Waiting on Wednesday: The Night Season by Chelsea Cain

“Waiting On” Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by Jill from Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we’re eagerly anticipating.

The book I’m eagerly awaiting is THE NIGHT SEASON by Chelsea Cain. It’s the fourth book in Chelsea’s Beauty Killer series.  I literally yelled with excitement yesterday when I read about it on Twitter.  Here is a synopsis from the publisher:

Chelsea Cain launches the next stage of her bestselling series as Archie Sheridan works to regain his life and Susan Ward steps in to share the spotlight in this electric thriller from one of today’s most talented suspense writers.
 
With Beauty Killer Gretchen Lowell locked away behind bars once again, Portland detective Archie Sheridan can finally rest. Meanwhile, the city of Portland is in crisis. Several people have drowned in heavy rains that have flooded the Willamette River. But the medical examiner discovers that in fact the latest victim was poisoned before she went into the water—she didn’t drown. A little detective work shows that so far three of those previously thought to be accidental drownings have actually been murdered. Portland has a new serial killer on its hands, and Archie and his task force have a new case. Meanwhile reporter Susan Ward is following up on an entirely separate mystery: the dramatic flooding has unearthed a skeleton, a man who might have died during catastrophic flooding more than sixty years ago that washed away an entire neighborhood and killed at least 15 people.

 As Archie follows the bizarre trail of evidence and evil deeds to catch his killer, he has to battle the rising waters of the Willamette first.

I’m literally aching to get my hands on a copy of this book! I’ve been a Chelsea Cain fan from the beginning! As a matter of fact, during Dectectives Around the World, hosted by Jen’s Book Thoughts,  I did a spotlight on Chelsea Cain’s Portland.

THE NIGHT SEASON is scheduled for release by Minotaur Books on March 1, 2011.  Over seven months to wait…however will I do it!?

Posted in Minotaur Books, Waiting on Wednesday | Tagged , , , | 11 Comments

Giveaway: Come Sunday by Isla Morley

Yesterday, I reviewed COME SUNDAY by Isla Morley and earlier today I posted an interview with Isla

Thanks to the publisher, I have one copy of COME SUNDAY to give away to one lucky reader.  Trust me…you want to read this book.

To enter, please fill out the form below.  Comments are welcomed, but won’t be counted as entries. US & Canadian residents only, please. No P.O. Boxes. The winner will be announced on Tuesday, September 8th.  Good luck!

Posted in Bookish Chatter | 4 Comments

Inteview with Isla Morley, Author of Come Sunday

It’s not often that I do author interviews, but after reading COME SUNDAY I couldn’t help myself, the questions just flowed right out of me.  I hope you enjoy!

Photo credit: Molly Hawkey

You grew up in South Africa during apartheid.  Do you think this changed they way you looked at life? At people? How did it affect your writing, specifically what you wrote about?

When I moved to California in 1994 after marrying my husband (an American), the big news was then-First Lady, Hilary Clinton, had said a bad word.  I thought, “Wait.  What?  This is a big deal on this side of the word?”  In South Africa, we’d just been through the first free election without any assassinations.  Many still feared the kind of bloodbath that had happened in other African countries.  A new constitution was being hammered out, and the Truth And Reconciliation Commission was about to be established, a system seeking justice for victims and perpetrators of atrocities through repentance and forgiveness.


Growing up in South Africa meant being immersed in complexities, and so it’s really no surprise that I’m drawn to stories and characters that are complex.  The abiding themes of suffering, forgiveness, and redemption have made their way from my childhood memories to the pages of my manuscript.

You’ve lived all over the world, including Johannesburg, London and Honolulu, and now Los Angeles. All of these locations have vastly different cultures.  Which location was your favorite, and why?

I like places where there’s a diversity of cultures.  Honolulu was probably my favorite, but not for the typical reasons.  It was there that I made friends with three amazing women, each from a different part of the world – Singapore, Tonga and the Seychelles.  They’re all different colors, too, and for a white girl who grew up in a segregated society, these friends represent a power no government can corral.

You literally left behind everything you had when you chose to leave South Africa and move to the US.  How did this change/effect you?

I left my country with two suitcases and enough naiveté to fill a hundred Harlequin novels.  I had no idea how hard being a foreigner was going to be.  To my husband’s congregation, I was Mrs. Reverend Morley, to the IRS I was ‘Resident Alien.’  It was as though I’d been stripped of my identity, but everyone kept smiling and saying, “Gee, what a pretty accent you have.  Are you from Australia?”  Amid the daily stresses of driving on the wrong side of the road, deciphering recipes that called for ingredients in ounces and pounds instead of milliliters and grams, and decoding cultural in-jokes like Seinfeld, I built up a big reservoir of empathy for those who are considered “outsiders.”

Abbe Deighton, the main character in Come Sunday has lost her bearings after moving from Africa to Hawaii.  Were aspects of Abbe’s life taken from your own?  Did you lose your bearings after leaving your home? What did you do to overcome this?

Losing one’s bearings, whether by choice or by circumstance, is probably something each of us should go through at least once.  It gives you a chance to examine what’s really important.  It’s easy to become defined by stuff.  But when you’re lost, physically and spiritually, when you’re emotionally disoriented, you’re in the best position to latch on to what is real and lasting.  Love, of course, but also friendship, loyalty, hope, God.  Finding out your bearings have nothing to do with compass coordinates is a liberating experience.

Abbe experiences a pretty traumatic loss in Come Sunday. How difficult was this to write, being a mother of a daughter yourself?

It was hard to imagine myself in Abbe’s situation.  I used to avoid movies and books where children get hurt, because that’s a deep scary cave.  But this was a story that wanted telling, and it was as if I was the sucker who showed up on the day that particular assignment was handed out.  Soon after I started writing the story, though, I knew it wasn’t going to be all about grief but more about the redemptive power of forgiveness.  It was going to be about the nature of marriage and motherhood and interracial friendships.

Before making the leap to fiction, you were a journalist.  How did the two roles differ? Did your role as a journalist help/hinder your role as a fiction writer?

When I wrote for the magazine, it was challenging and demanding, but ultimately soulless.  After I quit my job, I pledged never to write again.  Ten years later, after Abbe materialized at my bedside one night, I encountered something entirely different.  When I sat down to write, it felt as if there was a great invisible river running above me and I was sticking my finger in it, and the undercurrent coursed through me and spilled out onto the page.  It was immensely fulfilling and life-changing.

Your work has been compared to authors like Barbara Kingsolver, Bohjalian, Sue Miller, and Anita Shreve. I say I have to agree! Who are some of your favorite authors?

Thank you.  It’s very humbling, those comparisons, and I’m sure they’d stop if people were to see me hacking away at the weedy undergrowth of my latest story.


Among my favorite authors are Cormac McCarthy, Tim O’Brien, Anne Lamott, Bill Bryson, Roxana Robinson, Doris Lessing, Jon Krakauer and Alan Paton.

Who/what is your inspiration as you write? Is it always the same, or does it change depending on what you write about?

The inspiration for a story tends to come from a particular character, rather than an event or place.  And whatever inspired the character – who can say?  I tend to believe it’s the great Creative Spirit who is the author of all stories.

I’m anxiously awaiting another book from you. Can you give us a hint on what you are working on now?

The reason why I wrote secretly in a closet (literally) for two years was because I needed to write and write with permission to fail.  I didn’t want to disappoint anyone.  For this reason, it’s hard to talk about what’s next.  But I can tell you it will tackle deep themes and include events that challenge and change lives.

I’m nosey…I like to see where people work.  Can you share with readers  a picture of your desk, office, etc?
Here’s where I’ve been doing my writing lately… I have an office, but it’s out on the deck with the view of the San Gabriel Mountains that I spend much of my day.  I’ve also traded my computer for old-fashioned notebooks and a ballpoint pen.  There’s always a pot of tea and the sound of the mockingbird and grand thoughts drifting along on the morning breeze.

What a breathtaking view! Ahh…and do I spot post-it notes? A woman after my own heart!

Check back later today & enter to win a copy of COME SUNDAY by Isla Morley!

Posted in Author Interviews | Tagged , | 6 Comments

Teaser Tuesday: The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths

Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by MizB of Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along!

Just do the following:

  • Grab your current read
  • Open to a random page
  • Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
  • BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
  • Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!

 

My teaser this week comes from:

 
Shop Indie Bookstores

“Now the wind sounds like children’s voices calling.  How sad they sound, like the cries of sailors lost at sea, like the will o’the wisps searching the world for comfort and warmth.” (pg. 277)

What’s your teaser this week?

Posted in Teaser Tuesday | 7 Comments

Review: Come Sunday by Isla Morley

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Picador; 1 edition (August 3, 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 0312429770
  • Source: Publisher

Abbigail (Abbe) Deighton lives with her husband, Greg, and three-year-old daughter Cloe in Hawaii.  Greg, a minister,  is a caring, loving, husband.  Cleo is your typical toddler, keeping Abbe on her toes.

Abbe’s life is quite different than the one she had growing up in South Africa.  Her father was an alcoholic, physically and abusive toward her mother.  In Abbe’s eyes, her mother put up with the abuse for far too long.

Abbe’s life is ripped from her when Cleo is hit by a car and killed. She goes into a long depression, in a sense dying along with her daughter.

It isn’t until Abbe returns to South Africa that she discovers that she hasn’t been “whole” for some time.  She learns more about her parents’ deaths, and her life.

COME SUNDAY is a heart-wrenching tale of one mother’s grief after losing her child, and ultimately herself.  I literally sobbed through the first 50-60 pages.   As a mother myself, I can’t bear to think of how I would react if I lost one of my children.  However, this is not a tale full of dread and sadness.  It is not only a story of love and loss, but also a journey of rediscovery.  This path Abbe takes is uplifting and empowering, she learns more about her mother; she wasn’t the virtual punching bag Abbe grew up thinking her to be.  Abbe, always the minister’s wife, becomes an individual and finally begins to lead the life she’s meant to lead.

I highly recommend COME SUNDAY, I cannot sufficiently portray how much I loved this book.  Yes, the start of the journey Abbe faces is difficult, but the pain she goes through is worth it in the end.

Beauty, the servant from Abbe’s childhood, said it best:

“The death of our babies is not our punishment…We must carry our burden like the buckets of water the women carry on their heads.  Most of them carry small buckets because their necks are not strong enough.  But a few of the women, the strong ones, have to carry the big buckets.  They have to carry more water; they have to walk a long way.  Then, when the others have finished all their water and are thirsty again, the woman wit the big bucket comes home.  She puts it down and doesn’t have to carry it again for a long time.” (p. 253)

Please don’t let the dreariness of this book’s premise prevent you from reading it.  Just like Abbe’s journey, the reader’s initial sadness will be rewarded in the end.

Buy this book now from:

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Posted in General Fiction, Review, Women's Fiction | Tagged , , , , | 10 Comments

It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week?

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading This Week? This is a weekly event to list the books completed last week, the books currently being reading, and the books to be finish this week. It was created by J.Kaye’s Book Blog, but is now being hosted by Sheila from One Person’s Journey Through a World of  Books so stop by and join in!

Books Completed Last Week

Ashes to Water by Irene Ziegler
Gone Tomorrow by Lee Child
The Improper Life of Bezellia Grove by Susan Gregg Gilmore
The Blessings of the Animals by Katrina Kittle

Currently Reading

61 Hours by Lee Child
The Crossing Places by Elly Griffiths
The Nobodies Album by Carolyn Parkhurst

Books to Complete This Week


The Holy Thief by William Ryan
And of course…Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins

What are you reading this week?

Posted in It's Monday What Are you Reading This Week | 12 Comments

Review: Is Your Buffalo Ready for Kindergarten? by Audrey Vernick

  • Reading level: Ages 4-8
  • Hardcover: 32 pages
  • Publisher: Balzer & Bray; 1 edition (June 22, 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 006176275X
  • Source: Personal copy

Is Your Buffalo Ready for Kindergarten is an charming and adorable book about preparing your child (or buffalo!) for kindergarten!  It discusses things your kindergartner might be worIried about, including being shy & sharing.  It assures children that they don’t need to know how to do all of these these before starting school.  What I loved most about it was the underlying theme of “everyone is special in his/her own way.”

My youngest son, Justin, is starting kindergarten in just a few weeks.  We purchased this book as soon as it released and we’ve read it several times since then, so I wanted to make sure to include his thoughts.  To keep it simple, I asked what he liked about this book:

“I think the book is very silly.  I thought it was funny when the buffalo tried to put on a suit and it was too small.  The funniest funniest funniest part was when he was trying to balance on the tight rope! The tower of blocks they built was very cool! And when the buffalo got his bum stuck on the swing? That was very funny!   Oh, and I liked the part  when the buffalo got grumpy (I added: You know you can’t be grumpy at kindergarten?)  Of course, Mom, but I can still like it!”

Justin picked up on the illustrations of Is Your Buffalo Ready for Kindergarten right away.  The illustrator is Daniel Jennewein, and his drawings are the perfect complement to this story.  They are quite humorous!  Justin spent hours pouring over this book, talking about each of the illustrations.

Justin was very excited to hear that Audrey & Daniel will be in town in September for a signing.  He’s looking forward to getting his first “autoscratch” (autograph).

I highly highly recommend this book to any child preparing to enter kindergarten. I think it will alleviate any fears they may have starting school.

Buy this book now from:
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These are affiliate links. If you purchase an item from either of these links I will earn a small commission, which goes toward the hosting of this blog & other routine costs associated with running this blog.
Posted in 4-8 years of age, Kid-Lit/Middle Grade, Review | Tagged , | 8 Comments

Review: Ashes to Water by Irene Ziegler

  • Hardcover: 394 pages
  • Publisher: Five Star (June 16, 2010)
  • ISBN-10: 1594148600
  • Source: Author

Annie Bartlett returns to her small Florida hometown after her father is murdered.  She demands to confront the woman acquitted of the crime, and is astonished to find that she looks remarkably like her mother, who has been dead since she was a young girl, a victim of suicide.  It’s not difficult for Annie to remember what her mother looked like; she continues to see her nearly every day.  Her mother has “haunted” her since her death, berating Annie’s father and discounting his love to her.

After meeting his father’s accused murderer, she’s suddenly drawn to fight for this woman’s acquittal. She begins to dig a little deeper she discovers that some pretty powerful people are involved, and these individuals want to keep their secrets buried.

I was happy to have “met” Irene on Twitter and I was instantly drawn to the premise of this book.  She has developed some very complex characters; the reader learns a great deal about each of the major characters.  The storyline was evenly paced, keeping my focus and interest throughout.  Irene is definitely an author to keep on your radar, I see nothing but good things in her future. Highly recommended for fans of character-driven thrillers.

Thank you to TLC book tours for providing me the opportunity to participate in this tour.  Please check out the other stops along the way:

Monday, August 23rd: Lesa’s Book Critiques

Tuesday, August 24th: My Reading Room

Wednesday, August 25th: Booksie’s Blog

Thursday, August 26th: Café of Dreams

Monday, August 30th: Jen’s Book Thoughts

Tuesday, August 31st: My Random Acts of Reading

Wednesday, September 1st: Helen’s Book Blog

Thursday, September 2nd: Life In Review

Buy this book now from:

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These are affiliate links. If you purchase an item from either of these links I will earn a small commission, which goes toward the hosting of this blog & other routine costs associated with running this blog.
Posted in Mystery/Suspense, Review, Thriller, Virginia is for Book Lovers | Tagged , , | 3 Comments

Traffic Jam at Jenn’s Bookshelves!

Today’s a busy day here at Jenn’s Bookshelves! A lot is going on and I wanted to make sure you took notice of all the great posts that went live today:

Review: Blessings of the Animals by Katrina Kittle

Review: Darkfever by Karen Marie Moning

Mockingjay District 8 Stop & Giveaway

See? All sorts of great stuff is going on! Be sure you check them all out!

Posted in Bookish Chatter | 1 Comment

Mockingjay District 8 Tour Stop & Giveaway

Hello from District 8!  While my District technically produces textiles, I thought I’d touch on another bit of info from Hunger Games and Catching Fire: the animals of Panem!
Panem has a wide range of interesting wildlife!

Jabberjays are birds created to spy on enemies of the Capitol. They were like voice recorders with wings, they  had the unique ability to memorize and repeat whole human conversations, and were used to gather words from the rebels. The citizens of the Districts soon discovered this, and instead began using jabberjays to spread lies to the Capitol. It wasn’t until later on in the games that the Capitol started using jabberjays again; tributes were fooled with voices they recognized from home, spoken by the jabberjays.

Mockingjays When the Capitol decided to stop using jabberjays, the birds were left in the woods to die.  But instead of perishing, they began mating with the local mockingbirds, thereby creating mockingjays. Like mockingbirds, mockingjays have the ability to duplicate things they hear, in this case songs.  Wearing a mockinjay on your clothing is a sign of rebellion: the Capitol not only failed to destroy their creation, but instead it came back better than before.  Rebels were able to identify Katniss in the woods outside District 12 due to her mockingjay pin.

Another #fail for the Capitol-when people saw Katniss wearing her mockingjay pin, they started wearing them too.  They saw it as a sign of fashion, but in reality it was spreading the popularity of the rebellion.

Muttation-this is a broad range of animals, created by the Capitol for use as weapons, etc.  Jabberjays & mockigjays are technically muttations (mutts for short) , as are tracker jackers, genetically-altered wasps trained to kill & destroy.  They are much larger than normal wasps, and their poisonous venom causes delusions.  Other nameless muttations made an appearance in Hunger Games and Catching Fire, including monkey creatures with deep, deadly claws & butterflies that appeared beautiful but wielded a deadly stinger.

I can’t wait to see what interesting animal creations make an appearance in Mockingjay!  What do you think? Can you come up with an unusual muttation or animal? Is it the friend or foe of the tributes?

Be sure to check out the Official Hunger Games Facebook page. It’s full of great giveaways, facts, etc.

Next up on the 13 District Blog Tour is Friday, August 20: at The Compulsive Reader!

Ok, on to the giveaway! Fifty, yes 50, lucky winners will be awarded exclusive Mockingjay glow-in-the-dark buttons.  Show your Mockingjay pride with some flare!!

To enter, please fill out the form below. Comments are not counted as entries.  Contest is open to US residents only, please.  No P.O. Boxes.  Multiple entries will be disqualified. Winners will be contacted via email on Monday, August 30th. Due to the number, a list of winners will not be posted.

Posted in Bookish Chatter | Tagged , , , , | 40 Comments