Monday, December 8, 2014

MMGM~THE LUMPY DUCKLING

I've been away from my middle grade spotlights for a while and decided it was time to join in, again. It's great to me back in the lineup for Shannon Messenger's MMGM! Click HERE for the other participants.

THE LUMPY DUCKLING: Another Weaver Tale (Weaver Tales, #3)
by Kai Strand

Publisher: Guardian Angel Publishing
Released: October 2014
Format: Paperback
Pages: 85
Goodreads | Amazon | B&N

I'd like to thank the author for supplying me with a copy in exchange for an unbiased review.

Favorite Line/Passage: Wheezy leaned against her bedroom door when she closed it behind her. Her heart pounded from the effort of holding her feelings inside. Such strong emotions swirled inside her, she was afraid of what might burst out. She wanted to yell at the top of her voice in anger, yet her heart weighed heavy with sadness, and tears hovered just behind her eyes. Remembering Lumpy's handsome new face caused her to frown with confusion and sob from a sense of loss.

Description: Lumpy may be hefty with a misshapen mouth, but he’s funny and the most loyal friend Wheezy could ask for. When she meets Unwanted, she casts a wish for people to be able to see her best friend like she does. Her wish nearly kills him.

NIGHTSTAND WORTHY +2!

My Splats: a sweet coming of age tale of trying to find one's place in the world and within relationships. It's full of fun, youthful energy. 

What sets this story series apart from other shorter fantasy reads in the middle grade category is the structure of the story. These children are word weavers, meaning they often challenge each other through every day events by communicating in poetic rhyming. Initially, I thought it might become too much or take away from the main theme of the story but it didn't. In fact it did the opposite by showing character quirks, beliefs, and reactions - inner emotions. I think kids this age will really gravitate to it. It makes them think.

The story has wonderful characters such a Eloise aka Wheezy, who sneezes in threes. She has a great attitude of being strong and sure of herself - on the outside, anyway. As events unfold, the reader learns there's more to Wheezy on the inside then she shows on the outside. Then there's her BFF Lumpy, who's always been the plump, smart boy on the block. He's practically a master at word weaving, always making it a playful game. A little competition between good friends sounds fitting and intriguing to readers of this age. I absolutely LOVE this concept. 

As all good stories do, this one has roadblocks the main character must overcome. Through one dangerous wish that could have a grave outcome, Wheezy takes the reader on a journey of changing friendships as kids move from the elementary mindset and physical body to moments of awkward adolescence. How does he feel? How do I act? Will they still like me? There's even a bully to give the tale a deeper MG feel, although it's done in a new, fresh way. 
By story's end, the true meaning of friendship shines through in a delicate and very sincere way. It's a wonderful teaching tool for kids this age. I'd recommend reading together, especially with 10-11 year olds. (Psst...if you're wondering if that little blue dude on the cover is Lump, it's not. You'll have to read to find out who he is.)
Weaver Tale #1                    Weaver Tale #2
What's a good middle grade story on friendship you've read? 
 photo Sheri2.png

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Wistful YA: COMPULSION, a Giveaway, & ISWG!

Within the publishing arena, is there anything more thrilling than watching a dear friend achieve her dream? I think not. I am beyond ecstatic to share Martina Boone's dream with you - a story that enraptured her heart. A story she wrote to capture yours. 

Release Date: 10/28/14
ISBN: 1481411225
Publisher: Simon Pulse, Simon Teen
Pages: 448

Summary from Goodreads:
Three plantations. Two wishes. One ancient curse.

All her life, Barrie Watson has been a virtual prisoner in the house where she lives with her shut-in mother. When her mother dies, Barrie promises to put some mileage on her stiletto heels. But she finds a new kind of prison at her aunt’s South Carolina plantation instead--a prison guarded by an ancient spirit who long ago cursed one of the three founding families of Watson Island and gave the others magical gifts that became compulsions.

Stuck with the ghosts of a generations-old feud and hunted by forces she cannot see, Barrie must find a way to break free of the family legacy. With the help of sun-kissed Eight Beaufort, who knows what Barrie wants before she knows herself, the last Watson heir starts to unravel her family's twisted secrets. What she finds is dangerous: a love she never expected, a river that turns to fire at midnight, a gorgeous cousin who isn’t what she seems, and very real enemies who want both Eight and Barrie dead.

Buy Links:
 photo 9F3EE1AE-B1F5-45EB-87E4-5D28630C7FC5-7157-000003FF9121E113.jpg  photo 6682AA0B-74D4-4387-95A5-8FF5F06129C8-7157-000003FF90EF4A11.jpg  photo kobobuyicon_zpsb933c957.png  photo C5192E77-11AB-4F0C-A100-1152CA3C5DBB-7157-000003FF90C02846.jpg
 photo bookdepositorybutton_zps03c7c0bd.jpg

Compulsion is available anywhere books are sold. Signed copies are available from One More Page Books. You can also order with the special “I have a Compulsion for reading” bookplate from Eight Cousins.
About the Author:
Book Blitz Organized by:
Martina Boone was born in Prague and spoke several languages before learning English. She fell in love with words and never stopped delighting in them.

She’s the founder of AdventuresInYAPublishing.com, a Writer’s Digest 101 Best Websites for Writers site, and YASeriesInsiders.com, a site devoted to encouraging literacy and all this YA Series.
From her home in Virginia, where she lives with her husband, children, and Auggie the wonder dog, she enjoys writing contemporary fantasy set in the kinds of magical places she’d love to visit. When she isn’t writing, she’s addicted to travel, horses, skiing, chocolate flavored tea, and anything with Nutella on it. Author Links:
Before we get to the fabulous giveaway, let's have some fun.

Martina, what’s your favorite thing about Compulsion?
I secretly love Gothic novels. There was a point where Daphne du Maurier's REBECCA and Mary Stewart's AIRS ABOVE THE GROUND were among my favorite novels. I've always adored books with exotically dangerous settings, quirky characters, and elements of mystery and suspense. Since I'm from Prague, one of the most magical, broodingly beautiful cities in the world, the bar for magical locations is set pretty hight. But the South. Ah, there I have all the elements I love—a haunted past, regret, anger, continuing conflict, and questions of morality galore. Southern plantations are the closest thing to moldering abbeys and decaying castles that we have in the United States. I'm grateful to Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl for reminding me of how much I love all the elements they included in BEAUTIFUL CREATURES, because their series got me thinking about the possibilities of Spanish moss and crumbling Southern mansions. My favorite thing about Compulsion, hands down, is the setting and how it shaped (and twisted) the characters and families who live there. 

Exotically dangerous settings ... #clearsthroat #blushes

What is the weirdest piece of research you had to do when writing COMPULSION?
I researched a LOT of off the wall things for this book: pirates, shipwrecks, ghosts, witches, voodoo, hoodoo, Cherokee witchcraft, slavery, drug running, lost treasures of the Civil War, Confederate privateering, the Red Sea Gold, indigo production, drag queens/drag shows, secret rooms, furniture with hidden drawers, ball lightning . . . The thing that fascinated me the most on a research level was the various forms of magic that were present in the South with the confluence of belief systems brought there by slaves from different regions and religions intersecting with Native American belief systems. I spent a lot of time Googling specific spells and curses and trying to work out how the interpretation of them might have changed over three hundred years.

What do you want readers to take away from COMPULSION?
That you can pick your family, the people you love. And that you need to do more than just survive your life. You have to go out and live your life. 

Very profound.

Can you sum up COMPULSION in one word?
Sure. The title: Compulsion. I think my editor nailed it coming up with that.

So COMPULSION wasn't the original title?
The book has had three titles, and I love them all. My working title was FIRE CARRIER, and when you read the book, you'll get that. My brilliant acquiring editor, Annette Pollert, who edited the book all the way up to copyedits, came up with BEHOLDEN, which everyone loved, and that also suits the book perfectly. But the bottom line is that COMPULSION fits several themes in the book and also conveys a sense of energy that I hope I've achieved in the plot. It's by far my favorite, and it carries through into the rest of the series.

COMPULSION is part of a trilogy. Did you already have the series written when you submitted the manuscript?
I never meant to write a series, but I knew I wasn't done with Watson Island yet, so after I'd written the second draft, I gave both Eight and Cassie little sisters. I intended to let them help me explore the magical aspects of those families in companion novels. When my agent and I were getting ready to submit COMPULSION to publishers, I very quickly wrote synopses for the novels. Just quick sketches. And then I immediately went to work writing the second book to keep from going crazy while I was waiting to see if COMPULSION would sell. 

We already had a phone call scheduled with a publisher for a Monday, and my agent called me at five o'clock on Thursday night to tell me that Annette, my future editor, wanted to talk to me the next day, and did I have time. Um, does McDonalds sell hamburgers? 

#snort #giggle

Also, he said, Annette wanted to know if I would consider making the other two books a series. Sure, I said. Of course. And then I had until ten-thirty the next morning to come up with ideas: plot and character arcs for the series, a plot that was progressive instead of episodic, themes that would carry across the books. All that. 

'K, me interjecting here ... Now that is chaos for a writer - less than a handful of hours to mind-create two full stories. But, obviously, you handled it amazingly! 

So I called my critique partners and begged for brainstorming help. We were all focusing on plot at first, and then when I was just talking things trough, I finally realized what the character progressions had to be. Instead of crying about the loss of what I'd already written in Book Two, I got excited about the series idea instead, and I also realized that I could use what I'd done for Book Two. Just in a different way. 

Martina, you rock in ways I can't even express here. I remember when you first contacted me as you were launching Adventures in YA Publishing. I am thrilled for you! Congratulations. 

Now for you amazing readers: GO ENTER THE COMPULSION GIVEAWAY
Best of luck to you. 

a Rafflecopter giveaway

To fulfill my #ISWG post today, I'm going to leave you with a few thoughts to ponder over the coming weeks.

list of participants
'Tis the holiday season, as we all know. No matter where you live or what beliefs you hold you are most likely aware of the commercialism that has come to blanket this time of year. During my childhood, there were times when advertisements and the luring 'sale' caused commotion. Anyone remember Cabbage Patch dolls?                                                                                                                                              As an adult, I've seen these isolated commercial moments multiply to the point there is almost no relief. I fear this generation will miss out on the importance of this calendar month, that it's about reflecting, remembering there is good in the world, and being thankful. Despite my valiant efforts to lend reminders and be a better example (as I'm sure you do as well), it just might not be enough. What will their children feel during this time of year? Their childrens' children? What will we leave them to focus on? And if they don't focus on the importance that is life and how we came about, what will happen to society?

Yeah, a heavy question to leave you with, but one I think is worth our time. 

Until our next IWSG chat ... ((HUGS))


 photo Sheri2.png

LinkWithin

Related Posts with Thumbnails

MY STATS