Showing posts with label Book Lovelies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Lovelies. Show all posts

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Book Lovelies (3)

To read more about Book Lovelies (and its "sister" meme, Book Crazies) please visit our features page.


What am I loving about the book(s) I tote around town and stash under my pillow at night? Stick around to find out. Don't forget to share what you are loving about your current reads!

All right my lovely blogger friends! Here's my confession: I've been way too busy to do any reading this week! <<this is where you gasp from utter astonishment, noting to self that one who does not find time to read must not be living a happy life at all!>> I'm having withdrawals from two really great books!

What are those two really great books I'm LONGING to read more of:
1. I must finish City of Bones (so close to the end!)
2. The Lit Express book club's choice for February: 13 Reasons Why by Jay Asher

What's lovely about reading 13 Reasons Why? Well, actually a lot of things. But this time, it has nothing to do with the book. For being a person who loves reading (and writing) so much, sometimes I don't know how it is I ended up marrying someone who doesn't like to read...ever. (Ah, okay...I know why...there's the love part and the part where he's so good looking and talented and...).

What I'm loving about 13 Reasons Why is that we're reading it together. <<I clear my throat>> That doesn't mean we each have our own copy. I mean, I'm reading it out loud to him before bed. Yes, I know, cute and corny all at the same time. The lengths I go to try to get him to read!

And as a side note,
And I don't know if this counts or not,
but it has to do with a book so I'm going to tell you anyway
Another Book Lovelies fact:

I'm truly....really....excited....happy.....overwhelmed.....bouncing in my seat....

to see WHO IS SAINT GIOVANNI? appear on this blog in weekly installments. I know, it's my own book, so does that count? Heck yes it does. Because Book Lovelies is about all the exciting/happy/lovely book moments/feelings you have about books!

Have you had any Book Lovelies moments lately?

If you would like participate in this meme, please leave your link at the bottom of this post. Book Lovelies is the "sister" meme to Book Crazies. The two memes rotate every other week for variety!

Monday, January 24, 2011

Book Lovelies (2)

To read more about Book Lovelies (and its "sister" meme, Book Crazies) please visit our features page.

 
What am I loving about the book(s) I tote around town and stash under my pillow at night? Stick around to find out. Don't forget to share what you are loving about your current reads!

Just finished: Revolution by Jennifer Donnelly
Currently reading: City of Bones by Cassandra Clare (on page 98)

About Revolution...
How do you feel when you are already enjoying a book, and then BAM, you're slammed with a twist you were not expecting? That's what happened while reading Revolution. It became my favorite part of the book. Until that point, I was thinking it was a 3.5 star book but then SLAM...twist...and it bumped the overall score up to a 4. Oh yeah, it was THAT good. I wish I could tell you what the twist is, but I don't want to spoil it for you in case you plan on reading this book.

In the past, if I picked up a book written in present tense, more than half of the time I'd put it back onto the shelf. I've always preferred to read books written in past tense. Revolution is written in first person, present tense, and I think it totally worked for this story. It made everything feel so immediate, which was important since the main character, Andi, was struggling with some pretty intense feelings. Although, I personally cannot relate to her traumatic experiences, the present tense made me feel like I was Andi. It had me constantly thinking how would I react or feel? Would it be like Andi? Essentially, it made the story come alive for me. *I loved it*

I almost forgot this point, and I'm glad I remembered! Revolution has a love story weaved into it. And if you know me, you know I LOVE romance. But, what made this romance so spectacular is the fact that it was pretty average. Average as in boring? No way. It was average as in "this can actually happen in real life." Lately, I feel like YA books are taken over by the I'm in love with you at first sight scenario. That can be fun too, but it gets old quick. Maybe it's only getting old because there isn't enough variety in what happens after the love at first sight scene. Anyway... in Revolution Virgil is this really caring, normal (and hot) guy. He and Andi hit it off right from the start, but their romance develops naturally. It's helped me realize that tenderness can happen in very small events. Like singing someone to sleep...

About City of Bones...
So, I have much less to say about this one. NOT because I'm not loving it. I am. But, I'm only about 100 pages into the book. What's got me hooked? Simon and Jace. Both of them make me LAUGH like crazy. And, I can already tell where things are headed...romantically...between Clary and both boys. Is this a love triangle in the works? We shall see.


If you would like participate in this meme, please leave your link at the bottom of this post. Book Lovelies is the "sister" meme to Book Crazies. The two memes rotate every other week for variety!



Monday, December 20, 2010

Book Lovelies (1)

What am I loving about the book I tote around town and stash under my pillow at night? Stick around to find out. Don't forget to share what you are loving about your current reads!


I've been reading Cassandra Clare's Clockwork Angel for a little more than two weeks. Confession time: I'm still only about half way through the book. No, no...I'm not an incredibly slow reader. And it's not so bad that I never feel like reading it. My busy schedule is holding me hostage. But finally(!) some of my deadlines have lifted for a little bit, and I'm really looking forward to reading more, hopefully finishing it by the end of this week. Share time: what do I love about the book so far?



1. Cool magic.
Instead of telling you all about it, why don't I show you with an excerpt:

     Will placed the tip of the stele against the dirty floor, and began to move it. Broad dark lines flowed from the tip, and Tessa watched in fascination. There was something particular and beautiful about the way the stele scrawled--not like ink flowing from a pen, but more as if the lines had always been there, and Will was uncovering them.
     He was halfway through when Jem made a noise of realization, clearly recognizing the Mark that his friend was drawing. "What do you--," he began, but Will held up the hand he wasn't drawing with, shaking his head.
     "Dont," Will said. "If I make a mess of this, we could well fall through the floor."
     Jem rolled his eyes, but it didn't seem to matter: Will was already finished and was lifting the stele away from the design he had drawn. Tessa gave a little cry as the warped floorboards between them seemed to shimmer--and then became as transparent as a window. Scooting forward, forgetting entirely about her dress, she found herself staring through it as if through a pane of glass.
     She was looking down into what she realized was the library. She could see the large round table and the Enclave seated at it, Charlotte between Benedict Lightwood and the elegant white-haired woman. (excerpt from pg. 211)

2. Snappy dialogue.
I am sooooo tired of reading books with boring conversation between main characters. The sort of conversation someone has, in my opinion, tells a lot about their personalities. It's writer's job to convey their characters personalities every chance they get. Clare does an excellent job of this!

So, I wish I had been recording my thoughts about this book more faithfully. Then, I would have the perfect scene to share with you. The scene I'm choosing is a pretty good example but maybe not the best. So, Again, allow me to show you:

     "But the books are all behind bars!" she said. "Like a Literary sort of prison!"
     Will grinned. "Some of these books are dangerous," he said. "It's wise to be careful."
     "One must always be careful of books," said Tessa, "and what is inside them, for words have the power to change us."
     "I'm not sure a book has ever changed me," said Will. "Well, there is one volume that promises to teach one how to turn oneself into an entire flock of sheep--"
     "Only the very weak-minded refuse to be influenced by literature and poetry," said Tessa, determined not to let him run wildly off with the conversation.
     "Of course, why one would want to be an entire flock of sheep is another matter entirely," Will finished. "Is there something you want to read here, Miss Gray, or is there not? Name it, and I shall attempt to free it from its prison for you."(excerpt from pg. 87)

3. Excellent World Building
Alright, so I think 2 excerpts is quite enough for this post. So, I'll skip it for #3. What I will say is that Clare's world building is one of her strong points. In many of the YA books I've read lately, world building seems to be a low point.

For example, in Hush, Hush by Becca Fitzpatrick, I never had the sense of the fallen angel's way of life, who they are, and how they live. In Twilight (by Stephenie Meyer, as if I needed to remind you), the world building was adequate.By the end of the first book it was clear what life was like for the Cullen clan and how they differed from the red eyed vampires. Clare surpasses them all.

She is a detailed world builder. For those of you who don't know this, Clockwork Angel is the first prequel (part of a series) to Clare's The Mortal Instruments. I haven't read The Mortal Instruments, and I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing.

I was worried starting with the prequel because I thought there would be a lot I wouldn't understand about their world. Nope, so far I don't feel like I've been whacked over the head with too much information. If there are references to the other books in the series, I don't pick up on it, and it doesn't seem to get in the way.

*All excerpts taken from Clockwork Angel and written by Cassadra Clare*