Showing posts with label something strange and deadly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label something strange and deadly. Show all posts

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Stacking the Shelves: Between the Devil and a Lovely Darkness

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 :)


This week brought me two long pined for new releases! Also, as you're reading this I'm spending the weekend in Italy, so I'll get back to everyone on Monday :)

Won

A Darkness Strange and Lovely, by Susan Dennard

Won from Jen at YA Romantics! Thanks again, I've been waiting for it to release for a year :)


Bought

Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea, by April Genevieve Tucholke

I've been pining for this since before it even had a cover! Can' wait to make it my next read once I finish Robin Wasserman's Book of Blood and Shadows!


Amazon freebie

Madly, by M. Leighton

I've seen some reviews of this one around so I thought I'd give it a try. It was free when I just looked it up on amazon, but you can check whether it still is here.

Also, I have two giveaways going on right now! Both are international and you can check them out in the top left sidebar :)

That's it, and I'm secretly glad because I have soooo many unread books and that always makes me twitchy >.< Have you already read any of these? If so, what did you think? And what's new on your shelves this week?

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Stacking the Shelves: Sweet Shadows and Wicked Bones

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 :)

This week I didn't get too many books, which is good because I have a huge stack to tackle already! I've already read 2 of those 4 books and they were fantastic :D

Bought in print:

Shadow and Bone, by Leigh Bardugo

This was a spontaneous buy at my favorite English-only bookstore in Zurich. It's a new UK paperback version with the original cover&title and with Siege & Storm coming out now and everyone raving about the series again I just couldn't resist. I'd planned to only read a couple pages to check it out but yeah... 30 hours later and the thing's gone ;) Fantastic! Now begins the miserable wait for the matching paperback edition of book 2...

eBooks:

A Dawn Most Wicked, by Susan Dennard
Sweet Thing, by Renee Carlino
Of Silver and Beasts, by Trisha Wolfe

I had the A Dawn Most Wicked novella on preorder but had forgotten all about it, so when it downloaded to my kindle that was a great surprise! I've already read it and it's awesome! My review should be up soon :)
I got Sweet Thing spontaneously because it was on sale for 0.99$. East Village, old café, and musician, and eccentric friends sounded great to me :) I feel like going to New York but since it's not going to happen for another year I'll just live vicariously :P
Of Silver and Beasts is a late add I just bought 5mins ago because it's also on sale! It was on my wishlist after I read an excerpt...

What do you guys think of my new additions to the pile? Have you read any of them? And new pretties made it onto your shelves this week?
Also, I've got two giveaways going on at the moment, one for a book of your choice up to 10$ and another for a copy of Snow White Sorrow by Cameron Jace. Links in the sidebar :)

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Book Covers Of Books I've Read

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly feature hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. Every week the participants post their top ten to a specific topic.

So this week is about favorite covers of books we've read... and it's soooo hard to choose!!! So much pretty! I'm sure I will forget something totally obvious and want to bash my head into the wall because of it. Ahem. Anyway, here goes in no particular order...




I imagine Varen to look just like that. I love that the models wear clothes the characters wear in the book. And I love all the writing on the image - it hints at Varen's mysterious notebooks.
As for Fragile Eternity, the butterfly looks just that - fragile. Frozen. I also adore the font! And it was one of my favorite books in the seris :)


Black City was a book I wanted to read for a whole year before it came out. The wait was agonizing. I love that shatteredrose, the font, the colors, the city in the backdrop. It's perfect.
Throne of Glass - so badass! The clothes. The hair. The daggers!! The colors and font. The UK cover is just so much better than the US one.


Masque's cover is even more beautiful in person because the paper has a shimmer to it that isn't visible on the screen. The colors, dress, and parasol fit perfectly. I love it!
Dearly, Departed is another parasol cover I love. The colors are perfect and again, it fits the actual content. I also adore the font!


Splintered's cover is just so vibrant!!! The colors are even deeper when you see them for real, and I love how there are so many details you only start to notice as you read the actual story.
With Chantress, the combination of the colors, her hood, the font, the tag line, and the thing she's holding in her hand intrigued me.


I have very mixed feelings about hte Fallen series, but I love the covers. Torment is my favorite. It looks eternally cold and mournful and you can just see the inner turmoil of the girl. It's stunning in its simplicity.
Something Strange and Deadly is another one you have to see in person because it shimmers so prettily! The model looks really close to how I imagined Eleanor and I think the detail of the cogs and wheels in the background is awesome.

Nevermore, by Kelly Creagh
Fragile Eternity, by Melissa Marr
Black City, by Elizabeth Richards
Throne of Glass, by Sarah J. Maas
Masque of the Red Death, by Beathany Griffin
Dearly, Departed, by Lia Habel
Splintered, by A.G. Howard
Chantress, by Amy Butler Greenfield
Torment, by Lauren Kate
Something Strange and Deadly, by Susan Dennard

This was really hard! I thought there would be less pretty dress covers and more graphically interesting ones but those are mostly covers from the TBR pile. Also, it's hard to separate my feelings of the story from those of the cover. There were many books I love whose books are pretty but just not quite awesome enough to make the list.
Anyhow, here are some runner-ups from other books I've already read:



Wither, by Lauren Destefano
In the Shadow of Blackbirds, by Cat Winters
The Pledge, by Kimberly Derting

With Wither, it's that the cover fits so perfectly! Also, mostly I chose it because the inner design of the book is so special and gorgeous! In the Shadow of Blackbirds was fantastic and I love that the cover photograph appears in the book, along with other copies of actual photographs from the time period the book is set in. The Pledge is so gorgeous, and what I think is special about it is that the word is juxtaposed on the image again and the texture is different from the rest of the cover. You feel the words when you trace them.


Oof. Alrighty, what do you guys think of my choices? Anything that is glaringly absent? And please leave your links, I can't wait to see what covers you chose and find new things to drool over ;)


Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Waiting on Wednesday: A Darkness Strange & Lovely, by Susan Dennard

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly meme hosted by Jill at Breaking The Spine to spotlight upcoming book releases that we're excited for. My pick this week:


Expected release: July 23, 2013
Publisher: HarperTeen
Format: Hardcover, 416 pages

Goodreads description:
Following an all-out battle with the walking Dead, the Spirit Hunters have fled Philadelphia, leaving Eleanor alone to cope with the devastating aftermath. But there’s more trouble ahead—the evil necromancer Marcus has returned, and his diabolical advances have Eleanor escaping to Paris to seek the help of Joseph, Jie, and the infuriatingly handsome Daniel once again. When she arrives, however, she finds a whole new darkness lurking in this City of Light. As harrowing events unfold, Eleanor is forced to make a deadly decision that will mean life or death for everyone.


I adored Something Strange & Deadly!!! Read my review here, if you like.  At the end of it, Eleanor really was in a bad spot, and apparently she's left to her own devices. I can't wait to see how she masters that, and how the story will unfold in Paris! Oh, and there's of course Daniel, and their awesome banter. And Susan Dennard once posted a teaser involving an airship!! Plus, look at that stunning cover. Notice the subtle differences to the first one. If you'd read it, you know why she has her arm behind her back...

What do you think of my pick? Are you also impatient? What did you pick this week?

Friday, August 3, 2012

Review: Something Strange and Deadly, by Susan Dennard


Publication date: July 24th, 2012
Publisher: HarperTeen
Format: Hardcover, 388 pages

Goodreads description:
The year is 1876, and there’s something strange and deadly loose in Philadelphia…

Eleanor Fitt has a lot to worry about. Her brother has gone missing, her family has fallen on hard times, and her mother is determined to marry her off to any rich young man who walks by. But this is nothing compared to what she’s just read in the newspaper—

The Dead are rising in Philadelphia.

And then, in a frightening attack, a zombie delivers a letter to Eleanor…from her brother.

Whoever is controlling the Dead army has taken her brother as well. If Eleanor is going to find him, she’ll have to venture into the lab of the notorious Spirit-Hunters, who protect the city from supernatural forces. But as Eleanor spends more time with the Spirit-Hunters, including their maddeningly stubborn yet handsome inventor, Daniel, the situation becomes dire. And now, not only is her reputation on the line, but her very life may hang in the balance.


Review (spoiler free):
I was really anxious to get my hands on this book! I love steampunk, but have read few stories set in the US so far. Also, I was curious to see how the author would combine the historical/steampunk setting with zombies. Well, I was not disappointed!

I really enjoyed how Susan Dennard managed to write a strong heroine like Eleanor and still make her believable in a 19th century setting. She is not strong in a way that makes her seem out of context or as if transplanted in 1876 Philadelphia from the present day, but neither is she a vapid high-society girl only concerned with fashion and gossip. She is smart, and she can kick some ass- err, incapacitate the Dead with well-placed blows of her sturdy parasol. All of that while wearing a suffocating corset and heavy skirts and gloves in the summer heat (for once, the gorgeous dress on the cover is actually relevant to the book). The frequent mention on dresses and dressing procedure might appear weird to some people, but do your research – those corsets kept more in line than just young ladies’ figures. If you can’t move your body or even breathe freely, how are you going to think? How break out of confinement and the role assigned to you by society?

However, that’s what Eleanor needs to do if she wants to save her brother from whoever is controlling the Dead and uncover the mystery of her father’s death and her family’s financial ruin. Preferably before her mother spends the rest of their meager funds on trying to keep up with society’s expectations so that she can marry Eleanor off to the first rich man that comes along, which appear to be Clarence Wilcox, son of a man who used to be her father’s friend. But what exactly are Clarence’s reasons to show interest in Eleanor?

Eleanor needs help, and information. What better place to go than the Spirit Hunters, hired by the city to improve security during the Centennial Exhibition? An unusual amount of walking Dead have been sighted in the cemeteries around Philadelphia, and unless the Spirit Hunters can come up with a smart solution, they might turn Hungry and overrun the city at any time.

The Spirit Hunters were different from what I thought – I had expected a large organization, with secrets and hierarchies and funds. Instead, there are only three of them. Joseph, the Creole gentleman from New Orleans who used to study under a voodoo queen. Daniel, the rude inventor who loves to tease Eleanor. Oh Daniel. You got on my nerves as much as on Eleanor’s at the beginning, but you turned out to be one of my favorite characters in the book. And Jie, the Chinese girl who wears trousers and inspires a new way of thinking about gender roles in Eleanor. Jie is nothing if not tough, pragmatic, and realistic.
However, the city mistrusts the Spirit Hunters despite hiring them, and their evasiveness about certain issues also rouses Eleanor’s suspicions.

Just whom can she trust? Her family? The Spirit Hunters? Clarence Wilcox? No one but herself? I really enjoyed seeing Eleanor grow into her true potential despite the tremendous odds she is facing at times. The pace of the book was great, picking up as things went along and always a good mixture of action scenes and smart deductions and revelations about the sinister plot behind the actions of Philadelphia’s elite. There’s was also humor thrown in, especially in the dialogues between Eleanor and Daniel.

The love interests in this book couldn’t be more different from one another. On the one hand, Clarence Wilcox is the man every girl in society pines over: handsome, rich, accomplished, about to run for the city council. On the other hand, Daniel is poor, at times rude and infuriating, but also a very talented inventor and someone who really cares about his surrogate-family of Spirit Hunters. He and Eleanor have more in common than is obvious at first sight. I loved watching their relationship evolve. Who knew what rolled up shirt sleeves could do to a girl not used to being touched without gloves (another realistic 19th century part I really enjoyed – effects of dress etiquette). Another thing I enjoyed? The romance aspect didn’t hijack the story but it did enrich it without being dominant.

The final showdown was surprisingly graphic but nothing if not realistic. I admit that I could see part of the revelation of the mystery coming, but not the whole extent of it or Eleanor’s entire involvement. No matter what, the fallout from it all was unexpected in its severity and the ending doesn’t sugarcoat anything, which I liked even though it broke my heart a little. Overall, I can’t wait to see Eleanor face the consequences of what she did and the decisions she’s made. What an amazing debut and killer start to a new series!


Personal thoughts (spoilery):
For once, I don’t have that much to add. I loved how realistic the setting was (down to all the uncomfortable parts like the stink, having to get by on little money while pretending affluence, having to bribe your maid), and I could go and on about how important those dresses were to the way women could move and behave and express themselves – or more like, couldn’t. Seeing Eleanor go from being shocked at Jie’s wearing trousers to doing it herself was awesome. She didn’t grow up to be an adventurer, but she definitely picked up courage and learned to hold her own in a fight – especially once the lack of breath in that corset didn’t leave her in danger of fainting anymore.

What I didn’t expect, but thought was great? That the price she pays is her hand. I expected it to be saved somehow, but it wasn’t. There had to be payment for her breaching of norms and laws, and this is it. Don’t get me wrong, I hurt for her and I shudder at something similar happening to myself. But I’m glad the author didn’t ‘chicken out’ and come up with an unrealistic miracle. I’m curious to see the consequences of this – no way for her mother to marry her off now, even if the damage to her reputation could be undone. I hope Daniel makes a really great artificial hand for her in the sequel ^^’’ Yes, I really did like the dynamics between them that much. Their exchanges were also very amusing, and that kiss… *sigh* let’s just say, I wish my first kiss had been like that.

A note on the zombies: I’m not usually a fan of zombies. Unlike vampires, they just gross me out. I only knew them from a few movies though and had never read a zombie-book, even though there are so many coming out right now. I had actually planned for my first zombie read to be Dearly, Departed, but I haven’t gotten round to that one yet. I read in one review that the blogger thought there was not enough mention of zombies/importance given to the issue in Something Strange and Deadly, but I can’t agree with that. The Dead come up all the time, and there are plenty of attacks. The final showdown was quite graphic but in that, erm, slightly pleasant, liking-to-be-grossed-out way. (We have a word for that feeling in Swiss German but I can’t come up with an English translation.)

I wanted to keep this short but there I am, rambling on again… one last note on the women characters. I liked Eleanor for her fierceness and her loyalty, as well as her realism. She keeps the finances of the household in check and runs errands while her mother stays at home doing… whatever. Having tea, probably. Yet while Eleanor is strong in her person, the author also made her limitations (and those of all women) clear. She and her mother have no male provider and protector, and they need money. While her mother deludes herself and pretends affluence and fawns over marrying her daughter off like so much cattle, which I found sickening, it is also a show of realism in her character. If they want to keep their high-society status, Eleanor can’t work outside the home. Her mother is probably too old to remarry, so finding a husband for her daughter, to her, is worth spending all that money if it pays out in the end. Eleanor’s age would not have been an issue at the time, nor were her wishes. I also liked that Dennard brought in characters from all classes – spoilt daughters for whom money was no issue, Eleanor caught somewhere in the middle, as well as servant girls such as her maid Mary. I thought she was greedy and petty at first, but she’s also just trying to get by on what is probably little to no wage apart from food and housing. The jealousy among women, as well as the occasional moments of companionship, again made the time and setting come alive to me rather than just having it there as a sort of theatre scenery.

To wrap it up: great and diverse characters, well-rendered scenery and world-building, compelling writing, interesting plot, as well as just the right amount of fighting and action scenes. One of my favorite books this year so far, and a piece of shelf-candy for greater merits than just a beautiful cover.


But as always, I’m interested in what you guys think. Have you read it? Do you want to?


There’s also a book trailer, as well as a beautifully done website.
Susan Dennard also has a Facebook page and a Twitter account.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Stacking the Shelves, general update & giveaway news





Stacking the Shelves is a weekly post hosted by Tynga's Reviews to showcase new adds to the reading pile, no matter how they were acquired. This time, I'm also using it for a general update and recap.

First off, I have to apologize for not replying to comments or checking out other people's WoW's etc. The reason is that I was on a 10-day Interrail journey which led me from Zurich to Prague to Hamburg to Amsterdam and eventually back to Zurich. Loads of train-driving, amazing memories and sights I will forever treasure. However, also not so much time on the computer/blogs/twitter/tumblr and all that. Which was nice in a way, but not something I'd want to do all the time. I'm glad to be back!

Of course, I can't go on a trip without buying books... but since my suitcase was small, I limited myself to two. I bought Paranormalcy by Kristen White when I was in Prague and read it on the journey to Hamburg. You can read my review here. When I was in Amsterdam, I discovered that they actually have a Waterstones there!! I know the store from UK trips and love it - no Swiss book store stacks that many English books! I bought:
I love haunted house stories, but I've read waaaay too few of them! This nearly 700 page monster contains stories on diverse aspects of the genre by a variety of writers - among them, to my surprise, also Virginia Woolf. Once I finish it (could take a while) I'll review some of the stories.

The day after I got home from my trip I went to the fleamarket, where I bought a book for a buck (among other things). It's a German edition and I don't usually read thsoe anymore because the (often not so good) translations upset me, but I thought what the heck, I've been looking at this at the store way too often to pass up this opportunity.

 

I own it with the cover on the left, but I thought it was also really interesting to compare it with the English cover. Very different effect.

When I got home today, too more pretties were waiting for me in my mailbox!
goodreads
goodreads

I've been wanting to read Anna Dressed in Blood for forever and was only waiting for the paperback. However, since Something Strange and Deadly only just came out, I will read that one first and probably get started on it tonight or tomorrow.

What I've recently finished:



I enjoyed both books a lot and hope to get some reviews up soon!


More news: I'm participating in the 2nd Annual Summer Giveaway Hop hosted by I Am A Reader, Not A Writer and Mary from BookHounds & Forever Young (adult). Almost 200 blogs are participating! This is my first time doing something like this and I hope my post goes on at the right time (yeah... time difference doesn't help trying to coordinate blog posts and rafflecopter forms >.<) and everything works as it should. The hop starts on August 1 and ends on August 7. I hope some of you guys will check out my post and enter! I hope this will be fun :)


What's new on your shelves? Have you read any of the books mentioned above, and what did you think about them? What are you reading at the moment? Tell me in the comments :)

Monday, July 9, 2012

Book Trailer: Something Strange and Deadly, by Susan Dennard

I do not usually post book trailers here because I'm not such a big fan of them, but I've been excited for this book for months and I think the trailer is pretty well done!



I like the graphics with the shadows on the wall and the short quotes! Also, we get some more info about the mysterious Spirit-Hunters. I'm really cuious about the worldbuilding in this book! It's Victorian and paranormal and sort of steampunk-ish, a combination I really enjoy! Also, zombies. I know they are all the rage now, but I actually haven't read a zombie book yet... I've been meaning to read Dearly, Departed by Lia Habel but I'm waiting for the paperback edition with the pretty cover to release *ahem*.


Not heard of Something Strange and Deadly before?

Publication date: July 24, 2012
Publisher: Harper Teen
Format: hardcover, 400 pages

Goodreads description:
goodreads
The year is 1876, and there’s something strange and deadly loose in Philadelphia…

Eleanor Fitt has a lot to worry about. Her brother has gone missing, her family has fallen on hard times, and her mother is determined to marry her off to any rich young man who walks by. But this is nothing compared to what she’s just read in the newspaper—

The Dead are rising in Philadelphia.

And then, in a frightening attack, a zombie delivers a letter to Eleanor…from her brother.

Whoever is controlling the Dead army has taken her brother as well. If Eleanor is going to find him, she’ll have to venture into the lab of the notorious Spirit-Hunters, who protect the city from supernatural forces. But as Eleanor spends more time with the Spirit-Hunters, including their maddeningly stubborn yet handsome inventor, Daniel, the situation becomes dire. And now, not only is her reputation on the line, but her very life may hang in the balance.


Doesn't it sound awesome?! Not to mention, the cover is completely gorgeous... I've been participating in ARC giveaways over and over but with no luck... have you read an early copy of Something Strange and Deadly? Are you excited about it? Thoughts on the trailer? Let me know in the comments :)