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  • Author Archives: Laura

    • Book Review: “Crazy Rich Asians” by Kevin Kwan

      Posted at 6:10 am by Laura, on February 19, 2018

      Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan

      Publisher: Anchor Books
      Published: May 2014
      Genre: contemporary, women’s fiction
      ISBN: 9780345803788
      Rating:
       ★★★★

      When New Yorker Rachel Chu agrees on a summer in Singapore to visit her boyfriend’s “traditional” Chinese family, she expects the trip to be relaxing, if a little dull. She has no idea…

      Nick’s childhood home is a palace. He grew up riding in more private planes than cars. He and Rachel will be attending the wedding of the year. Oh, and Nick just happens to be one of Asia’s most eligible bachelors — and his formidable mother isn’t so sure Rachel is the right one for him.

      Rachel is under the impression she’s jetting off to Singapore with her boyfriend for the summer — something fun between semesters of professor life. Little does she know, his family is wildly, outrageously, crazy rich, and they have their own set of standards for this mystery girl he’s bringing home.

      I loved this. If you’re a fan of Jane Austen’s satirical novels, imagine her sassy, snarky, sarcastic commentary in a modern setting and you have Kevin Kwan. The extreme detail put into the characters’ seemingly superficial lives was hilarious. Everyone played a role in this novel, from Nick’s mother, to his cousins, to Rachel’s BFF from college, to passersby in Singapore. Toss in the [admittedly very little] research I did on Singapore lifestyle and culture, and holy crap this book [seems to] nails it.

      I mean, come on. Look at this quote. (From the mind of a guy I think is Nick’s cousin by marriage.)

      “But then his parents were always so selfish. Sure, they raised him and paid for his education and bought him his first apartment, but they failed him when it came to what was truly important — they didn’t know how to flaunt their wealth properly.”

      These people. My goodness. It was brilliant.

      Among all of this extravagance are three down-to-earth characters: Astrid, Nick, and Rachel. Astrid is Nick’s cousin, and she lives the high life as well — but she knows enough about heartache, budget cuts, and experience-over-materials that you can’t help but like her frank and honest character. Nick is one of those “I’m wealthy but I don’t flaunt it” types, living in a small apartment in NYC and living paycheck to paycheck rather than dipping into an account overflowing with decades of family coin. You’d think he’d be the spoiled type, but he wants nothing to do with the family money despite wanting to please his mother and father. And finally, Rachel. Our normal, totally average, super funny, head-on-her-shoulders Rachel, who is just trying to wrap her brain around all the crazy superficial things going on around her and Nick on this trip. You can’t not love her. She’s such a refreshing voice.

      In the end, though, even the most surface-level characters had depth to their motivations and desires. For example, Nick’s mother claims she’s not happy her son never told her about his dirt poor, possibly-a-gold-digger girlfriend and that’s the only reason. But as the story progresses, it digs deeper: she’s concerned the girlfriend’s background, her family ties, honor, values, tradition. She mentions money as an excuse to not like Rachel, but so much of this novel has threads of Asian family expectations and values. It’s an excellent cultural read.

      I should’ve read this book sooner — like, the day it published. I can’t wait for the film!

      This qualifies as book 1 of 16 in my TBR challenge. 

       

      Posted in books, Reviews 2018, Rock My TBR | 1 Comment | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: contemporary, review, rock my TBR
    • Deal Announcement: Tasha Suri, Fantasy

      Posted at 9:10 am by Laura, on February 17, 2018

      Deal Announcements feature my most recent deal as an agent and the story behind it. Writers and readers should experience how an agent knows when they’ve struck gold and sign an author, the beginning of the journey to publication.

      I’m thrilled to announce the publication of Tasha Suri’s Empire of Sand!

      Hachette Book Group associate editor Sarah Guan acquired world English rights to a debut fantasy novel by Tasha Suri. According to HBG, Suri was inspired to write Empire of Sandby Mughal-Indian history. The novel, HBG said, “is the story of a nobleman’s illegitimate daughter and a vow-bound mystic who both possess the rare ability to compel the dreams of sleeping gods.” Suri was born in the U.K., but toured India during childhood holidays. She is now a librarian in London, and studied English and creative writing at Warwick University. Laura Crockett of TriadaUS brokered the deal. Empire of Sand will be released in the fall under HBG’s Orbit Books imprint.

      Once upon a time…

      It was late June when I received a query for a 15th-century Mughal-Indian-inspired fantasy. The query was beautifully written, and the sample provided opened with an interesting scene and premise, setting the stage for what I hoped to be a gorgeous fantasy. I needed more.

      One early August afternoon, I finished reading the gorgeous fantasy. Natasha’s writing was lush and stunning, and I couldn’t help thinking her style was a perfect blend of traditional atmospheric fantasy a la Juliet Marillier and Roshani Chokshi. The magic was unique yet familiar, rooted in tradition and lore, and the romance was so achingly beautiful and classic I couldn’t help but sigh over the two. I had to call and offer. Immediately. And she accepted!

      There was something about this project that made me think it would sell quickly, too. Agents always think their clients’ work will sell quickly — we believe in them, we love their stories — but it really comes down to wowing editors. Her project felt right for crossover audiences, so I sent it out with a bang all over the board. It was a month between offering representation and putting it on submission, and another month till we received a very enthusiastic offer from a publisher.

      The offer prompted an auction. On Diwali. Do you realize how important and amazing that was for Tasha and her family? And by the end of the day, we knew exactly where EMPIRE OF SAND would find a home.

      This was a huge deal for everyone involved. My first auction, landing a deal on Diwali for Tasha, and announcing the deal on Lunar New Year for Sarah. What a trio!

      And the rest…is history.

      Congratulations, Tasha! You’re going to be a published author!

      EDIT: For more information about EMPIRE OF SAND, check out the acquisition announcement from Orbit!

       

      Posted in agenting, deal announcement | 4 Comments | Tagged deal announcement
    • Book Review: “The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street” by Karina Yan Glaser

      Posted at 6:35 am by Laura, on January 9, 2018

      The Vanderbeekers of 141st Street by Karina Yan Glaser

      Publisher: HMH BFYR
      Published: October 2017
      Genre: middle grade, contemporary
      ISBN: 9780544876392
      Rating: 
      ★★★.5

      The Vanderbeekers have always lived in the brownstone on 141st Street. It’s practically another member of the family. So when their reclusive, curmudgeonly landlord decides not to renew their lease, the five siblings have eleven days to do whatever it takes to stay in their beloved home and convince the dreaded Beiderman just how wonderful they are. And all is fair in love and war when it comes to keeping their home.

      The five Vanderbeeker siblings adore their home in Harlem. It’s close to their parents’ work, it’s close to school, their best friends live nearby, all the coolest people (the mailman, the baker, their elderly neighbors next door) greet them each day — what’s not to love? Well, The Beiderman — Mr. Beiderman, as Dad keeps reminding them — is not too great. He’s not letting the Vanderbeekers renew their lease, and he’s kicking them out of the building before Christmas!

      This book is, in many ways, a love letter to Harlem, to neighborhood camaraderie, to homes that are more than a space to live in with a roof over your head. It’s a great story about family and perseverance, silly antics, imaginative and creative children, friendship, and neighborly love. Even though it’s set during the Christmas season, it’s perfect for any time of year.

      The siblings believe The Beiderman is a crochety old man because he has never known joy in his life. So what he needs this Christmas is some good ol’ cheering up — and that’ll make him renew their parents’ lease. They come up with all sorts of clever, funny, and silly ideas, from bringing up tea to delivering scheming notes a la noir crime, to delivering a kitten in a box to playing a violin with such passion and determination it makes the man cry.

      The Beiderman’s history comes about in pieces, fitting together like a puzzle till the very end with the violin music, and — like most Grinch/Scrooge tales — a change of heart and understanding of character. It’s a good, heartwarming story, bound to be a favorite for middle grade readers. There’s a character for everyone in here!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2017 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: contemporary, genre: holiday, genre: middle grade, review, rock my TBR
    • Deal Announcement: Nina Moreno, YA Contemporary

      Posted at 7:10 pm by Laura, on January 4, 2018

      Deal Announcements feature my most recent deal as an agent and the story behind it. Writers and readers should experience how an agent knows when they’ve struck gold and sign an author, the beginning of the journey to publication.

      I’m thrilled to announce the publication of Nina Moreno’s Saint Rosa of the Sea!

      Hannah Allaman at Disney has bought Nina Moreno‘s debut YA contemporary novel, Saint Rosa of the Sea, pitched as Gilmore Girls meets Practical Magic, in a preempt. The women in Rosa’s family are cursed: her abuela is exiled from Cuba, her mother is reckless, and Rosa is forbidden to go to the sea. Rosa dreams of finally seeing their island, but her study abroad plans crumble amid political changes just as she crashes into a quiet boy from the docks. Publication is planned for summer 2019; Laura Crockett at Triada US Literary Agency negotiated the deal for world English rights.

      Once upon a time…

      ‘Twas the afternoon before offices closed and all through the inbox, not an email was pinging, not even a — wait a minute! Is that an offer?!

      Nina Moreno is one of the very first clients I took on a couple years ago, and I fell in love with an incredibly doomed, romantic YA contemporary set in an orange grove. We loved this manuscript to pieces, but unfortunately there were no bites.

      While I was submitting that manuscript, Nina’s brain was cooking up a new project, about a drummer in a small town. But soon that project developed into something more, making the drummer the BFF to the real protagonist of this small town’s story: Rosa, an artistic soul with a passion and determination to visit her family’s country, a country forbidden legally and by her own family to visit in any capacity. Toss in the cultural elements, the diaspora, the lyrical language, and a whole lot of delicious pastries, and I was a goner. This manuscript was gorgeous.

      We submitted it several months later to several editors (after many revisions), halted further submission (for more revisions), was about to submit again (but was asked to not because Nina wanted to revise some more), and then finally sent off what we felt was the strongest possible draft. Not two weeks later, Disney came in with an offer we couldn’t refuse.

      Merry Christmas, indeed!

      And the rest…is history.

      Congratulations, Nina! You’re going to be a published author!

       

      Posted in deal announcement | 3 Comments | Tagged agenting, deal announcement
    • MSWL for 2018

      Posted at 9:55 pm by Laura, on January 1, 2018

      Also known as
      What I’d Like to See in my Agent Inbox for 2018

      In general, my manuscript wish list stays the same no matter the season or year! But for 2018, I’m really hoping to see these kinds of projects in particular appear in my inbox.

      My inbox typically floods with fantasy manuscripts across the age categories. I don’t mind that one bit! But I’m already pretty particular about fantasy, and I do represent a variety of fantasy writers already. To really expand my list, I’d like to see more in these categories and genres.

      ~

      Adult Historical Fiction || I love all sorts of historical fiction, especially when it branches off little-known aspects of history, or it takes on a fresh new look at popular historical events (WWI and WWII, for example, are incredibly common on the shelves, but it’s how the story is told or the unique perspective the story is told through that brings them to the shelves). My favorite historical fiction includes Shadow on the Crown (Emma of Normandy and early British history), Letters from Skye (WWI/WWII parallel narrative told entirely in epistolary format), The Alice Network (WWI/WWII parallel narrative shining light on female spy networks). I’m attracted to Between Two Fires (early Welsh history), The White Russian (because I find Russian history fascinating), and Hild (life of a nun). I would love to see some more light shed on impressive women in history and the things they accomplished despite society’s limitations (STEM, feminism, code-breaking, politics). Admittedly, I’m most drawn to European (specifically English) history, but I’m open to reading anything as long as the premise is compelling and fresh.

      Adult Contemporary Women’s Fiction || Some of my favorite contemporary women’s fiction tends to be a bit on the morally ambiguous side of things, tackling taboo topics or shedding light on a hot-button issue in a new way. The queen of this, I think, is Jodi Picoult. I also adore women’s fiction that is about the average woman doing average things, experiencing the difficulties of everyday life, and growing from it — such as A Window Opens, Leave Me, and The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living. On the flip-side, I love chick-lit — humorous women’s fiction that’s appealing to a millennial audience, about young women in the workplace and the silly things that happen in their life. My absolute favorite is Sophie Kinsella, along with The Hating Game, Attachments, and You and Me, Always. Romance is not a primary draw for me, but it doesn’t turn me off to the story, either!

      Adult Historical Fantasy || I’m such a sucker for these, especially if there are elements of romance. The voice and the writing in historical fantasy is exactly what I love about the two genres separately. It’s accessible, even when it’s a world entirely different from our own. The characters’ voices are enticing, their daily life is familiar, as if I’ve always been a part of it, thanks to the historical aspects of the world. Some of my favorite books and series, such as Outlander, Daughter of the Forest, and The Winter Witch, are historical fantasies. Others, such as City of Brass, Uprooted, and The Queen of Blood, are inspired by history and folklore, though not necessarily part of actual historical pasts. I’d love to see more historical fantasies inspired by other cultures’ histories and folklore.

      Young Adult Contemporary Fiction || It is all about the voice for me when it comes to YA contemporary. It needs to feel and sound authentic to the teen reader, as they are the target audience. When I read YA contemporary, I need to feel like I’m talking to my high school best friend. It’s not a matter of nostalgia, but a bit like living in my memory — every emotion, every action, how angry and elated I would feel after certain events transpired, how important specific things were for me and why. Teen readers can spot inauthenticity in a heartbeat, and you want to make sure you have their desires and heartbreaks in the voice of your protagonist. You’re not an adult trying to be a teen — you are a teen, you get them. Talk to any secondary education teacher or school or YA librarian, and they really understand them.

      That said, I am seeking fantastic rom-coms like When Dimple Met Rishi (technology camps!) and Anna and the French Kiss (study abroad programs!), badass heroines like Dumplin’ (fighting against stereotypes), books that handle mental states with honesty like When We Collided and What to Say Next, and great family and friendship dynamics like Emma Mills, Morgan Matson, and Jenny Han. I tend to lean on the lighter side of things, with hope at the end of the tunnel, rather than something dark and gritty from the get go and very little humor to carry throughout. I do like tear-jerkers, but I want that spark of hope and inspiration at the end.

      Young Adult Fantasy || The YA world is difficult to break into, especially in fantasy. But I’m such a sucker for YA fantasy — I love all the worlds and ideas and originality that floods the market. That’s the issue at stake, though: it needs to be original. So while I love fairytale retellings, they need to be proper retellings, with twists and turns and (for goodness’s sake) new names. I love culturally-influenced or mythology-inspired stories, but I’m not interested in Greek or Roman mythology whatsoever. (Never have been.) I love historically-inspired fantasies, too, such as Walk on Earth a Stranger. That said, I’m very much into elemental magic — when magic is innate, a part of the world, or part of the world’s faith/mythology — over all other kinds of fantasies. Think Star-Touched Queen, Shadowfell, and Hunted. If you have a YA fantasy, send it my way, especially if they fit into any of the above criteria. I’m especially hunting down a Viking-inspired fantasy…

      Young Adult Historical || Historical fiction is very hard to break into in YA. Sometimes it needs to have magical elements, sometimes it needs to be an era that readers are familiar with. But that usually limits it to WWII novels or fantasy. So what do I want that’s different from that? Simple. Look to your own city, look to the history books, look to your family history, and see what seemingly small event had a large impact for that area. A Prisoner of Night and Fog is set in Germany in the 1930s, not quite WWII but through the perspective of someone in the middle of the frightening changes in the country; Outrun the Moon is set during the San Francisco earthquake, and how race and economic status barriers fell in a state of emergency; A Madness So Discreet is set across America in the 1800s, battling patriarchy and standing up for those unlawfully sentenced to mental institutions; The Forbidden Orchid is set in Asia as a Victorian girl hunts down her father, a man in the middle of a race to find a perfect, rare orchid. There are so many more — but great YA historical fiction requires an intriguing and original premise, a general accessibility, and bringing the past to life.

      ~

      For a final once-over, feel free to follow my #mswl on Twitter and on #MSWL website, follow #MSWLaesthetic, read my Manuscript Wishlist post, follow submission guidelines, read up on Publishers Marketplace deals, and catch up on this blog once in a while to read my thoughts and reviews of published works. Every little bit helps to getting representation! Oh, and as a reminder:

      ALWAYS seeking: diversity. We each experience life differently because of diversity. Race, ethnicity, gender identity, sexual orientation, ability, mentality, health, economic status, religious affiliation, all of it. The obvious shouldn’t need to be said — that I want my projects to reflect the beautiful diversity of the world, that I want to see and share with others life through another’s eyes, that I want to see these differences expressed through art and creation and culture, that these books need to be on bookshelves — but that’s the state of things. So yes, there is no question to it: I want diversity.

      ALWAYS open to queries: even during times of the year when publishing seems extra busy, or extra slow, or I’m on vacation or traveling or anything — I am open to queries. I never close. I read every single query. It’s unfair to you as the writer to try to keep track of all the agents who are opened or closed, and (selfishly) it’s unfair to me to be closed when something truly remarkable could have been in my inbox for me to represent. SO! With that said, if I’m busy or traveling or on vacation, I’ll have an away message up with clear, simple instructions about what will happen with your query in the time I’m away. I am never closed to queries.

      NEVER seeking: anything in space, anything set in the future, thrillers and suspense (psychological, military, legal, political, or otherwise), all nonfiction projects (poems, essays, memoirs, how-tos, everything nonfiction), paranormal romance, erotica. If your project uses any of these concepts to describe it, it’s an automatic no. I’m not the agent for any of these projects, so please do not send them to me.

      ~

      I hope this is helpful! I look forward to reading and selling excellent manuscripts in 2018!

      Posted in agenting | 4 Comments | Tagged agenting, personal
    • 2018 Bookish Resolutions and Reading Challenges

      Posted at 12:45 pm by Laura, on December 31, 2017

      Major Goals

      READ 50 BOOKS || I manage to read at least 50 a year and I’d like to keep that up. Surpassing each year is nice, but I don’t want to challenge myself too much that reading becomes a stressful chore.

      READ 5 LIBRARY BOOKS || Like last year, I’ll already be reading a set allotment of library books anyway for the book clubs I’m in or running (should be 20 if my math is correct). I’d like to add 5 more library books to the mix, fun and interesting reading material I’ve been curious to read and haven’t yet!

      READ MARILLIER & GABALDON || Again like last year, I’d like to read the rest of the series I own by Marillier and Gabaldon. Unlike last year, I will not attach it to the Flights of Fantasy challenge. I honestly can’t remember why I did this to myself, but I read more fantasy outside of M and G and didn’t apply it to the Flights of Fantasy challenge. This’ll be separate.

      Bonus Goals

      FANTASY AND HISTORICAL FICTION || Read more fantasy! Read more historical fiction! These are my favorite genres and yet I’m always reading loads of contemporary. (Probably because those feel “mindless” to me and I can race through those like candy. Maybe. Possibly. Likely.) I look at my TBR bookcases and see all of these great books I’m still very excited about, and they’re mostly in these two genres. Which leads to my next bonus goal…

      READ MORE FROM TBR, LESS FROM ARCs || I know I’m not the only one who sometimes sees galleys as free ways to read a book. But you know what’s also free? A library. My library purchases fantastic books, and just about everything on my galley-hunting TBR ends up on the library shelves in the end. So perhaps I should read the books I own first before diving into a fighting ring for a galley of a book coming out in a few months anyway.

      What are some of your goals for 2018?

      Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments
    • End of Year Book Survey IV

      Posted at 6:15 am by Laura, on December 31, 2017

      This is the third year I’m participating in Jamie’s (@ The Perpetual Page-Turner) End of Year Book Survey. In 2015 I shared my bookish life in Hermione gifs, 2016 in Pevensie gifs, and this year I’ll share it through Gilmore Girls gifs! I’m looking forward to reading your 2017 book survey too.

      Note: This includes all books read in 2017 – they do not have to be published in 2017.

      Number of Books You Read: 57
      Number of Re-reads: 0
      Genre You Read the Most From: contemporary

      1. Best Book You Read in 2017

      I can’t stop thinking about The Alice Network. That was one of two 5-star books I read this year (the other was Outrun the Moon), but for some reason The Alice Network really stuck out for me. It’s not your usual historical fiction, let alone your usual parallel narrative, WWI/WWII historical fiction.

      2. Book You Were Excited About & Thought You Were Going To Love More But Didn’t?

      Caraval was a book I was very excited to read, and I was thrilled to have received a galley of it, too. But it started to crash and burn within a couple pages, and it just…continued to dig a deeper hole. I was very disappointed. I gave it 3 stars on Goodreads but in hindsight my thoughts and feelings about the book could really bring it down a star or two…

      3. Most Surprising (in a good way or bad way) Book You Read in 2017?

      What to Say Next tops this list. Unlike most of Buxbaum’s readers, I didn’t care for Tell Me Three Things one bit, but I was pulled into What to Say Next within a few sentences. Then she had me bawling my eyes out. So in a VERY good way, Buxbaum surprised me!

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      4. Book You “Pushed” The Most People To Read (and they did) in 2017?

      I push my client’s books, obviously, and I’ve been so excited to see how well my friends and fellow bloggers love Jared Reck’s A Short History of the Girl Next Door. Outside of agent life, I’d say the book I pushed the most was The Bear and the Nightingale at the library. You can get just about anyone to read wintry Russian historicals with a dash of magic and folklore. It’s appealing across many ages!

      5. Best Series You Started in 2017? Best Sequel of 2017? Best Series Ender of 2017?

      Started: Troubled Waters by Sharon Shinn (Elementals 1)
      Sequel: Son of the Shadows by Juliet Marillier (Sevenwaters 2)
      Ender: The Dire King by William Ritter (Jackaby 4)

      6. Favorite New Author You Discovered in 2017?

      Beatriz Williams! I don’t know why it took me so long to read The Secret Life of Violet Grant, but I’m glad I did and now I want to read more by Williams!

      7. Best Book from a Genre You Don’t Typically Read/was Out of Your Comfort Zone?

      I have a very hard time with nonfiction, but I thought Stiff by Mary Roach was interesting, informative, and hilarious.

      8. Most Action-packed/Thrilling/Unputdownable Book of the Year?

      It’s not action-packed or thrilling, but I could not put down The Map That Leads to You. It’s one of those books that’s entirely engrossing for those who have the itch to travel, the constant wanderlust, the need to find a home in a whole new place entirely our own.

      9. Book You Read in 2017 That You are Most Likely to Re-Read Next Year?

      I’m not sure how likely it is I’ll re-read something in the first place (LOL I thought last year I’d reread a Kinsella book and, as you can see from the top ^, I have not re-read a single book this year!), BUT I really enjoyed When Dimple Met Rishi and can see myself rereading that next summer.

      10. Favorite Cover of a Book You Read in 2017?

      OH GOSH, I love so many covers! I’d say Like a River Glorious probably takes the cake here. The covers for this historical fantasy are so captivating.

      11. Most Memorable Character of 2017?

      Eve Gardiner in The Alice Network. I can’t stop thinking about her story, and how her story is so similar to so many women from WWI.

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      12. Most Beautifully Written Book Read in 2017?

      Hunted or The Silver Gate because both were so beautifully written in two completely different ways. Hunted is a Russian-esque fairytale retelling and twist of “Beauty and the Beast,” which I found lyrical and engrossing; The Silver Gate is about sibling dynamics, mental health, and the power of fairytales in everyday life, set in medieval-Celtic culture. Both made me catch my breath.

      13. Most Thought-Provoking/Life-Changing Book of 2017?

      The most thought-provoking was probably The Miniaturist, especially after my book club held their discussion on it. I thought I had it all figured out, but then a book club member suggested a Fight Club plot that blew my mind. It’s probably too far-fetched, but it made me enjoy the novel even more for it!

      14. Book You Can’t Believe You Waited UNTIL 2017 to Finally Read?

      The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon. So many friends and colleagues said I’d adore this book about books to pieces — but honestly, they didn’t recommend it the way that would’ve made me pick up this book in the first place: it’s a gothic book. Yes, I love books about books, but some of those just turn out to be surface-level stuff, a setting rather than a passion. This book, though, was awesome.

      15. Favorite Passage/Quote From a Book You Read in 2017?

      A book is a companion, though. You can read it in a special place, like on a train to Amsterdam, then you carry it home and you chuck it on a shelf, and then years later you remember that feeling you had on the train when you were young. It’s like a little island in time. —The Map That Leads to You by JP Monninger

      16. Shortest & Longest Book You Read in 2017?

      Shortest: The Case of the Counterfeit Criminals by Jordan Stratford
      Longest: Son of the Shadows by Juliet Marillier

      17. Book That Shocked You the Most

      Three Dark Crowns, because nothing really happens till the last line and I couldn’t believe I wasted all that time on a book in which nothing happens. I hear the rest of the books really build up, but I’m not going to bother. It’s not for me.

      18. OTP OF THE YEAR (you will go down with this ship!)

      Dimple and Rishi!

      19. Favorite Non-Romantic Relationship of the Year

      Mercy and her hate-to-friendship with Elodie in Outrun the Moon. Those two navigated some deep racial and class issues so well during this shocking moment in San Francisco history. I can only hope their friendship continued on after the book’s end. (Yes, they’re real! I firmly believe it!)

      20. Favorite Book You Read in 2017 from an Author You’ve Read Previously

      Always and Forever, Lara Jean, of course! It was so nice to see this trilogy come to an end the way it did. I loved Lara Jean’s growth and development across all of the books.

      21. Best Book You Read in 2017 That You Read Based SOLELY on a Recommendation From Somebody Else/Peer Pressure

      The Map That Leads to You, thanks to Alyssa! I couldn’t stop fawning over her instagram pictures of it, and once I got my hands on the book I fell in love immediately.

      22. Newest Fictional Crush from a Book You Read in 2017?

      Um, there are no memorable men this year, so my fictional crush goes to a woman I greatly admired: Eve Gardiner in The Alice Network.

      23. Best 2017 Debut You Read?

      When Dimple Met Rishi is definitely a favorite debut from this year. It’s so fun!

      24. Best World-building/Most Vivid Setting You Read This Year?

      Hunted made me shiver with all of its excellent wintry descriptions and magical light. I especially enjoyed the formatting for the book, with the beast’s perspective on wintry paper, as if it were written in blood on snow. Design can really play into the story!

      25. Book that Put a Smile on Your Face/was the Most FUN to Read?

      You and Me, Always was cheesy in the best way and I couldn’t stop smiling as I was reading it. I definitely needed that kind of book in that moment of the year.

      26. Book That Made You Cry or Nearly Cry in 2017?

      The Light Between Oceans was too heart-wrenching for words. I could easily see why both women acted the way they did, and then I was torn just like the husband, and then I put myself in the child’s shoes, and…guys, this is a rollercoaster of a book.

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      27. Hidden Gem of The Year?

      The Unlikely Story of a Pig in the City, is such a great story for Charlotte’s Web fans and general contemporary fiction. It hasn’t gotten enough love and attention, and it deserves so much more!

      28. Book that Crushed Your Soul?

      I keep talking about The Alice Network, so I’ll change it to The Secret Life of Violet Grant. That was also covering a very crushing topic of female history.

      29. Most Unique Book You Read in 2017?

       Paper Menagerie, which is a collection of science fiction short stories. I wouldn’t have picked this up otherwise, but I was impressed. It was definitely the most unique book I read in 2017.

      30. Book that Made You the Most Mad (doesn’t necessarily mean you didn’t like it)?

      Oh, a ton. A TON. I was probably most angry with (and deeply disliked) The Woman in Cabin 10.

      1. New Favorite Book Blog You Discovered in 2017? 

      Unfortunately, I wasn’t a very good blogger overall this year, and didn’t read any new ones.

      2. Favorite review that you wrote in 2017?

      The Map That Leads to You, because it was entirely quotes. I hadn’t done that before, and I really wanted to review the book, but it was so hard to sum up the novel without the moving passages. I let the book review itself, haha.

      3. Best Discussion/Non-review Post You had on Your Blog?

      One was an agent announcement (Clarissa’s novel Impossible Saints, in fact!), and another was one of my If We Were Having Coffee posts.

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      4. Best Event that You Participated in (author signings, festivals, virtual events, memes, etc.)?

      I was at Book Expo for lots of editorial meetings, and then went to ALA to meet my author Jared Reck and watch him sign galleys of A Short History of the Girl Next Door. Random House treated us to a very nice dinner with David Barkley, Nic Stone, and E Lockhart, too — it was a fun night.

      5. Best Moment of Bookish/Blogging Life in 2017?

      Oh, so many things, but my clients’ work definitely tops the list. I love seeing friends add my clients’ books to their TBRs and enjoying their reading experience. I’m bursting at the seams with two big deal announcements, but that will need to wait till January or so before it goes public.

      7. Most Popular Post This Year on Your Blog (whether it be by comments or views)?

      The most popular post this year was my review of Jenny Han’s Always and Forever, Lara Jean.

      8. Post You Wished Got a Little More Love?

      I wasn’t a terribly good blogger this year, so I didn’t have any posts in particular I wish got more attention or love, comments or discussion. I’m pleased people even find this at all!

      9. Best Bookish Discovery (book related sites, book stores, etc.)?

      This is so lame, but I’m saying it anyway: how much money I saved by reading books from my library. I didn’t have the best reading year, and I saved so much by checking out books from the library instead of purchasing. If I loved what I read, of course I ran to the bookstore and purchased my own copy!

      10.  Did You Complete Any Reading Challenges or Goals that You had Set for Yourself at the Beginning of This Year?

      I read a lot of fantasy, but I didn’t consider it part of my Marillier / Gabaldon challenge for Flights of Fantasy — I’ll change that for next year. I wanted to read more library books (which I did) and hold back on blind purchases (which I did). I didn’t read any classics or reread any books, but I did read a decent amount off my own TBR shelves. Win some, lose some, but in the end I’m quite pleased!

      1. One Book You Didn’t Get To in 2017 But Will Be Your Number 1 Priority in 2018?

      The City of Brass and The Passion of Dolssa top my list for 2017, and they’re on my January TBR. I gotta get started on them!

      2. Book You Are Most Anticipating for 2018 (non-debut)?

      From Twinkle, With Love is definitely up there! Sandhya Menon has easily become an auto-buy author for me. Oh, and Spinning Silver by Naomi Novik!

      3. 2018 Debut You are Most Anticipating?

      Hmmm…perhaps Sky in the Deep by Adrienne Young. It sounds exciting.

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      4. Series Ending/A Sequel You are Most Anticipating in 2018?

      The next Queens of Renthia book, The Queen of Sorrow by Sarah Beth Durst, hands down.

      5. One Thing You Hope to Accomplish or Do in Your Reading/Blogging Life in 2018?

      Commenting more, engaging more, and announcing more deals! (More, more, more.)

      6. A 2018 Release You’ve Already Read & Recommend To Everyone:

      Impossible Saints by Clarissa Harwood. I’ve already mailed a couple copies to friends and they’ve come back to me with positive responses, so…fingers crossed!

      Posted in books, Update Post | 5 Comments | Tagged books, End of Year Book Survey, personal
    • Christmas Eve Book Tag

      Posted at 5:35 am by Laura, on December 24, 2017

      It’s the day before Christmas! I hope you’re having a great holiday season. It’s been a busy few months lately, but I just had to do this Christmas Eve tag from Sam’s vlog. Enjoy!

      Christmas Eve Book Tag

      CHRISTMAS EVE MORNING || What is a book you wake up excited to read? (Anticipating reading, read in the past and love, etc)

      Anticipate reading: The City of Brass by SA Chakraborty
      Read in the past and love: Daughter of the Forest by Juliet Marillier (ha! Made it into another tag!)
      .

      CHRISTMAS EVE BREAKFAST || What is your favorite treat/food during the holidays?

      Gosh, it depends on the time of day! In the mornings I love a good breakfast casserole — eggs, cheese, sausage, onions, peppers — and I’m a sucker for mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, and pumpkin pie for lunch and dinner. It’s also not the holidays without ham, but the other foods are must-haves during the holidays. I also love peppermint ice cream and french vanilla hot cocoa with marshmallows.

      Clearly I love holiday food.

      FAMILY TIME || What is a book that fills you with happiness and love and the warm fuzzies in general?

      Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone. Hands down.

      CHRISTMAS CAROLS || What are your favorite Christmas carols/songs, or holiday songs?

      For Christmas carols, I tend to go a bit more traditional. I love “O Come Emmanuel,” “Wexford Carol,” and “I Wonder as I Wander.” Christmas songs I tend to think of pop tunes, and sung by specific singers. In that case it would be “Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas” (She & Him), “All I Want For Christmas is You” (Mariah Carey), and “It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas” (Harry Connick, Jr).

      ANTICIPATION || What book release are you very much anticipating?

      For one I have read, it would be Clarissa Harwood’s Impossible Saints (January 2!). For ones I’m looking forward to reading, it would be Rachel Hartman’s Tess of the Road, Jessica Leake’s Beyond a Darkened Shore, and Adrienne Young’s Sky in the Deep.

      SLEIGH BELLS ON THE ROOF || You hear Santa on the roof and you’re very excited for the goodies! What book kept you up late at night?

      Gosh, the last book that comes to mind that kept me up for ages was Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern. That was a couple years ago. There are books that’ve stuck with me too (likely due to connection in that moment of my life) and kept me awake and wondering, like A Window Opens by Elisabeth Egan.

      CHRISTMAS MORNING || What book or item has been on your wishlist that you’re anticipating, perhaps receiving, this Christmas?

      There’s an item that’s forever and always on my wishlist and probably will be till I die, so I don’t expect it! It’s the 1940s edition of Jane Eyre with Fritz Eichenberg’s etchings. I can find it on Amazon and Etsy, but that’s just too easy. I want to discover it, you know? I’m also eagerly anticipating Juliet Marillier’s Den of Wolves, though, and that seems far more reasonable to receive this Christmas!

      I tag anyone and everyone who wants to participate in this fun Christmas + bookish tag!

      Posted in book tag, books | 2 Comments | Tagged book tag, books
    • Book Review: “The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living” by Louise Miller

      Posted at 6:45 am by Laura, on December 11, 2017

      28110139The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living by Louise Miller

      Publisher: Pamela Dorman Books
      Published: August 2016
      Genre: contemporary, women’s fiction
      ISBN: 9781101981207
      Rating: 
      ★★★★

      When Olivia Rawlings—baker extraordinaire for an exclusive Boston dinner club—sets not just her flambéed dessert but the entire building alight, she takes a much-needed weekend break in the idyllic leafy town of Guthrie, Vermont. A weekend soon turns into something more permanent when Margaret Hurley, the cantankerous, sweater-set-wearing owner of the Sugar Maple Inn, needs to recruit a new baker who can help her reclaim the inn’s blue ribbon status at the annual county fair apple pie contest. On paper, at least, Livvy seems to be just who she was looking for.

      Along with Salty, her gigantic, uberenthusuastic dog with almost too much personality, Livvy, as the Sugar Maple’s new baker, brings her mouthwatering desserts to the residents of Guthrie and her best friend, Hannah. And when Olivia meets Martin McCracken, the Guthrie native who has returned from New York to nurse his ailing father, Livvy comes to understand that she may not be as alone in this world as she once thought. With the joys of a warm, fragrant kitchen, the sound of banjos and fiddles being tuned in a barn, and the crisp scent of the orchard just outside the front door, Olivia Rawlings may finally find that the life you want may not be the one you expected—it could be even better.

      Livvy is an excellent pastry chef. Her whole life is about her work as a baker. But when she sends her Boston dinner club (and, in many ways, her affair) alight, she flees to Vermont to get a breather and be with her best friend Hannah. Word gets out a baker is in town, and soon enough she’s hired as the new baker for Sugar Maple Inn. She not only needs to do the daily tasks of creating masterful baked goods solo, she also is perfecting her apple pie recipe so Sugar Maple can get the blue ribbons once more. Livvy begins to settle into the small town, participating in a contradance band and spending time with the McCracken family. After all this time in the big city, is Guthrie her true home?

      I could feel Livvy’s tension in Boston subside and fade away when she settled into Guthrie. She began to loosen up and settle in, enjoying the small town life she used to make fun of. The soothing routine baking needs for the inn — rolls, pastries, bread, cakes and cookies — followed by the high adrenaline of weddings and festivals really created a warm, homey atmosphere. I especially enjoyed the holiday family gathering scenes with the McCrackens, and the times when Livvy participated in the band for contradances. She slowed down, breathed more easily, and took a break. Her true colors came out.

      Comfort reading at its best! It’s a slow, relaxing read — just what I needed. It served as a reminder that we are here to enjoy life, not drown in the chaos and stress. The City Baker’s Guide to Country Living is the perfect book to read over the winter holidays, curled up under a blanket, hot beverage in hand, and a pastry (or two…) on a plate nearby.

      (Plus, look at the awesome paperback cover. That’s what caught my attention!)

      This qualifies as book 15 of 5 library books in 2017.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2017 | 4 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: contemporary, review
    • Mini Reviews

      Posted at 5:25 am by Laura, on December 6, 2017

      Life has been crazy hectic, leaving very little time for me to sit down and write full reviews for the books I’ve read lately. I didn’t want to not review them, though, so here are my two cents on a variety of books!

      ~

      Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafón

      Publisher: Penguin
      Published: 2001
      Genre: gothic, historical fiction
      Rating:
       ★★★★.5
      Summary: Barcelona, 1945. Daniel’s widowed father, an antiquarian book dealer, initiates 11-year-old Daniel into the secret of the Cemetery of Forgotten Books, a library tended by Barcelona’s guild of rare-book dealers as a repository for books forgotten by the world, waiting for someone who will care about them again. Daniel’s father coaxes him to choose a volume from the spiraling labyrinth of shelves, one that, it is said, will have a special meaning for him. And Daniel so loves the novel he selects, The Shadow of the Wind by Julian Carax, that he sets out to find the rest of Carax’s work. To his shock, he discovers that someone has been systematically destroying every copy of every book this author has written. In fact, he may have the last one in existence. Before Daniel knows it his seemingly innocent quest has opened a door into one of Barcelona’s darkest secrets, an epic story of murder, magic, madness and doomed love. And before long he realizes that if he doesn’t find out the truth about Julian Carax, he and those closest to him will suffer horribly.

      Mini Review: What a thrilling, engrossing, captivating book. This is gothic fiction. Mystery, romance, suspense, murder, literary passions, mistaken identity, ghosts (real or otherwise), haunted homes, ancient cities, a web of secrecy. I savored every word. There were moments of greatness here, with scenes that captivated me, I could not tear away. There were other moments that could’ve had more to it — more character development or more depth — to make it absolutely perfect. But perhaps that’s what happens when a work is translated: not all of the brilliance of the original shines through. I know this is brilliant. This translator did an excellent job conveying Zafón’s story. If you haven’t read this book yet, drop everything and do so now.

      London Belongs to Us by Sarra Manning

      Publisher: Hot Key Books
      Published: June 2016
      Genre: young adult, contemporary
      Rating:
       ★★★
      Summary: Sunny’s always been a little bit of a pushover. But when she’s sent a picture of her boyfriend kissing another girl, she knows she’s got to act. What follows is a mad, twelve-hour dash around London – starting at 8pm in Crystal Palace (so far away from civilisation you can’t even get the Tube there) then sweeping through Camden, Shoreditch, Soho, Kensington, Notting Hill . . . and ending up at 8am in Alexandra Palace. Along the way Sunny meets a whole host of characters she never dreamed she’d have anything in common with. But as this love-letter to London shows, a city is only a sum of its parts, and really it’s the people living there who make up its life and soul. 

      Mini Review: The city of my heart! It was a fun romp of a story, racing all over the city over 12 hours. Sunny is sweet and naive, and she has her share of boyfriend troubles (in my opinion, she should’ve been angrier earlier, but that would ruin the fun of this ode to London), but I loved the way others worked with her, strangers and friends alike, to help her find the boy who wronged her. So many great neighborhoods and snippets of history, fantastic locations with interesting trivia, and all the colorful people. I laughed out loud at many points in this book, even took pictures of quotes and passages I found hilarious, poignant, and so very true to life. If you’re looking for a good, quick, light contemporary YA, this is the book for you!

       

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      Blue Heron Series: The Best Man & The Perfect Match by Kristan Higgins

      Publisher: Harlequin HQN
      Published: February 2013, October 2013
      Genre: contemporary, romance
      Rating:
       ★★★.75 and ★★★
      Summary: (1) Faith Holland left her hometown after being jilted at the altar. Now a little older and wiser, she’s ready to return to the Blue Heron Winery, her family’s vineyard, to confront the ghosts of her past, and maybe enjoy a glass of red. After all, there’s some great scenery there….Like Levi Cooper, the local police chief – and best friend of her former fiancé. There’s a lot about Levi that Faith never noticed, and it’s not just those deep green eyes. The only catch is she’s having a hard time forgetting that he helped ruin her wedding all those years ago. If she can find a minute amidst all her family drama to stop and smell the rosé, she just might find a reason to stay at Blue Heron, and finish that walk down the aisle.

      (2) Honor Holland has just been unceremoniously rejected by her lifelong crush. And now—a mere three weeks later—Mr. Perfect is engaged to her best friend. But resilient, reliable Honor is going to pick herself up, dust herself off and get back out there… or she would if dating in Manningsport, New York, population 715, wasn’t easier said than done. Charming, handsome British professor Tom Barlow just wants to do right by his unofficial stepson, Charlie, but his visa is about to expire. Now Tom must either get a green card or leave the States—and leave Charlie behind. In a moment of impulsiveness, Honor agrees to help Tom with a marriage of convenience. But juggling a fiancé, hiding out from her former best friend and managing her job at the family vineyard isn’t easy. And as sparks start to fly between Honor and Tom, they might discover that their pretend relationship is far too perfect to be anything but true love….

      Mini Review for The Best Man: The characters felt authentic, even in the cheesy and comical bits, and there was a surprising amount of depth in the development and plot. The small town feel was so cute and quirky, and the novel was a great balance of comedy and romance. There was only one scene in particular that rubbed me the wrong way (you’ll know it when you read it), but overall this was an enjoyable read. Romance isn’t normally my go-to, but I wanted something good and light to read during the chaos. Higgins delivered, and I promise you: even though there were some romance cliches and tropes, I was still left guessing to the end how the pieces would come together.

      Mini Review for The Perfect Match: Honor and Tom are two desperate souls (heavy emphasis on desperate, because that described Honor and her talking eggs (I kid you not) to a T) for two very different reasons, but they matched each other well. It was nice to be back in this small town atmosphere, even closer to the winery than the first book. I wasn’t a huge fan of Tom as a love interest, and Honor sometimes made me want to throttle her, but when the two were together they complimented one another. Together, I could root for them. I fully plan to continue the Blue Heron series!

      ~

      Hopefully writing up another full review soon before the holidays hit! Keep reading, friends!

      .

      This qualifies as books 13 and 14 of 5 library books in 2017.

      This qualifies as book 14 of 12 in the Rock My TBR challenge.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2017, Rock My TBR | 7 Comments | Tagged books, genre: contemporary, genre: gothic, genre: historical fiction, genre: romance, mini review, review
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    • Hello, I’m Laura!

      I'm a bookish bookworm and book hoarder. By day I'm a literary agent, and by night I'm forever rearranging my bookshelves. I could talk your ear off about Gothic literature, and in my past life people thought I'd become a professional musician. I have a fluffy black cat named Rossetti, I love to travel, tea is my drink of choice, British TV is the best, and I'm always down for chips-and-queso nights. Welcome to Scribbles & Wanderlust! Grab your favorite hot beverage and let's chat books!
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