
Controversy aside, I’m really excited to read about an adult Scout and the cover is very pretty.

Controversy aside, I’m really excited to read about an adult Scout and the cover is very pretty.
So I think we all know this was going to happen. The show Game of Thrones was going to end before the final book is published. However, I think many of us, were hoping that the show’s ending would be different then the books. It’s doesn’t seem like it will be. Show runners, Dan Weiss and David Benioff confirmed the show is heading towards the same endgame as George is with the book. I’m not sure how I feel about this. In one way, we are going to miss out on George’s meticulously detailed story telling and no longer will have the benefit of knowing what’s coming on the show. On the other hand, it means we get to experience the show with a fresh take that we couldn’t before since we had an idea of where the characters stories go. So there’s good and bad in both options. First we will get a condensed version of the story and outcome and then we will get a more detailed account of how Westeros was won or lost. And let’s be honest, I’m going to watch the show and read the final books anyway so why stress how I find out how it ends? I have seen a movie and then read the book after to see how they compared so this isn’t anything new to me or to many other people. So I guess after typing this all out, I feel alright about this.
So how do you feel about this? Are you upset that the books will now be spoiled? Will you still read them when they come out? Or are you like me, who’s now just going to go with the flow? Let us know in the comments below.

The first book in a spin-off series from the Fallen Kingdom Series. It takes place partly in Mytica and partly in Toronto and apparently that will all make sense.
So this is a cute book. Perfect for kids who have just finished Harry Potter or Lemony Snicket and are looking for something new. It has many of the same kid fantasy novels. Three siblings who are move from orphange to orphange until they land in Cambridge Falls. There they travel back and forth in time thanks to a mysterious book. Soon they meet an evil Countess, a badly dress Wizard, a Giant and Dwarves. Kate is the older sister, who carries more responsibility then one at 14 should. Michael is a dwarf obsessed nerd of a brother and Emma is a tough as nails baby sister, who doesn’t take anyone’s crap. They of course find out that they are more then what they seem because that’s how these types of books go and end up going on wild adventure that will either save the world or end it because isn’t that how all adventures work? It’s fun and cute and at times quite humorous but also pretty predictable. I good start to a series that I think will be pretty entertaining but the next book will have to wait as I have a few books on my nook and iPad that demand attention.
And we are back. Well, I am. As I’m writing this Kate is on a plane on her way home. New Orleans was great! We both had a lot of fun. It’s such a chill city. It was a lot of fun walking around and seeing the sights. I do hope we get to go back again some day.
But back to business. The movie adaption of Insurgent by Veronica Roth comes out tomorrow. I have mixed feelings about the movie of Divergent, I overall liked it but I have reservations about this one. First the trailer makes it pretty clear they did some major changes and I’m not sure if that’s going to be good or bad. Insurgent was a hard book to read because Tris suffers from PTSD and no one tries to help her and it was beyond frustrating. I’m not sure how that will play on screen or if they will sort of gloss over it kinda like they did with Katniss in Mockingay Part 1. I guess I’ll find out when I see it later this or next week.
There are other YA movie adaptations coming soon that I’m pretty excited. Of course Mockingjay Part 2. That’s definitely going to be brutal. Moviefone highlighted a few that are in the works. Some that I knew of like The 5th Wave and Mrs. Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children. The former should make a good movie and the latter, well hopefully with Tim Burton at the helm it will be better then the book. I didn’t know that Daughter of Smoke and Bone, Grasshopper Jungle, Immortal Rules and Shadow and Bone have all been optioned. That’s awesome! I think both Kate and I have said how much we loved Daughter of Smoke and Bone by Laini Taylor. That will be really interesting to see how that plays out on the big screen. Immortal Rules by Julie Kagawa is excellent Vampire Dystopian novel. I also think that Smoke and Bone by Leigh Bardugo is being produced by David Heyman of Harry Potter fame. So I have a lot faith that will be well done. And Edgar Wright is attached to direct Grasshopper Jungle? Yes please! I know we have talked a lot about this book lately and it’s flaws but it was an entertaining book and I actually think if done right will make a better movie.
So book fans, we have a lot of good books being made into movies in the upcoming years. Let’s hope that they are all more like Harry Potter and Hunger Games and less like The Giver or Percy Jackson.
P.S. Not mentioned in the article but Maggie Stiefvater’s Scorpio Races and Rainbow Rowell’s Eleanor and Park have also been optioned. I’m not sure where Scorpio Races is in development but I do know that Miss Rowell was asked to write the screenplay for Eleanor and Park and well I can’t wait for both of these!
One last thing on the whole Andrew Smith fiasco. Maggie Stiefvater said it best on twitter.
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576773638512340992
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576773905878269952
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576774062812372992
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576774253162397696
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576774333261078528
https://twitter.com/mstiefvater/status/576774565411610624
The author who said that Maggie was “more familiar with manly car things” was a female author. It’s also a pretty benign comment that probably wasn’t meant to be sexist but could be taken as that, just as Smith’s comments were. It goes both ways. That’s why we have to talk about. Sexism has become such a part of culture that we don’t even truly realize we do it.

I’ve never read anything by Marilynne Robinson. It seemed time.
Next Week Kate and I will be going to New Orleans for the first time ever! To say we are excited would be an understatement. To celebrate our upcoming trip we are going to share some of our favorite books that place in The Big Easy. I’ll go first with the series, Chronicles of Nick. It currently has five books Infinity, Invincible, Infamous, Inferno and Illustion, with the sixth book, Instinct coming out on March 31. 

The Chronicles of Nick is actually a spin-off series from Sherrilyn Kenyon’s Dark-Hunter series. I haven’t read them yet but there are many characters cross over between the two series. Nick Gautier (that’s Go-Shay, it’s the Cajun pronunciation and don’t forget it)is a streetwise kid from New Orleans. He’s the only child of Cherise Gautier, who had Nick when she was 14, the age Nick is now. Nick thinks he knows what’s what. He’s starting high school as a scholarship kid at a fancy private school. He is constantly bullied for his lack of finances and his forced wearing of ugly Hawaiian shirts but Nick makes do. Then everything changes when one day, he’s hanging out with his friends and well they try to kill him. He is saved by a mysterious warrior, Kyrian and is dragged into the world of the Dark-Hunters. Nick’s world will never be the same.


Nick is one of my favorite male YA characters. He’s so sarcastic that who could give Percy Jackson a run for his money. He always has a comeback and really it’s hard to get him to shut up. It’s really surprising that he doesn’t get slapped more often. With the meeting of Kyrian, who is a Dark-Hunter, a warrior fights a race that fights the dark forces. He soon finds the world is filled with demons, werewolves, vampires and worse and by worse, Nick himself. You see, Nick is the son of the Malachai. The most powerful demon that can singularly take down the world. There is only supposed to be one Malachai at once but his father has done all he can to stay away, even get arrested and jailed. Throughout the series, Nick is fighting his destiny to become the Malachai and destroy the world. The dark forces that created his kind will do anything to turn him and his friends will do anything to keep him, him.


In first five books, Nick has had to battle of Zombies of his classmates, vampires,and demons. He’s been kidnapped and taking to the demon realm. He’s also been taking to an alternate universe where he isn’t constantly trying to run for his life. With the help of his friends Caleb, Koda, Ash, Bubba and Mark he has battled the worst and kept his sarcastic sense of humor in tact. Now that he has accepted who he is he has to fight even harder to fight his own destiny. It hasn’t been easy since many of his friends have once been his enemy. For instance, Koda his girlfriend was originally sent to kill him and honestly may still if he turns towards the destruction of the world. Caleb is a demon that was tasked to protecting, Nick and sorta hated him for it. So yeah, it’s been rough. Despite all the darkness, Kenyon keeps things rather light and fun. I laugh so hard when I read them and I can’t wait for the next one.
New Orleans is the perfect backdrop for the series. NOLA, is known for it’s ghosts and haunting, voodoo queens that it’s no stretch of the imagination that there might be a bar run by werewolves or witches run classes in the french quarters. Or that it’s a doorway to other realms and there is a goblin market. I’m pretty excited to see where Nick hangs out. Have beignets at Cafe du Monde and walk around St. Louis Cemetery. I’m really excited to go to New Orleans and looking forward to what Nick and company do next.
Author Andrew Smith is having a good year. His last book, Grasshopper Jungle, won a Printz Honor and he’s been getting good reviews on his new book, The Alex Crow. He’s been called the Kurt Vonnegurt of YA and Grasshopper Jungle has shades of Slaughterhouse-Five with it’s multi-layered plot lines that are kinda absurd. However, he started a controversy after comments he recently made to Vice.com Here’s the quote that got him in trouble.
On the flip side, it sometimes seems like there isn’t much of a way into your books for female readers. Where are all the women in your work?
I was raised in a family with four boys, and I absolutely did not know anything about girls at all. I have a daughter now; she’s 17. When she was born, that was the first girl I ever had in my life. I consider myself completely ignorant to all things woman and female. I’m trying to be better though.
So, he’s saying that the reason that his female characters are one dimensional is because he has had no experience with them so he can’t write them. By that logic, what experience does he have with giant insects that he was able to make them believable? Anyway, it’s not surprisingly, many women in literary circles took to twitter and other social media and called him out on this comment and in response it seems Mr. Smith deleted his twitter page. In return, many of the women who criticized have been harassed and bullied for speaking up. Criticizing someone’s work is not bullying them and nor is having a valid point either. This has sadly become all to common on social media. Let’s not forget that Gamer Gate is still going on. That many women on the internet are threatened with violence for nothing but pointing out sexist practices and trying to start conversations to change them.
I like this tweet by author Shannon Hale.*
but I feel for women author they really don’t have the luxury of creating one dimensional characters the way men authors do at least when it comes to female characters. I feel like it a female author wrote male characters the way that most female characters are that they would be undoubtedly called on and probably wouldn’t publish another book. But that’s just me.
I liked Grasshopper Jungle. My only beef with it was the fact that the only real female character in it, Shann was a non-entity. As I wrote in mini-review of the book earlier this year.
Weird. In one way, it was refreshing to have a novel take on bisexuality in such a head on way but on the other hand, the female lead Shann, is pretty one dimensional. So it’s progressive in one way and a step back in another way.
So one one hand, he wrote a compelling story of a boy struggling with his own sexuality against the backdrop of apocalyptic destruction by giant grasshoppers. On the other hand, the few women in the story were the girlfriend, who is a none issue besides being the main character girlfriend and mom of the main character’s best friend who is promiscuous. So, in Mr Smith’s own words, he is ignorant of all things women so he’s just not going to put the time into writing them.
So this has turned out to be a longer post then I intended but that’s OK. We need to talk about this. We need to talk about the lack of diversity in literature, whether it’s adult fiction or young adult fiction. We need to stop allowing authors get away with lazy opinions that because they are not female or minority that they can’t possibly write those characters so they don’t and when they do, we should call them out on it and not fear being, harassed, threatened or bullied. Andrew Smith is good author as he was just recently honored with a prestigious award so he should be held to higher standard but then again all authors should be too.
So I ask you, what is your opinion on this or this topic? Sound off in the comments below.
*Speaking of Shannon Hale. Here’s an account from a school visit she recently did where only girls were given permission to hear her talk, not the boys.
Jennifer Donnelly is a good author. I love her adult series, The Tea Rose (well actually 2/3 of it. The third book, The Wild Rose, I could do without) Most of books are historical fiction and you can tell she put in the time and effort to get the details of the time period right. Even for her YA titles, Northern Lights and Revolution. She knows how to tell a story that is full of romance and suspense that keeps you drawn in. I guess that is what I was expecting with her Waterfire Saga.
The first thing you may have noticed as I did that Rogue Wave as did Deep Blue, the first book in the series, has a mermaid on the cover. Clearly, this was not going to be her usual historical fiction novel. I don’t think it ever says when exactly this novel takes place but I feel it’s implied it’s in modern day. The Mer people are descendents from the lost city of Atlantis. Some of who adapted to the water after the city drowned into the sea and formed six different kingdoms in our oceans and seas. Our heroine, Serafina, is the princess of the Miromara, a Mer kingdom that spans the Mediterranean, Baltic, Adriatic, and Black Seas. On the day of she was supposed to be crown the heir of Miromara, they are attacked and she is forced to flee with her best friend, Neela. A princess from the Kingdom Matalia, located in the Indian Ocean. After many trials and tribulation, they find their way to the River Olt, where the famed Lele witches live. They meet up with four other princesses from the other Mer kingdoms and are told they are the descendents of the originals and only they can find the six talismans that will stop the big bad monster and save their world. Got it? I forgot to mention that Serafina was supposed to have been betrothed to Mahdi, the heir to Matali Empire and Neela’s cousin but that didn’t happen because all hell broke loose or and Mahdi may have been cheating on her. It wouldn’t be a true YA novel if it didn’t have some teen angst, right?
Rogue Wave starts as the six Mermaid Princess separate and go and find their talismans. Serafina, goes back to Miromara because she is sure there is something about Merrow, the mermaid she is descendent from and is also the one who hid all the talismans but of course that’s a dangerous since her home is in ruin and now ruled by Traho and his deathriders, who attacked them. Neela is heading back to Matali to try to warn her parents and hope they will take action. They both are constantly being chased by death riders and others who are also looking for the talisman but they are both smart and determined and find ways to get out of trouble.
The first book I thought was only kinda, meh. I didn’t have a problem with the story or the characters but It didn’t seem to have a lot of energy. I like Jennifer Donnelly as an author, so I guess I have certain expectations when it comes to her work and this I feel is not her best. I mean, props for her for trying something new but I feel it’s a little bit by the numbers. It’s like she had a checklist of everything that should be in a YA fantasy novel and checked things off one by one. Also the writing style is a bit off. I think they are going for a little younger end of the YA spectrum so the 13-15 crowd because it’s very tame. There is nothing anyone would be upset or offended about it. It’s a little surprising because as I said before, she has written YA novels before without dumbing them down. That may not be the best way to describe but she does spend a lot of time recapping what has already happened or spelling things out so the reader won’t miss it. it’s unnecessary and also slows down the pace of the book. Oh and don’t get me started on the cutesy sea lingo. Instead of calling each other girls, they say merls and they use currensea not currency. There are so many of them that a glossary is included at the end.
Rogue Wave is a better effort then Deep Blue but it’s still not up to her standards. It took her two books but by the end of this one I see that this a real purpose for her characters. It’s more then just collect six talismans and save the world. It’s also a great book of female friendships. Serafina and Neela’s friendship is great. They are strong and there for each other. We have barely had a chance to get to know the other four, Ling, Becca, Ava and Astrid but their was a beginning of a real bond between the them. Well the five of six. Astrid is the daughter of the leader who was first thought to behind the attacks and was seen as a outsider. I think that now that we have a real sense of what their mission is and who they are really up against, it’s only going to get better. So Miss Donnelly, you get another chance. It’s not a great series but one I’m willing to see how it goes.