Review: Scott Westerfeld, Margo Lanagan & Deborah Biancotti – Swarm

Scott Westerfeld, Margo Lanagan & Deborah Biancotti
Swarm

The Zeroes have created a place of their own – a night club where each can explore their powers in a safe zone. Yet they are set to be invaded by others who are running from Swarm, a Zero with a lust for power. While the Zeroes are set to disperse, it’s possible that they would be safer toegther – who should they trust?

30172827I felt somewhat frustrated by the ending. Nate, why? Anon, why? This made no sense at all. Sure, they’ll fix things somehow, but why did they do that? Perhaps someone else who has read it can give me a more informed opinion for why on earth the ending worked.

It’s neat to think about each Zero changing the direction of their focus (Crash has done this from right near the beginning). I really feel sorry for Scam, something that has been set up from the first novel – his power seems only bring harm. That being said, every one else has that potential, but they haven’t noticed it before.

This is like a teenage / young adult version of Brandon Sanderson’s Steelheart, MitosisFirefight and Calamity (Epics). If you enjoyed those, there is a good chance you will enjoy these, although the characters here are a lot younger. These novels have the advantage of giving the reader more than one perspective. The premise of Superpowers can be dealt with in a variety of ways and you can see that here.

I’m giving this 5 stars, just like its predecessor ‘Zeroes‘. There’s no need to have read the first, but it’s such a good read that you should totally go and buy it right now, and this one, so that you can read them in one fell swoop.

5star

Allen & Unwin | 28th September 2016 | AU $19.99 | Paperback

Review: Rachel Caine – Paper and Fire

Paper and Fire
Rachel Caine

Jess Brightwell sacrificed his bright future at the Library when his friend Thomas was murdered. Determined to set the mystery at rest, Jess can’t keep his nose out of trouble – and seems determined to drag his friends in as well. With London burning and the safe havens Jess has always known crumbling, it’s not clear how he will get out of this mess.

30651327I find it very difficult to give an objective assessment of this novel. It’s told from Jess’ perspective, which granted is rather limited. Jess is basically a book stealer by trade, and so he looks at everything with a certain degree of detachment, which is actually very useful. He could do better with hiding his emotions though!

Everything seems to happen very quickly in this novel, the time is compressed and the action is thrilling. The characters never get a real chance to rest, it’s all plot and excitement. I found it impossible to put down, even when I was giving it a little reread to refresh my memory to review it.

I would have liked to get a sense of more of the mechanics behind the ‘magic’ of the Library, which comes in parts through notes written in the Codex of other characters (usually the ‘bad guys’). I think that further information from Thomas will be useful in this, and I hope to see more in the third novel.

I wanted this novel right after I had eaten up the first novel (Ink and Bone) in one very happy sitting, but I had to wait. The wait was well worth it, and I only wish I had managed to reread the first before settling into this one. Depending on the publication of the next novel, I might manage it then. Being separated from my main bookshelves makes rereading quite hard.

I’m going to give this novel 5 stars for being fantastically twisty with characters that I loved time and time again.

5star

Faber Factory Plus Ffp | 27th July 2016 | AU $16.99 | Paperback

Interview with Erik Therme

Author photo (Erik Therme)-1An Interview with Erik Therme, author of Mortom and Resthaven

I’m not going to be reviewing your newest novel, but from your other published novels, is there one that is your own personal favourite?

That’s a tough one. My debut mystery, Mortom, has a special place in my heart, as it’s my first published book. Resthaven, my YA suspense novel, was written for my two teenage daughters, and I feel very paternal toward the characters in the book. All that said, my soon to be published third novel, Roam, is probably my favorite, as it has the most accomplished and fulfilling story line (in my opinion) of everything I’ve written to date.

Everyone has a ‘first novel’, even if many of them are a rough draft relegated to the bottom and back of your desk drawer (or your external harddrive!). Have you been able to reshape yours, or have you abandoned it for good?29770150

This is a great question, as I’ve been recently thinking a lot about my first novel. It’s basically a love story—very different from everything else I’ve written—and while I never plan to officially publish it, I’d love to have a paperback for myself and a few friends. If I get ambitious, I might do a one-time limited printing of the book and possibly offer a few copies as giveaways.

Some authors are able to pump out a novel a year and still be filled with inspiration. Is this the case for you, or do you like to let an idea percolate for a couple of years in order to get a beautiful novel?

I’m not a prolific author, and I don’t really have an ‘idea’ dump as many other authors have. I wish I did, but my mind doesn’t work that way. For me, an idea comes slowly, and it’s not uncommon for the story to wither and die once I try to put it on my paper. Needless to say, I have plenty of half-written stories haunting my hard drive, which I never delete, as sometimes they can be recycled for other projects.

I have heard of writers that could only write in one place – then that cafe closed down and they could no longer write! Where do you find yourself writing most often, and on what medium (pen/paper or digital)?

I’m fortunate enough to have a downstairs office inside my house, and it’s definitely my happy writing place. You’ll find me there with a cold Mountain Dew, a movie soundtrack playing in the background, and wearing my fuzzy Mogwai slippers. I’ve always used a computer to write, as very few people (myself included at times) can read my handwriting.

Before going on to hire an editor, most authors use beta-readers. How do you recruit your beta-readers, and choose an editor? Are you lucky enough to have loving family members who can read and comment on your novel?

My lovely wife is my first and primary beta-reader. She’s incredibly talented when it comes to catching errors, and she’s an expert in all things grammar. She’s also not shy about pointing out things she doesn’t like, whether it be characters, plot points, or just bad writing. It’s definitely tough love at its finest.

I walk past bookshops and am drawn in by the smell of the books – ebooks simply don’t have the same attraction for me. Does this happen to you, and do you have a favourite bookshop? Or perhaps you are an e-reader fan… where do you source most of your material from?

I’m blessed to live in Iowa City, home of acclaimed Prairie Lights Bookstore. Their staff is amazing to work with, and they’ve been extremely generous with shelving and sharing my work. I’m also fortunate enough to have a great relationship with our local Barnes & Noble stores, and they’ve been kind enough to invite me to multiple signings and events.

I used to find myself buying books in only one genre (fantasy) before I started writing this blog. What is your favourite genre, and do you have a favourite author who sticks in your mind?

Harold and the Purple Crayon was one of my favorite books growing up. When I graduated to chapter books, I devoured series like Encyclopedia Brown and The Three Investigators. It was in junior high that I discovered Stephen King, and I continue to be inspired and awed by his writing to this day.

Social media is a big thing, much to my disgust! I never have enough time myself to do what I feel is a good job. What’s your take on it?

I manage all my social media: everything from Facebook to my website. It can definitely feel overwhelming at times, but it’s a necessary evil if you want to successfully extend your reach as an author. The important thing is to not shout BUY MY BOOK! over and over, as that rarely works and can easily alienate others. Social media is about connecting with readers and fans, and sharing your love of books and writing. If you’re lucky, readers will then be curious enough to take a chance on your work.

Answering interview questions can often take a long time! Tell me, are you ever tempted to recycle your answers from one to the next?

I have to be honest: after my first dozen interviews, I began to realize that many of the questions were so similar that I found myself (more or less) rewriting the same answers. Eventually I created a Word document with my completed interviews, and I refer to it when I’m asked similar questions, which gives me more writing time for my novels.

Interview with Conor Nicholl

393400_10150465888608783_2043507386_nAn Interview with Conor Nicholl, author of Agrathias

Everyone has a ‘first novel’, even if many of them are a rough draft relegated to the bottom and back of your desk drawer (or your external harddrive!). Have you been able to reshape yours, or have you abandoned it for good?

I’ve had many, many ‘first novels’ ever since I started writing when I was five. I think my first one was about two dragons who had to defend themselves from a group of people that were flying in to defeat them. It wasn’t until 12 that I got the idea for Agrathias. I’d always wanted to finish a book, and I just went with this idea and made myself never quit. I’m really glad I made this decision. I’ve grown a lot as a writer, and I’ve gotten to see a 12 year-old’s idea age itself over 11 years as it became a full-length novel. Now, though, I’d really love to find the stuff I wrote between the ages of 5 and 12. Whether I’d laugh, smack my head, saying “why?”, or do both, it’d be cool.

Some authors are able to pump out a novel a year and still be filled with inspiration. Is this the case for you, or do you like to let an idea percolate for a couple of years in order to get a beautiful novel?

I let an idea percolate before getting it onto paper. It takes the place of an outline for me. I just go about my day, day to day, and then start writing once I have a pretty good idea what the next part of my story should be. It’s exciting and engaging when you can just write and write, and sometimes more ideas will come along, so it’s more of a snowball effect. So all this writing will work itself out in time, and if that takes place in one year or a few (or maybe a few months, who knows?), I’m fine with that.51gexi1gr4l

I have heard of writers that could only write in one place – then that cafe closed down and they could no longer write! Where do you find yourself writing most often, and on what medium (pen/paper or digital)?

I’ll write wherever I can. I mostly write in areas with some commotion going on or in car rides. It helps me see everyone moving around or the landscape passing by to think of what to write next. Plus if I’m around friends, I can both talk to them and write, and it helps with writer’s block because anything they say can give you ideas. Plus, even if you end up writing nothing, at least you got to talk to a friend! So that would also mean I write mostly on paper. However, digital is so valuable because it makes whatever you write on paper permanent once you send it to your email. I can’t say how many times before I started doing this that I would lose whole chapters because I lost the papers. That’s a small reason it took me 11 years. It’s demoralizing having to write chapters over again because of loss of time and ideas, and sometimes it would take weeks or a month or two to get back into writing again. So I’m very grateful for digital!

Before going on to hire an editor, most authors use beta-readers. How do you recruit your beta-readers, and choose an editor? Are you lucky enough to have loving family members who can read and comment on your novel?

I was really self-conscious when I first started to write my book, so for the first few years I never showed anyone except for my friend Elise. But then as I grew older I started having more people read it to get a better opinion on different parts to the book, and so the book changed as I took in some of their ideas I really liked. And Elise has been the biggest help anyone could ever ask for. For the first year and a half of writing she probably spent just about as much time, if not more, on editing and helping me write the book. She was solely responsible for the addition of the main female character in the book. And even though since then I had taken on the book by myself, I can’t thank her enough for what she did in the beginning.

I walk past bookshops and am drawn in by the smell of the books – ebooks simply don’t have the same attraction for me. Does this happen to you, and do you have a favourite bookshop? Or perhaps you are an e-reader fan… where do you source most of your material from?

I can’t help but stop by a Waldenbooks whenever I pass by it in the mall. I just look inside and start reading anything, and my friends will end up coming to find me in there. It was like this at college. I would usually have to go to my bookstore for course reading material, and I would spend way more time just reading the books all along the aisles.
I like Amazon because it allows you to have this similar experience while on the go. I can search for any book, then go through similar books. Not as entrancing as the actual bookstore, but it comes pretty close for me! So that’s why I have both print books (lulu.com for paperback and hardcover), and electronic versions for Kindle.

I used to find myself buying books in only one genre (fantasy) before I started writing this blog. What is your favourite genre, and do you have a favourite author who sticks in your mind?

I would say that my favorite author in childhood and young adult would have to have been J.K. Rowling. I know that is a bunch of other people’s favorite author, but I always got excited when the new Harry Potter book came out. However, in my adolescence years, I really became hooked on the Darren Shan books in the Cirque Du Freak series. I really like endings, and I mainly judge both the books I read and the movies I see on them, and I just felt really good after reading the ending to that series.

I would say that I have just recently entered adulthood (I’m 23, so maybe a few years?), so now I just like reading anything fantasy. I like to see how others envision their own world.

Social media is a big thing, much to my disgust! I never have enough time myself to do what I feel is a good job. What’s your take on it?

When I was close to finishing Agrathias and I knew that I would definitely be publishing it, I made a Facebook Page for it and started inviting everyone I could, and from there I’ve been advertising it ever since. I post updates for it whenever something significant happens, or whenever something happens around me that relates to my book. I’m also reaching out to whoever can offer reviews for Amazon, because any sort of critique will not only help readers determine if they want to read my book, it will also help me to improve my writing.

Offline, I try whenever I can to tell people about my book without bugging them. I’m not pushy, but I guess I kind of have to be since hardly anyone will care about my book unless it is leveraged upon them in the right way. If they end up liking it, it will propel itself from there. Since I can only reach so many people, that’s when I rely on others to spread the word for me, because people would feel better in buying a book from someone they know and trust than from the author who they probably don’t know too well.

Answering interview questions can often take a long time! Tell me, are you ever tempted to recycle your answers from one to the next?

Luckily this is my second interview, so the temptation isn’t there! But even in the future, I wouldn’t. The interviewer has been nice enough to ask the questions and post on their networks, so I’ll answer them without any copy and paste. Of course, if similar questions are asked, similar answers will be given, but it all happens in how I’m answering it at that time.

Review: Jennifer Niven – Holding Up the Universe

Holding Up the Universe
Jennifer Niven

Libby used to be the fat girl who had to be lifted out of her house by crane (as per Gilbert Grape), but now she’s just a ‘regular’ fat girl attending the local high school and trying to live down her past. Jack just wants to keep continuing on being the sort of popular guy – but he’s hiding a secret that will continue to affect his whole life.

28686840Libby connected with me really strongly and left a lasting impression for me. She’s a strong female protagonist that nevertheless needs support from her family, friends and a counsellor. No woman is an island, and Libby is no exception.

Ok, so how about Jack? I think Niven gets inside the mind of a teenage boy exceptionally well, and presents a well balanced character who has individual flaws (and a very interesting ‘weakness’). I’d never heard of the ‘weakness’ he has, and it is really quite fascinating to read about. I think YA fiction novels at the moment are doing a great job of removing stigma around various disabilities and it’s fantastic.

The plot. It keeps you reading, it has some fantastic twists that the reader sees coming (most of the time) and that the characters don’t see at all. Although you might think you know what is going to happen next, or what horrible thing another person might do, you really have no idea at all. I was satisfied and couldn’t put the novel down.

I’m going to say that this novel deserves a place in my favourite YA novels of fiction that deals with difficult issues. If you liked FanGirl, Any Other Night or Caramel Hearts, this novel is going to satisfy you. Niven has written another novel, All the Bright Places, that I haven’t gotten my hands on yet – it might actually be a requested novel for me for Christmas now. 5 stars for this one, and I look forward to getting the chance to read another similar.

5star

Penguin | 6 October 2016 | AU $17.99 | Paperback

Review: Danielle Paige – Stealing Snow

Stealing Snow
Danielle Paige

Snow has been institutionalised ever since she tried to walk a friend through a mirror. On a serious cocktail of drugs, it’s not clear what is fantasy and what is truth. When she’s broken out of the Institute by a handsome trickster to rescue her hot lover, life is going to be more magical than she imagined.

30309128I feel like I didn’t get a really good grip on Snow’s character. But then you consider that she has been locked up and completely drugged for the last 10+ years and you can’t be surprised. She felt quite cold to me, and never seemed to warm up. I’ll be looking for more character development in the second novel of this.

The back of the novel promises me that ‘her choices of the heart will change everything’. What we actually see though is her ?three? love interests all wanting to kiss her or for her to kiss them. What’s so big about a kiss? Seriously guys. Just chill. Snow, kiss them all. Deal with the consequences. This is life.

Dude! How could that happen? It was a twist I wasn’t expecting at all. And I still don’t know why or how it happened. Something for the next novel! The plot circled around, and gave nutty things the ability to happen. I think maybe it could have been overwhelming.

I’m going to give it 3 stars. I think it just didn’t give me enough of an impression to feel polarised by it.

3star

Bloomsbury | October 2016 | AU $16.99 | Paperback

Review: Kerry Drewery – Cell 7

Cell 7
Kerry Drewery

Martha has killed a famous celebrity – or at least she said she did. Now waiting her fate in an increasingly smaller set of cells, her last days on earth are not only numbered, but also watched 24/7 by the public. That public will decide whether she is guilty or innocent by voting. The only problem is that the system is rigged for those who have money to have the potential to make more votes.

29864658Martha has lost a lot of important people, and I can see why she does the things she does. But she came across as a selfish, shallow character that I simply couldn’t like very much. And considering that I was supposed to get attached so I would be worried when she was close to dying, well, I wasn’t.

It’s unclear how the different people come on board with the ideas that Martha and her offsider are working on to change the world. Not enough clarity around a lot of issues actually, which was really frustrating.

I’m sorry. Even if this is a new thriller series, I couldn’t give points for the ending. It felt like no progress had been made at all, particularly with the authorities showing some really clear blind eyes (if there is such a thing). I read the novel, and the pacing was fine, but the plot was transparent and I couldn’t care about the characters. 3 stars from me.

3star

Allen & Unwin | 28th September 2016 | AU $19.99 | Paperback

Review: Mark Tedeschi – Kidnapped

Kidnapped
Mark Tedeschi

This novel covers Australia’s first and only kidnapping to date – Graeme Thorne was kidnapped for ransom because of his parents winning the Opera House Lottery. Unfortunately his kidnapper, Stephen Bradley killed him by accident and the ransom could never be paid. Fortunately, Bradley was eventually caught and sentenced to life for this crime.

kidnapped-the-crime-that-shocked-the-nation-9781925456349_lgSo you might think I have given away the whole novel with my opening paragraph – but in fact, you know all of that information almost from just reading the blurb and reading the first chapter. That alone would have killed the novel for me.

I picked this novel up from someone else’s TBR pile from publishers, because I was getting into crime and was excited to get my hands on some more Australian fiction. I should have known better perhaps. I so wanted to like it though!

This crime was one of the first to be solved using modern forensic techniques, and that alone should have made it more exciting for me. I like to know the science behind things, such as in Blood Secrets. Instead, I’m sorry. I found this novel utterly boring. I finished it only by skimming the last couple of chapters in despair of something truly exciting happening.

I’ve giving this novel 2 stars. Maybe another person who really REALLY loves true crime fiction will love it, but for me, the outcome was known too quickly and there was no sense of suspense to keep me reading.

2star

Simon & Schuster | December 2015 | $32.99 | Paperback

Interview with Juliet Marillier

juliet-marillier-author-imageAn Interview with Juliet Marillier

Your newest Blackthorn and Grim novel is fantastic – I read it rapturously for an afternoon. I know that you tend towards trilogies, is this due to publisher requests or your own preferences?

I’m glad you enjoyed Den of Wolves! Re trilogies, it’s usually my own choice to write in that form and it can be for different reasons. With the Sevenwaters Trilogy, I felt I needed three generations of the family to deal fully with the impact of the traumatic events in the first book. Publisher pressure led to three more Sevenwaters books being written quite a bit later, but they don’t form a trilogy, they are linked stand-alone novels. The epic stories in both the Bridei Chronicles and the Shadowfell series also seemed to need three books to be complete. So it’s mostly my own preference – I choose what feels like the best way to tell a particular story. Trilogies are pretty common in fantasy fiction, and publishers often expect them. I’d originally thought of a longer series for Blackthorn & Grim, but to my surprise the story ended up feeling quite complete in three books.

Everyone has a ‘first novel’, even if many of them are a rough draft relegated to the bottom and back of your desk drawer (or your external harddrive!). Have you been able to reshape yours, or have you abandoned it for good?den-of-wolves-cover-image

I have a few hidden away, some written in longhand. There are three romance novels stashed in a drawer somewhere – I got encouraging rejection letters for those. And there’s an early fantasy novel that nobody got to see. I suspect it’s pretty clunky. Definitely abandoned for good! I also have a great collection of stuff I wrote (and illustrated) as a child, including a tale of rampaging killer robots and one about scientists finding prehistoric life in the fiords of New Zealand.

I have heard of writers that could only write in one place – then that cafe closed down and they could no longer write… Where do you find yourself writing most often, and on what medium (pen/paper or digital)? Has the place you write changed over the many years of your writing? I understand that you live in a home that is more than 100 years old!

My house was built in 1904, and is part of the ‘poppy trail’ in the historic Perth suburb of Guildford – two Anzac soldiers lived here during World War 1. I love that historical connection and I often think of those two young men and what faced them in the trenches. They both got home safely!

I write most often on the kitchen table, even though I have a perfectly good study. That’s because the kitchen/living room of the house is where my five dogs hang out, and we all tend to congregate together. Also, good heating and lighting and ease of making tea. Like Blackthorn and Grim, I enjoy my brew. I write almost exclusively on my laptop these days, plus a tablet for travelling. I used to write everything longhand, then word process and edit at the same time. That got much too slow. I learned to touch type when I worked in the taxation office, probably the best thing to come from that experience! I’ve moved house a couple of times since I started writing seriously, but the workplace has often been a kitchen table.

You’ve said that you travel to countries where you are going to set your next novel to get reference material you would otherwise miss out on. Where is the most interesting place you have been, and did you work any of the local personalities into the resulting novel?

I have been to some fascinating places. Most interesting? A tie between an off-the-beaten-track trip to Transylvania (for Wildwood Dancing) and a trip the Faroe Islands (for Foxmask.) Transylvania was really beautiful and I discovered all kinds of quirky historical details because the guide was prepared to take me to places where tourists don’t go. The Faroes are so dramatic, everything larger than life – towering cliffs, thundering waterfalls and so on. And puffins!

I don’t work real people into the novels, it’s more a case of blending characteristics from various people I’ve observed to create someone new.

You’ve worked as a music teacher. I love the way Grim uses telling tales to calm others in your newest novel – do you think any of your future characters might use music instead?

Considering my background in music it is perhaps surprising I haven’t included more musicians in my stories, or had them do what you suggest. I think there are one or two harp-playing characters but that’s about it. Certainly it’s something I could do in the future. Storytelling and music are very much tied together in history.

What formal training, if any, do you have in writing? Do you think the education you have had has influenced you write?

I have a university degree in English and foreign languages, and an honours degree in music. That’s on top of a very sound school education, back in the days when we studied classic novels and Shakespeare in high school and learned grammar in primary school. All of that taught me how language worked and how to use it capably. Being an avid reader from a very early age was really significant in shaping me later as a writer. My love of music, singing in particular, and of traditional stories was instrumental in my developing a particular writing style, for instance, I often tend to put things in threes. I’ve never undertaken formal training in creative writing. I can’t say whether doing that would have made me a better or worse writer. Just a different one, I guess.

I walk past bookshops and am drawn in by the smell of the books – ebooks simply don’t have the same attraction for me. Does this happen to you, and do you have a favourite bookshop? Or perhaps you are an e-reader fan… where do you source most of your material from?

I do have an e-reader, which I use when travelling, but I very much prefer print books. Anything I know I’ll want to re-read, I try to get in print. I’ve found it really sad that so many local bookshops are going out of business. This happened with our Dymocks branch in Midland, where the staff had done a great job and had really supported my books over the years. It was horrible to see the sudden closure. Favourite bookshop: Stefen’s Books in Perth, a specialist speculative fiction and crime bookseller. That’s where my Perth book launches are held. The staff are really knowledgeable and go that extra mile to find exactly what customers are looking for, often before the customer really knows what that is!

Answering interview questions can often take a long time, and I know you have done many over the years! Tell me, are you ever tempted to recycle your answers from one to the next?

I try not to, as it would feel a bit disrespectful. Inevitably there will be some overlap, though. The more interesting the question, the more interesting the answer is likely to be. I’ve enjoyed answering your questions!

Review: Jane Abbott – Elegy

Elegy
Jane Abbott

Cait and Michael have been bound together for an age – yet until this point in time they have just been step sister and brother. After Michael breaks a boy’s arm without even touching him, the family gets into deeper trouble, both in love and in life.

elegy_500-220x340This novel was awful. It was well written and everything, and the dialogue was believable, yet the plot left a lot to be desired. It was repetitive, and didn’t seem to go anywhere. I didn’t feel for any of the characters and the whole lot felt staged.

I could tell that they would die. I’m not going to specify who, but trust me, you’ll see it coming. And then, despite this being the earliest time Michael has come into his power, there is nothing new that happens. To me, the fact that they put other people at risk because of their love is really selfish – if they’re going to do it again and again anyway!

There’s no plot resolution and I was left feeling empty. I had hoped for a fantastic ending that would rescue the novel for me, but it didn’t happen. I didn’t get why Hope was so fantastic a name, or how that soul got there (given the timing and all). Sigh. I’m giving it 2 stars. I’m thinking that I would probably enjoy Abbott’s other novel as her writing style is not what broke this novel.

2starPenguin Random House | 29 August 2016 | AU $19.99 | Paperback