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    • ARC Book Review: “The Secret Keeper” by Kate Morton

      Posted at 3:48 pm by Laura, on September 24, 2012

      The Secret Keeper by Kate Morton

      Release Date: October 16
      Publisher: Atria Books
      ISBN: 9781439152805
      Goodreads: —
      Rating:
      ★★★★★


      During a summer party at the family farm in the English countryside, sixteen-year-old Laurel Nicolson has escaped to her childhood tree house and is happily dreaming of the future. She spies a stranger coming up the long road to the farm and watches as her mother speaks to him. Before the afternoon is over, Laurel will witness a shocking crime. A crime that challenges everything she knows about her family and especially her mother, Dorothy — her vivacious, loving, nearly perfect mother.

      Now, fifty years later, Laurel is a successful and well-regarded actress living in London. The family is gathering at Greenacres farm for Dorothy’s ninetieth birthday. Realizing that this may be her last chance, Laurel searches for answers to the questions that still haunt her from that long-ago day, answers that can only be found in Dorothy’s past. Dorothy’s story takes the reader from pre-WWII England through the blitz, to the ’60s and beyond. It is the secret history of three strangers from vastly different worlds — Dorothy, Vivien, and Jimmy — who meet by chance in wartime London and whose lives are forever entwined.

      Moved to tears. Kate Morton’s artistic style becomes more and more polished with each book. I am deeply thankful and incredibly delighted to have been given this opportunity to read an advance copy of this book. She is one of my favorite authors, and this has easily been marked as one of my favorites this year.

      True to her readers’ expectations, Morton’s slow-building, deeply woven, neo-gothic style continues in this novel, moving towards the middle of the twentieth century and out of Victorian / Edwardian England. Here we meet a range of characters in special circumstances: Dorothy, a young woman in love with Jimmy and obsessed with fantasy; Jimmy, an honorable and good man with incredible photographic talent; Vivien, an orphan with an inheritance, trapped in a gilded cage; Henry, a twisted man with a gift for words; and Laurel, the daughter on the hunt to discover the story behind a crime she witnessed.

      With every chapter — each ending on a cliffhanger, I might add — Laurel discovers more about her mother’s history, and her mother’s history is revealed to the reader. The narrative jumps back and forth, starting in 1941, jumping to 2011, and then the late 1930s onward. Snippets of a puzzle begins to form, with some pieces that seem plausible to fitting in the right place and yet leave more questions than answers. Something is very wrong with Dorothy, her connection to Jimmy and Vivien, and her link to her future with her several children and the happy life she lived. Pieces do not quite match up. Bit by bit, the story unfolds, suspicion rises, and the final chapters hit with a bang.

      I love stories like this. The antiquated feeling that neo-gothicism brings, the unraveling of a family history, the twists and turns and shocking revelations, the search for identity within an identity. I cannot wait for the rest of the world to read this book! I want to discuss it, but anything I say may spoil your enjoyment of discovery!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged advance reading copy, ARC, book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fiction, genre: gothic, genre: history, genre: mystery, review
    • Prepping for JK Rowling’s “The Casual Vacancy”

      Posted at 11:37 am by Laura, on September 24, 2012

      To prepare yourself for Rowling’s adult novel, out tomorrow, here are some excellent articles I’ve found about the work, her feelings toward the new book and genre, and how she and her publishers think it will be received.

      1. MuggleNet posted a link to The New Yorker‘s lengthy interview with Rowling entitled “Mugglemarch” which proves to be an excellent read. Definitely take the time to look through it.
      2. The Guardian also provides a journalistic interview as well, squashing all the hyper around a who-dun-it mystery thriller and getting to the heart of Rowling’s intention: to write, not to make money.

      I’ve got a reservation on the book. I’m looking forward to reading something new from her. She could write anything and I bet I’d be interested, simply because she’s a great storyteller.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news, publishing
    • 55% of YA Books Bought by Adults – PW

      Posted at 6:16 pm by Laura, on September 14, 2012

      New Study: 55% of YA Books Bought by Adults – Publishers Weekly

      More than half the consumers of books classified for young adults aren’t all that young. According to a new study, fully 55% of buyers of works that publishers designate for kids aged 12 to 17 — known as YA books — are 18 or older, with the largest segment aged 30 to 44, a group that alone accounted for 28% of YA sales. And adults aren’t just purchasing for others — when asked about the intended recipient, they report that 78% of the time they are purchasing books for their own reading.

      This makes complete sense to me! YA is a growing market, the teens section of stores running out of space. I wonder what the resurgence is?

      They make the point that “Hunger Games” and “Harry Potter” are the drawing factor, but surely there’s more to it than that. Plus, this can be great news for teenagers as well, that reading is good and fun. In one of my graduate classes, we discussed the books that influenced us the most. The majority of us mentioned books from childhood and teen years, nothing fairly recently. This meant reading early and in the teen years marked important transitions in life.

      Keep it coming!

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 1 Comment | Tagged books, bookstores, genre: young adult, news, publishing
    • Pietsch Succeeding Young as CEO of HBG – PW

      Posted at 6:10 pm by Laura, on September 14, 2012

      A bit of old news, but it’s still news for this week!

      Pietsch Succeeding Young as CEO of HBG – Publishers Weekly

      Michael Pietsch is taking over at Hachette Book Group. The publisher announced today that Pietsch will be succeeding David Young as CEO of the U.S. division of the France-based publisher. Young, who is stepping down to return to the U.K. to be with his family, will retain his chairman title, and Pietsch will officially take over the day to day responsibilites on March 31, 2013.

      Um, can I move to the UK too?

      Big transitions like this are huge for the industry. I hope Pietsch continues to do well, and that Young enjoys his last few months in the US before heading home.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged news, publishing
    • Exciting new ARC opportunity!

      Posted at 7:04 pm by Laura, on September 8, 2012

      An ARC (Advance Reading Copy) is a book that publishers send to their employees, reviewers, bloggers, and booksellers to read, review, and send feedback. It helps to boost sales, promote awareness, and even help catch some last-minute errors before publication.

      I was able to get my hands on a DRC (Digital Reading Copy) of Kate Morton’s upcoming novel The Secret Keeper through Edelweiss. One of my managers at work knew I loved Victorian, Gothic, and neo-Victorian/Gothic literature, and had actually requested an ARC of The Secret Keeper for me! She was kind enough to let me have it!

      1959 England. Laurel Nicolson is sixteen years old, dreaming alone in her childhood tree house during a family celebration at their home, Green Acres Farm. She spies a stranger coming up the long road to the farm and then observes her mother, Dorothy, speaking to him. And then she witnesses a crime.

      Fifty years later, Laurel is a successful and well-regarded actress, living in London. She returns to Green Acres for Dorothy’s ninetieth birthday and finds herself overwhelmed by memories and questions she has not thought about for decades. She decides to find out the truth about the events of that summer day and lay to rest her own feelings of guilt. One photograph, of her mother and a woman Laurel has never met, called Vivian, is her first clue.

      The Secret Keeper explores longings and dreams, the lengths some people go to fulfill them, and the strange consequences they sometimes have. It is a story of lovers, friends, dreamers and schemers, play-acting and deception told against a backdrop of events that changed the world.

      Expected publication: October 9th. Atria. Hardcover. 480 pages.

      Posted in books, Update Post | 3 Comments | Tagged ARC, books, personal
    • For American Girl Fans – A New Girl!

      Posted at 9:33 pm by Laura, on September 6, 2012

      American Girl was my life when I was younger. I read all the books, had five dolls and five beds and five sets of wardrobes, went to the American Girl Store in Chicago and blew years’ worth of savings in less than two hours, attended historical events at my local living history museum and with my grandmother in her city’s museum…

      And then middle school happened, and I grew older, and the magazines stopped coming and I was out of the loop.

      Sad.

      But then (!) I became a bookseller, and now I’m “meeting” all of the new AGs and looking forward to the stories they have to tell! Finally, this week, a new girl has arrived that I know nothing about and the younger girls I sell books to are just as excited as I am!

      Meet Caroline Abbott! She’s stuck in the middle of the War of 1812 (AG appears to have broken the ‘[#]4 formula), and a lot is going to turn her world upside down.

      Caroline Abbott is doing what she loves most—sailing on Lake Ontario with Papa—when her world turns upside down. A British officer boards their sloop, announces that Britain and America are once again at war, and takes her father prisoner. As Papa is led away, Caroline promises him that she will be brave until he returns. Then the British attack her village, and it looks as if the Americans are in trouble. Can she stay steady enough to help win the day?

      My favorites in the boxed sets were the Christmas / winter / holiday stories. I genuinely want to start with Caroline’s winter story first whenever I get the chance to feel ten again.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 1 Comment | Tagged books, genre: children, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “Across the Universe” by Beth Revis

      Posted at 9:32 pm by Laura, on September 4, 2012

      Across the Universe by Beth Revis

      Publisher: Razorbill
      Genre: young adult, dystopian, sci-fi
      ISBN: 9781595144676
      Goodreads: 3.82
      Rating:
      ★★★.5

      Amy is a cryogenically frozen passenger aboard the vast spaceship Godspeed. She expects to awaken on a new planet, 300 years in the future. But fifty years before Godspeed‘s scheduled landing, Amy’s cryo chamber is unplugged, and she is nearly killed.

      Now, Amy is caught inside an enclosed world where nothing makes sense. Godspeed‘s passengers have forfeited all control to Eldest, a tyrannical and frightening leader, and Elder, his rebellious and brilliant teenage heir.

      Amy desperately wants to trust Elder. But should she? All she knows is that she must race to unlock Godspeed‘s hidden secrets before whoever woke her tries to kill again.

      Normally I would not go for anything remotely similar to science fiction, so I am surprised at how well I enjoyed the space aspect of this dystopian book, the first of a trilogy. In fact, I found the world, the technology, the science, the mystery so completely fascinating that it almost made up for my distrust of the characters.

      The story is told through two different points of view, Amy’s and Elder’s, which I found to be incredibly refreshing for such a complex topic. Reading their thoughts in this romance-dystopian-sci-fi crossover created a well-rounded view of this world inside a spaceship. The complications from this, however, led me to distrust nearly everyone except Elder and Amy. Eldest is tyrannical, Doc has moments of empathy and then sudden, remote coldness, Orion comes across as kind but with a hidden motive, and Harley – my absolute favorite character – has such clarity in the midst of his instability. Yet, I could not fully trust any character, even to the end when truths are revealed. Plus, it doesn’t help the author’s intentions of creating a romantic relationship between the two narrators when the entire time a reader is rooting for Amy and Harley instead. They are more suited than Amy and Elder.

      As far as the technology and science goes, it was incredibly fascinating to see how it could be twisted in a rather evil way and yet do such good for this trapped society. For example, to prevent violence all the citizens are drugged through the water system. To prevent overpopulation, people’s hormones are tampered to turn on only once every twenty years, like “animals in heat.” Some of these concepts sound so great – and conceivable in this day and age! – and yet they are cruel at the same time. Science could just as easily harm as it can help a society, and taking away an individual’s free will is constantly questioned in this book.

      Also, everything Amy went through being frozen and then reawakened, all the psychological and physical trauma – as sick as it is for me to say this, I really enjoyed reading about that. I want to know how someone could survive being frozen for centuries and then wake up against their will to a world vastly different from the one they left, with a new way of speaking, a new culture, a place with no sky or seasons or proper weather. I loved watching her develop.

      All the distrust and lies, however interwoven and complex, can be set aside long enough for me to look forward to reading the second book in this trilogy. I’m very interested to see what Elder plans to do next, how Amy reacts to these plans, and what sorts of scientific disturbances we come across next.

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: dystopian, genre: fiction, genre: sci-fi, genre: young adult, review
    • Pentagon Warns SEAL/Penguin About Book – CNN

      Posted at 8:52 pm by Laura, on August 31, 2012

      Pentagon warns former SEAL about bin Laden book — CNN — Barbara Starr

      The Pentagon general counsel threatened legal action Thursday against a former Navy SEAL who wrote a revealing book about last year’s Osama bin Laden raid, warning him he has violated secrecy agreements and broken federal law.

      In a letter addressed to “Mark Owen,” the pen name of book author Matt Bissonnette, General Counsel Jeh Charles Johnson wrote the Pentagon is considering pursuing “all remedies legally available” against the former SEAL and his publisher, Penguin Putnam.

      When I saw plans for this book to be put on the shelves at work, I had wondered if this was really something to publish in the first place, if not so soon. Wouldn’t this be confidential? Wouldn’t this spark even more conspiracy theories?

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “Shadow of Night” by Deborah Harkness

      Posted at 6:38 pm by Laura, on August 29, 2012

      We’re going to try a new formatting from now on for book reviews. Just to provide some more information if you were curious.

      ~

      Shadow of Night by Deborah Harkness

      Publisher: Viking Adult
      Genre: fantasy, historical fiction, fiction
      ISBN: 9780670023486
      Goodreads: 4.06
      Rating:
      ★★★★★

      Picking up from A Discovery of Witches’ cliffhanger ending, Shadow of Night plunges Diana and Matthew into Elizabethan London, a world of spies, subterfuge, and a coterie of Matthew’s old friends, the mysterious School of Night that includes Christopher Marlowe and Walter Raleigh. Here, Diana must locate a witch to tutor her in magic, Matthew is forced to confront a past he thought he had put to rest, and the mystery of Ashmole 782 deepens.

      A whirlwind, mind-bending, fantastical experience of a read! So much is thrown into the second installment of the All Souls Trilogy, and Harkness accomplished it without overwhelming the reader with information and twists. There truly is so much in this novel to work with. First, the characters not only travel to Elizabethan London, but also to France and Czechoslovakia (at the time, the Holy Roman Empire or Bohemia). Names are dropped constantly, and depending on your background you may recognize them: Marlowe, Raleigh, Bacon, Rudolf II. Never fear — Harkness provides an index at the end of the book to inform the reader of historically acknowledged characters and what they were known for to help you understand their role in the novel. Diana even experiences moments of memory tugging, attempting to remember why she recognizes certain names and what they were known for.

      Plenty is revealed about Diana and Matthew’s characters as well. Questions about Diana’s power are answered, and unfold into spectacular and terrifying results. Matthew’s over-protective behavior and sometimes cold, unfeeling actions are explained when they meet his father, Philippe. The history of vampires and witches and daemons, the ways they are connected, and ways Diana and Matthew’s connection could help and harm history and the modern era are explored seamlessly.

      Harkness also provides an equal balance between the search for truth and the romantic relationship. For once, a trilogy does not involve a love triangle. Instead, Matthew and Diana face hardships of their own. Neither fails in loving the other, which is wonderful. They are a mature couple working through the kinks of the relationship as they discover each other, their personal histories, and their roles as vampire and witch in both modern and historical society. It’s absolutely amazing, and incredibly refreshing to read this sort of relationship.

      This novel needs proper attention and care when reading. There is so much depth — with history, with fantasy, with characters’ personal growth — that mindless reading will leave the reader boggled rather than enlightened and entertained. I cannot wait for the third installment! It will be brilliant. This plot continues to build and strengthen with each page, and I have no doubt Harkness will end this with a bang!

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: fantasy, genre: fiction, genre: history, genre: romance, review
    • B&N Picks John Lewis Department Store as First U.K. Partner – PW

      Posted at 11:21 am by Laura, on August 28, 2012

      Barnes & Noble Picks John Lewis Department Store as First UK Partner – Publisher’s Weekly

      The first U.K. retailer to agree to sell Barnes & Noble’s Nook E-Ink readers is John Lewis, a department store with 37 outlets that carries a large selection of technology products. The chain will begin carry the Nook Simple Touch and Nook with GlowLight later this fall in Lewis electronics aisles throughout the U.K. as well as on its Web site.

      Well. At least it’s not up in the air anymore.

      Posted in books, Link | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news
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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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