especially Letty, but at the same time I couldn’t form a personal connection with the story. When Letty got Alex drunk I honestly couldn’t read the book anymore that day I was so disturbed. I loved how supportive Rick’s character was though, he was like a constant pillar of strength. And Luna is just a little cutie. I couldn’t understand how Letty’s parents could leave them so suddenly but its probably better that they did, it forced Letty to stand on her own two feet. While there were pieces of this story I didn’t love, I liked the book overall.

The bottom line: I thought this story had a sweet ending even if I did get a bit freaked out along the way. It was interesting to see the characters grow through the story. I would recommend!

Link to author website

Click on the cover to go to the book’s Amazon page

ARC August – Check in #2 – 8/15

Two weeks down now, halfway through the month and I think I’m making good progress. I didn’t get as much done as I had planned this week but we all need a little down time once in a while! ARC August, which is hosted by Read.Sleep.Repeat is a reading challenge that centers around catching up on reading your ARC’s! And I definitely needed the encouragement this month since I have a long list of them to get done.

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My progress: 

1. Awake by Natasha Preston – Read & reviewed during Week 1
2. On The Way: A Working Woman’s Field Guide by Robin Lake – Read & reviewed during Week 1
3. The Guilty One by Sophie Littlefield – Read & reviewed during Week 1
4. Who Do You Love by Jennifer Weiner – Read & reviewed during Week 1
5. Imaginary Things by Andrea Lochen – Read & reviewed plus an author interview!
6. Steele Resolve by Kimberly Amato – Read & reviewed
7. Melting Steele by Kimberly Amato – Read & reviewed
8. 33 Cecils by Everett DeMorier – Read & reviewed
9. Friction by Sandra Brown – Up next after I finish the book for this month’s book discussion
10. We Never Asked For Wings by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
11. A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan
12. Goddess of Suburbia by Stephanie Kepke

Books read August 8th-15th:

41ipsFo0VdLImaginary Things by Andrea Lochen – 4.25 stars

81bJqKePfdLSteele Resolve by Kimberly Amato – 2.75 stars

51KO56Q-KBLMelting Steele by Kimberly Amato – 2.5 stars

A1yPvrKsVaLThirty-Three Cecils by Everett De Morier – 3.5 stars

So that is what I have accomplished this week! Lots still to read, I didn’t have these on my original sign up post but I realized that I have 2 more ARC’s that I need to read for 9/1 and therefore will likely read in August. So that makes a total of 6 more books to read before 8/31. And with the Terryville Fair coming up at the end of the month, I lose a whole weekend to that. Lots of reading to do!! Will have to fit everything in.
Happy reading to you all!

Author Interview – Andrea Lochen – Author of Imaginary Things

So I was lucky enough to get an author interview with the very talented Andrea Lochen. For those of you who have not yet read her recent release, Imaginary Things, I would highly recommend picking up a copy. I absolutely loved the book, you can read my review of the book here. I’m looking forward to reading her other published novel, The Repeat Year, plus anything else she publishes in the future!!

Here is Andrea’s About the Author from her website

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Andrea Lochen is the author of two novels. Her first novel, The Repeat Year (Penguin 2013), was praised by Kirkus Reviews as “an engaging, satisfying read that explores friendship, love and who we really are when it truly matters.” A draft of the novel won the 2008 Hopwood Novel Award. The Repeat Year was also produced as an audiobook (Brilliance Audio) and translated into a German edition (Ullstein Buchverlage). The film option was sold to Ineffable Pictures. Andrea’s second novel, Imaginary Things, is forthcoming from Astor + Blue in April 2015. Lori Nelson Spielman, bestselling author of The Life List, called it, “a beautiful book, filled with vivid scenes, unforgettable characters, and oodles of heart. With a page-turning plot and an utterly unique concept, Imaginary Things entertains, inspires, and provokes thought—a perfect book club pick.”

Andrea earned her Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, where she was a Colby Fellow. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, where she was the Fiction Editor of The Madison Review, a nationally-distributed, student-run literary magazine. Since 2008, she has taught undergraduate writing at the University of Wisconsin-Waukesha and was recently awarded the UW Colleges Chancellor’s Award for Excellence in Teaching. Andrea currently lives in Madison with her husband and daughter and is at work on her third novel.

Below is the interview I had with Andrea. My questions are in bold and her answers follow.

  1. What was your favorite subject in school? It probably will surprise no one to discover that it was Creative Writing. In elementary school one of my teachers taught a unit called “The Writers’ Workshop” in which we wrote, illustrated, and “published” our stories.  I adored it (and her)!  Throughout my education from kindergarten until graduate school, I have always loved language and reading in its all forms—spelling, literature, writing, etc.
  1. What is your favorite vacation spot? Riviera Maya, Mexico. It’s only a short flight from Wisconsin (where I live) though it feels like worlds away with its gorgeous white sand beaches, turquoise waters, and warm sunshine.
  1. Do you have any pets? A Teddy Bear dog (a Bichon Shih Tzu mix) named Maddy. She’s a fluffy, spunky, affectionate girl.
  1. What do you like to do in your spare time? Ha!  Spare time?  What is this concept you speak of?  As a new mom, I haven’t experienced much of it lately, so it would certainly feel like a luxury.  I like going for walks with my dog and my baby in her stroller, reading good books, baking, watching movies, and spending time relaxing with friends and family.
  1. If you could have any magic/supernatural power or have something supernatural happen in your life, what would it be? That’s a really fun question to answer because it’s something I’m always imagining in my novels!  In my first novel, THE REPEAT YEAR, my protagonist Olive gets to relive a year of her life in order to attempt to right wrongs.  In my second novel, IMAGINARY THINGS, Anna gets to see her son’s imagination.  I guess if I were to be granted one supernatural event, I would want to be able to time travel back to certain moments in my past, just to observe and see loved ones again.  For example, I would love to witness times I spent as a little girl with my grandma (who has since passed away).
  1. When did you realize you wanted to be an author and did you have another profession before this? I’ve wanted to be an author since I was in the third grade (because of my cool teacher and the Writers’ Workshop).  Currently, in addition to writing novels, I also teach English at the University of Wisconsin-Waukesha during the fall and spring semesters.
  1. Do you have any special rituals that you find yourself following when you’re writing? OR Take us through your typical work day. How’s this for a special ritual?  Despite having a beautiful office with a comfortable chair and desk, lately I tend to find myself writing at my coffee table on the living room floor.  I re-read my work constantly as I write and sometimes even aloud to get a sense of the flow and if the dialogue sounds authentic.  I always need to have something to drink at hand (most often a glass of ice water) and sometimes a snack as well.
  1. What (if any) research did you have to do for this novel? What was your favorite piece of research you did for this novel? I wanted to understand the phenomenon of imaginary friends in childhood better, so I read psychologist Marjorie Taylor’s book Imaginary Companions and the Children Who Create Them.  I highly recommend it to anyone else interested in imaginary friends.  It was particularly entertaining reading the case studies of what kids said!
  1. Do you find that you base any of your characters on people in your life? Have you gotten any inspiration for scenes in your novel from things that have happened to you in real life? Quirks and traits of my characters are sometimes based on real people I know, but there’s never a 1:1 ratio.  As for inspiration from real life: definitely, yes, all the time!  The fictional town in IMAGINARY THINGS, Salsburg, is actually based on a real small town in Wisconsin that my husband spent a lot of time in growing up.  I loved the town’s intimate feel with its few businesses and once a year parade and carnival.
  1. How long did it take you to write this novel, from when you first put pen to paper to when it was published? Hmmm….let me go back to my computer files and check it out.  It looks like I started the draft in August of 2012, and it was published in April of 2015.  So a little less than three years.
  1. Are you working on any future books now? I am, thanks for asking! Book 3 doesn’t have a name yet but it has a magical premise like my first two novels, but I won’t give it away.  It’s about two sisters and the lake house that has been in their family for a century.   I’m really enjoying writing it!
  1. Are there any books or authors that have really influenced you and made you want to write? What about those authors inspired or influenced you? My literary hero is JK Rowling.  I love how rich her imagination is and that she was able to create an entire world that millions of people want to inhabit.  I love how she turned on an entire generation of readers.
  1. Have you read anything lately that you loved? I just finished M.L. Stedman’s THE LIGHT BETWEEN OCEANS, which broke my heart (but in a good way).  It’s such a beautifully written, moving novel. (Just as an aside, I recently read this book as well and loved it! You can see my review of that book here.)
  1. Do you have any advice for aspiring writers? If you want to write a book, you need to carve out time to do it.  There are never enough hours in a day, and there are always some other more important tasks to fill those hours with.  But if it’s a goal of yours and you love you doing it, try to set aside at least an hour every day to work on it, whether that’s reading/researching, outlining, drafting, revising, or even just daydreaming about it while you walk the dog.  Spend time with your book every day.
  1. Is there anything else about you that you’d like your readers to know? How much I appreciate them!  Thanks so much for reading my books!  I love hearing from readers, so if you want to connect with me, please check out my author Facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/andrealochen.author) or follow me on Twitter (https://twitter.com/AndreaLochen).

I just wanted to say thank you to Andrea for being featured on my blog. It was a pleasure reading your book and interviewing you!

ARC August – Check in #1 – 8/8

Woo hoo! One week down! ARC August, which is hosted by Read.Sleep.Repeat is a reading challenge that centers around catching up on reading your ARC’s! And I definitely needed the encouragement this month since I have a long list of them to get done.

arc-august

My progress: 

1. Awake by Natasha Preston – Read & reviewed
2. On The Way: A Working Woman’s Field Guide by Robin Lake – Read & reviewed
3. The Guilty One by Sophie Littlefield – Read & reviewed
4. Who Do You Love by Jennifer Weiner – Read & reviewed
5. Imaginary Things by Andrea Lochen – Up next!
6. Steele Resolve by Kimberly Amato
7. Melting Steele by Kimberly Amato
8. 33 Cecils by Everett DeMorier
9. Friction by Sandra Brown
10. We Never Asked For Wings by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
11. A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan
12. Goddess of Suburbia by Stephanie Kepke

Books read August 1st-7th:

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Awake by Natasha Preston – 3.25 stars – Also stay tuned for an interview with this author soon to be posted (hopefully)

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One the Way by Robin Lake – 4.0 stars

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The Guilty One by Sophie Littlefield – 4.0 stars

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Who Do You Love by Jennifer Weiner – 3.75 stars

So! That’s where I ended up this week. Make sure to check in early next week, I’ll be posting an author interview with Andrea Lochen, author of Imaginary Things. Happy reading!

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Fairytale Retellings I’ve Read/Want To Read

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Top Ten Tuesday is a book meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every Tuesday there is a different bookish topic and bloggers are asked to post their own top ten list based on the topic. This week is a listing of the Top Ten Fairytale Retellings I’ve Read/Want to Read. I’ve always loved fairy tales (Cinderella was my favorite movie growing up) and I really enjoy some of the fairy tale retellings that have been published. It is a fun, usually adult spin on a childhood dream. So below are some of my favorites I have read and ones I definitely want to read:

1. Fairy Tales series by Eloisa James

I have to say this is a great series of fairy tale retellings, especially if you like historical romance novels. I really liked the series.

2. The Wrath and the Dawn by Renee Ahdieh
51ZanRZ7R4LI LOVED THIS BOOK! Great read and I definitely recommend. Can’t wait for #2 in the series to come out next year!

3. Atlantis Rising by Gloria Craw
71mccBs4q+LI’m not sure if Atlantis really counts as “fairy tales” but if we’re going to liberally use the term then I guess it counts. I read this book recently and really enjoyed it!

WANT TO READ

1. Lunar Chronicles series by Marissa Meyer

I’ve heard a lot of good things about this series and I currently own the first and third book. I can’t wait to dive in, just have to find time to fit them in! As a side note, the last picture (Winter) is being released this fall.

2. Wicked series by Gregory Maguire

I own the first book in this series, I had started it a long time ago and never finished it (like 8 years ago at least, maybe more). I am a massively huge fan of the musical that was inspired/based on the first book though and I recently discovered that it became a series so I am looking forward to reading all 4 of these books. Gregory Maguire also has some other fairy tale retellings I would like to check out, including Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister and After Alice.

Any suggestions? 

So that’s mostly it! There are just so many options for fairy-tale retellings that it is hard to narrow it down. One thing I realized while compiling this list is that I haven’t really ever seen a good retelling of The Little Mermaid. Does anyone have any suggestions for books like that? I would love to hear about them! Also let me know if you think I’ve missed any really great fairytale retellings. This is one of my favorite genres so I would love to add some of these to my TBR list!

Happy reading!

Top Ten Tuesday: Last Ten Books That Came Into My Possession

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Top Ten Tuesday is a book meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every Tuesday there is a different bookish topic and bloggers are asked to post their own top ten list based on the topic. This week is a listing of the Last Ten Books That Came Into My Possession. I have been pretty active in both requesting e-galleys, accepting donations from family and friends, and at my local library so I am going to try and piece this together the best I can.

From Net Galley: 

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I’m actually pretty excited because all 3 of these were books that I wanted to read and I was able to get all of them on Net Galley for free! I have only recently discovered the greatness that is Net Galley and I am looking forward to using it much more in the future.
1. The Coincidence of Coconut Cake by Amy E. Reichert
2. A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan
3. Awake by Natasha Preston

From my Gram:

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This past weekend I visited my Grandma and Grandpa down in Pennsylvania. My Grandma is a part of a book club down there and every so often when I visit she lets me take some books from her leftovers (which I LOVE). So this past weekend I brought 4 books home with me that I haven’t read before and all of them look really interest and I can’t wait to read them!
4. Long Time Gone by Karen White
5. Matters of Faith by Kristy Kiernan
6. The Paris Wife by Paula McLain
7. The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown

From Publishers:

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This is the first print ARC copy I’ve ever received. I’m pretty excited about it.
8. Stove-Junker by S.K. Kalsi

Gifted from Mom’s kindle:

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After all the Net Galley activity, I’ve gotten tired of using the kindle app on my phone. My mom had an older kindle that she hasn’t been using since she has both a Paper white and a Kindle Fire. When she gave me her Kindle there were a few books on it from her account and I was able to keep these two. I am trying to read more classics this year so I’m glad these are now available to me!
9. Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte
10. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

SO! That’s my listing of books I’ve most recently received. What books have you gotten lately?

Friday Finds (July 10)

FridayFinds-ADailyRhythm2

FRIDAY FINDS is hosted by A Daily Rhythm and showcases the books you ‘found’ and added to your To Be Read (TBR) list.  Whether you found them online, or in a bookstore, or in the library — wherever! (they aren’t necessarily books you purchased).

My finds this week include a historical fiction, a young adult, a fiction, and a women’s fiction (I think):

1. Newport by Jill Morrow
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This book tells the story of a family in Newport in the spring of 1921. I went to Newport recently and we did the mansion tours and I was just floored by the amount of wealth it took to make those mansions. This book is supposed to be about the “glamorous world of Newport in the Roaring Twenties” so I hope I see some of that wealth in this book!

2. Paperweight by Meg Haston
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This book is about a girl who is struggling with an eating disorder in a rehabilitation center. It sounds like its going to be a really moving story about a tough issue affecting many girls today.

3. Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde
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Don’t get excited, I know the title sounds a lot like 50 Shades of Grey but that is not this book. This book is about “Chromatacia, where the societal hierarchy is strictly regulated by one’s limited color perception.” I’ve been really into the dystopian novels lately where the population is segregated into a hierarchy based on some weird mutation, like the color of their blood in The Red Queen. I thought that this book sounded like a definite must read.

4. Maybe in Another Life by Taylor Jenkins Reid
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his book sounds like it will be a great read. Its about a woman who is at a bar and can either go home with a friend or a guy and the book switches between the storylines on what would happen to her with either decision.

So those are my finds this week! Please feel free to share your finds or leave a link to your own “Friday Finds” blog posting below! Happy Friday! Hope you all enjoy the weekend! I am glad its here!

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