Scribbles & Wanderlust
  • Home
  • About
  • Clients and Representation
  • Book Reviews
    • Reviews 2012
    • Reviews 2013
    • Reviews 2014
    • Reviews 2015
    • Reviews 2016
    • Reviews 2017
    • Reviews 2018
    • Reviews 2019
    • Reviews 2020
    • Reviews 2021
    • Reviews 2022
    • Reviews 2023
    • Reviews 2024
    • Reviews 2025
  • Features
    • Deal Announcement
    • End of Year Book Survey
    • If We Were Having Coffee
    • This Season’s Rewind
  • Discover a New Read
    • Adult
    • Young Adult
    • Middle Grade
  • Tag: books

    • A Publisher’s Perspective on Ebooks – AmLib

      Posted at 11:32 am by Laura, on January 13, 2012

      A Publisher’s Perspective on Ebooks – American Libraries – Andrea Fleck-Nisbet

      As publishers, the challenges we face in light of the digital revolution are myriad and touch every aspect of the business, from acquisition, design, and production to marketing and distribution.

      …

      Although the possibilities for producing interactive ebooks and apps are now seemingly endless, resources for most publishers are limited and the market has been slow to keep pace with our enthusiasm for creating these new products. One of our biggest challenges today is deciding where to focus our time and energy as the digital landscape evolves and the consumer’s needs change.

      An excellent history of digital publication, and a practical outlook for the future.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, magazine, news, publishing
    • Children’s Authors at Winter Institute – PW

      Posted at 8:21 pm by Laura, on January 12, 2012

      Children’s Authors at Winter Institute – Publisher’s Weekly – Judith Rosen

      Ever since Algonquin used the American Booksellers Association’s Winter Institute to get booksellers to read and fall in love with Sara Gruen’s Water for Elephants, which sold more than a million copies before being turned into a film, publishers have been using the winter bookselling confab to generate excitement—and not just for adult titles. This year more than 20 children’s book authors and illustrators will be on hand to greet booksellers at the seventh annual gathering, Wi7, next week in New Orleans.

      John Green, Jennifer Nielsen, and Lisa Stasse are among the YA and children’s authors at this event! Check out the link for a full list of the authors and books.

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged authors, books, genre: children, genre: young adult, magazine, news, publishing
    • Penguin Author Events, Awards, and News!

      Posted at 3:45 pm by Laura, on January 11, 2012

      Check out the full details on Penguin’s blog page!

      Some highlights:

      • John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars was published January 10th and he is on tour with his brother Hank across the country for TFiOS and nerdfighter events. (See my review of TFiOS.)
      • Amor Towles’ Rules of Civility voted “Penguin Group (USA) Book of the Year”
      • Amy Chua’s Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother debuted #25 on the NYTimes Bestseller list, attracting a “new wave of national attention.”
      • A great list of upcoming Riverhead Books 2012 titles.

      Happy reading!

      Posted in books, publishing, Update Post | 0 Comments | Tagged books, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “The Fault in Our Stars” by John Green

      Posted at 11:46 am by Laura, on January 11, 2012

      The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

      Diagnosed with Stage IV thyroid cancer at 12, Hazel was prepared to die until, at 14, a medical miracle shrunk the tumours in her lungs… for now.

      Two years post-miracle, sixteen-year-old Hazel is post-everything else, too post-high school, post-friends and post-normalcy. And even though she could live for a long time (whatever that means), Hazel lives tethered to an oxygen tank, the tumours tenuously kept at bay with a constant chemical assault.

      Enter Augustus Waters. A match made at cancer kid support group, Augustus is gorgeous, in remission, and shockingly to her, interested in Hazel. Being with Augustus is both an unexpected destination and a long-needed journey, pushing Hazel to re-examine how sickness and health, life and death, will define her and the legacy that everyone leaves behind.

      A riveting, emotional journey! As I’m from Hazel’s hometown (and also John Green’s), it was wonderful to tour the city through the eyes of fictional characters. It was also exciting to piece together random snippets from John’s videos across several years: his trip to Amsterdam, his musings about fake ruins in a park, and his wife’s job as an art dealer.

      Apart from my familiarity with the city and John’s videos, the long-awaited book left an impact. I’m neither a cancer survivor nor am I sixteen, but I am a girl and I truly felt like I was Hazel. I remember when I met John at a reading how worried he was that as a 30-something male he would not convincingly pull off a teenage female narrator. He accomplished this, without a doubt. The bond Hazel formed with Augustus felt exactly like teenage first love; her conflicting feelings with her best friend, wanting to see her and yet wanting to stay away and prevent any further emotional damage; her intense obsession with a book that spoke to her – down to the serial watching of America’s Next Time Model and her jokes with her parents, Hazel was real.

      This book also enlightened me to the awkwardness of human interaction when a healthy person encounters one with a disability or an illness. We, as humans, immediately resort to pity or embarrassment or an over-eagerness to help. In reality, or at least with John’s characters, they want to be treated without the pity and sad faces and deliberate avoidance of any topic revolving around their situation.

      Looking for Alaska was a good book, but I can say without a doubt that The Fault in Our Stars (published January 10th!) is, by leaps a bounds, a greater story with characters that feel like close friends you’ve known forever, and with dialogue and situations that make you pause and think twice.

      Rating: ★★★★★ of 5

      GoodReads: 4.79 of 5

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 1 Comment | Tagged book review, books, genre: contemporary, genre: fiction, genre: romance, genre: young adult, goodreads, review
    • For Reading and Learning, Kids Prefer Ebooks to Print Books – DBW

      Posted at 7:11 pm by Laura, on January 10, 2012

      For Reading and Learning, Kids Prefer Ebooks to Print Books – Digital Book World – Jeremy Greenfield

      Given the choice between reading e-books or print books, children prefer e-books, a new, exploratory field study shows. Children who read e-books also retain and comprehend just as much as when they read print books, the study also suggests.

      Be wary of this “study” – there were only 24 families, and most reliable studies should have over 100 at the very least. However, the results are still interesting to read.

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 1 Comment | Tagged books, ebooks, news, publishing
    • Book Review: “The Winter’s Tale” by William Shakespeare

      Posted at 10:41 pm by Laura, on January 9, 2012

      The Winter’s Tale by William Shakespeare

      Though not a book, and better viewed on the stage than in print, I have made it a personal goal to read through all of Shakespeare’s plays. I debated writing a review because Shakespeare is a classic and there are eloquent, analytical essays written by all sorts of academics worldwide yearly that know far more about his work than I could ever imagine. But I shall write one anyway, so the common reader can relate to his work in some form.

      All I knew about The Winter’s Tale was that the name “Hermione” was in it. Everything I read was fresh and new and unheard of. In all of my course work, professors focused on Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear, Romeo & Juliet. One of my high school teachers dissected Twelfth Night, which was extremely refreshing. But not one professor or teacher discussed Midsummer, Othello, Winter’s Tale, Richard. Apart from his sonnets, I decided to dive into his work on my own.

      Without giving too much away, I must say that I did like the play and would rather see it on stage. Reading it reminded me of Othello meets Oedipus the King by Sophocles. There’s tragedy, there’s disguise, there’s a man felt falsely wronged by a woman, and there’s a fulfilled prophecy with offspring. What was different about this play from Shakespeare’s earlier works was its maturity. It was truly a tale, and it incorporated fairy lore and Greek mythology. In some ways, this was a tragic-comedy as well(so tragic, it was nearly comedic – but laughing could make one feel guilty for doing so). Winter’s Tale was entertaining, humorous, and serious at the same time.

      I liked it, but I stick by what I said before: it would be better on stage. Macbeth still holds a special place in my heart for my (so far) favorite Shakespeare play (and I still have yet to see it. R&J and Midsummer are close seconds because I’ve seen it performed).

      Rating: ★★★ of 5

      GoodReads: 3.64 of 5

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 1 Comment | Tagged book review, books, genre: classics, goodreads, review
    • What Occupy Can Learn from the Hunger Games – Salon

      Posted at 3:23 pm by Laura, on January 8, 2012

      What Occupy can learn from the Hunger Games – Salon – Mike Doherty

      Stories of people who are trampled on by competing ideologies and broken by enforced scarcity are certainly apt at a time when the U.S. political system is regularly brought to a standstill by politicians unwaveringly devoted to ideologies, the European Union threatens to disintegrate due to its members’ conflicting demands, divisions between the rich and the poor are ever-increasing, and those with the power to help offer rhetoric instead. The Occupy movement, as a loosely affiliated band of concerned people – Marxists, anarchists, environmentalists, survivalists, and more – has on the whole avoided ideology and embraced diversity and democracy. Some would say its lack of specific goals has undermined it, but the adoption of a V-style oppositional stance surely wouldn’t help. Occupy has done much to cast the U.S. and U.K. as dystopias, as pictures of police in riot gear confronting protestors have proliferated in the media…

      …Propped against a wall inside the Bank of Ideas is a placard that reads, “’1984′ was not an instruction manual.” Nor, indeed, is “V for Vendetta,” and neither are “The Hunger Games” or “Chaos Walking.” The new YA dystopian novels are thoughtful books, but they don’t offer solutions or blueprints – they merely suggest ways of combating stifling political ideologies. They’re full of different voices, or what literary theorist Mikhail Bakhtin, writing in – and against – Soviet Russia, called “polyphony”: the opposite of propaganda, and the enemy of ideology. Where they resonate with the Occupy movement, it’s in the protagonists’ determination to recalibrate the world around us in creative ways: seeing a bank as an educational institution, a tent as a library, a movement as a gathering of people asking questions, and encouraging ways of thinking by which solutions could be found.

      A moving piece that links dystopian novels such as V for Vendetta, 1984, Brave New World, Divergent,  and The Hunger Games to the Occupy movements worldwide. 2011 was marked as the year of the Protestor, and publication popularity had leaned towards dystopian novels at the same time.

      Seeing how the world culture and book culture influence and mirror one another is fascinating and intriguing!

      Posted in books, Link, publishing | 2 Comments | Tagged books, genre: dystopian, news, politics, publishing
    • Traditional Books, Dressed to Kill… – The Observer

      Posted at 1:05 pm by Laura, on January 8, 2012

      Traditional books, dressed to kill… – The Observer – Robert McCrum

      From the outside, the book trade looks staid, static and conservative, but inside the publishing jungle there’s a life-and-death struggle between E and P. This competition has begun to sponsor a literary bonanza. If ever there was a golden age of reading, this is it.

      The flip-side of ebooks: they are encouraging more purchases of print books. What do you think? What is your opinion on E versus P?

      Posted in Link, publishing | 0 Comments | Tagged books, ebooks, news, newspaper
    • Book Review: “Death Comes to Pemberley” by PD James

      Posted at 7:04 pm by Laura, on January 7, 2012

      Death Comes to Pemberley by PD James

      The year is 1803, and Darcy and Elizabeth have been married for six years. There are now two handsome and healthy sons in the nursery, Elizabeth’s beloved sister Jane and her husband Bingley live nearby and the orderly world of Pemberley seems unassailable. But all this is threatened when, on the eve of the annual autumn ball, the guests are preparing to retire for the night when a chaise appears, rocking down the path from Pemberley’s wild woodland. As it pulls up, Lydia Wickham – Elizabeth’s younger, unreliable sister – stumbles out screaming that her husband has been murdered.

      As a staunch Austenite, any Austen adaptation or rewriting is generally avoided. However, I’d heard from several of my friends and read reviews from various sources (including NPR) that I became incredibly curious and bought it for my Nook.

      I do not regret it!

      The prologue sums up Pride & Prejudice for any reader who has not read Austen. This certainly helped the story and set the tone for the writing – James brilliantly wrote this novel sounding like Austen wrote it herself! The recap of the novel linked the classic to this murder mystery in such a way that the reader could view this novel in two ways: as an extent of P&P or a novel with similar character names but essentially a stand-alone piece. James excellently mimicked Austen so well that the known characters resembled their Austen counterparts. It was also fun to see a brief mentioning of an “Anne” who was in a “happy marriage with a naval captain” (Persuasion), and later of a “Mr. and Mrs. Knightley of Donwell Abbey…a friend of Mrs. Martin” (Emma). She also included an entirely new cast of characters, which helps to separate this murder mystery from P&P.

      Any “Downton Abbey” fan could find pleasure in this, as well. The new characters included servants, their backgrounds and points of view, lawyers, witnesses, and villagers. Austenites know the elite, but rarely ever hear about or see the “downstairs” group of people. As I’ve said several times already, this aids the novel: one can read it without thinking of James “polluting the shades of Pemberley” with her adaptation.

      In terms of the mystery, I was kept on my toes. Two characters were on my mind up until the trial as suspects, but when the truth was revealed, I’ll admit I was shocked! Yet evidence pointed directly to this character. And, of course, any and all loopholes were tied after the trial as characters relieved their heavy burdens on Darcy and Elizabeth.

      Well-written, historically accurate, mimicked Austen rather well, and could be read separate from or with Pride & Prejudice.

      Rating: ★★★★.5 of 5

      GoodReads: 3.13

      Posted in books, Reviews 2012 | 0 Comments | Tagged book review, books, genre: adult fiction, genre: classics, genre: fiction, genre: mystery, review
    • Gothic Literature

      Posted at 8:41 pm by Laura, on January 6, 2012

      This semester, in my final literature course, we’re focusing on the Gothic elements! My favorite genre. Here’s what we’re reading starting next week!

      Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Wilkie Collins’s The Woman in White

      Great Horror Stories, a compilation with Stoker, Poe, and Lovecraft; Sheridan Le Fanu’s In a Glass Darkly; and Classic Ghost Stories, another compilation that includes Dickens!

      Posted in books, Update Post | 0 Comments | Tagged books, genre: adult fiction, genre: classics, genre: fiction, genre: gothic, genre: horror
    ← Older posts
    Newer posts →
    • 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!
    • Search the Blog

    • Currently Reading

    • Book Review Rating Key

      ★★★ — It’s good
      ★★★★ — It’s great
      ★★★★★ — OMG LOVE!!!

    • Recent Posts

      • MSWL for 2026
      • Favorite Reads of 2025
      • Deal Announcement: Nina Moreno, YA Romance
      • Deal Announcement: Sharon Choe, YA Fantasy
      • Deal Announcement: Hanna R. Neier, MG Historical/Contemporary

Blog at WordPress.com.

Scribbles & Wanderlust
Blog at WordPress.com.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Join 1,202 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Scribbles & Wanderlust
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...