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November 13, 2011

October 21, 2011

Adult authors switching to YA


Major Adult Authors Come to Teen!

Jodi Picoult, the internationally bestselling and award-winning author of numerous books, and her daughter Samantha Van Leer, have teamed up to write a new teen novel:Between the Lines, planned for release in the Summer 2012 season.

Picoult is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of several adult novels, including My Sister’s Keeper, House Rules, Handle With Care, Change of Heart and Nineteen Minutes.Her daughter, Samantha Van Leer, is a junior in high school and pitched the idea of the book to Picoult, while she was in the middle of a book tour.

Between the Lines will be published jointly by Simon Pulse and Emily Bestler Books, and will be released on June 2012. This will be Van Leer’s debut book, while it will serve as Picoult’s debut teen book.

And another internationally bestselling adult author, Philippa Gregory, will also publish a series of young adult historical romance titles with Simon Pulse! Her first title is scheduled to release in Summer 2012.

Gregory is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Other Boleyn Girl and The Red Queen, with her Tudor series being adapted as a TV drama and The Other Boleyn Girlas a major film in 2008.

With this new deal, Gregory, and her historical and storytelling expertise, will be exposed to a new generation of young adult readers around the world.

October 13, 2011

Books That Will Give You Nightmares:

Hannibal by Thomas Harris
The Shining by Stephen King
The Exorcist by William Peter Blatty and we can't leave out
The House of Leaves by Mark Danielewski


What books have you read that gave you nightmares?

August 18, 2011

Sales of "To Kill a Mockingbird" up 123%

Sales of "To Kill a Mockingbird" up 123% on Amazon.UK, and the book has climbed as high as #25 on the site's Top 100 list (compared to #803 on Amazon.com) since David and Victoria Beckham said Harper Lee was the inspiration for their new daughter's name, the Daily Mail reported. 

Here's how the soccer legend and his former Spice Girl wife made their decision: "A lot of thought goes into our children's names and Harper was a name that we've loved for a long time for a couple of reasons," said David. "One reason is Harper's an old English name which we loved and one of the other reasons was Victoria's favorite book is To Kill a Mockingbird and the author was Harper Lee. It's a very strong, passionate book. That's where Harper came from."

August 17, 2011

Any skeletons in your closet?

What reading skeletons do you have in your closet? Books you’d be ashamed to let people know you love? Addiction to the worst kind of (fill in cheesy genre here)? Your old collection of Bobbsey Twin Mysteries lovingly stored behind your “grown-up” books? You get the picture … come on, confess!

August 9, 2011

Teaser Tuesday!

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!

August 4, 2011

Do you ever stop a book midway?

If you’re not enjoying a book, will you stop mid-way? Or do you push through to the end? What makes you decide to stop?

Post Amazing Book Depression

I was reading about this phenomenon called P.A.B.D. which stands for Post Amazing Book Depression  and means: the over-whelming sad feeling one gets after finishing a great book. 

Yes, I feel this feeling a lot! 

However, if a book has consumed me and made me feel such a part of it's life and world, it's often quite traumatic to be done with it. I do resort to many of the tactics listed in the Weekly Geek post in order to deal with it.

Yes, I've been known to seek out other books with a similar theme. 

Yes, I make other people read the book. (I did this with the ever popular Twilight, Book Thief, Hunger Games, etc.)

Yes, I read other things by the author and follow them around the internet.

No, I don't go seek out fan fiction though. That stuff sort of makes me crazy. And no I don't re-read over and over and over. For the most part anyway. 


Some of the books that have caused this P.A.B.D. for me:


--The Whole Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer
--The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins
--Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
--The Goddess Series by P.C. Cast
-- pretty much any big epic fantasy
-- pretty much any book where I feel a huge character connection. It's hard to let them go!



How about you? What books have caused you P.A.B.D.?

July 28, 2011

Weekly Geek 7/28/11


Last year, I saw a movie, I think it was called Definitely, Maybe, that got me to thinking. In this movie, one of the girls was on a quest to find a particular copy of Jane Eyre, I forget now the specific reason why. But in the process of her search, she ended up with this massive collection of Jane Eyre books, from all sorts of places and years and styles. She had a shelf that went all the way around her room, filled with these wonderful Jane Eyre books.

It made me wish I had a collection like hers, a collection of one particular title, in all it's various versions.

So, Weekly Geeksters, tell us, do you have a collection, (or are you starting a collection,) of one particular book title? If so, what's your story? Why that book, and how many do you have, and what editions are they? Share pictures and give us all the details.


Or perhaps you dream about starting such a collection. What title would it be and what would it take for you to get motivated to start collecting?

Or maybe it's the works of a particular author you collect (or want to collect) instead a certain book title?

July 26, 2011

Teaser Tuesday!

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!

Borders closes for good - what consumers need to do next:

Consumer Reports experts suggest consumers take the following steps when dealing with bankrupt businesses:

    • Use any Borders or Waldenbooks gift cards immediately or you'll run the risk of the cards soon becoming worthless.


      • Pay by credit card. If you have issues with your purchases, you may be able to dispute the charge with your credit card company. This is especially useful for CDs, DVDs, computer software, audiobooks, and e-book readers such as the Kobo Wireless eReader.

      And in regard to the Kobo e-reader, current owners shouldn't immediately worry over the future of their device. In a statement released to Forbes, the Toronto-based Kobo start-up said:
      In June Kobo and Borders began transitioning Borders’ customers’ eBook accounts to Kobo to provide direct access to the most up to date eReading functionality, apps, and devices. Kobo owners will continue to use their eReader devices as usual and browse and shop for new titles in the Kobo Store with no interruption in service.
      The e-reader company, which Borders had a minority stake in, says its Kobo eReaders will still be available at other retailers such as Best Buy, Sears, and Walmart.

      July 24, 2011

      Happy Birthday Winnie The Pooh!!!

      Happy Birthday, Winnie!



      Want to feel old? Winnie-the-Pooh turns 90 on August 21. If you'd like to send him a birthday card, the New York Public Library will be celebrating his birthday at the Library's Children's Center at 42nd Street all month and is accepting cards on Pooh Bear's behalf. It's an appropriate destination, since Christopher Robin Milne's "original Winnie-the-Pooh doll set--including Winnie, of course!--is at the Library, on view in the Children's Center, in a special room surrounded by art of the 100 Acre Wood!"

      Goodbye Borders

      But today, we come not to bury a troubled company that has already made a difficult announcement. We come to praise its booksellers. For, despite any mistakes made at any level, from floor to corporate, at the height of its powers Borders offered the kind of handselling expertise that readers crave.

      Each of the 11,000 people out looking for work has to consider this personally, so I will, too:

      Goodbye to the first Borders store I visited back in the early 2000s. I marveled at a store that combined everything I wanted: a plethora of shelves, amazing magazine racks and a clean, well-lighted café.
      Goodbye to Borders employees who helped me find books over the years for my two daughters, cheerfully checking "in the back" and allowing us (along with legions of others) to sit in their kids' sections for hours at a time.

      Goodbye to the amazing store that had amazing events, like the Twilight party I attended for free, the Alexander McCall Smith reading and so many others I cannot list.
      Goodbye to the Borders stores that we visited as a family, always knowing that there would be a congenial, welcoming staff who would allow us to roam separately, then come back together at the checkout line, eagerly sharing our "finds" with each other.

      Bethanne Patrick

      July 23, 2011

      Talking about JERKS

      Over at The Broke and the Bookish, I read a discussion about JERKS. Yeah, so I think I can come up with some jerky characters! But first let me just say that jerks, in my mind, are different from villains. Jerks you have really truly no patience for. Villains have something about them that sometimes make you feel for them. Jerks, you never feel for. Am I right? What do you think?

      1. Ambrose from The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss (Ugh, he is awful!)
      2. Hindley Earnshaw from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte ( I blame him for everything that's wrong with Heathcliff!)
      3. Fernand Mondago from The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (Gah! What was he thinking!?)
      4. Draco Malfoy from Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling (Never once felt sorry for this dude.)
      5. Mr. Wickham from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen (Slime all around.)


      Do you agree with my list? Do you "feel" for any of these guys? What characters come to mind for you on this subject?

      July 22, 2011

      The Mortal Instruments Trilogy

      Book Club is currently reading The Mortal Instruments Trilogy by Cassandra Clare.  We have finished book 1 and are reading book 2 and 3 for the month of July.  For those of you who are not reading along with book club...this summary of the series might make you want to pick up a book.


      Anyone who has visited New York City can tell you that it's a magical place. But what if the magic that resides there is more than hectic energy and a bunch of tourist-friendly sites . . . what if it's real? What if there's another layer to this world that most people can't see, a layer that's full of faeries and vampires, werewolves and demon hunters, protective runes and evil overlords? In The Mortal Instruments trilogy, Cassandra Clare peels back the glamour to reveal the magic that is usually hidden from us.


      In City of Bones, Clary can hardly believe her eyes when she sees a trio of teens slay a demon at her favorite nightclub. Little does she realize that it's merely her first glimpse into a world that she was born into—a world that her mother, Jocelyn, has tried desperately to keep from her. But with her mother missing and Luke—her mother's oldest friend and the second most important person in Clary's life—pushing her away, Clary must turn to these same demon-slaying teens, known as Shadowhunters, for answers. Along with her best friend, Simon, Clary struggles to absorb all that she is learning. Demons attack her; Simon is turned into a rat at a warlock party and stolen by vampires; Valentine, an evil Shadowhunter long thought dead, is back and trying to find the Mortal Cup so that he can create a Nephilim army. Through it all, though, there is Clary's intense attraction to Jace, the Shadowhunter who both drives her crazy and draws her to him. Can Valentine be right? Can Jace really be her brother?


      The story continues in City of Ashes, with Clary attempting to forget her love for Jace by avoiding him and dating Simon. All that changes, though, when she hears that Jace has been imprisoned in the Silent City by the Clave's Inquisitor, who refuses to believe that Jace isn't working for Valentine. When Valentine chooses that night to kill the Silent Brothers and steal the Mortal Sword, it only makes Jace look more guilty. After figuring out that Valentine is killing Downworlders in order to perform a ritual that will turn the Mortal Sword into a powerful instrument of evil, the teens visit the Seelie Court to ask the Faerie Queen for her help. In short order, Clary's love for Jace is revealed, Simon is turned into a vampire, and Jace confronts Valentine on a ship in the East River. Clary discovers that she has the ability to create new runes, which serves her well during the climactic battle on board Valentine's ship, as the Nephilim fight a host of demons and Clary tries to keep Valentine from converting the Mortal Sword. Clary manages to destroy Valentine's ship, but not before he escapes, many Nephilim are injured, and Simon finds that drinking Jace's blood has made him impervious to sunlight. Things seem to be getting back to "normal" when Madeleine Bellefleur appears to tell Clary that she knows how to wake up Jocelyn, who had been captured by Valentine's demons and into a deep sleep.

      July 19, 2011

      Teaser Tuesday!

      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!

      Monday Musings

      CAN you judge a book by its cover?
      Sometimes, I think you can. I’m a total cover-junkie, so I very, very often pick out books based on their cover art. And, sometimes, yes, I’m disappointed, as the cover turned out to be better than what was inside. But, a lot of the time, the covers actually are fantastic, and the story inside turns out to be really good, too!

      July 18, 2011

      July Book Club

      June's book was City of Bones by Cassandra Clare.  We all enjoyed it so much that we decided for July, let's finish book 2 and 3.  For those of you who just don't have the time to go through two books in one month, take your time, enjoy the book.  The discussion questions will be posted in the side bar and I will update the blog with comments and reviews.

      Happy Reading!

      July 13, 2011

      Teaser Tuesday!

      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!

      July 11, 2011

      Monday Musings

      What’s at the top of your must-buy list, right now? (or, if you don’t wait — if you’re more impulsive — what books have you recently purchased?)


      My must buy list includes:


      Blood Red Road by Moira Young
      Modern Faerie Tales set by Holly Black
      Map Of Time by Felix J. Palma




      Books I recently purchased:


      The Named by Marianne Curley
      The Dark by Marianne Curley
      The Key by Marianne Curley
      City of Glass by Cassandra Clare
      Inside of a Dog by Alexandra Horowitz



      July 10, 2011

      Sunday Salon 7/10/11

      Do you read books “meant” for other age groups? Adult books when you were a child; Young-Adult books now that you’re grown; Picture books just for kicks … You know … books not “meant” for you. Or do you pretty much stick to what’s written for people your age?
      Yep, I love Young Adult books, and I’m in my 40′s. ;) Usually they’ll be fantasy (vampires, werewolves, etc), or romance, or a mix of both. Some examples of what I’ve read this year:

      The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins
      The City of Bones by Cassandra Clare
      The Named/The Dark/The Key by Marianne Curley
      Wither by Lauren DeStefano
      Divergent by Veronica Roth
      The Gathering by Kelley Armstrong
      The Hollow People by Brian Keany

      Play Along...

      To play along, just answer the following three (3) questions…

      • What are you currently reading?
      • What did you recently finish reading?
      • What do you think you’ll read next?

      July 6, 2011

      Teaser Tuesday!

      Teaser Tuesday is a weekly bookish meme, hosted byMizB 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!

      July 3, 2011

      Edgy Books vs. Gentler Books

      What is edgy? And what is gentle? Do authors really yearn to be able to write a more gentle book? Do readers need it? Or are they, as was suggested, clamoring more for the edgy?

      The term "edgy", to me it means pushing the envelope a bit. It means there's stuff in the book that may make you squirm a little. Perhaps the subject matter is hard. Perhaps there's lots of violence and street talk and rough characters. Perhaps there's parts that make you want to close your eyes in denial. Things you just don't agree with. "Stuff happens" in edgy books I would say.

      However, in gentle books, there's not necessary a lot of stuff happening. It may be that it's more about the characters. It may be that it's more about relationships instead of stuff happening. The action, if any, is quieter and slower. People are perhaps, nicer. We might use the word "heart warming" for gentle books.

      Let me be the first to say that I like both kind! Obviously, sometimes you are in the mood for one, and sometimes the other. But do you think that there's more of a market for the edgy? Do you think that if someone were to write a gentler book, no one would want to read it because it's boring and "nothing happens!"? I think there's a bit of truth in that.



      What are your feelings on gentle books? Do they bore you? Are you looking for more action and edge? Or do appreciate the slowness of a gentle read? 

      June 30, 2011

      Mockingjay Word Search

      Weekly Geek 6/30/11

      Music is a pretty amazing thing. It can take us back to the past, make us want to dance, put us in a romantic mood, or simply lift our spirits. But sometimes, music does something a little different for me: it reminds me of a book.

      Yes, there is nothing more geeky than to be riding down the road listening to the radio and suddenly thinking "That song matches [book title] perfectly!". But that is exactly what happens to me sometimes. 

      So, my fellow Weekly Geeks, your challenge this week is to come up with at least one song-book match. It could remind you of a theme from the book, a specific part of the plot, or even one of the characters (a sort of theme song, if you will). Be sure to include samples of the lyrics and the reason why that song reminds you of that book. If you can provide a link to a recording of the song so that other geeks can hear it that would be great as well. (One good place to look for links is last.fm, there are others, too).

      June 28, 2011

      Monday Musings 6/27/11

      If you’re a mood reader, what (genre) do your moods usually call you to read?
      Usually, when I feel compelled to read something specific, it ends up being fantasy. I like being in another world, I LOVE the paranormal, otherworldly beings, things that I won't ever experience in my own reality.  Not quite sure why my brain just gets fried on a daily basis and I can't wait for my "break".  I don't by any means absorb new information, I just get to relax in someone else's world.
      Sometimes I get pulled into nonfiction, but not so often.
      So, people, what genre do your moods call you to read?

      June 26, 2011

      Sunday Salon 6/26/11

      This week I'm talking about all those books I probably wouldn't have read had it not been for the prodding of some other bookish people. So, here's my top ten books I'm glad people recommended to me because I would have for sure skipped over them/not have known they existed/judged based on the cover alone.

      1.  The Twilight Series by Stephanie Meyer
      2.  Hunger Games Series by Suzanne Collins
      3.  City of Bones by Cassandra Clare
      4.  Goddess Books by P.C. Cast
      5.  Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
      6.  Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein
      7.  The Hollow People by Brian Keaney (series)
      8.  Heaven is for Real by Todd Burpo

      June 25, 2011

      Favorite Novel of all Time:

      Okay, people, it's time to share. What is your favorite novel of all time?
      It doesn't have to be intellectual, a work of art, or an established favorite.  It can be trashy, funny, sentimental. Say why it's your favorite of all time!

      Catching Fire Discussion Questions

      Book Covers

      A Weekend to ReCOVER is a meme hosted by Her Book Self that is dedicated to analyzing, comparing and discussing cover art.  Feel free to share your thoughts on any book art that strikes your fancy!

      June 23, 2011

      Weekly Geek 6/23/11

      Though I'm really not very good at it, I love trivia. Put books and trivia together and you've got a perfect match. So I thought it would be a fun Weekly Geek activity for us to come up with some book trivia questions to ask each other.

      So take a moment, don't stress about it all, and write down five to ten questions that pop into your mind. You could center all your questions around a particular theme or genre, maybe something in which you specialize. Or ask questions about one certain book. Or teach us about your favorite author through your questions.

      You could do really easy ones that you know we'll all get or really hard ones that will challenge even the best of us.

      Once you post your questions and add your link here, be sure to go around and answer the questions posted by everyone else. Remember, no fair Googling! At the end of the week, don't forget to do another post with the answers to your questions.

      And most importantly, have fun!

      Roman Gladiator's Gravestone Describes Fatal Foul

      An enigmatic message on a Roman gladiator's 1,800-year-old tombstone has finally been decoded, telling a treacherous tale.
      The epitaph and art on the tombstone suggest the gladiator, named Diodorus, lost the battle (and his life) due to a referee's error, according to Michael Carter, a professor at Brock University in St. Catharines, Canada. Carter studies gladiator contests and other spectacles in the eastern part of the Roman Empire.
      He examined the stone, which was discovered a century ago in Turkey, trying to determine what the drawing and inscription meant. [Top 10 Weird Ways We Deal With the Dead]
      His results will be published in the most recently released issue of the Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik(Journal for Papyrology and Ancient Epigraphics).
      Tombstones talk
      The tombstone was donated to the Musee du Cinquanternaire in Brussels, Belgium, shortly before World War I. It shows an image of a gladiator holding what appear to be two swords, standing above his opponent who is signalling his surrender. The inscription says that the stone marks the spot where a man named Diodorus is buried.
      "After breaking my opponent Demetrius I did not kill him immediately," reads the epitaph. "Fate and the cunning treachery of the summa rudis killed me."
      The summa rudis is a referee, who may have had past experience as a gladiator.
      The inscription also indicates Diodorus was born in and fought in Amisus, on the south coast of the Black Sea in Turkey.
      Though Carter has examined hundreds of gladiator tombstones, this "epitaph is completely different from anything else; it's telling a story," he told LiveScience.
      The final fight
      The story the tombstone tells took place about 1,800 years ago when the empire was at its height, its borders stretching from Hadrian's Wall in England to the Euphrates River in Syria.
      Gladiator games were popular spectacles, many of them pitting two men against each other. Although deaths from wounds were common, the battles were not the no-holds-barred fights to the death depicted by Hollywood, said Carter.
      "I believe that there are a number of very detailed rules involved in regulating gladiatorial combat," Carter said.
      Though the exact rules are not well understood, some information can be gleaned from references in surviving texts and art. 
      For starters, most, if not all, of the fights were overseen by the summa rudis.
      Among the rules he enforced was one in which a defeated gladiator could request submission, and if submission was approved by the munerarius (the wealthy individual paying for the show), the contestant could leave the arena without further harm.
      Another rule that appears to have been in place was that a gladiator who fell by accident (without the help of his opponent) would be allowed to get back up, pick up his equipment and resume combat.
      Death of Diodorus
      It's this last rule that appears to have done in Diodorus. Carter interprets the picture of the gladiator holding two swords to be a moment in his final fight, when Demetrius had been knocked down and Diodorus had grabbed a hold of his sword.
      "Demetrius signals surrender, Diodorus doesn't kill him; he backs off expecting that he's going to win the fight," Carter said.
      The battle appears to be over. However the summa rudis — perhaps interpreting Demetrius' fall as accidental, or perhaps with some ulterior motive — thought otherwise, Carter said.
      "What the summa rudis has obviously done is stepped in, stopped the fight, allowed Demetrius to get back up again, take back his shield, take back his sword, and then resume the fight."
      This time Diodorus was in trouble, and either he died in the arena or Demetrius inflicted a wound that led to his death shortly thereafter.
      This event would have happened before a crowd of hundreds, if not thousands, of people in a theater or in part of an athletic stadium converted into a sort of mini- Colosseum.
      After Diodorus was dead, the people who created his tombstone (probably family or friends) were so upset, Carter suggests, that they decided to include some final words on the  epitaph:   
      "Fate and the cunning treachery of the summa rudis killed me."

      June 22, 2011

      Previously Posted "Sunday Salon"

      I'm trying out a new weekly blurb.  Sunday evenings are usually a down time for me so I have time to ponder and write and read and snack...ok, getting back to the point.   I came across a blog that posts their weekly blog on Saturdays called "Saturday Evening Post".  I thought it was kinda catchy, wanted to try something like it but for Sunday.  Took a while, but I am introducing my new weekly post called "Sunday Salon".  For this week, I have a question for all of you.  I was shown someone's library today, stacks and stacks of books (it was quite impressive).  And while sitting here looking at my shelves starting to fill up with books, I started wondering...what are people's book buying habits or accumulating habits?  How bad of a problem do others have?  Is it as bad as mine? Or worse!
      Share your buying or book accumulating habits - how bad of a problem do YOU have?!?!?

      Ever Throw a Book?

      Ever throw a book? I nearly tossed my book across my room late one night. In my case, it wasn't about  the book’s heroine but the death of an ally.  It made me so MAD and angry and sad and shocked, I kinda felt betrayed.  I'm not even sure anymore, but I was a mess.  And to top it off, when I finished the trilogy, I felt so let down I tossed the book as well.
      What gets us so riled up that we want to throw a book across the room?  Is it anger … revulsion … disappointment … fear? And what sparks those emotions?
      • graphic sex?
      • graphic violence / brutality?
      • offensive language?
      • over-the-top suspense?
      • injustice—characters treated or judged unfairly?
      • irritating characters?
      • predictable plot lines?
      • unrealistic coincidence?
      • bad writing?
      The question is:  how does literature evoke such passion?  Think about the wonder of it all—literature comes to us as small black letters on a flat white page…which we use to create meaning…which in turn inspires powerful responses. Astonishing…when you think about it.

      Ending one book...Starting Another

      Do you ever find yourself mourning the end of a book?  You finish the last sentence and you're not quite ready to say good-bye?  I've been reading "The Hunger Games Series", I finished book 1, went straight to book 2 and then book 3.  I had no problem finishing the first and second book because there was another one to continue on to.  But by the time I reached the end of the last book, I'd been so caught up in Katniss's mind - her life, her thoughts - it was hard to leave her.
      Then I turn around to start a new book.  It was hard, it took energy and commitment.  What about you?  Which books have been hard ones for you to end?

      June 21, 2011

      Is there redemption for fallen angels?

      Came across this blurb from my twitter account.  I thought it was too interesting to pass up.  It will make you wonder...

      Does Love Win for Demons?


      While studying the doctrine of angels last week, an interesting 
      question was brought up.
      Is there redemption for fallen angels?
      Though there have been a few voices which affirm there will 
      be, such as Origen, the overwhelming consensus of the 
      tradition is that demons have no second chance.
      Now this is not a question which occupies much of our time, 
      in part for the perfectly valid reason that we actually know 
      quite little about the angelic realm. But perhaps it deserves
       more carful consideration.
      Angels are rational beings, made by God for his glory, and 
      they therefore have value just as we do. And so, if some of 
      them fell, would we not expect an act of redemption which 
      includes them as well?
      In other words, does love win for the demons too?
      The problem of course is that the text, as far as I can tell, 
      gives no indication that we should expect such a thing. In 
      , the pressure of the narrative seems to imply just the 
      opposite.
      My question then is this, should that influence our larger 
      debate on hell?
      Does it make a difference to the ways we talk about the 
      love and justice of God, if other rational creatures have 
      no chance of redemption?
      Should we posit a salvation for fallen angels?
      And if not, and if it doesn’t bother us, what does that say 
      about the way we understand God and his saving acts?

      Where do you go for Book Recommendations?

      -- Where do you go for book recommendations?
      It's all from bloggers these days for me. Your influence over me is huge. That and just falling love with authors and then wanting to read everything by them, or things they like. That adds to my list too.
      -- How often do you challenge yourself to get out of your comfort zone?
      Probably not really that often, though I'm not opposed to the idea. My comfort zone is pretty broad I think, so it's hard to find something "out of it" really.
      -- How often do you read outside your genre?
      Hmmm... so what's my genre? All types of YA? Fantasy? Literary fiction? If I consider these "my genres" then I don't get outside of them often. I have read two non fiction in the past two years, and I loved my choices, so that's something. I have read more horror this year and that's been fun too.
      -- How often do you try a new-to-you author?
      I love trying new authors, and in recent years, my list of new authors I've discovered every year grows and grows. It's very fun learning about how many authors there are out there to love and read.
      -- How often do you take a chance?
      Again I would say, not very often! So here goes nothing!

      Teaser Tuesday!

      This is fun for everyone!  


      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!

      June 20, 2011

      Monday Musings 6/20/11

      I was reading about this phenomenon called P.A.B.D. which stands for Post Amazing Book Depression  and means: the over-whelming sad feeling one gets after finishing a great book. 

      Yes, I feel this feeling a lot! 

      However, if a book has consumed me and made me feel such a part of it's life and world, it's often quite traumatic to be done with it. I do resort to many of the tactics listed in the Weekly Geek post in order to deal with it.

      Yes, I've been known to seek out other books with a similar theme. 

      Yes, I make other people read the book. (I did this with the ever popular Twilight, Book Thief, Hunger Games, etc.)

      Yes, I read other things by the author and follow them around the internet.

      No, I don't go seek out fan fiction though. That stuff sort of makes me crazy. And no I don't re-read over and over and over. For the most part anyway. 


      Some of the books that have caused this P.A.B.D. for me:


      --The Whole Twilight Saga by Stephenie Meyer
      --The Hunger Games Trilogy by Suzanne Collins
      --Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis
      --The Goddess Series by P.C. Cast
      -- pretty much any big epic fantasy
      -- pretty much any book where I feel a huge character connection. It's hard to let them go!



      How about you? What books have caused you P.A.B.D.?