Thursday, 23 June 2011

$0.99 Summer Promotion for Nook Owners

Special news for all you Nook owners -- Winterborne is available on Barnes & Noble for the low price of $0.99 for a limited time only.  Tell your Nook-loving friends and stock up on your summer reading today!

Monday, 13 June 2011

Top 10 Things I've Learned About Teen Romance


10. When a 25-year-old guy is lusting after a 16-year-old, it’s creepy. If he’s a 100-year-old vampire, bring it.

9. That ginger guy with the blank stare in my gym class may not be the gangly geek I think he is.

8. The more aloof and friendless I am, the more likely I am to attract the hot, mysterious guy from school.

7. If the guys I like have names like Peeta and Gale, I am trapped in a crappy future. Time to get my game face on.

6. If he sparkles in sunlight, do not assume it is an art project gone awry. Run.

5. If I am destined for/matched with/in an arranged marriage to a guy, I will not love him. I will fall in love with the other guy.

4. If I never see my mysterious boyfriend eat yet he sucks down vials of red liquid, don’t despair. He may not be a vampire. He may just be immortal.

3. If the fact that two hot brothers are into me seems too good to be true, it is. They are vampires.

2. When the guy I like has yellow eyes and prefers milkbones to milk, get a clue. He’s a werewolf.

1. Get thee to a love triangle. No adolescence is apparently complete without two males competing for my love. If I can’t rustle up an Edward and Jacob, improvise with my best friend’s pasty grandfather and my neighbor’s dog.

Friday, 10 June 2011

Today's YA Too Dark?

B'niz first.  I've had some awesome reviews the last week or so and want to thank all of the reviewers for spending a little time with my book and caring enough to spread the word.  I urge you to check out these blogs -- Mollie's YAttitude Problem, Anna in Athens, GreeceLa Petite Fille Rousse (interview bonus!), and My Keeper Shelf.  I also have a guest post on top 10 things I've learned about teen romance up today on Missy Reads & Reviews.  So you don't OD on blog names here, please feel free to peruse the rest of my reviews on GoodReads and Amazon at your leisure because I'm sure you have nothing better to do on a Friday.

In other news, some lady ignited a firestorm with her Elisabeth Hasselbeck-style view on YA lit.  The Wall Street Journal article discussed the bleak landscape of today's YA novels compared with the Judy Blume unicorns and rainbows of yesteryear.  Remember when it was all menstruation and peeping toms?  Ah, the good old days.  By pointing to all the horrors contained in the pages of modern books for kids as though it's some new phenom, the writer displays a shocking level of ignorance.  She asserts that SE Hinton kicked off dark YA with The Outsiders and publishers have ridden the misery money train ever since.  Has she read any mythology (my books of choice throughout adolescence)?  Myths are full of murder, adultery, rape, sexism, bestiality, and incest (in no order of favoritism).  Did reading about Zeus raping Europa in the form of a bull "normalize" rape for me?  Not so much.  Made me think he was a lightning-chucking asshole, though.  Plenty of YA authors and librarians have weighed in on this topic in the last week so I don't want to repeat too much of what's been said (great points about the Matthew Shepard murder, teen cutting, etc).  I'd simply like to give me two cents on the dystopian angle.  The puppet cites The Hunger Games as "hyper-violent" and rallies parents not to allow publishers "to bulldoze coarseness or misery into their children's lives."  YA dystopian books are uniquely positioned to make teens think about social and ethical issues.  In reading those types of books, they immerse themselves in a possible future.  A bleak future that, if they don't want to find themselves living in it in thirty plus years, may make them think or behave differently as they grow into adulthood.  I wish YA dystopian was more prevalent when I was a teen.  My critical thinking skills didn't kick in until much later, probably because I wasn't confronted by issues that required much critical thought.  Also, science and technology have moved on by leaps and bounds in the past forty years.  The ethical issues arising from these advancements will continue to multiply and I would rather have teens debating these types of issues now and deciding what kind of people they want to be and what kind of world they want to inhabit, rather than having them scratching their heads as adults and wondering how the world ended up in such a sorry state.  At least I can rest assured that my own kids will be emotionally ready to face an uncertain future because I didn't bathe them in sunshine and put their brains on ice for future use.  Hey, that last bit gives me an idea for another dark dystopian YA novel...  

My Quote of the Week: "You're my favorite friend." - my 4-year-old daughter to me.            

Friday, 3 June 2011

Writing in Progress

I've been writing up a storm this week, unfortunately, none of it is for my blog:( The kids are away and I'm trying to get through as many pages as poss for Book 2 of the Universe Unbound series.  I'm also working on a couple of guest posts for other blogs.  Basically, I am openly cheating on my blog.  


Two fantastic reviews have posted this week for Winterborne. One is from Lisa in Australia at Read Me Bookmark Me Love Me and the other from Beth in the UK at A Little Sun Shy