Showing posts with label ARC Challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ARC Challenge. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Review: The Secret Keeper by Paul Harris (and a word from the author: Fact Vs. Fiction)

He talked of how journalism had always been what he'd wanted to do since he was a little kid. Of how chasing a story could feel a little like chasing a drug, getting high, moving on to the next one. Of how covering a war had seemed like the ultimate hit.

"And what do you think now?" she asked. "Is it what you expected?"

Danny shook his head.

"I don't understand this place," he said. "I don't know how people can do the things they have done to each other. I feel there's nothing that can be done to make this better. I don't think we're telling that story."
[pg 179]


The Secret Keeper by Paul Harris
Dutton, 2009
Suspense/Thriller; 318 pgs

I have gotten fairly good at choosing books that I know I will like. Occasionally I come across a book that proves to be disappointing, but, fortunately, that was not the case with Paul Harris’ The Secret Keeper. Far from it. The novel held me in suspense throughout and had me thinking of it even when I was unable to read. I even dreamt of Sierra Leone one night; I was stopping at checkpoint after checkpoint on my way out of Freetown for a purpose I did not know.

Danny Kellerman at least had a purpose. He had snagged an assignment in the war torn country of Sierra Leone, his own dream come true. It was a promise of excitement and to be right in the middle of something big. A place where he could make a name for himself. His life was irrevocably changed by his experiences in Sierra Leone. He saw the unimaginable, the horrors of war, and it hit way too close to home.

Seeking normalcy, Danny returned to his life in London. He settled into life with a new girlfriend, Rachel, and continued to work at the paper. His relationship with his ailing father continued to leave a sour taste in his mouth, the two never quite being able to see eye to eye. Danny thought his life was going along okay, even despite the emptiness he felt; at least until he received a letter in the mail from a long lost friend.

Maria Consuelo Tirado had been the one. He had once thought she was the love of his life; only their lives had taken them in completely different directions. Maria’s ties to Sierra Leone bound her there while Danny was only too eager to get away after the civil war at last seemed to come to an end. Her letter, however, called him back. Maria needed his help. She was in trouble. Danny was at first reluctant to go, but after learning that she had been killed in a roadside robbery, he knew he had to convince his editor to let him go back to Sierra Leone. Even if it put his relationship with Rachel in jeopardy, he had to find the truth. Was Maria’s death a simple case of being in the wrong place at the wrong time or was it a planned murder?

The country had changed much since his last visit there four years before. And yet, it had changed so little. His old friend and guide, Kam, seemed to have prospered during Danny’s absence, while Danny’s friend Ali Alhoun worried about his business in a country that was fast becoming unfriendly to “foreigners”.

I really liked reading about the journalists’ interactions with each other and seeing them in action. There was a definite competitive edge, but there also seemed to be a camaraderie between them—they helped each other out and looked after each other.

Perhaps it will come as no surprise that what drew me most to the story was that of the child soldiers. War is such an ugly thing and to bring children into it is unimaginable to many of us. And yet it happens. Children are ripped from their families and forced into service as soldiers, sometimes, often times, being asked to do terrible things. One of the most heart wrenching stories in the novel is of a mother separated from her son after having lost all of her other children. The details of it made me mad and oh so sad. Unfortunately, stories like that are all too true.

Maria worked with child soldiers, trying to rehabilitate them; she was an U.S. aide worker, very passionate about her job. While others looked at these young men and saw only cold blooded killers, she saw children whose childhoods had been completely stolen away. They and their families were victims of a terrible war. It is no wonder Danny fell head over heels for Maria. She was beautiful, strong and independent, not afraid to stand up for what she believed in.

I liked Danny right from the start. He was troubled and flawed. He was never cocky, just confident. He was smart and thoughtful. When he had first arrived in Sierra Leone during the war, he was still a bit idealistic and caught up in the euphoria of a new experience, not to mention being in the middle of a situation that was a constant adrenalin rush. Even the more experienced journalists were not immune to it. Paul Harris captured that so well in his writing. The author also painted a realistic picture of an older Danny. He’d lived a lifetime during his short time in Sierra Leone. The weight of his experiences was heavy on his shoulders, and Harris made me feel that. I felt Danny’s confusion and grief as well as his rage.

Another aspect of the novel that especially interested me was the setting of Sierra Leone. I was not too familiar with Sierra Leone until I saw the movie Blood Diamond. After seeing it, I researched the country and its history, trying to find out what was true and what was fiction, and to try to gain a better understanding of what was really going on there. It was interesting to read about Harris’ Sierra Leone in The Secret Keeper. I could feel the heat beating down on me just as Danny could. I especially liked the juxtaposition of the old Sierra Leone with the new, as Harris weaved the past with the present throughout the novel.

There is so much I want to say about this novel. There was so much to it, but then you might not want to read the book if I give it all away! It is not just a mystery thriller. There is certainly mystery and plenty of suspense, but I think the underlying stories of the characters, their relationships and their personal struggles are very much a part of what makes this book great. I loved how the author demonstrated that nothing in the world is black and white. Nothing is as simple as it may seem. People are complex as are the situations they may find themselves in.

Paul Harris has earned a place on my must read list. I wish he’d hurry up and finish his next book so I can read it.

Rating: * (Very Good)

Challenge Commitment Fulfilled: ARC Challenge, New Authors Challenge & 2009 Pub Challenge


I admit to being a bit fascinated by Paul Harris and his career as a journalist. He has traveled the world on assignments, including to Sierra Leone, the setting of his novel, The Secret Keeper. I am thrilled to have him here as a guest on my blog and was even more excited when I got a sneak peek at what he had written. I don’t think you will be disappointed! Please join me in welcoming Paul Harris to Musings of a Bookish Kitty!

FACT VS. FICTION by Paul Harris

I still don’t really consider myself an author. Not yet. I’ve been incredibly lucky to have a novel published but I always have been – and remain – a journalist first and foremost. That is my day job. But writing The Secret Keeper allowed me to explore some of the experiences I have had as a journalist through the medium of fiction. Perhaps strangely I hope that a deeper version of the truth might have come out as a result. Journalism is by its nature limited. For better or for worse (and sometimes it is really not clear which) journalism is limited by what the reporter can prove or has seen. Facts and interviews and reportage are scrambled together against a deadline. But fiction can reflect what a writer knows to be true. Or feels in their gut to be right. As such writing The Secret Keeper was a liberating experience in that it allowed me to look at things in an obscure part of Africa that meant a lot to me but not much to the outside world. And it allowed me to do it my way, saying what I wanted to say, not just what I could glean from a notebook.

Wendy wrote me an email saying: “As a war correspondent, I imagine it would be impossible not to be touched and influenced by everything you see going on around you.” That is true. But the picture that emerges is a complex one. Few people cover wars or crises such as natural disasters or famines and emerge untouched. It is impossible not be moved by the suffering and the tragedies and, most often, the sheer pointless of most of the reasons why these disasters happen. But there is another side too. Journalists, like everyone else in a conflict, are also participants in these events. As such they have their own agendas, both personal and professional, just like aid workers or politicians or warring combatants. Journalists go to war not just to expose the plight of the innocent. They also do it for ego, for the excitement and to further their careers. It is a dirty little secret and not one limited to reporters or wars. I covered a famine in Ethiopia once and was astonished to hear aid workers from “rival” organisations grumbling about each other’s activities as if they were in a competitive sports game. They expressed all the bitterness or triumph or petty jealousies of each other’s aid activities as Mets and Yankees fans do when talking about who has the better team. Journalists can be like that too.

Several incidents in the book are based on real experiences I had in Sierra Leone. One in particular stands out. I had been present at a protest outside a rebel leader’s house in the capital Freetown. My driver had spotted signs of trouble and spirited me away five minutes before shooting broke out and several protestors were killed. One of my colleagues was less lucky. She had been caught up in the thick of it, fortunately escaping with her life despite the flying bullets. Now, looking back, I am deeply grateful for the wisdom and foresight of my driver. But back then – and I still hate to admit this (it feels so, so warped now) – I felt a huge streak of professional and personal envy. Genuine jealousy at her brush with death. She had an amazing story to tell her colleagues, many of whom measured success by closeness to the action. And, even better, her account of the day had sailed onto her newspaper’s front page. Perhaps a little of the reason why I wrote The Secret Keeper was to process emotions and experiences like that. To get out that version of the truth, which exists far beyond the notebooks, interviews and TV pictures that make up journalism. Truth can be stranger than fiction, but sometimes fiction can hold a deeper truth than journalism.

* * *
Check out Paul Harris' website for more information about the author and his book. And visit TLC Book Tours for a list of Paul Harris' tour stops!

Many thanks to author Paul Harris and TLC Book Tours for the opportunity to be a part of this book tour.

Monday, September 22, 2008

ARC Challenge Wrap Up


As my husband and I sat down for lunch yesterday, I told him how I failed to complete the easiest challenge I'd entered this year. True to form, he asked, "You mean the Graphic Novels Challenge?" I assured him that I would finish that one. There's still time after all. Even if only three months. It might be the only one I finish at the end of the year. Well, that and the 1st in a Series Challenge, which I am bending the rules to right and left and not at all sticking to my actual list.

Teddy from So Many Precious Books So Little Time created a shoe in of a challenge--perfect for me since I have been on an ARC reading kick lately. It was the easiest challenge out there. With the amount of Advanced Readers' Copies sitting here on my desk bookshelf, there was no way I could fail to read a measly four books for the The ARC Challenge. And yet, I wasn't able to pull it off. I was reading the entire time, and so it wasn't like I didn't open a book during the past three months. I did manage to fit in three ARC's. Given just a couple of more days, I probably could have finished the fourth. Why, oh, why didn't I join the Pub Challenge? I would have had that in the bag within the first few months of the year.

I actually am quite happy with what I have been reading lately, even if not all of the books fall neatly into my challenge categories. And that's really what matters. I don't think anyone would begrudge me that.

What ARC's did I manage to read during the past three months? Here's my list:

  • Nightwalker by Jocelynn Drake

  • Far World, Book 1: Water Keep by J Scott Savage

  • The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith

  • Interestingly enough, each of these books had elements of the fantastical about them. I liked them each for different reasons and am glad I had the opportunity to read each one. J Scott Savage's book was my favorite of the bunch--and not because he was kind enough to sit through my inquisition of him. All three of the authors were completely new to me and I am definitely interested in reading more by them in the future.

    Many thanks to Teddy for being such a great host and offering me a chance to take part in The ARC Challenge!

    Monday, August 25, 2008

    Find Your Magic : Farworld 2008 Blog Tour

    I was thrilled when author J. Scott Savage contacted me about reading and reviewing his new book on my blog as part of his virtual book tour. The author was kind enough not only to provide me an autographed copy of his book, but also agreed to an interview and a giveaway.

    Far World, Book 1: Water Keep
    by J. Scott Savage
    Shadow Mountain, September 2008 (ARE)
    Fantasy (YA); 419 pgs

    One of the first things I do when I crack open a book is to read the dedication. This one I read out loud to my husband and he immediately zeroed in on the mention of solving Ultima games. As a result, he plans to read this book based on that alone. Okay, so maybe that isn’t quite true. He does enjoy a good fantasy story and that may have something to do with it too.

    Thirteen year old Marcus Kanenas is alone in the world. He is an orphan, having moved from place to place, school to school, and he isn’t sure how long he’ll be at the latest one. Bound to a wheelchair and the target of bullies, he has learned to be resourceful. He has a talent for disappearing and sensing what is to come, gifts he does not fully understand, but which have come in handy in a pinch. He often dreams of a far away world, one full of magic and talking animals and trees. He calls it Farworld. He daydreams about a young girl about his age whose name begins with a K, an imaginary friend—or so he believes.

    Marcus discovers that his dreams are not so farfetched, however, when a man comes for him, posing as an attorney representing his long lost parents. Once the man has Marcus alone, his true identity and intentions are revealed and Marcus must fight for his life. A helping hand comes from an unexpected place—an unexpected world, in fact. Kyja reaches out to Marcus, sensing the danger he is in, and pulls him into her world, that of Farworld. Farworld is even more amazing than Marcus imagined it would be. He marvels at the joking horse and the singing flowers. He is enamored by the commonness of magic.

    Like Marcus on earth, Kyja is a bit of an outcast in Farworld. Magic is commonplace in her world, a natural ability that everyone shares. Everyone that is except for Kyja. Like Marcus, she has had to endure stares and jokes on her behalf. She has learned to live without magic, and yet it is something she longs for. Perhaps it is buried deep within her as her friend and teacher, the wizard, Master Therapass suggests.

    Kyja’s opening the way for Marcus to enter into Farworld has much bigger ramifications than either can imagine. A balance has been disrupted and both will quickly discover that they are a part of a bigger plot. The Dark Circle is growing more powerful and will stop and nothing to find Marcus and Kyja to either destroy them or bend them to their will. The only hope is for Kyja and Marcus to bring together the four Elementals—water, land, air and fire. Their search will not be an easy one. Not only do they face the threat of the Dark Circle and its minions, but also other enemies such as the mimickers and unmakers.

    While separately the two do not seem like much of a threat against any evil, together they make quite a team. Their friendship and faith in each other is strong, but will it be strong enough to see them through to the end?

    Water Keep is the first in the Far World series by J. Scott Savage. There is innocence about both Kyja and Marcus that is instantly endearing and yet both characters are wise beyond their years. They have had to overcome a lot in their thirteen years, faced loneliness and learned to make do with what little they had. Neither thought they were special in any way, and yet when faced with danger, they both proved they had more courage and strength than most people would probably have shown in the same situations.

    The author did a great job of capturing the wonder and newness of Farworld to Marcus and of Earth to both Kyja and Riph Raph, the skyte. Kyja especially touched my heart; she is thoughtful and cares about complete strangers in need. She never asks for anything in return, just doing what she knows is the right thing to do. She also is quite blunt when she needs to be, standing up for what she believes and is not willing to back down just because danger is too close at hand.

    J. Scott Savage has created characters that will appeal to young audiences as well as older ones. It is definitely a young adult series, the story is not overly complex and the characters are easy to relate to.

    Farworld is an amazing place, full of magic and life. While avid fantasy readers may see some similarities in the set up as compared to other well known fantasy novels, there are plenty of differences and fresh ideas present as well. There is definitely a connection between Earth and Farworld, and I look forward to discovering more about it as the series progresses. J. Scott Savage’s Far World series was a delightful reading experience. I can’t wait until the next adventure.

    Rating: Rating: * (Very Good)




    Literary Feline: J. Scott Savage was nice enough to travel all the way to California via the virtual route for an interview. I couldn't afford the Disneyland passes and so we settled for my living room.

    J. Scott Savage: Disneyland, schmislyland. We can have our own theme park right here. You sing, “Yo ho, yo ho.” and then I’ll do the whole script from Haunted Mansion. Really, I can. It’s a gift.

    LF: Thank you so much for coming. Can I get you anything to drink? Maybe a little snack?

    JSS: Anything other than vegetables. I just finished weeding a virtual garden and I’m feeling a little too close to the carrots and things to even think about eating them. Felines are carnivores right? Maybe we can eat some raw tuna or something.

    LF: I may have some raw tuna lying around. Hold on, let me get you a can.

    LF: I hope you like animals. My dog and two cats are not shy. You might want to keep the dog in front of you. Riley has a thing for jumping up behind a person sitting on the couch and licking their ears. And you might want to keep your shoes on. The new kitten, Anya, thinks feet are toys especially designed for her.

    JSS: Oh whew. I thought that was you doing the whole ear-licking thing a minute ago. And we just met.

    LF: I thought we could start with a few general questions.

    JSS: You mean like Pershing? Or Washington? Sorry that was a little general joke.

    LF: [Laugh] You’re such a card!

    LF: What made you decide to switch from mystery to fantasy writing? Are there any advantages or drawbacks to writing one genre over the other?

    JSS: I really don’t know. It’s a mystery I guess. Although I’ve always fantasized about it. Thanks everybody! I’m here till Thursday.

    Actually, I didn’t intend to write a fantasy. I didn’t think I could. But this story just got stuck in my head. I started writing Farworld at 2:00 AM to prove to myself I couldn’t do it. But five hours and five thousand words later, I realized I was writing a fantasy and the rest is history. Well actually fantasy. I think there are pros and cons to any genre. But probably the coolest thing about fantasy is that anything can happen if you write it well enough. There are no limits.

    LF: I am always curious about an author's writing environment and preferences. Some authors prefer to isolate themselves in an office and keep strict writing hours while other prefer a more loose schedule or settling in at the local coffee shop. Do you have any writing routines, preferences or quirks?

    JSS: I’m really pretty much of a wherever whenever guy. Once I get into the story, a bomb could explode next door and I wouldn’t notice. I’d love to have a schedule. But a lot of times you have to grab the spare moments when you can. For example, I’m writing this on a plane. It’s not that quiet, but while I’m answering your questions I really don’t notice what’s going on around me.

    LF: What was the first story you ever put to paper about?

    JSS: Hmm. That’s a great question. I have actually never been asked it before. I’m sure I had written lots of things before as a kid. In fact I know I did. But the first time I can remember really feeling excited about a story I was writing was an urban fantasy about a killer named Flower who attacks a business man and breaks into the guy’s apartment to find a female thief going through the guy’s stuff. It was probably crap. But I thought I was writing the coolest story ever.

    LF: Would you like me to move the cat? Parker is a bit of a lap cat.

    JSS: Nope. I like cats and dogs. Even though I strongly believe that cats are actually minor demons.

    LF: As it turns out, the kitten is named after a demon. A vengeance demon to be exact.

    LF: It would have been easy to focus solely on Farworld, and I am glad you did not do that. Earth is just as much a character in your book as Farworld is in many ways. When you set out to write this series, were you aiming for such a balance?

    JSS: Absolutely. I want readers to understand from book one that this is a story about both Marcus and Kyja and about both Farworld and Earth. Balance is and will become a much bigger issue in the book.

    LF: Both Marcus and Kyja have disabilities. Marcus is wheelchair bound and Kyja cannot use magic. It would be easy to sympathize more with Marcus because his handicaps are much more familiar to readers, but Kyja's handicap is just as severe and dehabilitating. And yet both are also very strong and resourceful characters, made that way in part by their life experiences no doubt. Can you tell me a little bit about what went into the creation of these two great characters?

    JSS: Thanks so much. I think that the characters were the first part of the story that came to me. You are exactly right. Most people tend to focus on Marcus’s disability because it is more familiar to us. We don’t view Kyja as disabled because none of us have magic either. But in Kyja’s world, magic is the equivalent of technology here. Imagine not being able to use any tools at all, from a screwdriver to a car. It is a huge disability in her world. The thing that I was focusing on was creating characters who didn’t magically lose their weaknesses when they discovered who they are. I wanted them to struggle, learn, and if not overcome, at least come to terms with their weaknesses.

    LF: Will Dew Drop be back? She was such a fun character! I hope we get to see more of the Frost Pinnois too. And what about the ishkabiddles?

    JSS: Yes, yes, and yes. I didn’t get to spend as much time with the water elementals in book one. But we have not seen the last of them. And the Ishkabiddle has become a star in her own right. Now she’s demanding more minutes and a dialogue coach. Hmph. Stars!

    LF: And finally, what and who inspire you?

    JSS: So much inspires me. A movie, a walk in a forest, an unusual name I see while driving, an unexpected book. I am always collecting new ideas I want to write about. People ask where my ideas come from, but it would be easier to ask where they don’t come from.

    LF: Thank you for taking the time to visit with me, Scott. I also appreciate your patience with my animals!

    JSS: Thank you! It was a lot of fun.

    You can learn more about the author and his books at his website: Find Your Magic.

    GIVEAWAY!

    J. Scott Savage has been kind enough to offer an autographed copy of his fantasy novel to one lucky winner in the USA or Canada. If you are interested in entering the drawing for the book, leave a comment here. Please provide your e-mail address if you do not have a blog or a way of contacting your via your blog. The deadline for the drawing is 11:59 PM (PDT) on Sunday, August 31, 2008. Good luck!

    Read what others had to say about this book:
    As Usual, I Need More Bookshelves
    The Bluestocking Society
    Book-a-Rama
    Cheryl's Book Nook (Review)
    Cheryl's Book Nook (Interview with Author)
    Devourer of Books
    Dolce Bellezza
    From My Bookshelf
    Hey Lady! Watcha Readin'?
    It's All About Books
    Leafing Through Life
    Lesa's Book Critiques (Review)
    Lesa's Book Critiques (Interview with Author)
    A Reader's Journal
    She Reads Books
    Ticket to Anywhere
    Trish's Reading Nook

    Wednesday, July 09, 2008

    The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith


    If you live long enough, everything happens.
    And then some of it happens again.
    [pg xii]


    The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith
    Harper Collins, September 2008 (ARE)
    Fiction; 209 pgs

    Mark is an 11 year old boy whose life is out of balance. His mother has remarried and they have moved from London to the seaside community of Brighton. Mark was forced to leave behind his friends and the life he knew. His mother is deathly ill and Mark wants nothing more than to have things return to the way they once were. He directs most of his anger towards his new stepfather, David, who seems to control every facet of their life. It is his house that the family moved into and him that controls how much diet coke comes into the house.

    Mark feels alone and unsure of his place in the new life he finds himself leading. He befriends an elderly woman who lives in an apartment in the basement of the family’s house. She has lived there for many years on her own. She opens her door to the young angry boy and lets him in on a little known secret about the centuries old house they live in. Behind a locked door lies the old servants’ quarters where once servants ran the house, cooking and cleaning, keeping things in order and maintaining the balance of life up above.

    The Servants is a heartfelt story about a boy coming to terms with his mother’s illness and finding his way in life. Author Michael Marshall Smith’s writing is simple and genuine, allowing the reader into the mind of that 11 year old boy as he struggles to understand everything going on around him. It was impossible not to grow attached to Mark, to feel his pain and also to want to steer him in the right direction when he seemed to be off course. He just needs to find his own way and look beyond the surface of what is going on around him.

    In addition to Mark’s character, I was drawn to David, the stepfather. Mark focused so much of his anger and energy on disliking his stepfather that one had to wonder what was going on in David’s mind. Mark’s own father and mother could do no wrong in Mark’s eyes. He put them on pedestals, making it difficult at first to get to know them. And yet, it proved an effective move on the author’s part in telling Mark’s story. The reader only experiences what Mark wants us to. It is his story, after all. Although this is Mark’s tale, I would like to have gotten to know the elderly woman in the basement more. Her own story must be a remarkable one.

    There does not seem to be much to this story, at least not at first. Michael Marshall Smith’s The Servants is on one level a ghost story. On another, it is a story about love and family. And it is about finding one’s place in this mad crazy world we live in. I found The Servants to be a refreshing and charming story.

    Rating: * (Good +)


    Check out the Michael Marshall Smith's website for more information about his books.

    Review book provided by Harper Collins First Look Program.

    Monday, July 07, 2008

    Nightwalker by Jocelynn Drake


    Something in my soul had been hurt by what surrounded me, but I was not physically hurt.
    [excerpt from Nightwalker]


    Nightwalker by Jocelynn Drake
    Harper, August 2008 (ARE)
    Fantasy; 370 pgs


    It has been too long since last read a fantasy novel about vampires. I was thrilled when I learned that I was selected to receive a copy of Jocelynn Drake’s Nightwalker through Harper Collins First Look Program. It sounded like a promising start to a new series. A series reader can never have enough series to read, right? And what could be more fun than a tale of magic, vampires, lycanthropes, great battles, and a little flicker of romance?

    Nightwalker introduces readers to Mira, a vampire with a special talent of being able to start fires. She is greatly feared and admired by those in the magic realm. Mira is content with her life in Savannah, Georgia, watching over her domain and protecting the secret of her people, keeping the knowledge of the dark forces hidden from the humans. When a powerful vampire hunter comes to town bearing an unexpected gift, Mira finds herself face to face with an enemy she long believed to be dead.

    Danaus, the mysterious hunter, is not out to kill her just yet. He needs her help. The naturi were one of biggest threats to both nightwalkers and humanity centuries ago, and there are signs that they are returning to the world. Mira still has nightmares of her time in captivity when she was kidnapped and held prisoner by the naturi. She must decide whether to join forces with the hunter in fighting their common foe. One thing she knows for sure, however. She must seek out the triad that created the seal that had blocked the naturi from returning. Only they will be able to stop the naturi from growing in strength and ushering their queen across the barrier. If that were to happen, humans and nightwalkers would face certain death and destruction.

    Although the book got off to a slow start, it wasn’t long before I was drawn into the story. I especially found myself curious about Danaus. He is human and yet holds his own special powers. He has a strong sense of justice and is not sure what to think of Mira and her kind. He was taught all his life that vampires were evil and that they killed out of blood lust. Mira has her own code. She does not kill indiscriminately and cares about the humans as well as her own people. She will do what she must to protect the secrets that she keeps just the same, and if that means spilling blood, then so be it.

    It took me a little while to warm up to Mira. She seemed cold and calculating at first, using her wiles to get what she wanted. She was not above using force to prove her point and could just as quickly use her sensuality to get what she wanted. Jocelynn Drake did a good job, however, of bringing out the more human side of Mira as the story unfolded. And as her character often reminded the vampire hunter, humans are themselves a violent race—even more so in some ways than the nightwalkers.

    The novel takes readers from the beautiful city of Savannah, Georgia to Africa and on to England where the isle is rich in magic. I felt like I was wandering the streets right alongside Mira and Danaus as they went about their business. I wouldn’t have minded lingering a bit longer.

    The biggest disadvantage to reading this book is that it ends with a bit of a cliffhanger. It is obvious there is much more to Mira’s story, and, of course, now I have to wait before I will be able to see where Jocelynn Drake will take me next. Jocelynn Drake has created an intriguing and magical world that I cannot wait to visit again.

    Rating: * (Good +)


    Be sure and check out the author’s blog and website for more information about the author and her book.

    Sunday, June 15, 2008

    The ARC Challenge

    Teddy from So Many Precious Books So Little Time is taking the plunge in hosting her first challenge, The ARC Challenge. She thought it might be helpful for those of us who seem to have growing piles of ARCs we need to read and review.

    I know, I know. What about my moratorium on challenges? This one actually fits in quite nicely with what I already am planning on reading. It almost feels like cheating to sign up for it. Still. Why not? I may succeed at this one even if not with the others I have stalled on (for the time being--there's always hope).

    The challenge will run from June 21, 2008-September 21, 2008.

    The rules:

    1. Make a list of all of the ARC’s that you currently have and/or are on their way to you.

    2. If you have:

    • 1-3 ARC’s then pick at least one to read and review for this challenge.
    • 4-6 ARC’s then pick at least two to read and review for this challenge.
    • 7-9 ARC’s then pick at least three to read and review for this challenge.
    • 10 or more ARC’s then pick at least 4 to read and review for this challenge.

    3. Crossovers with other challenges are allowed.

    4. List the books that you plan to read for this challenge (you can change it at any time, as long as the books you change are also ARC's). You can read the books on your list in any order.

    5. Read the books and review them on your blog. If you don’t have a blog, you can post your review on sites like Amazon. Leave a comment on the post about the challenge with a link to each of your reviews.


    I decided against singling out four books for the challenge but will definitely be pulling from the below list. My goal is to actually read more than just the four required books. This time I am confident I will succeed. The books are currently in no specific order.

    Now for my embarrassingly long list . . .
    Rabbit in the Moon by Deborah and Joel Shlian
    The Cellist of Sarajevo by Steven Galloway
    The House of Midnight by Lucie Whitehouse
    The Book of Dahlia by Elisa Albert
    The House at Sugar Beach by Helene Cooper
    Change of Heart by Jodi Picoult
    Devil's Cape by Rob Rogers
    The Island of Eternal Love by Daina Chaviano
    The Sister by Poppy Adams
    Tigerheart by Peter David
    The Wednesday Sisters by Meg Waite Clayton
    Brida by Paulo Coelho
    The Likeness by Tana French
    The Glimmer Palace by Beatrice Colin
    The Lace Reader by Brunonia Barry
    The Gargoyle by Andrew Davidson
    The 19th Wife by David Ebershoff
    The White Mary by Kira Salak
    Zoe's Tale by John Scalzi
    Far World: Water Keep by J. Scott Savage
    Songs for the Missing by Stewart O'Nan
    *Nightwalker by Jocelynn Drake [read review]
    *The Servants by Michael Marshall Smith