Friday, 20 July 2012

Feature & Follow Friday (15)




What is Feature & follow?

Gain new followers and make new friends with the Book Blogger Feature & Follow! If this is your first time here, welcome! You are about to make some new friends and gain new followers -- but you have to know -- the point of this hop is to follow other bloggers also. I follow you, you follow me.

The Feature & Follow is hosted by TWO hosts, Parajunkee of Parajunkee's View and Alison of Alison Can Read. Each host will have their own Feature Blog and this way it'll allow us to show off more new blogs!


This weeks blogs are Booktastic Reviews
and A Glass of Wine
This weeks question

Q: Christmas in July! Someone gives you a gift card for two books (whatever that costs). What two books will you buy?

A: That is such a difficult question to answer!!!! Archangel's Storm by Nalini Singh and A Local Habitation by Seanan McGuire

Friday, 6 July 2012

TGIF (Comfort Reads) & Book Blogger Hop (4)

Friday is the day of following, friendship and questions in the book blog world. This week I am taking part in two further blog hops! TGIF is run by Ginger at GReads and the Book Blogger Hop is run by Jen at Crazy for Books. Look forward to getting to meet & know you my fellow book bloggers :-)

Q -Comfort Reads: Which books do you go to for comfort & familiarity?  Is there a type of book you seek out when you're needing that extra bit of comfort in your life?

A -  For me it's the Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovich. I love this series and can read the books over and over again. You can never have enough of Stephanie, Joe and Ranger. The big question of course is always whether Stephanie is going to choose Cupcake or Babe! If you haven't already read these I'd highly recommend getting started on the first book One For The Money, there are now 18 books in the series, wonderful :-) Yes, I've realised my comfort book is outside the genres I usually review for Eternally Books, but I have eclectic tastes!!




Q - If you could be a character from any book, who would you be?

A - I've had a hard time getting this answer down to just one character! I'm going to go with Alexia Tarabotti from the Parasol Protectorate series.  I just love how the series is set in an alternative Victorian England. She is an excellent character and believable. Pushes the boundaries of her society to almost intolerably improper proportions! If you have read this series yet take a look at the first book Soulless.

Feature and Follow Friday (14)




What is Feature & follow?

Gain new followers and make new friends with the Book Blogger Feature & Follow! If this is your first time here, welcome! You are about to make some new friends and gain new followers -- but you have to know -- the point of this hop is to follow other bloggers also. I follow you, you follow me.

The Feature & Follow is hosted by TWO hosts, Parajunkee of Parajunkee's View and Alison of Alison Can Read. Each host will have their own Feature Blog and this way it'll allow us to show off more new blogs!


This weeks question

Q: Jumping Genres: Ever pick up a book from a genre you usually don’t like and LOVE it? Tell us about it and why you picked it up in the first place.

A: I have. I don't usually read books that fall into the "Chick-Lit" or main stream contemporary romance but recently I read Fen by Freya North. Not my usual but I really enjoyed it, a light and easy read, just what I'd needed at the time! I think it's good to shake things up a little form time to time :-)

Wednesday, 4 July 2012

Waiting on Wednesday ~ Ashes of Honor


Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Jill @ Breaking the Spine which spotlight eagerly anticipated upcoming releases.


Ashes of Honor is the sixth book in the October Daye series by Seanan McGuire.  I've only read the first book in the series Rosemary and Rue but I really like the series and am getting my hands on the rest of it!


Title: Ashes of Honor
Author: Seanan McGuire
Series: Octorber Daye #6
Publication date: 24 September 2012

It’s been almost a year since October “Toby” Daye averted a war, gave up a county, and suffered personal losses that have left her wishing for a good day’s sleep. She’s tried to focus on her responsibilities—training Quentin, upholding her position as Sylvester’s knight, and paying the bills—but she can’t help feeling like her world is crumbling around her, and her increasingly reckless behavior is beginning to worry even her staunchest supporters.

To make matters worse, Toby’s just been asked to find another missing child…only this time it’s the changeling daughter of her fellow knight, Etienne, who didn’t even know he was a father until the girl went missing. Her name is Chelsea. She’s a teleporter, like her father. She’s also the kind of changeling the old stories warn about, the ones with all the strength and none of the control. She’s opening doors that were never meant to be opened, releasing dangers that were sealed away centuries before—and there’s a good chance she could destroy Faerie if she isn’t stopped.

Now Toby must find Chelsea before time runs out, racing against an unknown deadline and through unknown worlds as she and her allies try to avert disaster. But danger is also stirring in the Court of Cats, and Tybalt may need Toby’s help with the biggest challenge he’s ever faced.

Toby thought the last year was bad. She has no idea.

Tuesday, 3 July 2012

Guest Post: Sue Edge talks Zombie books!


I'd like to welcome Sue Edge who is the author of Dead Tropics for an interview on her book tour presented by the fantastic Innovative Online Book Tours.  I'll introduce Sue then let you hear what she has t say about writing Zombie books and finally take a sneaky peak at Dead Tropics.

Sue was born in Malaysia to French and British colonialists, had a very exciting childhood in the jungles of Borneo, the Australian outback and tropical Queensland, and is the proud mother of three children.
She manages to steal the time to write by ignoring the state of her house and pretending that the kids can look after themselves.




Sue Edge talks... 

Other people discuss the weather, politics and movies.  My girlfriends and I talk about urban fantasy books – the heroines, the gorgeous heroes, what actors would play them best, the chemistry between the characters, and the best quotes.  If it’s a half decent book, there’ll be a quote worth quoting.  “I’d said it before and meant it: Alive or undead, the love of my life was a badass” (Blood Promise by Richelle Mead) or Must be a rule in the ghost handbook—if in danger of evaporating, make sure you’re in the middle of a dire pronouncement.” (The Reckoning, Kelley Armstrong)
My mum just doesn’t get it.  “Zombies, vampires, werewolves?  What is it with you girls today?  What’s wrong with a normal man?”
It’s hard for a mortal man to compare with the sexy bad boys from True Blood  (source:  http://orderofsmutvixens.blogspot.com/2010/11/book-boyfriends-of-2010-honorary-men-of.html)
I’d shrug.  “Oh, you know, there’s no bad boy like a dead bad boy” I’d say or “It’s the great hair and perfect white teeth”.  The trouble was that I couldn’t really articulate the reasons for my fascination with the genre.   I knew that it went deeper than a man with broad shoulders and uncannily sharp teeth (not that there’s anything wrong with that…) but I wasn’t really sure what the ingredients were that made paranormal books so endlessly intriguing.

So I put the question to my friends, which led to much discussion – and arguing.  In the end, we agreed it boiled down to a few essential elements.  Firstly, the worlds are similar to our own.  This is what separates urban fantasy from plain fantasy.  There are a few significant differences – usually to do with magic – but it a world we can recognize as our own and imagine ourselves in.   Why is this important?  Because urban fantasy readers are romantic.  While we love the lives we lead and the partners we have chosen, we also dream of living life on the bigger stage, of the road less travelled, of our untapped potential and who we could have been under different circumstances.  Paranormal books give us that outlet.  “Oh sure, I’m a teacher but, hey, in another life, I might have been an awesome kickass vampire hunter!” 

Secondly, but related to the first point, readers can relate to the kickass kind of woman one usually finds in these books.  In a world where we hold our tongues politely, follow rules, get our hearts broken, do chores when we’re tired and just want a long bath, it is refreshing to lose ourselves in a heroine who has great lines, courageously faces her enemies and still has time for passion with a great hero – or two.

And that leads us to the third point, the heroes.  The quirky browed, smouldering eyed heroes who are helpless to resist the heroines (read: us).  In urban fantasies, the powerful, ultra-masculine heroes are protective, humorous, intelligent, articulate men of action.  But most of all, they worship the heroine.  They see her faults and yet they adore and desire her above all else.  Gee, we could all do with a bit of that in our lives!

My decision to write a zombie book raised a few eyebrows amongst my family and friends but, to my mind, it is just an extension of the urban fantasy world.  It is still a world that is recognisably our own, with a heroine who faces her adversaries with courage and the occasional smart- ass quip, and there is even a hero who worships her.  Lori doesn’t have magic powers but I think she has something even stronger – the parent’s fierce instinct to protect their children.
  
Let’s face it, we only get to live one life, and while it’s a good life most of the time, it’s also fairly mundane.  So as long as authors create worlds in which we, the reader, can immerse ourselves and emerge satiated, the urban fantasy genre is here to stay.

Dead Tropics
"In the midst of a catastrophe the world has never seen before, one woman will stop at nothing to protect her family...

When miners release an ancient and deadly virus, Lori, a nurse, finds herself at ground zero of a deadly battle for survival.  With time running out, can she find the strength to fight an ever-increasing enemy and save her family?"






You can find out more about Sue and here books around the web :-)


Sunday, 1 July 2012

Blog design, changes & delays!

Blog reconstruction work still under way!


SORRY :-)


Anyone who is a regular visitor to my blog may have noticed that it never looks quite the same twice and that sometimes things look a bit "screwey" too!

I have been redesigning my blog for ages and things just keep going wrong with it! But, I've learnt so much and have enjoyed it a lot :-) I did have a wonderful new design all built and all that on a test blog - but when I tried to get it on here it just did not look right!



Back to the drawing board I went and I think I'm nearly there now. But I apologise for all the times things have been so hard to find or just looked awful!

I mean how hard can it be to get not only the perfect colours and header but a lovely font and a drop down menu???



The finished product will be what I want eventually. I haven't forgotten about the little contest I ran a few weeks back either, I'm having issues with my designing which I want to iron out before I pass their lovely designs over (much less problems than my own!)

Stacking the Shelves (8) & Showcase Sunday (7)


Stacking The Shelves is a brand new meme for us all to showcase our book haul for the week. The lovely Tynga at Tyngas Reviews.


Showcase Sunday is another fantastic new meme where we can showcase our books, this is hosted by Vicky at Books, Biscuits & Tea



I can't choose which of these memes to participate in so I'm going to take part in both!!


I've been at the free ebooks on Amazon again this week! (These were free on Amazon UK on 1st July)


A Kiss Of Dark Rapture (Renegade Angels #0.5) by Sylvia Day
Sword of the Raven by Diana Duncan
Promise (Soul Savers #1) by Kristie Cook

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