Jessica L. Brooks's Blog
November 9, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {135}: Renegade Red
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: Renegade Red.
Renegade Red
by Lauren Bird Horowitz
Publication date: March 14th, 2017
From Goodreads:
Reckless, desperate, and distraught, Noa Sullivan leaps into a collapsing Portal in the explosive finale of Shattered Blue— the jaw-dropping, award-winning first installment in The Light Trilogy— in wild hope of rescuing her little sister Sasha. Now Noa and the Fae brothers who love her—Callum and Judah Forsythe—must find a way to survive not only across worlds but between them, in places so treacherous and deceptive their own minds are twisted against them. As the three fight to survive their passage, they battle not only enemies but themselves, and their darkest, most difficult secrets.
Surviving, however, is only the beginning: Noa needs to find Sasha. That means becoming a warrior herself, one just as fierce as the magical brothers battling for her love. Across broken cities, underground labyrinths, rushing floods and endless skies; in the face of legions of armies, horrifying tyrants, and the most deceitful of friends, can Mortal Noa rescue her sister—and understand her own heart—in time to escape the most deadly of magic realms?
Published on November 09, 2016 04:30
November 2, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {134}: The Breakup Support Group
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: The Breakup Support Group.
The Breakup Support Group
by Cheyanne Young
Publication date: November 22nd, 2016
From Goodreads:
After four years of first love bliss, Isla Rush just got dumped.
Any hope she has of winning her ex-boyfriend back is shattered when the town rezones her neighborhood, forcing her to spend senior year at a wealthy high school in the next town over.
With a broken heart consuming her soul, Isla can’t focus on anything, except maybe Emory Underwood—a ridiculously hot guy who dates a new girl almost every day. She can’t help but crush on him, even though it’s wrong.
When memories of her ex make her cry in second period, the school counselor sends Isla to a club that meets during lunch. The Break-Up Support Group is a collection of broken-hearted misfits who are all helping each other heal.
Just when Isla’s heart is finally on the mend, Emory shows up, forced to atone for all the broken hearts he’s caused over the years. While hiding her massive crush, she helps him understand the seriousness of breaking a heart.
In turn, Emory offers to help Isla get back on the dating scene by agreeing to be her fake date for the homecoming dance. Isla gladly accepts the ruse, because if anyone can make her into a desirable girlfriend, Emory can! There's just one small problem.
Isla's little crush on Emory might be exactly full blown. And a homecoming fake date with him could push her over the edge to possibly uttering the "L Word!"
Isla can't afford another heartbreak so soon after the last one. She will have to resist his charms, refuse to look into those dreamy eyes, and above all else, not make the mistake of letting him kiss her.
If only she hadn't let her guard down at the end of the night, under the light of her porch in a toe-curling kiss moment of weakness. And now, after months of Break-Up Support Group therapy, and with a heart fully on the mend, Isla has just handed it over to a guy who knows full well just how to break it.
Published on November 02, 2016 05:00
September 28, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {133}: Caraval
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: Caraval.
Caraval
by Stephanie Garber
Publication date: January 31st, 2017
From Goodreads:
Before you enter the world of Caraval, you must remember that it’s all a game . . .
Scarlett has never left the tiny island where she and her beloved sister, Tella, live with their ruthless father. Now Scarlett’s father has arranged a marriage for her, and Scarlett thinks her dreams of seeing Caraval, the legendary, once-a-year performance where the audience participates in the show, are over.
Then, Scarlett’s long-dreamt of invitation to Caraval finally arrives. So, Tella enlists a mysterious sailor’s help to whisk Scarlett away to this year’s show. But as soon as the trio arrives, Tella is kidnapped by Caraval’s mastermind organizer, Legend.
Scarlett has been told that everything that happens during Caraval is only an elaborate performance. But she nonetheless soon becomes enmeshed in a game of love, heartbreak, and magic with her sister, with Legend, and with the other players in the game. And whether Caraval is real or not, she must find Tella before the five nights of the game are over, a dangerous domino effect of consequences is set off, and her sister disappears forever.
Published on September 28, 2016 03:00
September 21, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {132}: We are Still Tornados
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: We Are Still Tornados.
We Are Still Tornados
by Michael Kun and Susan Mullen
Publication date: November 1, 2016
From Goodreads:
Growing up across the street from each other, Scott and Cath have been best friends their entire lives. Cath would help Scott with his English homework, he would make her mix tapes (it's the 80's after all), and any fight they had would be forgotten over TV and cookies. But now they've graduated high school and Cath is off to college while Scott is at home pursuing his musical dreams.
During their first year apart, Scott and Cath's letters help them understand heartache, annoying roommates, family drama and the pressure to figure out what to do with the rest of their lives. And through it all, they realize that the only person they want to turn to is each other. But does that mean they should be more than friends? The only thing that's clear is that change is an inescapable part of growing up. And the friends who help us navigate it share an unshakable bond.
This funny yet deeply moving book--set to an awesome 80's soundtrack--captures all the beautiful confusion and emotional intensity we find on the verge of adulthood...and first love.
Published on September 21, 2016 03:00
September 14, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {131}: Our Chemical Hearts
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: Our Chemical Hearts.
Our Chemical Hearts
By Krystal Sutherland
Publication date: October 4, 2016
From Goodreads:
Henry Page has never been in love. He fancies himself a hopeless romantic, but the slo-mo, heart palpitating, can't-eat-can't-sleep kind of love that he's been hoping for just hasn't been in the cards for him—at least not yet. Instead, he's been happy to focus on his grades, on getting into a semi-decent college and finally becoming editor of his school newspaper. Then Grace Town walks into his first period class on the third Tuesday of senior year and he knows everything's about to change.
Grace isn't who Henry pictured as his dream girl—she walks with a cane, wears oversized boys' clothes, and rarely seems to shower. But when Grace and Henry are both chosen to edit the school paper, he quickly finds himself falling for her. It's obvious there's something broken about Grace, but it seems to make her even more beautiful to Henry, and he wants nothing more than to help her put the pieces back together again. And yet, this isn't your average story of boy meets girl. Krystal Sutherland's brilliant debut is equal parts wit and heartbreak, a potent reminder of the bittersweet bliss that is first love.
Published on September 14, 2016 13:00
September 7, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {130}: SPINDLE (A Thousand Nights, #2)
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: Spindle.
Spindle
By E.K. Johnston
Publication date: December 6, 2016
From Goodreads:
The world is made safe by a woman...but it is a very big world.
It has been generations since the Storyteller Queen drove the demon out of her husband and saved her country from fire and blood. Her family has prospered beyond the borders of their village, and two new kingdoms have sprouted on either side of the mountains where the demons are kept prisoner by bright iron, and by the creatures the Storyteller Queen made to keep them contained.
But the prison is crumbling. Through years of careful manipulation, a demon has regained her power. She has made one kingdom strong and brought the other to its knees, waiting for the perfect moment to strike. When a princess is born, the demon is ready with the final blow: a curse that will cost the princess her very soul, or force her to destroy her own people to save her life.
The threads of magic are tightly spun, binding princess and exiled spinners into a desperate plot to break the curse before the demon can become a queen of men. But the web of power is dangerously tangled--and they may not see the true pattern until it is unspooled.
Published on September 07, 2016 09:30
September 6, 2016
#TopTenTuesday: Top 10 TV Shows I Wish Hadn't Been Cancelled
It's been a while since I blogged. (Since before summer started, I think. Yeah, I know. That's pretty bad.) Since a lot has been going on, I've been focusing on the proper/best ways to spend my time. But when I saw this week's TtT theme (TV)--thanks The Broke and The Bookish!!!--I had to jump on board, because who doesn't want to share some of their favorite shows? I've even linked each show to IMDB for your convenience. :D (Pretty sure many of you will not have heard of at least a few of these--feel free to share your thoughts in the comments.)
(in no particular order)
1. Kidnapped
Lovemuffin and I were really into this show. You never knew what was going to happen, and each show led you a little closer to figuring out why someone was... kidnapped. (Surprise!) And then, the show just... stopped at the end of season uno. Season ones love us, but seasons two tend to hate us. BOO.
HEY KID. I SURE HOPE YOU WERE FOUND.
2. Hellcats
Aly Michalka? Ashely Tisdale? And a bunch of other great people? It was a) college, not high school b) cheerleading and c) so much dang drama that I could. not. get enough. I still mourn the loss of this one every once in a while. :( And if you're keeping track, this is show number two I liked that was cancelled after one season.
(Good news! You can watch Hellcats season one at CW's Seed .)
3. Lie to Me
This entire premise was great. I felt like I learned something every episode! Being able to tell whether people are lying based on body language? Perfect! Plus the actors were A+. Lovemuffin and I loved Tim Roth, I LOVE Kelli Williams, and the cast was lovely and, as usual, we didn't know we were watching the last season and didn't have time to prepare ourselves. :(
4. October Road
This show ended after... two seasons. It had a GREAT cast (Bryan Greenberg as Nick, Laura Prepon, Evan Jones, and so many other wonderful people), and here was the premise:
An author returns to his hometown to face the people whom he based his book on.
I MEAN.
Drama + author + great cast + small town = a Jonathan Tropper book--oh wait, there is that, but this was supposed to equal OCTOBER ROAD.
I don't know how many people even know about this one. But still.
My birthday is coming up. I say this because this post has reminded me how much I need a DVD set.
5. Journeyman
Yes. Journeyman. Allow me to introduce you:
1) KEVIN McKIDD
2) TIME TRAVEL
3) THE ABILITY TO FIX THINGS IN THE PAST TO HELP PEOPLE
4) KEVIN McKIDD
5) TIME TRAVEL
6) FAMILY DRAMA
It took a few episodes to get into this one, but then, I was STUCK. Remember that whole, season-two-hates-us thing? I may not have come across this show until recently (it came out in 2007), but I AM SO UPSET that it ended after one season. In fact, the fans were so upset at the time, that they PETITIONED for this one season to be put on DVD. (It still hasn't been. Thinking I found the motherload of someone's collection, I, uh, accidentally ordered shady copies. OOPS.)
(Would Kevin still have been on Grey's, had this done well? Or would this show have still been going on? Who knows!)
6. About a Boy
First things first: MINNIE DRIVER!
Also: Based on a Book (which was also a movie!)
Also also: great neighbor guy who makes bad choices but is totes (mostly) there for neighbor kid! What's not to like?
2 seasons; then whack. (TV executive people you are very, very mean.)
7. The Finder
An Iraq war vet suffers a brain injury that triggers the ability to see connections between seemingly unrelated events, objects or people.
This wasn't one of my favorite favorites, but I was starting to get into it when it was axed. Maybe one of the reasons I enjoyed it so much was because of Geoff Stults (*cough* October Road alumni *cough*). Ask me how many seasons it got??? ONE.
8. Boston Public
People forget about this show. Yes, it was created by David E. Kelly., the same guy who created the more famous Boston Legal (and The Practice, and Ally McBeal...) But this one, I felt, had more heart. Plus a wonderful cast. (Seriously. Go to that little link up there and check out all of the great peeps. I'll wait.) And great episodes. And it was in high school but you didn't feel like YOU were a student.
Was I a little more attached to this show because I went into labor whilst watching it? Mayyyybe. Regardless, after four seasons, I was sad to see it go.
9. Las Vegas
Sometimes it takes me a while to warm up to people shows. This was yet another one of those. But once I did (JOSH DUHAMEL!), I got all into the drama, and then (TOM SELLECK!!), suddenly, everything stopped.
What the what, NBC?
10. Life as We Know It
ONE FREAKING SEASON.
Okay, yes, I'm being a little dramatic, especially since...
Confession: I've never even seen this. I found out about it years ago and have been kicking myself in the pants ever since for having no idea that it existed. You've got Missy Peregrym (Stick It, Rookie Blue), Sean Faris (so many things, but my absolute fave is Forever Strong--oh, did I mention he was the inspiration for Rowan in the Flora series? I did? Well anyway...), and DELL Chris Lowell (*cough* Private Practice *cough*), and that's only the beginning.
Add this to my list of how-the-heck-am-I-gonna-get-hold-of-this (WHAT? It's on DVD now???) because I suddenly feel like Veruca Salt.
So... have you seen any of these? Were you sad to see them go, too? Feel free to share your sob stories in the comments.
Published on September 06, 2016 10:04
June 3, 2016
#16DABash DIG TOO DEEP by Amy Allgeyer + #Giveaway!
DIG TOO DEEP
By Amy Allgeyer
Publication date: April 1st, 2016
Category: YA
From Goodreads: With her mother facing prison time for a violent political protest, seventeen-year-old Liberty Briscoe has no choice but to leave her Washington, DC, apartment and take a bus to Ebbottsville, Kentucky, to live with her granny. There she can finish high school and put some distance between herself and her mother--her 'former' mother, as she calls her. But Ebbottsville isn't the same as Liberty remembers, and it's not just because the top of Tanner's Peak has been blown away to mine for coal. Half the county is out of work, an awful lot of people in town seem to be sick, and the tap water is bright orange--the same water that officials claim is safe to drink. When Granny's lingering cold turns out to be something much worse, Liberty is convinced the mine is to blame, and starts an investigation that quickly plunges her into a world of secrets, lies, threats, and danger. Liberty isn't deterred by any of it, but as all her searches turn into dead ends, she comes to a difficult decision: turn to violence like her former mother or give up her quest for good.
Add to Goodreads | Watch the book trailer
DIG TOO DEEP was a great look at the current water crises all over this country due to Mountaintop Removal mining. In fact, every time I see a post by Erin Brockovich on Facebook, I'm immediately reminded of DIG TOO DEEP, as not only is this story a reality for many, many people at the moment, but it's also informative as to how the mining culture feels the way they do about speaking against everything. (And how the water contamination can get to be so bad, so fast!)
Another thing I appreciated about DIG TOO DEEP was how the main character, Liberty, stood up for what she believed in, even though it wasn't the safe or easiest decision. Between the writing, the dynamic between a few of the characters (Liberty and her grandmother, especially) and getting a taste of the great Kentucky setting, I found DIG TOO DEEP to be informative, articulate, interesting, and a downright frustrating, wonderful book. I was excited to talk to Amy about DTD, and asked,
What are the difficulties/struggles/or rewards of writing about such a real life, complex topic?
Her response:
This is such a great question because part of what drew me to the issue of Mountaintop Removal mining is that it *is* so very complex.
It’s clear that Mountaintop Removal mining is disastrous for the environment. And it’s become evident that there are very serious health issues associated with living near MTR mines.
But at the same time, the people in these communities depend on the mines for jobs. Often, mining jobs are the highest paying jobs in the area. The money from mining jobs doesn’t just help families of mine workers. It also helps the local businesses where they shop. Mine jobs often pay enough that the families have some disposable income, which creates a market for bookstores and hair salons, home improvement contractors and house cleaners—businesses that otherwise might not even exist in these areas. So mining jobs create other jobs.
But…people are dying in these communities because of the mines. Cancer, gall bladder issues, birth defects and stillbirths. These are lives literally lost because of Mountaintop Removal mines.
The bottom line: MTR mines keep towns alive at the same time they’re killing the residents. It’s a savage sort of irony. And when you add in the coal companies’ drive for profit, the crippling poverty in the area, the deep pockets of coal lobbyists which sway the government from enacting protective measures that might force coal mines to find safer ways to extract coal…it’s a very complex and difficult situation.
I love writing about heavy issues with no clear right and wrong. Putting a character, like Liberty, through the difficult process of choosing where to make her stand creates amazing tension. And I think those moments really resonate with people…especially teens, who grapple with figuring out who they are and what they stand for on a daily basis. The difficulty in writing about complex issues, though, is that there will always be people who disagree with your story—people who think you got it totally wrong. And as a writer, that’s an uncomfortable place to be.
Whew! I'm so glad she loved writing about this, because it's something we ALL need to be more aware of. :(
About Amy:The youngest of seven kids, Amy has been writing stories since she first learned to make her letters face the right way. Her work has appeared in Family Fun, A Fly in Amber and Stories for Children. As an architect, she spends her days restoring hundred-year-old homes in Boise where she lives with her son, a feral house cat, and a fake owl named Alan. She hates chocolate, but loves vegetables. She also loves travelling to foreign lands and the smell of honeysuckle on humid Southern nights.
Amy's Website | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads
And now, for a giveaway! Amy is giving away a hard copy of DIG TOO DEEP and some swag to one winner (US only)! I highly recommend entering this (or picking up a copy for yourself--it's so pretty) DTD is a bit of an underrated book, I think, and was easily a four-and-a-half star read. Aside from a bit of profanity and talk of drugs, I'd recommend it to anyone 12 and up.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Wanting to check out more 2016 debut authors? Here's the schedule for the entire month of June! (Blogs not hyperlinked yet, sorry!)
June 1st
My Book Addiction - Kristy Acevedo
SleepsOnTables – Michele Bacon
Adventures in Writing – Jennifer DiGiovanni
Sci-Fi and Scary - Margaret Dilloway
YaReads - A. E. Conran
BookCatPin - Anna Michels
June 2nd
Alice Reeds – Sarah Alexander
The Hermit Librarian – Anna Breslaw
Me, Myself, and I - Melissa Gorzelanczyk
Pulp and Mystery Shelf – Kim Savage
With Love for Books - Kat Helgeson
June 3rd
Let Me Tell You A Story - Amy Allgeyer
Gabriella M Reads – Tobie Easton
Bookish Wanderlove – Emily Martin
Brittany's Book Rambles - Robin Reul – Guest Post
Kirstyes - Books, Occupation - Magic! - Jennifer Mason-Black
Diane’s Book Blog – Michael Miller
Pimples, Popularity, and Protagonists – R.S. Grey
June 4th
Ink Sisters Write – Brooks Benjamin
21st Century Once Upon A Times – Lucy Keating
With Love for Books – Amber Smith
Swoony Boys Podcast - Mia Siegert
Vi3tBabe – Judy Sheehan
June 5th
Diane’s Book Blog – Sarah Ahiers
Cover2Cover - Kerry Kletter
The Candid Cover - Jenny Moyer
Lost in Lit – Katherine Fleet
Alice Reeds - Jenny Manzer
June 6th
Gabriella M Reads - Ami Allen-Vath
Two Chicks on Books - Nicole Castroman
Lisa Loves Literature – Janet B. Taylor
Downright Dystopian – Jeff Garvin
June 7th
The Hardcover Lover - Ashley Herring Blake
Here's to Happy Endings - Meg Leder
Vox Libris – Catherine Lo
YaReads – Scarlett Kol
The Book Cellar - Julie Hammerle
Ink Sisters Write - Kenneth Logan
Pimples, Popularity, and Protagonists – Jenna Welch
June 8th
Go Read A Book - Natalie Blitt
Curling Up With A Good Book - Lindsey Klingele
Across the Bookiverse - Kathy MacMillan
The Reading Nook Reviews - Rebecca Podos
June 9th
The Book Beacon - Andrew Brumbach
The Turning Pages – Shannon M. Parker
Book Lovers Life - Patrick Samphire
Bibliophilia, Please - Gordon Jack
June 10th
With Love for Books - Harriet Reuter
Hapgood the bookdragon - Marisa Reichardt
Cue My Muse - Laura Shovan
Rockin' Book Reviews – Bryan Methods
June 11th
Kirstyes - Books, Occupation - Magic! - Kiran Millwood Hargrave
Arctic Books – Laura Tims
Book Lovers Life - Sarah Schauerte Reida
June 12th
Bibliophilia, Please - Julie Eshbaugh
Mundie Kids – Robin Yardi
YaReads – Martine Lewis
June 13th
Little Book Heaven - Michelle Andreani
YaReads – Carrie Firestone
Me, Myshelf, and I – Peter HoffMeister
Emily Reads Everything – Emily Skrutskie
June 14th
Downright Dystopian - Christian McKay Heidicker
Brittany's Book Rambles - Kerri Maniscalco
Platypire Reviews – Nanci Turner Steveson
June 15th
My Book Addiction – Jennie K Brown
Sci-Fi and Scary - Jennifer Bardsley
June 16th
Milky Way of Books – Ava Jae
Rachel's Book Reviews – Jeff Zentner
June 17th
Write Writing Written - Lily Anderson
Two Chicks on Books – Kim Zarins
Pink Polka Dot Books - Heather Smith Meloche
June 18th
Pimples, Popularity, and Protagonists – K.C. Held
Wishful Endings – Elizabeth Briggs
Cue My Muse - Lee Gjertsen Malone
June 19th
Read.Sleep.Repeat. - Rahul Kanakia
YaReads – Dee Romito
With Love for Books – Jessica Taylor
June 20th
YaReads – Kurt Dinan
A Perfection Called Books – Erin Summerill
21st Century Once Upon A Times - Riley Redgate
My Book Addiction - Janet Sumner Johnson
June 21st
YaReads - J. Keller Ford
What's Write About This – Erin Teagan
Alice Reeds - Aditi Khorana
Latte Nights Reviews – Mia Garcia
June 22nd
Pink Polka Dot Books – Emily France
Emily Reads Everything - Sonya Mukherjee
YaReads - Everly Frost
Little Book Heaven - Paula Garner
June 23rd
Latte Nights Reviews - Kathleen Glasgow
Bookish Wanderlove - Karen Hattrup
June 24th
My Bookish Year – Erica M Chapman
The Eater of Books! – Julie Buxbaum
The Book Cellar - Jill Diamond
YaReads - Dana Elmendorf
June 25th
Pretty Deadly Reviews - Laurie Elizabeth Flynn
My Book Addiction - Erin Petti
SleepsOnTables - Parker Peevyhouse
The Phantom Paragrapher - Julie Leung
June 26th
The Book Cellar - Evangeline Denmark
The Reading Nook Reviews – Kathryn Purdie
Gabriella M Reads – Stephanie Scott
Read.Sleep.Repeat. - Lisa A. Koosis
June 27th
The Book Beacon - Claire Fayers
YaReads - Cheryl Blackford
Bookish Wanderlove - Jenn P. Nguyen
Bibliophilekid - Emily Cox and Nicole Allen
BookCatPin - Laura Stampler
June 28th
Pandora’s Books - Audrey Coulthurst
My Book Addiction – Abby Cooper
Downright Dystopian – Katie Kennedy
Hannah Plus Books – Tom Crosshill
Book Lovers Life - Cynthia Reeg
June 29th
Media Geeks Unite - Tricia Clasen
Tigersbooksandme - Destiny Soria
Mindjacked – Margot Harrison
books are love - Caleb Roehrig
Emily Reads Everything - Janet McNally
Platypire Reviews – Tara Sims
YaReads - Isabel Bandeira
June 30th
On Starships and Dragonwings – Traci Chee
Doodle's Book Reviews - Meghan Rogers
Pandora’s Books - Kathleen Burkinshaw
Bibliophilia, Please - Bridget Hodder
Swoony Boys Podcast - Krystal Sutherland
Alice Reeds - Karen Fortunati
My Book Addiction - Mike Grosso
The Reading Nook Reviews - Lindsey Roth Culli
Book Lover’s Life– Abigail Johnson
YaReads – Sarah Glenn Marsh
What's Write About This - Wade Albert White
Published on June 03, 2016 05:00
May 18, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {129}: United (Alienated, #3)
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: United.
United
By Melissa Landers
Publication date: August 2, 2016
From Goodreads:
After thwarting a deadly coup and saving the alliance between their worlds, Cara and Aelyx have finally earned a break. Their tiny island colony is everything they dreamed it would be―days spent gathering shells on the beach and nights in each other’s arms.
But the vacation is short-lived.
The treaty between Earth and L’eihr has awakened an ancient force that threatens to destroy them all. The Aribol, mysterious guardians charged with maintaining interstellar peace, deem the alliance a threat to the galaxy. They order a separation of the races, decreeing humans and L’eihrs must return to their own planets within the month or face extinction. In fact, they already have agents in place on Earth, ready to begin.
With the clock ticking, Aelyx and Cara assemble a team of colonists and race back to Earth, where they unite with old friends to solve the mystery of who the Aribol are, what they want, and the real reason the alliance has provoked them. As tensions build to a full-scale war, Aelyx and Cara must fight harder than ever―not just for their future, but for the survival of both their worlds.
Published on May 18, 2016 05:00
May 11, 2016
Waiting on Wednesday {128}: Paper Planes and Other Things We Lost
Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine. This week's can't-wait-to-read pre-publication book is: Paper Planes and Other Things We Lost.
Paper Planes and Other Things We Lost
Mindy Hayes & Michele G. Miller
Publication date: June 2016
From Goodreads:
On June 18, 1993, Flight 397 crashed off the coast of Long Island. But this story isn’t about the crash. Not completely.
This is a story about two high school seniors living very different lives, who share one connection: they both lost parents on that fateful flight.
Slowly, letters bridge the gap between California and Pennsylvania as Ruby Kaminski and Brett Pratt find a way to remember the past while looking toward the future.
This is a story about hope, paper planes, and the other things they lost.
Published on May 11, 2016 10:00


