Monday, August 1, 2016

Release Blitz: Three Little Words by Lauren Hawkeye

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Lauren Hawkeye's THREE LITTLE WORDS: The Complete Series is available now for preorder! Grab it for just .99c at a special price, and get her Safe Haven boxset for free before August 7th! See more about the boxset below.

Three Little Words Set 3D white back (1)

About THREE LITTLE WORDS: The Complete Series

“Hey girl, feel my sweater. Know what it’s made of? Boyfriend material." That’s right. My name is Dorian, and I’m in an Aussie band that’s kinda famous in America. That and a little know-how in between the sheets gets me all the sheilas I can handle… too bad I have my eye on one broken roller derby princess. And too bad she’s already hooked up with my roomie. -Dorian
 “There are plenty of fish in the sea. But this fish is my fish. Do not touch my fish."
The girl of my dreams is within reach again, and this time I’m determined to make her say yes—in her condo, at my apartment, in the middle of the law library during study hour (that last one was maybe not such a good idea). But Adele has changed in the years since we parted. I want her to be all mine… but the only way to make her whole again might be to… share?
-Malachi

“Skate fast. Hit hard. Get low."
That’s roller derby—and that’s easy. The rest of my life? Not so much. One life in pieces, one Aussie rocker, and one sexy ex. How do I know what to choose? And… do I really have to?”
-Adele

 The entire bestselling series now available in one complete set! 
 SPECIAL RELEASE DEAL! Send your receipt to ThreeLittleWordsSeries@gmail.com and receive a download code for the Safe Haven boxed set… that’s right! AUGUST 2- AUGUST 7 ONLY!

About Lauren Hawkeye

Lauren Hawkeye/ Lauren Jameson never imagined that she’d wind up telling stories for a living… though when she looks back, it’s easy to see that she’s the only one who is surprised. Always “the kid who read all the time”, Lauren made up stories about her favorite characters once she’d finished a book… and once spent an entire year narrating her own life internally. No, really. But where she was just plain odd before publication, now she can at least claim to have an artistic temperament.

Lauren lives in the Rocky Mountains of Alberta, Canada with her husband, toddler, pit bull and idiot cat, though they do not live in an igloo, nor do they drive a dogsled. In her nonexistent spare time Lauren can be found knitting (her husband claims that her snobby yarn collection is exorbitant), reading anything she can get her hands on, or sweating her way through spin class. She loves to hear from her readers!

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ARC August: Sign up Post



ARC August starts today and let me tell you, I have waited for this for a long time. Now, I know what I said two years ago, about giving up ARCs and all of that, but I'm a book addict okay? And ARCs are my drug of choice. So, as you can probably tell, I have a lot of ARCs I need to go through, and what better way to do it, than in the company of so many great readers.

In case you're wondering, ARC August is an event hosted by the amazing, wonderful and awesome Octavia and Shelly from Read.Sleep.Repeat and if you want to participate, hurry up and sign up. (I admit that I signed up late, because like an idiot I forgot to make up the post. Like literally FORGOT to write it. Don't ask, working in a school kind of fried my brain).

Anyway, here are the books I hope to get to read this month (and there are a lot of books in this list, so have patience here):

Young Adult


Menagerie by Rachel Vincent
The Hawkweed Prophecy by Irena Brignull
The Otherlife by Julia Gray
Holding Up The Universe by Jennifer Niven
The Continent by Keira Drake
Ink And Bone by Rachel Caine
Paper and Fire by Rachel Caine
Riverkeep by Martin Stewart
How To Make Out by Brianna R. Shrum
Extraordinary October by Diana Wagman

Adult


Relentless Flame by Jillian David
Flame Unleashed by Jillian David
Flame's Dawn by Jillian David
Wrong For Me by Jackie Ashenden
The Illusionist's Apprentice by Kristy Cambron
Rookie Move by Sarina Bowen
Playing By Her Rules by Amy Andrews
Bad Boys After Dark by Tina Moss, Ellis Leigh, Vivian Lane, Kallysten, Fionn Jameson, Shelley Munro, Nicola R. White, Bonnie Dee
Son Of Thunder by Libby Bishop
Lure Of Obsession by Lisa Kessler
Mastering Darkness by Kate Wendley
Abandoned Darkness by Kate Wendley
Chaos Rises by Pippa DaCosta


Comic Books



• Monstress issues #3, #4, #5 & #6 by Marjorie Liu


In case you didn't count, that's 27 books. Actually more, since Bad Boys After Dark is actually a collection of 8 full-length books, so 34 books to read for ARC August. Good thing I'm on vacation, right?

Are you joining on the fun? What does your TBR for this challenge look like?

Thursday, July 28, 2016

Book Review: #Static by Eric Laster

Author: Eric Laster
Series: N/A
Genre: YA, Mystery & Thrillers
Publisher: Automatic Publishing
Release Date: 19 Apr 2016
My Rating: 3 cups
Source: Netgalley
Blurb (from Goodreads):
When Curtis Brooks starts receiving phone calls from his older brother Wilt, who’s been dead a week, he’s sure it’s to help him find evidence that will lead to a murderer’s arrest. But Wilt claims he wasn’t murdered; his calling, meant to help him adjust, is standard protocol for newly deceased at the Aftermart—a kind of inescapable, ever-expanding Walmart filled with discontinued products.

Wilt’s death ruled a homicide, Curtis embarks on a dangerous plan to find the killer, which soon has him scheming against a billionaire and floundering toward love with his brother’s ex-girlfriend Suzy, all while struggling through high school and his single mom’s poor choices.

Why does Wilt help Curtis win over Suzy, even as he organizes a rebellion at the Aftermart? Who’d wanted him dead? Curtis risks his life to answer these questions, in the process forging a bond with his brother unlike any they’ve ever had.

*Disclaimer: I received an e-ARC of this book from Netgalley and Automatic Publishing in exchange for an honest review. This does not influence my opinion or my rating of this book in any way.

As soon as I saw the description on Netgalley I was intrigued, because the theme of a dead person being able to call a loved one is one that I haven't read much about. I was also a bit confused by the genre, because surely a book that talks about receiving phone calls from the dead has a little bit of fantasy in it, right? Or horror, depends on how you look at it.

It was interesting to read an entire story from a boy's POV. I found it a bit strange at times, but I definitely found it an interesting and good change from what I normally read.

I thought Curtis was a fascinating character. He had moments when he frustrated me, but for the most part I rooted for him and hoped he'd succeed in what he was doing. The story reveals a lot of things about Curtis that made me question some of the things about the story. I feel like, in the end, he does the best he can with the cards he was dealt. His parents are far from perfect, his life in general sucks. The fact that his brother died is important, but I feel like the fact that he got these phone calls from Wilt helped him cope or at least ignore the fact that Wilt isn't physically there for him when he needs him the most.

Remember when I said that I was confused by the genre? Well, the story itself left me with a lot of doubts regarding these phone calls. I kept wondering, mostly because of some of the details that emerged about Curtis throughout the book, if those phone calls were real. Which in a way I thought was brilliant, because then, depending on what you want to believe, there's two ways in which you can see the book. Either Curtis was completely delusional, or he really was talking to his dead brother on the phone.

I felt like the pace was a little too slow for my taste, and the ending turned out to be completely not what I imagined. Not necessarily a bad thing, just not what I expected.

My only issue was with the parents in this book. I would've wanted at least one of the parents to be somewhat normal, or at least true, mature adults. Actually, now that I think about it, all of the adults in this book weren't exactly role models, or even adults per se.

Anyway, I thought the book was okay and if you're fans of YA mysteries, you should definitely check it out and let me know what you think.


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