Hi there! I’m Kay: an opinionated book blogger enamoured with the world of novels. Reader of Speculative Fiction (the posh word for Sci-Fi/Fantasy) and Young Adult novels. Believer in the many uses of the towel, the science of deduction and other fandom in-jokes.
This blog has been closed since early 2016. To the publishers and writers: thanks for all the support over the years. To my readers and fellow bloggers: keep in touch!
Review: With All My Soul by Rachel Vincent
With All My Soul by Rachel VincentSeries: Soul Screamers #7
Published by Harlequin Teen, MIRA
Pages: 377
Genres: Paranormal YA, Young Adult
Source: Received for review from publishers
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Rating:
Also in this series: My Soul to Take, My Soul to Save, My Soul to Keep, My Soul to Steal, If I Die, Before I Wake
After spending the last year undead, Kaylee Cavanaugh has had enough of the paranormal creatures who have plagued her ever since she came into her banshee powers. Now she's ready to take her school back from the evil hellions, once and forever.
To protect her friends, Kaylee will need to find a way to turn the living incarnations of Avarice, Envy and Vanity against one another.
Yet when one more person close to her is taken, Kaylee realises she can't save everyone she loves without making some powerful sacrifices...
And so ends the Soul Screamers series. A series that quite genuinely surprised the hell out of me, delivering character development and plot turns that were utterly realistic and yet so rarely seen in the YA genre. Thank you, Rachel Vincent, for giving me a series I didn’t even know I wanted until I had it.
Let me just confirm that With All My Soul wrapped up the Soul Screamers series rather perfectly. Kaylee has spent the past six books two steps behind her enemies, but when things go from terrible to so-much-worse, she knows just reacting to attacks is not going to work. But with hellion demons being pretty much impossible to beat, and with no power or leverage to think of, what’s a girl to do? Vincent set up the perfect storm, and with it delivered the perfect solution. Every bit of Kaylee’s growth as a character culminated into her choices in this book. Book 1 Kaylee, Book 4 Kaylee and even Book 6 Kaylee would not have preserved… I love it when an author actually knows where they want a character to go – and then takes them there flawlessly. So, kudos, Rachel.
So while I loved that the series was tied up with a bow, I didn’t get the same emotional response to With All My Soul that I did from the other Soul Screamer books. Perhaps it was just me, but it felt like a lot of the “Big. Emotional. Scenes.” were ones we’d seen time and time again. Kaylee feels guilty and angsts! Nash lashes out at people who love him with unnecessarily cruel remarks! Tod and Kaylee profess their (literally) undying love! Adults randomly disappear and cause more angst! Sabine is Sabine! FEELS are meant to be HAD!
But not for me. I mean, intellectually, I understood that all of this was “Very. Important.” but it felt like a rehash of the last book, at least in terms of character interaction. Sure, the plot itself was solid, but the only real emotional development came from Kaylee – and even that was more “Oh look, Kaylee is finally stopping to think before blaming herself”. Perhaps that sounds unnecessarily harsh, but even when I enjoyed Kaylee, I could still admit her self-hatred was damn annoying.
Bottom line? This was an excellent wrap-up of a brilliant series. That said, it didn’t pack the emotional punch that I so loved in the other Soul Screamers books.
Want a copy? Click here to enter my giveaway of the book (open worldwide).
Morganville Kickstarter: Get over there and give already!!!

Myrnin’s Famous Vampire Bunny Slippers are SIGNED by the author for Pledges over $65! Go get some!!
As anyone who reads this blog will know, I am a big fan of the Morganville Vampires Series by Rachel Caine. It is absolutely, positively brilliant and is 1000% worth your time and energy. It has teenagers that actually think things out, properly terrifying adults, and cliffhangers that make you want to KILL for the next book.
Over on Kickstarter, the author and a bunch of other amazing human beings are trying to make the series into a web-tv series!! It is going to be stellar. Amber Benson (yes, from Buffy, but also a great author in her own right) has signed on to play the leading vampire Amelie in the series and, just, GUH. IT WILL BE AWESOME.
Here, let’s let Rachel Caine pitch it to you herself:
Problem: they need is $75,000 to get it done and they only have 5 days left to get to that number. And for some reason that is completely and utterly BEYOND ME, they aren’t there yet.
It will be a TRAGEDY OF EPIC PROPORTIONS if this series isn’t made. I’ve made my pledge (which comes with signed vampire bunny slippers, top that!) and you need to make yours!! Go. Now.
I mean it.
BEA 2013: the book haul
As I mentioned, I picked up a lot of books at BEA. So many so that I had to make Many. Tough. Choices. about which would go where: some went with me to France, some went to my mother’s house and some were left in London for when I go back. These photos were taken the one and only time all these books will ever be together: in the NYC hotel room! So, apologies in advance for the low quality.
Let’s break this down, shall we? Links all go to goodreads and hearts denote the books I am most looking forward to!
Young Adult:
- Splintered (Splintered, #1) by A.G. Howard
- Shadows (The Rephaim #1) by Paula Weston
- ♥♥ The Clockwork Scarab (Stoker & Holmes, #1) by Colleen Gleason – THE SUMMARY OF THIS BOOK GIVES ME SO MANY FEELINGS. #feministingFTW
- ♥ Rush (The Game, #1) by Eve Silver (signed)
- ♥ Born Of Illusion (Born of Illusion, #1) by Teri Brown (signed)
- The Infinite Moment of Us by Lauren Myracle (signed)
- Find Me by Romily Bernard (signed)
- False Sight (False Memory, #2) by Dan Krokos (signed)
- Twinmaker by Sean Williams (signed)
- Just Like Fate by Cat Patrick & Suzanne Young (signed)
- Unravelling (Unravelling #1) by Elizabeth Norris (signed)
- ♥ Reboot (Reboot #1) by Amy Tintera (signed)
- The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen (signed – complete fluke that I got this, though! The signing was ticketed, but they decided to open it up at the end as they had more copies!)
- Hero (Woodcutter Sisters #2) by Alethea Kontis
- Wasteland by Susan Kim, Laurence Klavan (signed)
- ♥ Ink (Paper Gods, #1) by Amanda Sun (signed)
- Dare You To (Pushing the Limits, #2) by Katie McGarry (signed)
- The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle, #2) by Maggie Stiefvater
- Indelible (The Twixt, #1) by Dawn Metcalf (signed)
- This Song Will Save Your Life by Leila Sales (signed)
- ♥ Heartbeat by Elizabeth Scott (signed)
- The Eternity Cure (Blood of Eden, #2) by Julie Kagawa (signed – will be for a giveaway)
- The Bone Season (Scion, #1) by Samantha Shannon
- Plague in the Mirror by Deborah Noyes (signed)
- Skin by Donna Jo Napoli
- All the Truth That’s In Me by Julie Berry
- The Coldest Girl in Coldtown by Holly Black (signed)
- Under the Empyrean Sky (The Heartland Trilogy, #1) by Chuck Wendig
- Little Red Lies by Julie Johnston
- Antigoddess (Goddess War, #1) by Kendare Blake (signed)
- Wild Cards (Wild Cards, #1) by Simone Elkeles (I’m still pissed at Elkeles over the whole reviewer thing, but I will probably still read this… because I’m hypocritical that way)
- Cherry Money Baby by John M. Cusick
- Praefatio (Praefatio, #1) by Georgia McBride
- ♥ Relic by Heather Terrell
- Projection by Risa Green
- ♥ A Wounded Name by Dot Hutchison (signed)
- ♥ Steelheart (Reckoners, #1) by Brandon Sanderson (signed)
- ♥ These Broken Stars (Starbound, #1) by Amie Kaufman & Meagan Spooner (signed)
- Project Cain by Geoffrey Girard
- Cain’s Blood by Geoffrey Girard
- How to Love by Katie Cotugno
- You Look Different in Real Life by Jennifer Castle (signed)
- Counting by 7s by Holly Goldberg Sloan
- The Shade of the Moon (The Last Survivors, #4) by Susan Beth Pfeffer
- Tandem (Many-Worlds, #1) by Anna Jarzab (signed)
- ♥♥ Entangled by Amy Rose Capetta
- Sorrow’s Knot by Erin Bow
- Marie Antoinette, Serial Killer by Katie Alender
- Journey to Virginland: CATENA by Armen Melikian
- The Darkest Path by Jeff Hirsch
Adult Fantasy/Sci-Fi:
- ♥♥♥ Vicious by Victoria Schwab (signed)
- Charming (Pax Arcana, #1) by Elliott James
- ♥ Gameboard of the Gods (Age of X, #1) by Richelle Mead (signed)
- Queen Victoria’s Book of Spells: An Anthology of Gaslamp Fantasy by Ellen Datlow (signed)
- Parasite (Parasitology, #1) by Mira Grant
- The Incrementalists by Steven Brust & Skyler White
- Outlaw by Ted Dekker (signed)
- Extinction Machine (Joe Ledger #5) by Jonathan Maberry (signed)
Middle Grade and Graphic Novels:
- ♥ Fortunately, the Milk by Neil Gaiman (signed bookplate)
- The Carpet People by Terry Pratchett
- The Time Fetch by Amy Herrick
- Constable & Toop by Gareth P. Jones
- The Song of the Quarkbeast (The Last Dragonslayer, #2) by Jasper Fforde
- The Abominables by Eva Ibbotson
- Curse of the Broomstaff (Janitors, #3) by Tyler Whitesides (signed) – Didn’t mean to pick this up, but then saw the author do a fantastically awesome drum solo and knew I couldn’t resist (Watch it here!). Met a librarian in line for Brandon Sanderson who told me his books are great, so am looking forward to reading it despite the randomness of how I picked it up.
- Storm Watcher by Maria V. Snyder (signed)
- Ghost Hawk by Susan Cooper
- The Twistrose Key by Tone Almhjell – Met a lovely Norwegian librarian who told me that the author of this book (Norwegian as well) translated it herself and then pitched it to the US market. Pretty smart!
- The Adventures of Superhero Girl by Faith Erin Hicks (signed)
- The Wolf Princess by Cathryn Constable
Non-Fiction:
- ♥♥ This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage by Ann Patchett
- Survival Lessons by Alice Hoffman (signed)
- An Appetite for Wonder: The Making of a Scientist by Richard Dawkins
Misc Adult Fiction:
- The Valley of Amazement by Amy Tan
- Love and Lament by John Milliken Thompson
- Something in the Blood: A Honey Driver Murder Mystery by J.G. Goodhind – This is from an indie UK publisher who did a fantastic job pitching this Midsomer Murders-esque series. Looking forward to checking it out!
- The Navigator by Michael Pocalyko (signed)
- One Last Thing Before I Go by Jonathan Tropper
- The Last Camellia by Sarah Jio (signed)
- Morning Glory by Sarah Jio (signed)
- The Returned by Jason Mott
- Who Asked You? by Terry McMillan
Extracts:
- United We Spy (Gallagher Girls, #6) by Ally Carter (signed)
- Prodigy (Legend, #2) by Marie Lu (signed)
- Unhinged (Splintered, #2) by A.G. Howard
Well, that took an eternity and a half to put together. Out of all the books I picked up, I took only 15 back with me to read over the next month or so – let me know if you want to know which!
BEA 2013 Recap (Part II): a tale told (mostly) in instagrams
Book Expo America a.k.a. When 90% humidity, sleep deprivation and hours in line can’t stop you from having the time of your life.
So, remember how I said I knew what to expect from BEA going in? Well, when the time came to actually go in, all of that disappeared from my brain. I wandered in 1000% lost and thank god I just stumbled into the right signing line, otherwise I might still be roaming Javits. But it only took me an hour or so to get accustomed to the layout and pretty soon I was darting all over the place.
- The poster size competition got rather out of hand.
- Richelle Mead signing stacks of her new adult series.
- Amy Tan interviewed in front of audience at the Downtown Stage.
This, I would soon discover, would become my life for the next 3 days. I was on my feet 9-5 thanking God that there was a Starbucks on the convention floor. I was powered by adrenaline and caffeine – and the kilos of books on my shoulders meant nothing. It was friggin’ Disneyland.
One of the best things about BEA: the bloggers. I met the lovely Mara (Girls in Capes) that first day, who introduced me to both Susan (Read This, Eat That) and Feliza. It was a lot easier to approach publishers in pairs, so some of the best publisher experiences I had were with them and Tania (Literary Cravings). (Excluding one awesome argument about Sansa Stark over at Source Books – nothing gets the blood boiling better than the Game of Thrones!)
So, yes, you do have to stand in line a lot at BEA – but that is one of the best parts. It gives you an opportunity to talk to fellow book lovers, learn the gossip, find out about books that you might not have otherwise heard of, exchange ARCs and, well, have someone watch your bag while you pop over to grab a coffee and/or publisher. Seriously, people, even if you aren’t British, you’ll quickly love the BEA queuing.
- The signing area filled up super quick.
- Cutest book poster at BEA – by far!
- Amanda Sun with the MLP version of her main character.
I followed the advice online and checked a bag the first afternoon. On days 2 and 3 I made sure to bring along a wheelie bag as I had to walk a lot after the convention to get back to my hotel and on to the theatre. NYC may be walkable, but it was rather like walking in an oven while carrying your own coffin.
… I don’t do well in the heat.
Anyhow, I met so many authors while I was there they’ve actually rather blurred in my mind. Though I know the US often sends dozens of authors out on tour together, we have nothing like that in the UK. To see 2 or 3 at once is highly unusual – but at BEA? Well, Harlequin had Elizabeth Scott, Julie Kagawa, Amanda Sun, Katie McGarry and Dawn Metcalf together not once, but twice. That’s kinda amazing
So, for the record, I met: Victoria Schwab (super lovely), Amanda Sun (super, super lovely), Richelle Mead (!!), Ally Carter, Brandon Sanderson, Maria V. Snyder, Jonathan Maberry, Eve Silver, Teri Brown, Holly Black, Anna Jarzab, Leila Sales, Jennifer Castle, Sarah Dessen (!!), Marie Lu, Susan Kim & Laurence Klavan, Elizabeth Scott (sweetest person ever), Amy Tintera, Ellen Datlow, Alice Hoffman, Kendare Blake, Cat Patrick & Suzanne Young, Romily Bernard, Lauren Myracle, Dan Krokos, Elizabeth Norris, Katie McGarry, Dawn Metcalf, Dot Hutchison, Ted Dekker, Amie Kaufman & Meagan Spooner, Julie Kagawa, Sean Williams, Deborah Noyes, Michael Pocalyko, Amy Herrick, Faith Erin Hicks, Sarah Jio, and Tyler Whitesides.
*wipes brow*
- Jonathan Maberry looking shiny in his comic book shirt of awesome.
- Elizabeth Norris signing her already-released novel Unravelling.
- Marie Lu signing extracts and posters at the Penguin booth.
In case you hadn’t noticed: I had an amazing time. I met so many amazing people and would highly recommend that you all give it a go sometime – whether as a blogger or as a power reader. However, I’m also glad I took the evening off from author events: it gave me much-needed time away from the chaos and the opportunity to bleed money on Broadway (Matthew Broderrik! David Hyde Pearce! I couldn’t possibly keep away.)
BEA 2013 Recap (Part I): the infamous Book Blogger Conference

The infamous Strand Bookstore, NYC
The Intro
So, this year I attended Book Expo America for what will likely be my first and only time. Living across an ocean is a bit of a barrier – to put it mildly. This trip was also a big holiday for me and my mother (who found a conference of her own while I was at BEA), so it also featured plenty of Broadway, museums, trips to The Strand (which was a-ma-zing) and cocktails!
I went into the Expo expecting a lot of different things: I knew it would be overwhelming, I knew I’d meet a lot of bloggers and I knew people got a little crazy. All of that was true – and all of it was amazing. I met so many amazing bloggers, publishers and authors – (almost) all of them generous with their time and knowledge. Even the few not-quite-perfect experiences I had were quite mild. In short: my experience at BEA was wonderful and I was this close to setting up camp on the expo floor.
Now, on to the recap!
Day 1: Book Blogger Conference
Despite the criticisms I’d read about the last Book Blogger Conference, I decided to give the convention a go. I figured the organisers would have learned from the extensive feedback they’d received and – after checking to see that a bunch of bloggers would be on the panels – I knew the conference could be quite entertaining.
I was kinda nervous turning up the first day as I didn’t know anyone else in attendance. But I quickly found that a lot of people were in a similar situation. It didn’t feel clique-y at all, and I managed to chat with a lot of different bloggers – some of whom I’d heard of, some of whom I hadn’t. It was a great intro to the convention, I thought.
The keynote talk – delivered by Will Schwalbe – started off really well. As a former head of some of the Big Six publishers, I was rather touched when he credited bloggers for saving the book industry. It was an exaggeration, sure, but a nice one. But then the room got rather tense when he criticized negative reviews (which, as Thea from The Book Smugglers put it later that day, should really be called “critical reviews”). I wasn’t too pleased, but as it was such a small part of his overall talk, it didn’t affect my overall positive opinion of the keynote.
Next up: decision time. The convention separated into Adult and YA and, as someone who reads and reviews both, I was super conflicted. In the end, I decided to head to the Adult Editors Insight panel and then go over to the YA Blogger panel. But once in settled into the first room I discovered – via twitter – that they were giving out a tonne of YA galleys in the other room. In the Adult room? One galley – which I really wanted, but those copies went fast! Luckily I picked up some of the YA titles when I went to the next session but most were already gone. I was later told that quite a few people at the YA panel had grabbed 2/3 copies of the same book while other people were still waiting in line, so I wasn’t the only one who missed out.
Anyhow, I enjoyed the Adult Editors panel – but, in retrospect, I realise that the panel should have been called a “buzz panel”. The editors offered no “insight” about how they work with bloggers, or how they view bloggers within their professional arena, but they did give me a bunch of titles to add to my goodreads wishlist.
The YA Blogger panel, on the other hand, was exactly what I was hoping for. The bloggers on the panel – Cindy from Nerdy Book Club, Thea from The Book Smugglers, and Danielle from There’s A Book – gave examples of the types of posts they do; talked how much work they put into their blogs; discussed critical reviews, the pressures of blogging, ARCs and other topics that were actually relevant to bloggers. Thea made some of the best points, I thought – probably because she said out loud everything I agree with: you are under no obligation to review a book, blog because you enjoy reading, and if you hate a book write a critical review – somebody has to.
After lunch, however, things went downhill.
The afternoon started with an ethics panel, chaired by Jane (from Dear Author). I expected great things from this, as I have always found Jane’s posts about the various legal issues surrounding blogging and publishing to be extremely informative. And while Jane was very well spoken and made many good points, I was very disappointed with the panel. For starters, the speakers didn’t seem to understand book blogging at all. They didn’t understand what an ARC was and, as such, gave what I believe to be incorrect information about the legal guidelines surrounding their receipt. (The Book Smugglers cover this in their BEA recap here.)
There was some interesting discussion about copyright of book covers – at least, interesting to this LLM student – but it wasn’t even remotely useful. Telling bloggers that they could be sued when we all know they never will be sued is completely useless. Also, considering the title of the panel included the word “Ethics”, I was hoping for more discussing about the grey moral areas of book blogging. Instead, it was all about FTC disclaimers.
The panels in the afternoon were even worse. I attended “Taking Your Online Presence Offline” which – as you’ll see from my tweets – was beyond bizarre. It was basically a promo panel for independent booksellers. All well and good, but not appropriate for the convention. I left early and didn’t bother attending the “Blogging Platforms” session – mostly because Aja’s tweets about it made me think I’d explode from a mad rage if I went in.

Bryant Park on one of the many horrifically hot days BEA fell on.
Then came “Extending the Reach of Your Blog Online”, which would have been so much better if it hadn’t mainly featured app developers and publishers trying to push their content. I thought that Mandy from The Well-Read Wife made some interesting suggestions about which social media platforms to explore. Many of these were new to me – like Vine, for example, which lets you make/edit/publish 6 second videos and tag them like tweets. The fact that, once again, no one talked about tumblr was both bizarre and disappointing.
To wrap it all up: the infamous speech by Randi Zuckerberg. It was a train wreck – or so I’m told. As she didn’t bring along a laptop (one had to be lifted from the crowd) she started a whole 30 minutes late. I stayed for the first few minutes then slipped out because a) nothing she said was at all relevant to me, and b) I had NYC to take advantage of! The one and only good thing about her talk? Chatting with the lovely Tania from Literary Cravings while we waited. So… thanks, Randi?
Bottom line: the conference was a great chance to meet other bloggers and to hear BNF bloggers discuss how they work and what they recommend. There was, unfortunately, a lot of industry-focused talk that felt like advertising and a disturbing amount of criticism of critical reviews. I really hope newer bloggers in attendance didn’t take that to heart!
Tune in tomorrow for the rest!

























