Friday, 15 January 2016

Books I'm Most Looking Forward to in 2016

There are so many books I'm (Rachel) really excited about this year so I thought I'd share some of them.  Most are adult books, but I do have a couple of young adult books on the list, too.

Several of these books I get to devour VERY soon. Feverborn comes out this coming Tuesday January 19th. I've been searching for it on Audible (which is how I've "read" the whole series) everyday and it just got added as a pre-order.  I'm shocked that Phil Gigante and Natalie Ross are NOT the narrators!  Luke Daniels and Jill Redfield are to be the narrators this time around. Even though I adore Luke Daniels, (he narrates the Iron Druid Chronicles, see below, Staked) I've come to LOVE Phil and Natalie's performance in the Fever series! We'll see how it turns out.

I happened upon Jane Steele on Eva's blog: All Books Considered.  It's a Jane Eyre re-telling, one of my all time favorite books, and it sounds amazing!  I'm so anxious about the ending to the The Raven Cycle! You better leave Gansey alone, Maggie, because Blue needs her love!

I'm sure it's no surprise to see the latest installments of The Others, Mercy Thompson, Kate Daniels (no cover yet), The Iron Druid Chronicles, and Laura Florand's latest Paris Hearts (no cover or title yet) on my list.

(click on cover for Goodreads link)
 
Feverborn (Fever, #8)  Staked (The Iron Druid Chronicles, #8) Fire Touched (Mercy Thompson, #9) 

Marked in Flesh (The Others, #4) He Will Be My Ruin  The Raven King (The Raven Cycle, #4) 

Jane Steele  https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/17333174-magic-binds?ac=1&from_search=1  The Visitor (Graveyard Queen, #4) 


 So what books are you most looking forward to this year?

Wednesday, 13 January 2016

Review: Foreplay by Sophie Jordan

Foreplay by Sophie Jordan
Publisher: HarperAudio
Publication Date: November 5th 2013
My rating: 3 stars  


Before she goes after the life she’s always wanted, she’s about to find the one she needs. Pepper has been hopelessly in love with her best friend’s brother, Hunter, for like ever. He’s the key to everything she’s always craved: security, stability, family. But she needs Hunter to notice her as more than just a friend. Even though she’s kissed exactly one guy, she has just the plan to go from novice to rock star in the bedroom—take a few pointers from someone who knows what he’s doing. Her college roommates have the perfect teacher in mind. But bartender Reece is nothing like the player Pepper expects. Yes, he’s beyond gorgeous, but he’s also dangerous, deep—with a troubled past. Soon what started as lessons in attraction are turning both their worlds around, and showing just what can happen when you go past foreplay and get to what’s real…

Foreplay was one of those guilty pleasure reads that I knew how things would go down for our characters, but I didn’t care because I enjoyed the build up and tension along the way.

Pepper has always had her eyes set on Hunter, her best friends brother, he’d been the ideal guy that she needed after her up and down life that she’d had and when thinks were looking rough for her too Hunter was one of the first people to give her a chance. Despite having a crush on Hunter for the longest time and choosing to go to Dartmouth because of him, he hadn’t really noticed her the way she would have like to. But now that Hunter is a single guy, may be its time for Pepper to take her chance? Her friends think the best way to would be to get some experience first and they’ve heard of this hot bartender who’s known to play around, so he would be the perfect guy to start with.

Despite hearing great things about Hunter and how he had been there for Pepper at her time of need and how he could be her perfect boyfriend, as soon as Pepper met the hot bartender Reece I was immediately smitten! I know Pepper initially got hot and cold vibes from Reece and at times he could be hard to understand, but when finally Pepper overcame her shyness and told Reece exactly what she was after, I thought things would be over even before they began, but I’m glad that this is exactly the right push that Reece needed to make his move. Like I mentioned Reece was hot, guys with tattoos are always my biggest weakness, but I loved how Reece had this softer side to him, he was a guy who was upfront about his feelings. Even though Reece and Pepper’s relationship started off as them messing around, I could genuinely see it becoming something more. Their chemistry was off the charts and despite them leaving little snags along the way I adored how they always find their way back to each other. My only complaint about this read was that it took Pepper a long time realising she had something so good right in front of her!

This was my first audiobook that I listened to all the way through. I’m really fussy when it comes to narrators. But Kim McKean left me wanting more from the story and characters, and although I found it strange at first narrating Pepper and Reece’s voice, I was so deeply involved in the story by that point to care, however people who are particular about accents, may notice McKean pronouncing palms as “polms” a few times, but again I loved the story so much and couldn’t wait to see how things would turn out that I didn’t really care. Overall Foreplay was a hot, fun read which I really enjoyed; I’m hoping that I end up liking the rest of the series just as much!




Tuesday, 12 January 2016

Interview & Giveaway: The Expatriates by Janice Y. K. Lee

Today I'm excited to feature Janice Y. K. Lee's newest story, The Expatriates.  It sounds like a moving and emotional look at three American women living in a small Hong Kong community.  Viking/Penguin provided this very insightful interview with Janice Y. K. Lee detailing her motivations and writing experience.  Be sure to scroll down for a chance to win this stunning book packaged so beautifully!


Publication Date: January 12th 2016
Publisher: Viking/Penguin
Purchase Links:

Book Description:

Mercy, a recent Columbia graduate without a safety net, is adrift, undone by a terrible incident in her recent past. Hilary, a lonely housewife, is haunted by her struggle to have a child, something she believes could save her foundering marriage. Meanwhile, Margaret, once a happily married mother of three, takes every opportunity to escape from her life in the wake of a shattering loss. Chapter by chapter, the novel draws the reader into their stories and gives us glimpses of expatriate life’s surprising contradictions in Hong Kong, where these women are both insiders and outsiders, incredibly privileged but deeply unsatisfied, and attempting, above all, to connect with others and regain a sense of self that has slipped away. As each woman struggles with her own demons, their lives collide in ways that have irreversible consequences for them all.
 

A conversation with Janice Y. K. Lee, author of
THE EXPATRIATES


Like The Piano Teacher, THE EXPATRIATES is set in Hong Kong. As a writer, what draws you in about this city?

I love Hong Kong and have spent a little over half my life there.   People view it as this world city, which it is, but that’s only one of its many facets. It is an amazing melting pot of cultures and experiences that, extraordinarily, still manages to have the feel of a small village, at least if you live there.  For me, there is the additional push and pull of home. You want to be there; you want to leave.  Like New York, there is always a tide of new arrivals, and those leaving.  I’ll always have Hong Kong with me.  

Did you do any research to prepare to write THE EXPATRIATES? Or did you draw mainly on your own experience?

I didn’t have to, which was a different experience from my first novel, The Piano Teacher, which was set during WWII in Hong Kong.  As I came to realize that these women lived in the same world I lived in, I find myself growing very thoughtful about this place I inhabited.  I was a constant observer in my own life, trying to see patterns and behaviors.  In a way, it was easy, because I just needed to live my life, but I wanted to be considered and fair to all of the people who were also living in this world. 

As American expatriates in Hong Kong, Margaret, Mercy, and Hilary share some concerns, but they are very different women. THE EXPATRIATES alternates among their stories and points of view. Which character did you find easiest to write? Which was the most challenging?

I found a bit of myself in each character.  Poor, hapless Mercy.  I felt for her, and felt I could have been her in another, parallel life.  And Margaret is the mother, the one who has children throughout the book, so I have lived some aspect of her life.  Hilary, I also felt I knew.  She didn't have children while everyone around her was reproducing like mad.  It must be off-putting and frightening at times.  Margaret and Hilary inhabit a more similar world than the one Mercy lives in.  For Mercy, I had to imagine what it would be like to come to Hong Kong as a twenty-something, but I thought it might be a bit like moving to New York as a twenty-something, which I did know something about.  I think human experience is more universal than we might think, even when people are from vastly different cultures, different generations.  

In many ways, THE EXPATRIATES is about loneliness and alienation, and about how the women feel like outsiders even as others might consider them the ultimate insiders. Do you think that the insular expatriate community is a useful lens for thinking about how people feel this all the time, in many different settings?

I am always surprised by how often you might find that someone you thought had it all, had it all figured out and was completely together was actually having a complete meltdown on the inside.  We are all, by our too-human nature, so self-involved that we necessarily experience life from our own perspectives, but wow, is there a lot going on all around if you pay attention.  Say, Clarke’s 50th birthday party, there were so many stories going on in that room, just about the characters we grew to know.  There are thirty other novels that could have been written about any of the other people who were there.  This is a long and roundabout way of saying that everyone who is living life in a thoughtful way feels like an outsider, I think.  I have always felt “outside” and I think that is a good thing.  It gives me perspective and distance. The expatriate community is a microcosm of society, in many ways, so it is a good lens to view what is happening on a larger scale outside.

As we see in the book, so-called “trailing spouses” of businesspeople in Hong Kong are thrown into a completely different world when they arrive—a world of drivers, nannies, housekeepers and leisure that leaves them with lots of spare time. As you’ve observed it, how does this change a trailing spouse’s sense of self?

If you take it in the most positive way, it allows you to have more time—that most precious of resources.  All the labor of taking care of the house, washing all the sheets and towels your baby threw up on, preparing meals, grocery shopping, having someone to receive all packages—all of that is subtracted from your life, leaving you free to... what?  And therein lies the rub.  What do you do when you discover 8 extra hours in your day? Who do you want to become?  I've seen people change drastically during their time as an expat, sometimes to become more free, evolve into someone completely different, and sometimes to become even more who they were when they arrived.  It's an opportunity to grow, and to change, away from the constraints of what is your “normal” life but everyone reacts differently to the experience. 

Motherhood, in THE EXPATRIATES, becomes a central, defining purpose for women, for Margaret and Hilary in particular but also for their friends and acquaintances. What happens, then, when a woman can’t conceive or faces a family tragedy?

Motherhood has been such a transformative and intense experience for me.  In the past thirteen years, everything has been refracted through the lens of motherhood.  It is central to my life.  So, I wrote this book while I was in the throes of that.  What struck me was how final it was.  Once you have a child, you are a mother.  That is it.  However you get this child: birth, adoption, whatever, when you do, you pass through this door and you cannot return from this new world.  A mother is a mother whether she loses her child or not.  For women without children, I think it must be awfully tiresome to be around mothers!  There is a large and vibrant part of society that doesn't have children, but luckily they have a lot of other things to occupy their time with.  Although since they themselves, since everyone, has mothers, I think they would find something in this book to connect with.

You lived in Hong Kong as an expatriate for ten years. Can you talk about the experience of moving abroad and being part of the expatriate community, and about your recent decision to return the United States?

When I moved to Hong Kong, I wasn’t your typical expat because I was returning “home” to a place I had grown up and where I still had family.  So I didn't go through the typical settling-in pains because I had a lot of local knowledge.  Still, I had to make friends, find a place to live, find schools for my children.  I loved my time in Hong Kong.  I made friends who I will remain close to for our entire lives, had wonderful experiences, experienced so much of Asia.  I liken it to college in terms of how formative it can be.  Because you are together for a temporary period, everything is heightened and intensified and there is also the sense that it is not “real life.”  Real life is waiting for you back “home.”  And that is why we decided to move back.  I wanted my children to start their lives in what I thought was the right place for them, long-term, as Americans. 

What were the biggest challenges you encountered in the writing of this novel? The biggest pleasures?

The biggest pleasure was... I really can’t say.  Writing is difficult.  The biggest pleasure was probably finishing! 

How was writing a novel set in the present day different from writing historical fiction (like The Piano Teacher)?

Research is really wonderful because it allows you to work without writing.  I cannot direct my writing at all.  It comes in fits and starts, so with The Piano Teacher, whenever I would get stuck I would head off to the library to research and read and some interesting fact or historical detail would usually loosen a knot in my head, or knock something loose.  With The Expatriates, whenever I got stuck, I just had to wait to get unstuck.  I would find inspiration and solutions in everyday corners of my life, but never know when that was going to happen.  So I had to learn to be patient.  Both books took around five years to write and I think that's my gestation period for a book, regardless.  These stories unspool slowly and I've learned to wait for them. 

About the author:
Janice Y. K. Lee was born and raised in Hong Kong, the child of Korean immigrants. She went to the United States for school and graduated from Harvard College with a degree in English and American Literature and Language.

After college she moved to New York and worked for several years as an editor at Elle and Mirabella magazines before getting an MFA from Hunter College and starting her first novel. The Piano Teacher was published to critical acclaim from the New York Times, People, and O magazine, among others. It spent 19 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, was a Richard and Judy Summer Read pick (UK), and was translated into 26 languages worldwide.

Janice’s writing has appeared in ELLE, Mirabella, Glamour, and Travel and Leisure, as well as numerous other publications.

She lives in New York City with her husband and four children.

Connect with Janice Y. K. Lee:




 The lovely people of Viking/Penguin have provided a galley copy of The Expatriates by Janice Y. K. Lee packaged soooo beautifully (see picture below) with French flaps and in a gorgeous box with magnetic closures *sigh*.  The giveaway is open to US residents only.




Saturday, 9 January 2016

Review: 3 Truths and a Lie by Lisa Gardner

3 Truths and a Lie (Detective D.D. Warren #7.5) by Lisa Gardner
Publisher: Dutton
Publication date: January 5th 2016
My rating: 4 stars 
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Book Depository | Audible

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/20957871-return-to-me
Boston Detective D.D. Warren faces her most brutal adversaries yet—a class of jaded thriller writers—in New York Times Bestselling Author Lisa Gardner’s exclusive e-Book short story

In Lisa Gardner's second short story, after the New York Times bestseller The 7th Month, Detective D.D. Warren takes on her most intimidating assignment yet: a fifty-minute class meant to educate a horde of bloodthirsty thriller writers on the ways of actual police work. Yet sometimes life really does imitate fiction, as D.D. takes the writers through the reality of one of her most twisted cases—a case that involves a seedy motel room, drugs, prostitution . . . and a severed leg.

With Gardner’s trademark suspense, sharp observations, and thrilling storytelling, Three Truths and a Lie is a fascinating chapter in D.D.’s storied career. Includes an early look at Lisa Gardner’s next novel of suspense, Find Her, coming February 9, 2016.


My Thoughts:
Detective D.D. Warren and her husband, Alex, are taking a “vacation” in Wisconsin as featured guest speakers at the Writers’ Police Academy.  As a bonus they get to hobnob with popular thriller writers, and attend the other work-shops for free.  D.D.’s a little nervous; really a day in the life of a homicide detective is not nearly as exciting as the fictional mysteries they write. D.D. decides to regale them with one of the most bizarre mysteries of her career involving “seedy motel, a hooker, and a dismembered leg”.  With that lead in she has her class (and me) riveted to the pages as she goes through the crime and uncovers the murderer. 

3 Truths and a Lie was a fast, fun, Forensic Files type of mystery.   Real life authors Karin Slaughter, Kathy Reiches, and Joe Finder make an “appearance” with Joe showing off his knowledge of Locard’s principal.  D.D. managed to keep her audience on the edge of their seats until the last reveal.  

I revel in every scene where Alex and D.D. are featured.  I was a huge fan of their romance even though their relationship has usually taken a back seat to the mystery of the stories. There was a short exchange, but it was nice to see them still solid together as a married couple.  They went through some rough times in the last book, Fear Nothing, because of D.D.’s injury.

You don’t need to read the previous books in the series to enjoy this short story.  The audio copy is FREE on Audible right now! I listened to it after reading the e-copy because I adore the narrator, Kirsten Potter, and because this short story was that good.  Both e-copy and audio version includes the first 2 chapters of Lisa Gardner’s next mystery featuring D.D. Warren, Find Her.  I’ll be reading that soon!



 

Thursday, 7 January 2016

Rock My TBR

 


Happy New Year everyone! What better way to kick off the new year with the Rock MY TBR challenge hosted by Sarah The YA Book Traveller. I'm the biggest hoarder when it comes to buying books and then letting them sit on my shelf all year long, so I thought this challenge would be perfect to get my out of control pile down. 

The challenge is to read a minimum of 1 book per month that you already own. So I'm going to make it my goal to read at least 12 books. Being the mood reader I am, I knew that I couldn't go with a set list, but a potential list of books that I could choose from: 






 


Are you taking part in the Rock My TBR challenge? If so which books are you planning on reading? I'm totally up for buddy reading! 



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