Tag Archives: The Taker

Stacking the Shelves (23)

STSWelcome to Stacking the Shelves, hosted by Tynga’s Reviews! I love to see what books other bloggers get during the week, and I love to share my new books as well. This week was a particularly fun week for me, because in addition to some new review titles I got a couple of surprises in the mail.

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A huge thanks to Lucy at The Reading Date for this amazing stack of ARCs! I entered her contest and frankly forgot all about it. When she told me I’d won the “Anti-Valentine” box, I was thrilled.  She also threw in a cool Comic Con bag! Thanks Lucy:)

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Alma Katsu was kind enough to include me in The Companion Club, a group of Adair followers who will help her promote her amazing trilogy. She sent all of us a package with pins, stickers, postcards and other goodies, including a note with this intriguing statement: “Please wear your pin proudly and if you draw blood with it—someone else’s of course, not yours—so much the better.” If you’ve read The Taker and The Reckoning, you’ll understand:) The third book in the trilogy, The Descent,  will be out in 2014.

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I pre-ordered my copy of Scarlet by Marissa Meyer from Amazon, and for doing so I got a surprise Scarlet lip gloss in the mail! Thanks to MacMillan for making my daughter very happy:)

e-Books for review from NetGalley & Edelweiss: (click on book covers to go to Goodreads)

Beautiful GoodbyeZenn ScarlettClub MonstrosityThe Sweetest DarkStoker's Manuscript

Beautiful Goodbye by Nancy Runstedler. Release date: July 23 2013 (Dundurn). I had never heard of this publisher before, but I believe they are better known for their non-fiction titles. I don’t have a lot of info on this book, but from the Goodreads description it’s a YA paranormal about three teens and a Ouija board.

Zenn Scarlett by Christian Schoon. Release date: May 7 2013 (Strange Chemistry). I remember getting the news about this acquisition from Angry Robot, and I’m really excited to have a review copy in my hands. You’ve got to click on the cover and read the book description. It’s out-of-this world! I’m really looking forward to this one.

Club Monstrosity by Jesse Petersen. Release date: April 29 2013 (Pocket Star).  This book sounds hilarious! It’s about a group of monsters who form a support group. Wow.

The Sweetest Dark by Shana Abé. Release date: April 9 2013 (Bantam). Set in 1915 England, this story takes place in a boarding school. It’s a historical paranormal and is recommended for fans of Libba Bray (!) and Lauren Kate (!) and gets a blurb from Melissa Marr (!)

Stoker’s Manuscript by Royce Prouty. Release date: June 13 2013 (Putnam Adult). This historical novel blends real events with a mystery that spans many years. I love that is revolves around the novel Dracula.

What did you stack your shelves with this week?

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Link Salad (1)

Link Salad button copyWelcome to Link Salad! I know lots of bloggers do roundup posts with links to interesting internet content, and I’ve been coming across so much relevant information lately, that I wanted to start my own roundup of sorts. I’m not sure how often Link Salad will appear, but I’m hoping to make this a weekly feature. Here are some of the fun bookish things I found around the web this past week:

fifty-shades-of-grey-hardcover_510x329Fifty Shades of Grey is a book that just won’t go away. It’s still in the news, and now, after achieving bestsellerdom in paper and digital formats, it’s finally going to be published in, ahem, hardcover. Here’s the article from EW’s Shelf Life.

The Witch SistersAuthor Alma Katsu has written a new short story set in the world of her The Taker trilogy, and it’s only 99 cents on Amazon. I’ve read and reviewed the first two books in the trilogy, The Taker and The Reckoning, and loved them. Book three, The Descent, won’t be out until 2014, but in the meantime The Witch Sisters will help you bridge the gap until book three arrives! Click here to purchase it now!

Subterranean PressSteven R. Boyett, most fabulous writer of fantasy, horror and speculative fiction, has a free novelette in this month’s Subterranean Press called Hard Silver. He’s calling it “fantasy Western,” which is one of my new favorite genre mash-ups. Boyett’s last novel was Mortality Bridge (reviewed here), but it came out almost a year and a half ago, so I’m happy to see something new from him. You can read it for free here.

Madmans jkt Des1.inddAny aspiring authors out there? Are you trying to find an agent? Then you’ll be interested to hear what newly published author Megan Shepherd’s experience at querying her manuscript was like. Megan’s debut The Madman’s Daughter, a retelling of The Island of Dr. Moreau,  had a typically bumpy road to publication, and she gives YA Highway the scoop on how she finally landed an agent. You can read her story here.

Ghost Planet biggerAuthor Sharon Lynn Fisher tells USA Today the top five reasons she loves to blend science fiction and romance, another mash-up genre that I’m loving. Ghost Planet is her sci-fi/romance debut, and I loved it! (You can read my review here.) Check out the USA Today article here.

Shades of EarthBeth Revis, author of the Across the Universe Trilogy, did something unique to promote the last book in the series, Shades of Earth. She and her publisher launched a copy of the book into space. Yes, you read that correctly. You can see the video on EW‘s Shelf Life here.  Is it real? Is it fake? I’m not sure how they did it (if in fact they did), but it sure was a cool idea!

And just because this is so damn funny, I had to throw in this dog video (which has nothing to do with books, but I guarantee it will make you laugh…):

That’s it for this week! Thanks for stopping by:)

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Free Today & Tomorrow! A New Short Story by Alma Katsu

I’m hoping I got you with the word “free.” Did it work? Alma Katsu, author of The Taker and The Reckoning has written a story based on two of her characters, and that story is free to download from Amazon today and tomorrow only, August 7th & 8th. If you are familiar with Jonathan and his young, but ultimately unhappy wife, Evangeline, this story is a peek into their lives before many of the events that take place in The Taker. And if you haven’t yet experienced Katsu’s lush and magical world, this is a great way to get a taste for free! Here’s the story description from Amazon:

Click to get your free copy from Amazon.

DREAMS CAN COME TRUE—BUT THE PRICE IS STEEP in this short story from THE TAKER saga

Evangeline McDougal is the luckiest girl in St. Andrew, Maine. She’s to wed Jonathan St. Andrew, eldest son of the town’s founder and heir to the timber business that has made the St. Andrews one of the wealthiest families in the state.

Nor does it hurt that her bridegroom is so very handsome. Irresistible, in fact. And when rumors fly about her husband-to-be and several of the other girls in town. . . . What is Evangeline to think? There is a price to pay for her marriage to Jonathan, but surely it is worth the cost.

Isn’t it?

If you don’t have a Kindle, not to worry. You can read it on any smart phone or computer just by downloading the Kindle app. Here is the link for your free copy of The Marriage Price. Please note that all of Katsu’s stories and books are for mature audiences. I’ve read it, and I loved seeing the events leading up to the marriage of Jonathan and Evangeline, this time through Evangeline’s eyes. Let’s help Alma try to push The Marriage Price into Amazon’s top 100! And if you are intrigued by the short story, please consider reading her other books. Click the book covers above to go to their Amazon pages.

BONUS: Click HERE to read the first chapter in the third book of the series, The Descent, coming from Simon & Schuster Spring 2013!

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THE RECKONING – by Alma Katsu – Review

(Caution: This review contains spoilers for The Taker, the first book in The Taker Trilogy)

Alma Katsu is quickly becoming one of my favorite authors. I loved her first book, The Taker (you can read my review here), and I was lucky enough to get an advanced reader’s copy of the second book in the trilogy, The Reckoning, which will be released on June 19. Both books are filled with lush and descriptive writing, historical details, and a delightfully agonizing tension that makes them worthy of the description “page turner.” But at the core of the story are Katsu’s characters, enormously flawed individuals that the reader wants to root for, kill or sleep with, often all at the same time.

The Reckoning picks up soon after the ending of The Taker. Our heroine Lanore, who was made immortal by the charismatic and dangerous Adair in The Taker, and then managed to imprison him in the concrete walls of his own mansion, has run away with Luke, the doctor who helped her escape the police after she killed her true love Jonathan.  Lanny and Luke are in London visiting the Victoria and Albert museum, where Lanny has anonymously donated her precious collection of objects d’art acquired from her travels over the past two hundred years. By giving away hundreds of objects, she is attempting to distance herself from the past and move on from the devastating loss of Jonathan.  But her peace is short-lived. While gazing at her objects behind the museum glass, Lanny feels a terrible and long-forgotten sensation, the tingling approach of a headache that could only mean one thing: Adair has escaped, and will certainly be looking for her to exact revenge.

In alternating chapters, Katsu goes back and forth between Lanny, who manages to ditch Luke while trying to stay one step ahead of Adair, to the monster himself, released from his prison by happenstance and thrust into the modern world without a clue about how to survive in it. Of one thing he is certain, however. Lanny must pay for her treachery no matter how long it takes to find her, and so he uses his powerful connection to the members of his immortal “family” to track down Jude, another immortal who has used his freedom from Adair to build a comfortable life for himself. Jude is shocked to see Adair on his doorstep, but reluctantly agrees to help him adapt to modern life and find Lanny. As Jude searches the internet for clues to Lanny’s whereabouts, the two discover the truth about Jonathan’s death.  Adair is sure that Jonathan is the key to locating Lanny, and so he sets out to find his burial-place and attempt to resurrect him from the dead, using his book of magical “recipes” that also contains the secret to immortality. Jonathan does indeed rise from the dead, but he is fundamentally damaged, and to Adair’s dismay, has no lingering respect for or fear of Adair. He tells Adair that he has met “the Queen of the Underworld,” a character that I’m hoping makes an appearance in book three.

As Adair gets closer to tracking down Lanny, she herself has made contact with friends from the past that can help her hide from Adair. But fate is cruel, and from this point on the story is a dizzying game of cat-and-mouse as Lanny realizes she cannot outrun her past. Katsu is brilliant at pacing her story and dropping bits of information about the characters’ pasts in just the right spots to spark the reader’s imagination, but she’s very careful not to give away too much. She takes us from the past to the present and back again, weaving together a story that spans centuries. The characters themselves go through many changes throughout the course of the story. Adair especially surprised me when his cruelty and power over the other characters became something else by the end of the book.  Katsu also digs deeper into some of the lesser characters from The Taker, and we discover that Adair is not the only immortal with cruel intentions. But all of the characters seem to have one thing in common: they are all capable of lies and deceit, and the reader is never really sure who to trust.

The Reckoning never loses momentum and unlike many “middle” books, it was even better than The Taker, if that’s possible.  The writing is gorgeous and almost visceral, and there was more than one occasion when I marked a lovely passage to go back again read again.  Katsu ends the book in a highly satisfying way, but wisely leaves many questions unanswered that she will most likely address in the final installment. A heady mix of intrigue, cruelty, betrayal and enduring love, The Reckoning will leave you breathless and impatient for more.

Many thanks to the author and publisher for supplying a review copy.

You can purchase The Reckoning here and visit Alma’s website here.

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THE TAKER Giveaway Winners

I am happy to announce the winners of my very first giveaway, which were selected by random.org.  Alma Katsu, author of The Taker, donated a bunch of cool stuff, including a copy of the newly released paperback.

Winner of the fan pack is Donna C.! Congrats, Donna!

And these four will be receiving a signed bookmark:

Monique I.

Brianne S. – Memories Overtaking Me

Zoe B. – The Consumption of Books

Carmen S.

Thank you to everyone who entered. I have another giveaway going on right now, just click on the photo of Oldsoul at the top right of this blog.

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THE TAKER Giveaway Ends Soon! Don’t Miss Out!

Up for grabs is this fun swag pack from author Alma Katsu, to celebrate the paperback release of The Taker.  Includes a paperback copy of The Taker, a proof of the paperback cover (pretty cool item, I’ve never actually seen one of these), sticky notes, a pen, bookmarks, and a “faux” wine label that refers to Katsu’s next book in the series, The Reckoning (will be released June 2012).

This contest is open to all US and Canadian residents, and it’s so simple, I don’t know why you wouldn’t want to enter! No hard questions to answer, you don’t have to worry about liking me on Facebook or following me on Twitter, just fill out this form. You can also read my review of The Taker here.

Contest ends Saturday March 31 at midnight PST!

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In My Mailbox #4

Welcome to another In My Mailbox, hosted by The Story Siren.  I wasn’t really expecting anything this week, but I did actually receive something in my mailbox, as well as an e-book and a bookstore purchase. So here we go:

The Reckoning by Alma Katsu. Release date: June 19, 2012. The sequel to the wonderfully hard-to-describe The Taker. After participating in a promotion for The Taker, I emailed the author to see if I could review The Reckoning before it came out. A week later, I received an ARC from the publisher. It pays to ask, I guess! I’m very excited, since I loved the first book in the series. If you haven’t read my review of The Taker or entered my GIVEAWAY, please click here to read more.

Here’s the description from Goodreads:

A love triangle spanning 200 years…Alma Katsu takes readers on a breathtaking journey through the landscape of the heart.

New York Times bestselling author Scott Westerfeld (Leviathan) praises Alma Katsu’s The Taker as, “a centuries-spanning epic that will keep you turning pages all night. This marvelous debut is a thinking person’s guilty pleasure.”

Now, Alma Katsu delivers the highly anticipated follow-up to her haunting novel about an immortal woman learning firsthand that the heart wants what the heart wants…no matter how high the stakes. Fans of The Taker can finally indulge in their next juicy fix with the second book of the trilogy, The Reckoning. In this gripping, pulse-pounding supernatural sequel, discover what happens to Lanny, Luke, Adair—and Jonathan. The Reckoning picks up where The Taker leaves off, following Lanny on her path to redemption—and creating a whole new level of suspense.

Pretty vague, right? Like I said, hard to describe.

The Destroyed by Brett Battles. Now available for Kindle, and will be available soon for other e-devices. Friends of mine know that Brett and I went to high school together, so I’ve always tried to support his writing career whenever possible. This is the fifth book in his Jonathan Quinn series. Quinn is probably Brett’s most popular character, and I’m sure this installment will be equally as exciting as the others.

Here’s the description from Amazon:

Mila Voss is dead.

That’s what the team hired to terminate her had reported, and that’s how her file had been marked.

Dead. Six years now.

So why did she suddenly show up on a hotel’s security camera in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania? Those who’d paid for her elimination are more than a little curious.

One person should know what happened—Jonathan Quinn, one of the best cleaners in the business, the man who’d been tasked with the disposal of her body.

Only Quinn isn’t exactly easy to get ahold of these days, and he may not be willing to share the answer.

PRAISE FOR THE JONATHAN QUINN SERIES

“Brilliant and heart pounding”—Jeffery Deaver, New York Times bestselling author

“Addictive.”—James Rollins, New York Times bestselling author

“Unputdownable.”—Tess Gerritsen, New York Times bestselling author

“The best elements of Lee Child, John le Carré, and Robert Ludlum.”—Sheldon Siegel, New York Times bestselling author

“Quinn is one part James Bond, one part Jason Bourne.”—Nashville Book Worm

“Welcome addition to the political thriller game.”—Publishers Weekly

You can purchase The Destroyed here.

Angelmaker by Nick Harkaway. Now available.  This book just sounds crazy! I’m reminded a little bit of The Rook, which was also a crazy book. I’ve never read Harkaway before, so I’m looking forward to checking him out. Here’s what Goodreads says:

From the acclaimed author of The Gone-Away World, blistering gangster noir meets howling absurdist comedy as the forces of good square off against the forces of evil, and only an unassuming clockwork repairman and an octogenarian former superspy can save the world from total destruction.

Joe Spork spends his days fixing antique clocks. The son of infamous London criminal Mathew “Tommy Gun” Spork, he has turned his back on his family’s mobster history and aims to live a quiet life. That orderly existence is suddenly upended when Joe activates a particularly unusual clockwork mechanism. His client, Edie Banister, is more than the kindly old lady she appears to be—she’s a retired international secret agent. And the device? It’s a 1950s doomsday machine. Having triggered it, Joe now faces the wrath of both the British government and a diabolical South Asian dictator who is also Edie’s old arch-nemesis. On the upside, Joe’s got a girl: a bold receptionist named Polly whose smarts, savvy and sex appeal may be just what he needs. With Joe’s once-quiet world suddenly overrun by mad monks, psychopathic serial killers, scientific geniuses and threats to the future of conscious life in the universe, he realizes that the only way to survive is to muster the courage to fight, help Edie complete a mission she abandoned years ago and pick up his father’s old gun . . .

That’s it for now, folks! What’s in your mailbox this week?

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GIVEAWAY & REVIEW: THE TAKER by Alma Katsu

**Please note: contest is now over.

Alma wrote to me recently and asked if I’d like to be part of her promotion for the paperback release of The Taker, and I jumped at the chance, of course! Before I get to the giveaway part of this post, here is a taste of what you can win:

You can fill out this form to enter, but please read my review of The Taker first, you won’t be disappointed!

The Taker has been on my to-read list since it came out last September, but I only recently found time to fit it into my reading schedule. I’m so glad I did, because this is a book that should not be missed.  Although the cover design is lovely, it didn’t really prepare me for the lush, sweeping story of Lanore, Adair, and Jonathan.

The story begins in the fictional town of St. Andrew, Maine, during the coldest time of the year. Luke, a young doctor, is working the night shift one evening when a beautiful young woman is brought into the hospital by the police.  She is covered in blood, but it isn’t hers. Her name is Lanore, and she confesses to Luke that she has just killed a man in the woods.  While the officers leave her in Luke’s care to search for the body, Lanore begins to tell her story, a story that spans over two hundred years. She tells Luke that she grew up in St. Andrew long ago, and as a young girl, fell desperately in love with a boy named Jonathan, a heart-achingly beautiful man who would never be able to love her completely. When she becomes (not surprisingly) pregnant after carrying on with Jonathan in secret, her father sends her away to Boston to have the baby, but upon arrival Lanore runs away from her chaperone and finds herself lost and alone in the unfamiliar streets of the city.

Here is where her story truly begins, as she is picked up by a group of exotic and mysterious men and women and taken to their home, where they drug and rape her. Lanore wakes up ill and confused, and before long she meets the man who will change her life forever: Adair, the leader of this odd group.  Lanore doesn’t know it, but her days as a mortal are numbered. As her condition worsens, Adair uses alchemy to make Lanore immortal, and she unwittingly becomes part of their strange and dangerous family, and bonded to Adair forever.

The Taker is a filled with sensual details that immediately reminded me of the early works of Anne Rice, in particular, Interview With the Vampire.  The structure is similar in that a character is relating her life’s story, and we jump back and forth between the past and the present.  Katsu delves deeper, however, when Adair tells Lanore his awful story, and the book becomes something more than just a tale, for the reader is suddenly caught up in a web of a story within a story within a story, like a set of Russian nesting dolls.  Easy to get lost, yes, but impossible to resist.

As Luke listens to Lanore’s unbelievable story, he himself falls under her spell, and by the end he has become just as wrapped up in her dark and lurid life as the rest of the characters. Katsu’s deft handling of the tale’s circuitous path as she hops between the present and past gives the story a dream-like quality, and I often felt as if I myself were emerging from a dream.  Her writing is flawlessly beautiful and authentically gothic, right down to her use of words such as “swive” and “catamite,” and the characters all have an air of arcane mystery that draws the reader in, despite their cruelty. Jonathan eventually re-enters the story, which brings the tale full circle.

You should know up front that The Taker is the first in a trilogy, which means the story is left unfinished. There are also periods of time in Lanore’s life that are not accounted for, and it left me wondering if these gaps will be filled in during future installments. (In fact they will. Keep reading and I’ll tell you more!)  I encourage you, reader, to give in to the lure of the storyteller.  Katsu’s erotic and atmospheric story will leave you enthralled.

The Taker will be released in paperback on March 27.

What happens next for Lanore, and how does Luke fit into all this?  The second book, The Reckoning, comes out this June, but in the meantime, Alma has also released an e-book only format short story that takes place somewhere in between. I’ll bet this answers some of my burning questions about those missing years.  Goodreads describes The Devil’s Scribe as:

After decades of running from her past, Lanore McIlvrae returns to America for the first time in 20 years to confront the source of her fear. The year is 1846 and Lanore—Lanny—has just landed in Baltimore after a long transatlantic crossing. That very night, she meets an “unattractive man with a high forehead and sunken eyes, and a tiny, pinched mouth like a parrot’s beak” who claims to write stories so dark and unsettling that he could be the Devil’s Scribe. His name? Edgar Allan Poe. Has Lanny finally met her match in this macabre man…or is it the other way around?

You can purchase The Devil’s Scribe here or here.

And now for the GIVEAWAY!

One lucky winner will receive: a copy of The Taker, a proof of the paperback cover of The Taker, sticky notes, a The Reckoning pen, bookmarks, and a wine label based on The Reckoning.  I’m thinking the book will also be signed! In addition, four other winners will each receive a signed bookmark (see above photo)!  The contest will end Saturday, March 31 at midnight PST.  Contest is open to US and Canada residents only! Please click here to fill out the entry form.  Good luck!

Many thanks to Alma Katsu for donating these giveaway items. You can also check out her website here.

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Tammy’s Top Ten Books of 2011 I Never Got to Read But Wanted To

It’s a sad truth: there is never enough time to read everything I want to.  But look!  You can see from the above photo that I own all ten books.  It’s not like I couldn’t find them at the library!   Kids, husband, dogs, life…they all try to pull me away from reading.  They want to be fed (kids).  They want their laundry done (husband).  They want to be walked and given duck treats (dogs).  Often when I finally lie down to read, I am interrupted.  Such is life, I guess. And so, like many readers, I end up with a very big “to be read” pile of books.

This post has been revamped for The Broke and the Bookish‘s Top Ten Tuesday, so my apologies if you’ve read this already.  This week’s “theme” is a Freebie, whatever top ten list you want to share!

These are the top ten that I really wanted to read this year but just didn’t get to:

1.  FLASHBACK by Dan Simmons. (Little, Brown & Company, 2011)  I love Dan Simmons. He’s written two of my favorite books of all time (Hyperion and Fall of Hyperion). Flashback is a set in a future America where most people are addicted to a drug called flashback, which allows the user to relive the best times of their lives.  It’s the story of a cop who is trying to solve a murder.  It’s long, but I will make time to read this book:)

2. THE FUTURE OF US by Jay Asher & Carolyn Mackler. (Razorbill, 2011)  This was one of my weekly recommendations.  It’s the story of two teens in 1996 who log onto AOL on their computer one day, only to see themselves on Facebook—15 years in the future.

3. THE TAKER by Alma Katsu. (Simon & Schuster/Gallery Press, 2011)  The plot sounds confusing, but this book has had some great reviews.  It’s a supernatural tale of unrequited love and redemption.  And has a character that appears to be immortal.

4. THE MARRIAGE PLOT by Jeffrey Eugenides. (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011)  Despite the really ugly cover (apologies to the book designer!), I’m betting this is great. I’ve read mixed reviews, but I’m a big Eugenides fan, so I’m looking forward to finally (someday) reading it.

5. THE DOVEKEEPERS by Alice Hoffman. (Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing Group, 2011)  Enough said.

6.  THE DEVIL ALL THE TIME by Donald Ray Pollock. (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 2011).  This book has had comparisons to Oliver Stone and Flannery O’Connor. Wow! It is set in rural West Virginia and is filled with odd, violent, and damaged characters. Sign me up!

7.  VAMPIRE EMPIRE: BOOK ONE: THE GREYFRIAR by Clay Griffith. (Pyr, 2010)  Book Two was published in 2011, so I’m really behind on this series. It’s received rave reviews and is a steampunk novel set in an alternate England in the year 2020.  A book with vampires and princesses, how can I resist?

8.  ROBOPOCALYPSE by Daniel H. Wilson. (Doubleday, 2011)  In a nutshell, robots take over the planet.  Humans vs. technology is always entertaining.

9.  SKIPPY DIES  by Paul Murray.  (Hamish Hamilton, 2010)  This book also came out in 2010 and has been languishing on my TBR pile for almost two years now. I believe it’s a sleeper and one of these days the movie will come out and everyone will be scrambling to read the book.

10.  DIVERGENT by Veronica Roth.  (Katherine Tegen Books, 2011)  This book is on almost everyone’s top ten list in the young adult category.  The second book in the series, Insurgent, comes out in May 2012. so I need to read this soon. It’s one of many dystopian novels that came out this year, but from what I’ve heard it’s better than most.

In case you missed it, here is my Top Ten list of my favorite books of 2011 that I actually read.

So, here’s to catching up…and here’s to 2012!  Happy New Year, everyone!

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Read Me! Recommended Reading for the Week of September 19th

This week I have two books that are worthy of mentioning. First, Brian Selznick’s WonderstruckThe Invention of Hugo Cabret was one of the most surprising and beautiful books that I read back in 2007, and Wonderstruck is his follow-up in the same vein. Of the 629 pages in the book, over 450 of them are illustrations by the author, which means this thick, heavy book is not as daunting as it seems.  This is the story of Ben and Rose, two children who live fifty years apart, yet whose lives magically intertwine.  Both children are compelled to set out on quests after they discover puzzling clues, and although their stories are separate, Selznick weaves them together with words and pictures, and creates something astonishing and unique.  If Wonderstruck is anything like Hugo Cabret, it is sure to be a wonderful experience for both children and adults.

Also new this week is The Taker by Alma Katsu.  This is Ms. Katsu’s first novel, and it’s gotten quite a lot of attention already. From the book description:  “On the midnight shift at a hospital in rural Maine, Dr. Luke Findley is expecting another quiet evening of frostbite and the occasional domestic dispute. But the minute Lanore McIlvrae—Lanny—walks into his ER, she changes his life forever. A mysterious woman with a past and plenty of dark secrets, Lanny is unlike anyone Luke has ever met. He is inexplicably drawn to her . . . despite the fact that she is a murder suspect with a police escort. And as she begins to tell her story, a story of enduring love and consummate betrayal that transcends time and mortality, Luke finds himself utterly captivated.

Her impassioned account begins at the turn of the nineteenth century in the same small town of St. Andrew, Maine, back when it was a Puritan settlement. Consumed as a child by her love for the son of the town’s founder, Lanny will do anything to be with him forever. But the price she pays is steep—an immortal bond that chains her to a terrible fate for all eternity. And now, two centuries later, the key to her healing and her salvation lies with Dr. Luke Findley.

Part historical novel, part supernatural page-turner, The Taker is an unforgettable tale about the power of unrequited love not only to elevate and sustain, but also to blind and ultimately destroy, and how each of us is responsible for finding our own path to redemption.”  

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