Saturday, February 25, 2017

Blog Tour + Book Blitz: The Piper's Price by Audrey Greathouse


The Piper’s Price

Audrey Greathouse

(The Neverland Wars #2)

Published by: Clean Reads Publishing
Publication date: February 21st 2017
Genres: Fairy Tales, Retelling, Young Adult
Peter is plotting his retaliation against the latest bombing. Neverland needs an army, and Peter Pan is certain children will join him once they know what is at stake. The lost boys and girls are planning an invasion in suburbia to recruit, but in order to deliver their message, they will need the help of an old and dangerous associate—the infamous Pied Piper.

Hunting him down will require a spy in in the real world, and Gwen soon finds herself in charge of locating the Piper and cutting an uncertain deal with him. She isn’t sure if Peter trusts her that much, or if he’s just trying to keep her away from him in Neverland. Are they friends, or just allies? But Peter might not even matter now that she’s nearly home and meeting with Jay again.

The Piper isn’t the only one hiding from the adults’ war on magic though, and when Gwen goes back to reality, she’ll have to confront one of Peter’s oldest friends… and one of his earliest enemies.

They found the forest’s hiking trail moments before breaking the tree line. “Where are we going, Peter?” He was heading toward a mobile home community next to the state park.

He continued to walk with confidence. His usual cocky stride looked surprisingly like the swagger of an ordinary teenage boy. “My friend lives here. Don’t worry. Don’t look like such a stranger here.”

She didn’t want to appear conspicuous, but Gwen was too baffled to help it. The unkempt lawns were boxed in by chain-link fences covered in varying degrees of rust. They passed a lawn littered with bicycles; on the other side of the gravel street, two different cars were parked on the lawn, clearly non-functional. Satellite dishes were on every trailer home. Despite all being painted differently, the track housing still managed to present a uniformity of depressing color.

Multiple houses had motorcycles out front or a dog milling around their yard. When she and Peter passed a pack of Rottweilers, the dogs ran up to the fence and began snarling until all the other dogs in the neighborhood were barking too. “Ignore it,” Peter advised her.

She was scared. This was not the sort of place she ever expected to visit with Peter. She didn’t trust his ability to protect her here. This wasn’t his world, but it wasn’t hers either. They were both out of their element. Peter just didn’t have the sense to realize it.

Winding down the gravel road, Gwen matched Peter’s pace almost step for step. They approached a blue-and-grey house. Like the others, it had wooden latticework around the bottom to help obscure the fact it didn’t have a foundation in the ground. The square house reminded Gwen of how she would take shoeboxes and try to turn them into homes for her dolls by decorating them. It was hard to fathom that she was walking up the plastic steps of the porch to knock on the door.

She waited, feeling her heartbeat in her throat, her toes, and everywhere besides her chest. Even the predictable noise of the door opening startled her.

A woman with a long, black braid and beige cardigan stood in the doorway. Gwen looked up at her, and then watched as the sharp features of her dark face dissolved into unadulterated shock.

“Peter?”

The startled woman ushered them in. She was just as uncomfortable with their presence in the trailer park as Gwen. Once inside, they stood in a living room full of old furniture, facing a kitchen with old electric appliances. There was no unity or romance to the orange recliner, chipped mixing bowl, off-white blender, dull toaster, and sunken couch. It was a bunch of old stuff that looked like it represented several decades of objects abandoned at Goodwill. The chingadera and bric-a-brac wasn’t any more cohesive: porcelain angles, an antique pot, a vase full of bird feathers, and a stopped clock made the place confusing and strange in the same way her grandmother’s house had been.

“What are you doing here?” she hissed, pulling her cardigan close and tossing her thick braid over her shoulder and out of her way. She had a shapeless housedress underneath the beige sweater, and a pair of black leggings insulating her legs as she stomped around, heavy-footed in her leather slippers.

She looked comfortable, except for the unexpected guests who were putting her so ill at ease. “You shouldn’t be here.”

“I need your help,” Peter said.

“They’re still keeping tabs on me.”

“That’s why I came in disguise.”

“You’re being irresponsible. You’re jeopardizing us both, and Neverland to boot.”

“I took all the right precautions. This is important.” Hollyhock and Foxglove wrestled their way out of the pixie purse and came twinkling out now that they knew they were safely inside.

“You brought fairies here?” she exclaimed. She leaned down and grabbed a hold of his arm, forcing him to look her dead in her dark eyes. Gwen wanted to leave. This wasn’t a friend, not anymore. This was a grown-up, and unlike Antoine the aviator, she was not amused with Peter’s wartime antics.

“What happens if they figure it out and come to question me?”

Peter scoffed. “You won’t tell them.”

“What if they threaten to arrest me? They could put me away forever until I told them what they needed to know, and nobody here would stop them.”

Peter broke free of her hold with ease; she wasn’t actually trying to restrain him. “Preposterous,” he declared. “If they did that, you would sit, stone-faced and silent in your cell until they all died.”

“What if they beat me?”

“You’d take the blows as though you were made of rock, and you would not speak.” Peter seemed to disregard the question.

“What if they tortured me and stuck blades under my nails?” she demanded.

“Then you would not even scream, but stay silent as a stone!” Peter insisted, hopping up onto a wooden kitchen chair at her dining table, looking down at the woman.

“What if they bring knives and cut off my fingers, one at a time, until I told them how to find you?”
Peter yelled right back, “Then you would steal their knives and scalp them all like the redskin princess you are!”

Her anger slunk off her face and out of her shoulders. She shook her head, frowning as a sad laugh escaped her. She clung to her sweater, blinking back tears, until, at last, she flung her arms around Peter. Still on the chair, he had to bend down to return the embrace.

“Oh, Peter,” she muttered, unaware of the tears slipping off her smiling face. “Oh, Peter.”

“It’s good to see you, Tiger Lily.”





Audrey Greathouse is a lost child in a perpetual and footloose quest for her own post-adolescent Neverland. Originally from Seattle, she earned her English B.A. from Southern New Hampshire University's online program while backpacking around the west coast and pretending to be a student at Stanford. A pianist, circus artist, fire-eater, street mime, swing dancer, and novelist, Audrey wears many hats wherever she is. She has grand hopes for the future which include publishing more books and owning a crockpot.

You can find her at audreygreathouse.com.




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Friday, February 24, 2017

The Friday 56 #5: Dark Triumph by Robin LaFevers


Hey everyone! I'm participating in another book meme called the Friday 56, which is hosted by Freda's Voice! Here are a couple of rules for this meme:


Rules:
 
*Grab a book, any book and find a creative way to showcase your 56. It can be a photo of the book and the 56 in comments or whatever you come up with.
*Turn to page 56 or 56% in your 
eReader
(If you have to improvise, that's ok.)
 *Find any sentence, (or few, just don't spoil it)
*Post it.
*Add your (url) post below in Linky. Add the post url, not your blog url. 





 

 
"I have decided I will keep my rendezvous with Mathurin.  I will even play the part I have been given -up to a point.  Then, when I've learned all that I can, I will put a stop to it. If he protests overmuch or thinks to force me to continue, so much the better, for then I can kill him in self-defense.  I am in desperate need of killing something."

pg. 56 



Fairy Tale and Folktale Fridays #19: Sootface



Hey there!  Welcome to "Fairy Tale and Folktale Fridays," a new feature on my blog where I discuss about some fairy tales and folktales I have read throughout the years. 



Sootface




 


Type: Folktale

Country of Origin: Native American

Main Character Hero or Heroine: Heroine

Recommend?: Yes! 




Once, there lived an Ojibwa man whose wife had recently died and he was left with his three daughters.  The older daughters were cruel and lazy and they would often mistreat their youngest sister by making her do all the dirty work around their home.  The youngest daughter was later called "Sootface" due to her being forced to cook near the open flames, where the fire singed her hair and burned her skin.  One day however, a powerful warrior wanted to take a wife and decided that in order to find the perfect wife, the woman must be able to see him while he's invisible.  That way, it would show the mighty warrior that the woman who can see him in his invisible form has a kind and honest heart.  So all the women in the village, including Sootface all go to the mighty warrior to pass his test, but only one woman with a heart of gold can pass this impossible test!






I was so happy to see a Native American version of the classic "Cinderella" story and this story was so unique in showing how the prince of this story tries to test the kindness of the woman he wants to marry by seeing if any of the women can see him while he's invisible. I loved the fact that this story focused on the importance of kindness and honesty as it's a great lesson that kids should learn and it makes the story both inspiring and creative to read!
 


1. How would you feel if you have siblings who are cruel to you?
 
It would definitely traumatize me for life, that's for sure.


  2. How do you define true beauty?

 I believe that true beauty lies within and a person who has a heart of gold and is willing to do the right thing is a wonderful indeed!

  

 

The Rough Face Girl by Rafe Martin; illustrated by David Shannon

 


 


Sootface by Robert D. San Souci; illustrated by Daniel San Souci

 

 


 

  

 


Jack and the Beanstalk

Book Blogger Hop #16: February 24th - March 2nd




Hello everyone! I'm participating in another book meme called the Book Blogger Hop which is hosted by Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer!  Basically, you just answer weekly questions and then post up your link on the question's page.


This week's question is : 

This week's question is submitted by  Eli @ The Book Supplier)!

 

How do you feel about books with multiple narrators?


It really depends on how the story is being set up.  If a book has multiple stories and there are different narrators narrating each story, then I wouldn't mind that.  But if there are multiple narrators in one story, that could be very confusing to me unless they were voicing a different character in the story.





Tuesday, February 21, 2017

Teaser Tuesday #8: The Dangerous World of Assassins!



Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.  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!





Title: Dark Triumph

Author:  Robin LaFevers

Year Published: 2013

Publisher: Houghton Mifflin

Genre: Romance, Drama, Adventure

Reading Level: Adult



I lean forward, pushing my body out past the battlements. The wind plucks at my cloak, buffets against me, as if it would carry me off in flight, just like the birds or the knight's soul. Let go, it cries, I will take you far, far away. I want to laugh at the exhilarating feeling, I will catch you, it whistles seductively.


The convent has returned Sybella to a life that nearly drove her mad. Her father's rage and brutality are terrifying, and her brother's love is equally monstrous. When she discovers an unexpected ally imprisoned in the dungeons, will a a daughter of Death find something other than vengeance to live for?



"There is a deafening clatter of hooves out in the courtyard as the men return, followed by the sound of soldierly chaos - the rattle of discarded weapons, the creak of leather, the clang of mail and armor.  Usually, there are shouts of victory and coarse laughter, but not today.  Today, the men are eerily silent."

I really enjoyed reading "Grave Mercy" and I've wanted to read the sequel to the series for a long time!  So far, everything sounds pretty interesting and I can't wait to see where this goes next!

Do you have a book that you are currently reading that you would like to show to everyone else?  Please feel free to post your Teaser Tuesday in the comments below and I'll check them out! 


Monday, February 20, 2017

It's Monday! What Are You Reading? #4: February 20, 2017



Hello everyone!  This book meme is called "It's Monday!  What Are You Reading?" and basically what you do is share what you have been, are and about to be reading over the week.  It's a great post to organize yourself and to visit and comment on other blogs!  This book meme is hosted by The Book Date!







I just recently finished "Wicked Intentions" by Elizabeth Hoyt and it was a pretty wonderful book, since this is the first book I had ever read by Elizabeth Hoyt!  I loved the way that the book weaved in a murder mystery with romance being the highlight of the story and I really loved the characters Lord Caire and  Temperance since they were unlike any romance couple I had ever seen!









I'm finally getting around to reading "Dark Triumph" by Robin LaFevers. I had to drop it the first time around, not because I hated it or anything, but because at the time I was reading loads of other books and it was hard to read this book during that time.









Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas is still on my list to read since it won the Because Reading's TBR List Meme and I wanted to read this book as soon as possible!  I also just recently picked up NOS4A2 by Joe Hill since I had enjoyed Joe Hill's "Locke and Key" graphic novel series and I've been hearing lots of good things about this book!  I also picked up "The Love that Split the World" by Emily Henry since I've also heard some good things about this novel and I wanted to check this book out!

Sunday, February 19, 2017

[ARC REVIEW] Wicked Intentions by Elizabeth Hoyt









Title:  Wicked Intentions

Author:  Elizabeth Hoyt

Genre: Historical Romance

Year Published: 2010

Number of Pages: 531 pages

Date Read:
2/18/2017   

Publisher:  
Gale Cengage Learning (Large Print)

Series: Maiden Lane #1

Source: eARC (NetGalley) / Library

Content Rating:  Ages 18+ (Gory Violence and Sex Scenes)

Buy on:  Amazon  //  Book Depository








I would like to thank NetGalley and Grand Central Publishing for providing me a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.


“Every word you have ever uttered, is engraved upon my heart.” 


Hoo boy! It has been a while since I had last read a historical romance novel and what better way to start off the new year than to read a historical romance novel by a new author?  When NetGalley offered me a new historical romance book online, I was tempted to try this novel “Wicked Intentions” by Elizabeth Hoyt out, since I had never read a romance novel by Elizabeth Hoyt before, despite hearing her name pop up in many romance discussions.  After reading this book, I was so blown away by the raw and real romance shown in this novel!



Lazarus Huntington, Lord Caire, was known throughout London as being a notorious rake who would pleasure himself with any woman he came across.  However, his main goal in this story is to find the person who murdered his former mistress Marie and he ends up enlisting the help of Temperance Dews, who was a widowed woman running a foundling home that her family established.  Unfortunately, Temperance and her family were having a hard time trying to maintain the home since they did not have enough money to support the home.  So, Lord Caire decided that he will introduce Temperance to high society so that way she can find a benefactor who could support the foundling home.  But in exchange for that, Temperance must help Lord Caire find Marie’s killer in the dangerous streets of St. Giles and even though Temperance and Lord Caire did not get along with each other at first, they both soon realize that their feelings for each other might grow into a passion that might consume them both!



Wow! I must admit that this was a pretty awesome read for my first novel by Elizabeth Hoyt!  I was amazed by the dangerous yet sensuous world that Elizabeth Hoyt had crafted and how the characters all try to survive in this type of world without being corrupted themselves.  Elizabeth Hoyt has done a fantastic job at intertwining the murder mystery plot of Marie’s murder into the romantic plot line between Temperance and Lord Caire as it was interesting in not only trying to discover who Marie’s murderer is, but it was great seeing the growing romantic relationship between Temperance and Lord Caire!  But what I loved the best about this book was how Elizabeth Hoyt wrote each character, especially Temperance and Lord Caire!  I loved the fact that both Lord Caire and Temperance are shown as both having flaws (Lord Caire is a rake, while Temperance has a dark past that she has trouble telling people about) and I loved the fact that Lord Caire was trying to get Temperance to open up about her past and Temperance was trying to show Lord Caire what true love is all about.  Although, the only nitpick I have about the characters was that I wish we knew more about Temperance’s family members like her brothers Winter, Concord and Asa and especially her sister Silence who has her own side story in this book.  Also, I have to say something about the…. SEX SCENES.  I must say that this novel probably has the most graphic yet sensual depiction of sex scenes I have ever read in any romance novel and it was quite an unusual yet mesmerizing experience to behold!



For anyone who does not like strong violence and sex scenes, this novel has plenty of violence and sex scenes that might make some readers squirm a bit.  Regarding the strong violence, there are scenes where the victims of the murders have their stomachs torn open by the murderer and it is described in graphic detail.  The same goes for the sex scenes are they are described much more graphically in this novel than in any other romance novel.



Overall, “Wicked Intentions” is a fantastic read if you are into historical romances that manage to combine murder mystery into the plot line and I definitely cannot wait to read more stories from the rest of the characters in this story!


* 2011 All About Romance (AAR) Annual Reader Poll for Best Love Scenes