Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stephen King. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Spooktacular Giveaway Hop! (INT)



Heys guys, it's October which means the leaves are turning red and gold and you wake up for your jobs and school in pre-dawn darkness (at least where I live). It also means Halloween is near! Unfortunately, we don't celebrate it here but that doesn't stop me from getting into the spirit and feeling like reading and watching creepy stuff (I'm looking at you, American Horror Story)
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This is my third year participating in this hop and I hope it'll be fun this time around, too! The rules are simple and explained under 'Terms & Conditions' in the Rafflecopter. In short: the giveaway is open internationally wherever Book Depository ships, cheaters will be disqualified and all their entries deleted.
Since this is a themed hop, I've got some suggestions for you below (click to cover to get to goodreads). You can always choose another book in the same series (no preorders). If none of these appeal to you, you can pick one between 10-15$ (as seen from my location) as long as it's somehow creepy and/or Halloween related.




Note: the cover shown here may differ from the one of the edition I will eventually order for you if you win.

Okay, now fill out the Rafflecopter and have fun hopping around the other blogs! Go out and enjoy the spooky season, or curl up with a creepy book and a cup of whatever makes you happy :)


a Rafflecopter giveaway




Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: Books that were hard for me to read

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every week they post a new topic that the participants come up with a top ten list for.



This week's topic is about books that were hard to read, be it because of the subject matter, complexity, bad writing, or whatever.


Daniel Defoe - Robinson Crusoe
I once tried to read it in German when I was nine. I thought it would be really interesting and all about surviving on that island, but it was really slow and simply too difficult for me at that time. Then I tried again in my third semester at Uni but never finished it. It was so boring. I'm not sure I even made it to the point where Friday shows up. I couldn't bear to read another catalogue of things he owns or is doing or remembering or thinking about God.

Stephen King - Dreamcatcher
This was my first Stephen King book and I read it when I was fifteen. It was a bit of a rebellious act because my mother (who doesn't like anything horror) always talked about him as that author who writes these gross, bloody horror books (never mind that she'd never read one). But I always felt drawn to King. The first 200 pages weren't so bad, but then the grossness started... for another 200 pages or so. I felt a bit nauseated at times. But then I read The Gunslinger next and was hooked on King for life.

Becca Fitzpatrick - Crescendo
I really liked Hush Hush when I first read it (don't know if I'd still feel the same way now) and was really disappointed by Crescendo. Nora was being so stupid and jealous and doing one brainless thing after the other. I don't even know how many times I rolled my eyes. Silence was a little better, but it's been two years and I still haven't bought that final book.

Laurie Halse Anderson - Wintergirls
Not a bad book at all, just to be clear. But for personal reasons it was very difficult for me to read.

Sarah J. Maas - Crown of Midnight
Why, you may wonder? Because it was so good but I knew it couldn't last. At a certain point in the story things started to pile up and I knew it would all come crashing down and go horribly wrong and characters I cared about would be hurt or killed. Makes it difficult for me to read on because all I can do is watch.

Courtney Summers - Some Girls Are
Heavy subject matter combined with excellent writing made for a harrowing read. I'm glad I read it though. It's important that these things are written and talked about.

Deborah Meyler - The Bookstore
It was unrealistic and pretentious. It wasn't all bad but I wished I could have knocked some sense into our dear protagonist.

Amy Butler Greenfield - Chantress
I'd been looking forward to this one so much and it started out promising, but then the pacing slowed, it was all talking and no experiencing/showing, it was stifling because the heroine was inside all the time, and I wasn't feeling the magic. The last 20 or so percent were great again, but man did that middle drag.

Cassandra Clare - Clockwork Prince
All. The. Feels. Being scared to read on because things will go horribly wrong, yet unable to resist reading. My heart was being stabbed. Cassie Clare made me cry on Christmas at two in the morning.

John Dos Passos - Manhattan Transfer
This book starts in the 1890s or so and spans all the way to the 1920s. There are at least 50 characters, some of whom reappear and some not. The narrative is very complex and not necessarily coherent but once I got into it, I found it irresistible and ended up really loving it. Just the way Dos Passos really gets into the characters' hearts and minds and describes the everyday gains and losses of their lives. The sadness and the hopes. I need to re-read it.

I think if I set my mind to it I could come up with many more. James Joyce's Ulysses was definitely hard to read, so was Bleak House by Charles Dickens (very bleak indeed, and like 1000 pages). And I could have listed a lot of books under 'annoying' but I think that adjective is not very precise or useful when it comes to describing a book or protagonist.
Were any of my picks hard for you to read as well? And what books did you settle on?

Saturday, September 21, 2013

Stacking the Shelves: Talented Queens and Heirs Next Door

I had a great week this time around! I've been waiting for my copy of Lola to arrive for weeks, same with Oath Bound :)

Bought


Lola and the Boy Next Door, by Stephanie Perkins
Oath Bound, by Rachel Vincent
Under the Dome, by Stephen King

I'm watching the UdD series at the moment and really enjoying it! But only from reading the first 20 or so pages of the book I've already realized that they changed a lot of things... I'll see which version I like better when I really dive into the book.
I ordered Lola from ebay because I really wanted the paperback with the old cover, and when I realized it wasn't happening I went to see where I could get the old hardback for cheap :P It shipped all the way from New Mexico to Switzerland... and it was still cheaper.


ebooks


The Runaway Queen, by Cassandra Clare and Maureen Johnson
Vampires, Scones, and Edmund Herondale, by Cassandra Clare and Sarah Rees Brennan
The Midnight Heir, by Cassandra Clare and Sarah Rees Brennan


Talented, by Sophie Davies
Crewel, by Gennifer Albin

As you can see, I went on a Bane Chronicles reading spree...I've already read the three episodes and liked them better than the first one! Herondales <3 *ahem*

Anyway, what did you get in the past week?


Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Beginnings and Endings

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every week they post a new topic that the participants come up with a top ten list for.

This week's topic is about our favorite beginnings and endings of books

This is really hard because while I often think "This is an awesome way of beginning a book!" it's kind of hard to remember these things when you should put them on a list...

Here goes in no particular order:


Great opening lines


The Night Circus - Erin Morgenstern
“The circus arrives without warning. No announcements precede it. It is simply there, when yesterday it was not.”
I love this beginning! It made me immediately want to keep reading!



The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger - Stephen King
“The man in black fled across the desert, and the gunslinger followed.”
One of my all-time favorite series. I read this sentence when I was 15 and I was hooked.



The Demon's Lexicon - Sarah Rees Brennan
"The pipe under the sink was leaking again. It wouldn't have been so bad, except that Nick kept his favourite sword under the sink."
I devoured this book. Evil magicians, demons, swords under the sink, and tons of snarky humor! And Nick is one of a kind.



Der Process (The Trial) - Franz Kafka
"Someone must have slandered Josef K., for one morning, without having done anything truly wrong, he was arrested."
("Jemand musste Josef K. verleumdet haben, denn ohne dass er etwas Böses getan hätte, wurde er eines Morgens verhaftet.")
I know many hate Kafka (at least the whole class apart from me did) but I really like his style and the way the power dynamics in his stories work, as well as the way he uses space and dimensions. This translation isn't bad, although 'wrong' should actually be something more like 'evil'.



Fahrenheit 451 - Ray Bradbury
"It was a pleasure to burn. It was a pleasure to see things eaten, to see things blackened and changed."
Amazing book! If you love reading at all, you've got to read this at some point.



And some favorite closing lines:



On the Road - Jack Kerouac
"The evening star must be drooping and shedding her sparkler dims on the prairie, which is just before the coming of complete night that blesses the earth, darkens all rivers, cups the peaks and folds the final shore in, and nobody, nobody knows what’s going to happen to anybody besides the forlorn rags of growing old, I think of Dean Moriarty, I even think of Old Dean Moriarty the father we never found, I think of Dean Moriarty."
Not my favorite quote from the book, but still a good way to open things up and round off the story.



The Evolution of Mara Dyer - Michelle Hodkin
"This is what I knew: I was trapped in my body, in that bed, at that moment. But even as I looked out through the windows of my eyes, through the bars of my prison, I knew i wouldn't be trapped forever. They rattled my cage to see if I'd bite. When they released me, they'd see the answer was yes."
Go get them, Mara! This series is soooo good, after that ending I just can't wait for the last book!



The Replacement - Brenna Yovanoff
"I reached for Tate, feeling for the warmth of her hand, and linked my fingers through hers. The only thing that mattered was the weight of her head on my shoulder. Our lives were limitless and unknowable, not perfect, but ours. This was life in Gentry. This is just what we do."
This book has SO many quotable lines, but I just really like this ending as well. It works perfectly.



White Cat - Holly Black
"Marks think they can get something for nothing. Marks think they can get what they don't deserve, and could never deserve. Marks are stupid, and pathetic, and sad. Marks think they're going to go home one night and have the girl the loved since they were a kid suddenly love them back. Marks forget that whenever something's too good to be true, that's because it's a con."
This is an amazing ending because it's the epitome of Cassel's voice, and an important motif in the whole series. I also like it because it is bitter... which is a quote in itself.



Some Quiet Place - Kelsey Sutton
"Fear tries to snatch the keys, but I manage to jerk them away just in time. He scowls down at me. 'The world can spin without me for a few minutes, woman. Come on, I've never driven before.' I laugh, a sound that he cuts short with a kiss that tastes of strawberries and terror."
This is a pretty random choice. It's a book I read fairly recently, and I just really like the ending.


Once more, most of these choices were quite random. It was hard to actually find opening sentences because most of my books are boxed up somewhere so it's not like I can snatch them from the shelf and look up beginnings and endings. But I really like the ones I came up with! What do you think of them? And what did you choose?

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Most Intimidating Books

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every week they post a new topic that the participants come up with a top ten list for.

This week's topic: top ten most intimidating books (size, content, hype...)


This is actually quite hard. Let's see what books I can remember...



George R.R. Martin - A Song of Ice and Fire series
Super-intimidating because of the sheer size of it! I love the Game of Thrones TV show, and I really want to read the books, but at the moment I just don't have time for a bunch of such huge books.


Laurie Halse Anderson - Speak
Here it's the topic that intimidates me. I think it's so, so important that someone writes about date rape, but I know I'm going to have a hard time reading this book. I read Wintergirls and it really sent me into a downward spiral. That speaks for Anderson's writing, but taking a dive into my hole is always dangerous and painful.


Marissa Meyer - Cinder
The hype. It makes me very wary, because honestly I never thought it sounded all that awesome *ducks*. But everyone likes it, also people I trust. So there must be something to it...?



William Shakespeare - Hamlet
I somehow got through my BA studies without reading it. The fame and topic and size of it (the Arden edition is freaking huge because of all the notes and secondary sources etc!) always put me off. But I finally read it last spring and damn it was freaking fantastic!!! Which proves that jumping over your shadow and actually facing those intimidating books can pay off.


Something by Diana Wynne Jones
She's such a famous English fantasy author - like a classic - and I've never read anything by her. In my teens, I read fantasy by German authors so it all kind of went past me. And now I'm strangely reluctant to pick anything up, even though many authors I love adore her work.


Stephen King - Misery
It's been sitting on my shelf since my 17th birthday. My sis found a ton of his books at a yard sale. I've read them all, apart from this one. I know there's a scene where the kidnapped authors is given a cake with his own finger in it. The kidnapper-woman just sounds way crazy and I know King is good enough to really horrify me. I know I'm chicken but I never could bring myself to even open the book. Even though I love king and have read a load of his stuff!


A lot of Dystopian and Sci-fi books
Those aren't my go-to genres but I'm realizing that there actually are some amazing ones out there. It's just the unfamiliarity and sometimes the hype that kind of put me off. I want to read Under the Never Sky though and see how I like it. It's just... so many of those books sound so similar. Blabla virus blabla zombies... natural disaster... nearly everyone dead... the fate of the world in the hands of a couple teenagers... evil scientists vs. good scientists. Controlling evil state power. Sure, you can make it good or unique. But when it comes to the description on the back of a book, it just all sounds like something I've heard before, even though I haven't actually read it.


Books by authors I've been following on twitter for a long time but who's work I haven't yet read
What if I like them and I've talked to them and told them I was going to read their book... and then I end up not liking it? It'd be awkward...


Huge but super-successful serieses
Sometimes I'm reluctant to start a series even though it sounds great, simply because there are already like a dozen books out and I know that in the time it'll take me to catch up, there will be another 3 or so out because the author is just that crazy-productive.



Garth Nix - The Abhorsen Chronicles
I've got a paperback with all three books in it (not the one pictured above). Which means it's over 1000 pages and super-heavy. I've had it fore like two years and just can't bring myself to read it, even though I've been drawn to the story ever since I picked up the German edition of Lirael when I was 14 and read the blurb on the back. That was 10 years ago. Am I stupid or what?!


I could go on with this list. There'd be quite a bunch of American classics on it - I've read quite a bunch of English ones, but I've never read William Faulkner or Hemingway or To Kill A Mockingbird or Gone with the Wind or Moby Dick or The Scarlet Letter. I also know that I really should read Brandon Sanderson. I think I'd love his work but I'm scared somehow. Same for Brent Weeks. It's very silly. I don't even know why. Sometimes it's like I'm afraid to like stuff.

So... what do you think of my list? Do we have anything in common? Books? Tendencies of avoidance? Also, please leave a link so I can check out your list :)

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Stacking the Shelves: Ink, Fever, and Freaks

Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Tynga's Reviews to showcase all the books we got in the past week. Those can be bought, won, gifted, for review, borrowed, print or ebooks... no matter, just share what you got :)

Last week was slow but this week more than made up for it! I wish there was more time to read, even though I realized today that I've already read 40 books this year!! o.O


For tour / review / NetGalley:

Girls Love Travis Walker, by Anne Pfeffer
Luminaire, by Ciye Cho
Ink, by Amanda Sun

I read an excerpt from Travis Walker on a blog a couple weeks back and really liked the voice, so when the sign-ups for the tour appeared I signed on immediately :)  I posted my review for Florence by Ciye Cho last week and since I enjoyed the book I agreed to review the sequel when the author offered it to me. As for Ink, I love Japanese culture so when the novel finally showed up on NG I had to request it and I'm so happy I got approved!


Print books:

Darkfever, by Karen Marie Moning
Bloodfever, by Karen Marie Moning
The Wind through the Keyhole, by Stephen King

Darkfever & Bloodfever were gifts from my BFF who re-bought the books so they'd match the editions for the rest of her copies of the series. She's been gushing to me about Barrons for forever so I hope I'll get around to meeting him soon!
The Wind Through the Keyhole is a book I was really excited about when it first came out! Another Dark Tower book! I read the first book in that series nearly 10 years ago and I still think about the characters quite often. I'm so glad I found this paperback edition - the cover is the prettiest version I've seen yet, and it's illustrated :)


Bought ebooks:

Crossing the Line, by Katie McGarry
Beautiful Freaks, by Katie M. John
Monument 14, by Emmy Laybourne

All of these were fairly cheap, Monument 14 is on sale for around 3$ (depending on locaction).


Free on Smashwords:

Winter Fae, by Melissa Turner Lee & Pauline Creeden


I sort of want to read so many of these at once >.< What do you think of them? And what did you get this past week?
Also, in case you missed it, I reviewed Debra Driza's MILA 2.0 this week :)

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Top Ten Tuesday: Authors and Books I'm Thankful For

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by the lovely people at The Broke and The Bookish. Every week, all the bloggers participating post their Top Ten list of a certain topic.

This week's topic is: Top ten authors and books I'm thankful for.

I'm not American so I don't do Thanksgiving, but seeing all those posts on twitter and around the blogosphere always gets me in a pensive mood, too, and makes me remember what and who I'm grateful to have in my life. So I'll give this list a try... as always, no particular order.
Sorry for the lack of pictures but there would be so many and the formatting always drives me nuts if I want them to look nice in the text.


  1. Stephen King - On Writing
    I love this book and I've read it several times. Most of what I know about writing and how I approach it I've learned from here. It's written in a way that even my 17-year-old self could understand.
  2. Ralf Isau - Der Kreis der Dämmerung (Circle of the Dawn)
    This is an epic saga in 4 volumes, spanning the entire 20th century. I've read all the books at least twice. They've made me laugh and cry and feel pretty much any emotion known to man. Reading makes me remember what's important. And I just love David Camden as a character.
  3. J.R.R. Tokien - The Lord of the Rings
    Probably no explanation needed for this one... I first red it 10 years ago and have been meaning to re-read it... for the 5th time. It was part of my introduction to fantasy books.
  4. Wolfgang & Heike Hohlbein
    I'm grateful for pretty much any book they've co-written between 1982 and 2004. I don't really know their more recent work. Some of my favorites are Der Greif, Dreizehn, Krieg der Engel, and Spiegelzeit. Those were the reads of my early to mid teens and fueled my imagination. I got another 2 or so from the school library every week (yes they wrote tons of books).
  5. Kate Griffin - A Madness of Angels
    One of the best Urban Fantasy books I've ever read. Her writing blows my mind every time! It makes me see the city through fresh eyes again, and it makes me believe that maybe magic is still possible even these days.
  6. Holly Black
    Anything she's written is amazing. She comes up with such great ways to express things, and her writing is very courageous and touches on topics that I think many authors shy away from or skirt around.
  7. Poppy Z. Brite - Lost Souls
    For putting the bite back into vampires. Well, for me at least since I read it about 18 years after it was published. Great writing, though sometimes on the vey gory side.
  8. Stephen King - Dark Tower series
    Roland Deschain and his ka-tet. Their journey will be with me until the day I breathe my last.
  9. Edgar Allan Poe
    I love his poems and short stories. He's hard to grasp but he was a big influence on me, especially his way of approaching short story writing in one of his essays.
  10. Oscar Wilde - The Picture of Dorian Gray
    I have no way to express my feels. I really love and admire this man. I even visited his grave in Paris, and I'm grateful I got there before they put this weird glass wall around it. One of my most treasured memories.
  11. John Keats, Stephen Crane, John Donne, William Carlos Williams, Christina Rossetti, Emily Dickinson, Shakespeare, John Milton, William Blake...
    I'm sure I forgot some. A very cut-back list of some of my favorite poets.

I realized that I put a big (too much?) focus on modern authors and forgot about all the Classics I read for university, many of which have left a big impression on me. That's part of the reason for number 11. Also, poems are very underrated. More people should read and discuss them.