Monday, September 10, 2012

Review: The White Forest, by Adam McOmber



Publishing date: September 11, 2012
Publisher: Touchstone
Format: Hardcover, 320 pages

Description from Goodreads:
In the bestselling tradition of The Night Circus and Sarah Waters’s The Little Stranger, Adam McOmber’s hauntingly original debut novel follows a young woman in Victorian England whose peculiar abilities help her infiltrate a mysterious secret society.

Young Jane Silverlake lives with her father at a crumbling family estate on the edge of Hampstead Heath. Jane has a secret—an unexplainable gift that allows her to see the souls of manmade objects—and this talent isolates her from the outside world. Her greatest joy is wandering the wild heath with her neighbors, Madeline and Nathan. But as the friends come of age, their idyll is shattered by the feelings both girls develop for Nathan, and by Nathan’s interest in a cult led by Ariston Day, a charismatic mystic popular with London's elite. Day encourages his followers to explore dream manipulation, with the goal of discovering a new virtual reality, a place he calls the Empyrean.    
 
A year later, Nathan has vanished, and the famed Inspector Vidocq arrives in London to untangle the events that led up to Nathan’s disappearance. As a sinister truth emerges, Jane realizes she must discover the origins of her talent and use it to find Nathan herself, before it’s too late.

Adam McOmber, whose short story collection This New and Poisonous Air earned glowing praise for its evocative prose, here reveals a gift for fantastical twists and dark turns that literary fans will relish.

The following review is based on an advance copy the publisher provided for me via NetGalley and states my honest impression of the book.

Review (no spoilers):
The White Forest is unlike any book I have read before, and I’d be hard pressed to categorize it. Part mystery or detective novel, part coming-of-age story, part fantasy, the novel is written in the literary tone and using many of the conventions of the Victorian epoch where it is set.

The reader meets Jane Silverlake, the first person narrator, several weeks after the disappearance of her close friend Nathan Ashe. The story of his disappearance and the subsequent investigation and search for him is told alternately in the present and in flashbacks to the time when Jane, her best and only friend Maddy, and Nathan first met years ago as well as to the weeks shortly before his disappearance. As the tale unravels, I was constantly torn between empathy for Jane (for example when we learn how she is treated by some of the staff as well as her general isolation) and the feeling that there was something sinister about her, that she was hiding something from both the reader and herself.

Jane’s ability to feel the souls of man-made objects emerged shortly after her mother’s death. They assault her mind with flashes of images or sounds, sometimes to the point where being inside her own home becomes unbearable and she seeks refuge in the nature of Hampstead Heath. While her friend Maddy feels uneasy about her ability and calls it a disease, Nathan is fascinated and often asks her to hold his hand so she can transfer the experience to him. He also wants her to experiment with her talent and develop it. As the story progresses and the young people grow up, it becomes clear that their friendly triangle transforms into an unhealthy power-dynamic of half-hidden rivalry, envy, and betrayal.

Before his disappearance, Nathan had fallen in with a man called Ariston Day who leads a cult or secret society in Southwark and lures in the sons of wealthy aristocrats with promises of leading them to a place called the Empyrean, a sort of earthly paradise where life will be like before the Fall. Day is an elusive and mysterious character who experiments with both magic and science and has no scruples when it comes to achieving his goals. Because of Nathan’s indiscreetness, Day has heard of Jane’s talents and wants to use them for his own ends. The mixture of fear and allure that draws in his followers can definitely be felt by the reader as well.

Adam McOmbers prose is gorgeous. There are so many hidden undertones and layers to his writing, sometimes with and sometimes without the knowledge of the characters who utter his words. The Victorian world he recreated is realistic and magical all at once and incorporates many of the typical and often contradictory traits of that society: a delight in mysticism, a simultaneous belief in science, the new technique of photography, the importance of reputation vs. what went on behind closed doors anyway, the roles and opportunities open to women. As a lover of the history of that era, reading this novel was a real delight. I was never quite sure where Jane’s journey towards the recovery of her friend as well as her own self-discovery would end up.

I would recommend The White Forest to a more mature YA or adult audience because of its complexity especially as it approaches the ending. A knowledge of English literary tradition enriches the reading but is not necessary – anyone looking for something truly different in the fantasy or literary genre can enjoy this novel and the uniqueness of its world, plot and style.


I am awed. I’d actually rather write a literary essay on this one than a review.

Have you had the chance to read White Forest early? Is this something you think you might enjoy? As always, feel free to comment :)

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Stacking The Shelves

Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme hosted by Tynga's Reviews for us to showcase any books we've gotten that week, be they gifted, bought, or received for review.





My book haul :) All of them are bought apart from Origin, which is a signed ARC I won in one of the author's competitions :D It's my first ARC and it makes me very happy and I just want to dig into it already ^^
Enshadowed, by Kelly Creagh
Black Heart, by Holly Black
Touch, by Jus Accardo
Uncommon Criminals, by Ally Carter

I've been meaning to read Touch forever, but whenever I wanted to get it, it was out of print or only available in an edition that for some reason was very expensive. I put of buying Black Heart for a long time because I was reluctant to buy it because of that dreadful cover change, but I finally caved. I hate that all 3 books look really different from one another on my shelves thogh :( This is such an amazing series and I would have loved to own them all in the same edition and format!
Enshadowed will be my next not-for-review read, just after I've re-read Nevermore. And by not-for-review I mean that I don't need to have it read or reviewed at a certain time, not that I won't review it at all ;)
I'm also looking forward to reading Uncommon Criminals because the first book, Heist Society, was so much fun! It's not top priority though; I have sooooo many unread books at the moment that choosing between them is making me crazy >.<
There are some more books that I ordered that are supposed to arrive hopefully soon... for example I got an email that Unspoken, by Sarah Rees Brennan, was pre-released and sent on its way, so I hope it'll get to me by release day / Tuesday!

It's been quiet here as concerns reviews this week. The reason is that I've read one book for a blog tour and can't post the review till next week, and I'm still on the book I started after that. It's been a bit slow going with my reading, but I hope my speed will pick back up soon!

What new books did you get? Show off your book haul and leave me a link so I can check it out :)

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Waiting on Wednesday: Stray Souls, by Kate Griffin

"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we can't wait to get our grabby bookish hands on.


My pick this week:


Stray Souls, by Kate Griffin


add it on goodreads
Expected Publication: September 18, 2012
Publisher: Orbit
Format: Paperback, 464 pages

'Don’t look back. It wants you to look back.’

London’s soul has gone missing. Lost? Kidnapped? Murdered? Nobody knows – but when Sharon Li unexpectedly discovers she’s a shaman, she is immediately called upon to use her newfound powers of oneness with the City to rescue it from a slow but inevitable demise.

The problem is, while everyone expects Sharon to have all the answers – from the Midnight Mayor to Sharon’s magically-challenged self-help group – she doesn’t have a clue where to start.

But with London’s soul missing and the Gate open, there are creatures loose that won’t wait for her to catch up before they go hunting.

Stray Souls is the first novel in the Magicals Anonymous series, set in the same fantastical London as the Matthew Swift novels.



I wasn't planning on doing a WoW this week, but then I sorted throug my books on goodreads and noticed this one! And it comes out in ONLY TWO WEEKS!! I had totally forgotten about it! Back when I added it, there was neither a cover nor a description. I love love love the Kate Griffin's Matthew Swift novels!! Among the most genius worldbuilding I have EVER read. I devoured the first book. Slowly - because it was so gorgeous to read and I didn't want it to end. I put sticky notes into my favorite bits - I had never done that before. So of course I am super excited that this new series is set in the same world, and the idea of London having a soul and a shaman from a magic self-help group having to retrieve it? I'm so in! I love how Griffin often writes reluctant heroes or heroines. And now I will shut up and take my babbling somewhere else ^^''

Have you read any of the Matthew Swift novels? No? You can check out the first one, A Madness of Angels, right here.
What are you guys waiting for this Wednesday?

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Teaser Tuesday: The Well of Lost Plots

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!


I decided not to do a Top Ten Tuesday today because I can't possibly choose only 10 of the books I'm looking forward to reading this Fall, and looking at how long my TBR list is and knowing that I'll never be able to read all of it depresses me at the moment. So I'm sharing a teaser from my current read instead :)

I'm cheating a bit and sharing 3 sentences instead of two.

'...here are the main points of the news. Prices of semi-colons, plot devices, prologues and inciting incidents continued to fall yesterday, lopping twenty-eight points off the TomJones Index. The Council of Genres has announced the nominations for the 923rd annual BookWorld Awards; Heathcliff is once again to head the 'Most Troubled Romantic Lead' category for the seventy-seventh year running...'



Haha. This is the footnoterphone entry from page 7 of Jasper Fforde's The Well of Lost Plots, the third book in the Thursday Next series centering on SpecOp Literary Detective Thursday Next, newly also member of Jurisfiction and currently hiding in an unpublished (for a reason) novel.

This one was one of my dusty reads; I bought it more than a year ago and hesitated to read it because I didn't want to re-read book 2 but was fuzzy on what exactly happened. Well, today I saw there is a recap at the beginning...
These books are a must for all us book geeks! It's about a world where everyone is crazy about literature! Also, people travel by airship (planes are only for the military) and dodos (brought back from extinction) are popular pets. And I mean, who wouldn't want Thursday's talent? The woman can read herself into books! And I mean that physically and literally.
Intrigued? Click the cover to get to goodreads.

What are you guys reading at the moment? Link me up in the comments :)

Monday, September 3, 2012

GIVEAWAY (Int)! Blogoversary and 200 follower-celebration




I know I know, I've been talking about this forever. By now, you've probably been thinking I'd never actually follow it up... but here it is, my joint 200 follwers and 3 month blogoversary celebration giveaway! To be precise, the blogoversary of my first post was on August 24, but since I only started blogging somewhat seriously in mid-June, I guess I can be forgiven for being a bit late. Right? This giveaway is going to last for all of September!

I can't believe it's been three months already! For that amount of time, I don't think I've posted enough reviews *squirms* I'm not used to reading on a schedule or having to immediately write about what I've read yet, and while I probably won't review every book I read, I still hope to get the reviewing frequency up a bit. It's just that writing them up actually takes me ridiculously long because I want to do justice to the book without spoiling too much or being super vague.

Also, I never thought I'd have so many awesome followers by now! Seriously, I'm happy about every page-view and comment on one of my posts! Especially the reviews, since I love to exchange impressions and discuss :)

I'm also curious to hear you guys' opinion about this blog. What do you like? Dislike? What kind of post would you like to see more of? One of my regrets three months into blogging is that I don't really feel part of a community. Where do bloggers 'hang out'? I'm a bit shy when it comes to striking up a conversation first and I'm afraid that I'd just bother people... but I love it when people talk to me :)

But now, without further ado,


The Prizes

Paperback Bundle




Ebook Bundle




Each bundle will go to ONE winner, who will receive ALL the books in it! The paperbacks will be ordered from the Book Depository, the eBooks from amazon, so you'll need a kindle or kindle app to receive them. (I even switched from amazon.de to amazon.com for this, since the German store doesn't have a give-as-gift function). Anyone the Book Depository ships to and anyone able to receive kindle books can enter, no matter where you live! Note on ebooks: if you already have one of the books, you can also choose another installment of the same series.
Also, I won some Origin swag from author Jessica Khoury and have some (though sadly not much) swag (some of it signed) lying around and if I receive that Origin swag by the end of September, I will put together a swag bundle for one runner up and add it to the rafflecopter!

I also want to try something new and creative for you guys to get more entries. Jessica Khoury's contests for swag and ARCs brought the Pinfiction phenomenon to my attention, and I'd like to try this here as well! How does it work? Easy. Just go to my Pinboards (you don't need a Pinterest account), pick a pin that you like, and write a 500 character (including spaces) story/scene to it! When you've done that, email the story and a direct link to the pin you picked to shelfspaceneeded(at)hotmail(dot)com. Attention: 500 characters are the limit, not 500 words! Enter your email address into the provided space of the rafflecopter form so that I know which entry is yours. Sounds fun, right? Something other than just sharing on twitter/facebook/whatever :)

The Rules
  • One entry per person / household
  • International as long as Book Depository ships to you and you can receive kindle gifts from amazon
  • You must be at least 13 years old
  • This is a follower-appreciation giveaway, so you must follow me by GFC or email
  • Cheaters will be disqualified and all their entries deleted. Believe me, I will check ALL entries before picking a winner, because cheaters falsify the odds for everyone and it's not fair.
  • Contest ends midnight September 30th, but I reserve the right to end it early
  • I also reserve the right to add/subtract/substitute prizes before the end of the giveaway
  • As soon as the Book Depository ships your books, I'm no longer accountable for them
  • Winners will be emailed and must respond within 48 hours, or I'll pick someone else.
If there are any questions, put them in the comments or tweet me (@Butterfly_Ghost) :)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Stacking the Shelves





Stacking the Shelves is a weekly meme at Tynga's reviews to show off  new additions to our book piles, be they bought or received from a publisher.

I wasn't planning on doing a Stacking the Shelves post this week. I ordered and preordered quite a bunch of books (read: too many >.<) but wanted to share them when they actually arrive. However, I went  to the used book store with a friend today and of course I couldn't walk out without buying anything...






The Book Thief, by Markus Zusak
Kisses From Hell, stories by Richelle Mead, Alyson Noël, Kristin Cast, Kelly Armstrong, Francesca Lia Block
Wings, by Aprilynne Pike
The Power and the Glory, by Graham Greene
Between, by Jessica Warman


I've heard so many amazing things about The Book Thief that I just had to get it when I spotted it! I've also been curious about Wings for a while, but always felt a little too dubious about it to buy at the store at the normal price. But for 1.50 Francs? Why not. I've never heard about Between, but the summary drew me in. As for Kisses From Hell, I already own Love is Hell and Promnights From Hell and there is a story by Richelle Mead in it... grabbing that one was a no-brainer. I have no idea what the Graham Greene book is about, but I've been meaning to read one of his works for a while (it's actually embarrassing that I've never read him, being a Lit student and all).

Have you read any of those books? Most of them have been out for a while... Also, feel free to leave me link to your own book haul :)


Sunday, September 2, 2012

Giveaway winner + new giveaway announcement

It took me a bit longer to finally get around to checking all the entries (takes forever) and pick a winner and I'm sorry for that (I was visiting family), but last night I finally got around to it. So... the winner of the Pushing The Limits giveaway is Kristia Miltiadou! She's already responded to my email and I've sent the book off to her. I hope you'll enjoy it, Kristia!
Overall, I was glad to see how many people entered and that there were only few instances of cheating. Some of you guys really tweeted every day, and I was sorry that I couldn't give all of you a book after you showed such passion for wanting to read it ;)

However, do not despair if you didn't win this time! As I've been saying for quite a while now (I know. Lazy blogger >.< ) I will hold a big giveaway to celebrate crossing the 200 follower mark as well as blogging for just over 3 months now. There will be bundle prizes and several winners! The exact details and the rafflecopter entry form will be up by Monday at the latest and the giveaway will run for all of September.

Thanks to all of you for following me! If you have any wishes or suggestions about what you'd like to see on the blog, my mailbox is always open :) I can't promise that I can comply with all the ideas but I'm curious about the kind of content you'd like to see more of on my blog!

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Review: Andy Squared, by Jennifer Lavoie


Expected Publication: September 18, 2012
Publisher: Bold Strokes Books
Format: Paperback, 264 pages


Goodreads description:
Seventeen-year-old twins, Andrew and Andrea Morris, have always been close. They share everything—from their friends to a room—and they both enjoy star positions on their high school’s soccer teams. All’s right with the twins...or is it?

When new student Ryder Coltrane moves from Texas to their small New York town, he spins Andrew’s world upside down. All of Andrew’s past relationship troubles begin to make sense and his true feelings start to click into place after Ryder comes out to him. His friendship with Ryder turns secretively romantic, but secrets, they soon find out, are hard to keep. Once rumors start to fly, so-called friends turn on them, and the boys’ relationship turns into a bomb about to explode. But Andrew never expected it would be his own twin, Andrea, holding a lighter to ignite it.





My review is based on a copy provided to me by the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. 

Review:
This is a thoroughly enjoyable, cute read about a teenage boy who begins to question his place in the world as well as his sexual identity.

The Morris twins, Andrea and Andrew, share pretty much everything, even down to the nickname Andy (thus the title). They go to the same school in their small town, they both play soccer, they used to do everything together and not keep secrets from one another. If Andrea had her way, they would also go to the same college and continue playing soccer there. For the moment, they even live in the same room because Andrew’s is being remodeled. While their closeness never bothered Andy a lot, he has been growing weary of it as of late. For example, he is no longer sure he wants to continue playing soccer in college or even go to the one Andrea prefers. However, Andrea is deaf when it comes to that topic and blatantly ignores his opinion.

Things change after Andy breaks up with yet another girlfriend and Ryder Coltrane enrolls in the twins’ highschool. Andy does not understand his own reactions to Ryder at first, while Ryder, who has had experience with guys before, appears to catch on quite quickly but doesn’t pressure him and lets him discover the truth on his own. I enjoyed watching their friendship grow as they connected; it made their later relationship so much more real than if they had been instantly deeply in love with one another for no real reason.

Even though the novel is written in the third person, it is mostly focalized through Andy’s point of view and we get insight into his feelings and thoughts. That made it easy for me to empathize with him. I found myself rooting for him and Ryder and was happy to see their relationship develop slowly. The way they handled it was realistic to me. It becomes clear quite early in the novel that their environment isn’t exactly gay-friendly, and I understood that Andy was uncomfortable about coming out to everybody so soon after he realized his own feelings. The situation is slightly easier for Ryder – he is staying with his uncle and aunt because his father, who is in the army, is stationed in Germany at the moment and his mother went with him to live there. So whatever he does here, they are unlikely to hear about it.

The secrecy actually added to their romance for me, but it’s also quite clear to the reader that it cannot last forever. Something’s got to give, and the two of them begin slipping up and cutting it close. Tension mounts as Andrea feels threatened and the twins begin fighting about their college plans more fiercely. When Andrea discovers the leverage she needs, things turn ugly.

Andy and Ryder were well fleshed-out and I found them very likable. Andy’s coming out was realistic to me and I liked how it was woven into his general personal development as he grows more independent and sure of himself and what he wants. I liked that for once, the characters’ families were an active part of the story and their children’s lives. However, I sometimes had trouble understanding Andrea’s motives for her actions. She was extremely controlling and at times I wished Andy would stand up to her more. Nevertheless, the dynamic between the twins was just as interesting as the romantic part of the plot.
Their friends were less fleshed-out than the main characters, but that was okay since most of the story didn’t focus on their interactions that much and it didn’t bother me.

Overall I really enjoyed the story; the writing is fluid and engaging and the characters’ dialogue and actions realistic. One point of critique is that there was not all that much action in the novel. Apart from the blow up near the end, I would have liked it if there had been some more bumps in the road, so to speak. There is growing tension, but hardly any minor eruptions. I only realized that in retrospect though – the focus of the novel is simply more on character development than on plot, which, given the topic, is okay.

Andy Squared is a great story about coming of age and coming out, and I wish there were more LGBT characters in YA literature. The more physical aspect of the story is handled delicately – there are some steamy make-out scenes but nothing graphic. I would thus recommend the story to readers of any age interested in accompanying a gay teen on his journey of self-discovery.

Have you read Andy Squared, or a similar type of LGBT story? Is this something you enjoy? Feel free to discuss in the comments; however, I WILL NOT TOLERATE DEROGATORY REMARKS ABOUT LGBT PEOPLE. Any hateful comments will be deleted. I understand that this may not be everyone's thing, but if you think you have to share your thoughts instead of just ignoring this post, please be respectful.