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!
The 2010 24-hour Readathon!
I had not planned on signing up for a readathon this weekend – but that was because I didn’t know about it! The last readathon I took part in, I had exams on my plate – but for this 24-hour-readathon I have less to do and more time to devote to reading. Not to mention my eyes kinda hurt, so no tv for me!
Dewey’s readathon just started (oh, about 2 hours ago), so there is still plenty of time to sign up!
Instead of what I did last time – a new post for every update – I am going to keep the whole readathon to this post. Mini-challenges, updates – the whole shebang.
So, what’s on my TBR pile for the next 24 hours?
- A Madness of Angels by Kate Griffin – Yep, I am still reading this. I don’t actually expect to finish it any time soon either!
- Dark Life by Kat Falls – I have wanted to read this for SO LONG, I am almost nervous to start!
- Burned by P.C. and Kristin Cast – Why oh why do I continue to read these books?
- The Eternal Ones by Kirsten Miller
- Friday Night Bites by Chloe Neill
- Stargazer by Claudia Gray
How many books do you have in your TBR pile for the next 24 hours? 6
Do you have any goals for the read-a-thon? To enjoy myself as much as possible. If I sit around focussing on deadlines, I will just end up reading for speed – which is never fun!
If you’re a veteran read-a-thoner, any advice for people doing this for the first time? I am not exactly a veteran, but I have participated before. Don’t go too crazy with the mini-challenges. They such up every drop of energy and then you end up posting them AFTER the deadline. If something is going to interrupt your reading flow, just skip it! Also, stick to YA. You will get through them faster and feel like you have actually accomplished something.
Hosted by Miss Wisabus – What were some of your favorite children’s books when you were younger? Do you have any new favorites now that you’re an adult? Have you included any children’s or YA titles in your Read-A-Thon stack this year?
I was a huge fan of the Animorphs series by K.A. Applegate. I started reading them when they came out, and read every single one as it was published – 55 books + extra super-length special books. I was a HUGE fan. Of course, I also read the American Girl books (such a shame about that company being bought up by Matel) and – as a tween/teen – the Harry Potter books consumed my soul. I read the first four about 20 times, and was one of the types that would camp out in front a bookstore to get a copy. Why am I speaking in past tense? I still am that type!
Actually, the HP were the only kids books I read as a teen. YA was not big when I was a YA, but I think I am making up for it now! 4 of the books on my Readathon TBR pile are YA!
And with that answered, I am off to buy unhealthy energy drinks and healthy snacks
Hosted by Crystal @ My Reading Room – Oh, how I do love pictures of my shelves/ And how I love to see pics of other peoples’ shelves – Enjoy!
I’m afraid that, because of my limited shelf space, I only keep TBR books on my shelves. If I start putting them away, I forget that I own them and never read them. So let’s look first at my Genre books – YA and UF:
And a few of my non-genre books, which are so rarely appreciated here on DBD. These are actually my favourite books – nicely shelved together for people to fawn over. You’ll notice a lot of Ann Patchett and Javier Marias. They are two of my very favourite authors and I never get a chance to show them love… so here it is! LOTS OF LOVE. ♥
Hosted by Iheartmonster – Fiction in under 100 words. This ended a lot darker than it started out – listening to Alanis Morissette does that to me:
I knew we would meet again. Perhaps introduced at a party, both of us eager to say “What was your name again?” As if we didn’t know.
Did that hurt? Good. Tell your mother I never liked her.
But attending your funeral is something else. People stand crying around your casket, looking at me with distaste when I check my blackberry. I guess can only fake so much.
Oh, by the way, I took the dog we got together to the sermon. He didn’t budge when your name was read. Guess he doesn’t miss you either.
And since I was inspired, here it is in image form:
Foyles Halloween Event: Demons vs. Angels
I literally just found out about a fantastic Halloween YA Event at FOYLES – there will be authors! An Angels vs. Demons debate! Prizes! Signed books! And copies of Ghost Town by Rachel Caine! I wish, wish, wish I was going – but since I can’t, you all should and then report back. At least then I can attend vicariously. ♥ Here are the details:
FOYLES Fear Fest – Demons Vs Angels: With Sarwat Chadda, Sam Enthoven, William Hussey, Cliff Mcnish and L.A Weatherly
Sunday 31 October 2pm
Celebrity chat show ghost ‘Jeremy Vile’ invites an audience of teen horror seekers to a special one-off Demons vs Angels themed debate with guest authors Sarwat Chadda, Sam Enthoven, William Hussey, Cliff Mcnish and L.A Weatherly.
Hosted in our very special literary graveyard, the event will be followed by a signing and creepy canapé reception.
With deluxe goody bags for all attendees and prizes to be won on the day. We will also have exclusive early release copies of Ghost Town by Rachel Caine, the Ninth Morganville Vampires book. Plus a chance to win an exclusive signed copies hamper, which will include books signed by Lauren Kate, Jenn Lynn Barnes, and the only UK signed copies of Becca Fitzpatrick’s Crescendo.
This event will be a lively chat show style debate, so come with your questions prepared!
The event is FREE, but you need to reserve your place by emailing events@foyles.co.uk
Christine Johnson talks Wolves and Weres
I am thrilled to introduce Christine Johnson, author of Claire de Lune, as she shares her thoughts on wolves and werewolves.
Warning: This post contains *extremely minor* spoilers. If you’re very, very sensitive tothat sort of thing, hurry and read the book before you look at this post.

So, when Kay suggested that today’s Claire in the UK Week guest post be about my thoughts on werewolves/real wolves, I knew immediately that I wanted to write about exactly that. I’ve had a lot of opportunity to talk about why the wolves are a female-only species, and the particular lore that plot-twist engenders, but I haven’t really gotten to discuss how the pack acts in their wolf form.
A few people have commented to me that there seemed to be a lot of actual wolf behavior in Claire de Lune and they’re absolutely right. When I wrote about the wolves – especially during the scenes when the pack is together – I relied heavily on information about grey wolf behavior. In fact, it was most common for me to be working on Claire de Lune with three windows open on the computer. One word processing document for the actual novel, one Internet page with grey wolf behavior and a lunar phase calendar. For the wolf-stuff, I have several sites I really like – one has diagrams of physical postures used by wolves, a couple of others described pack interactions and behaviors. There were books and articles that were really helpful for creating a base knowledge, but for quick reference, the Internet was definitely my friend.
In Claire’s world, the werewolves communicate non-verbally when they’re in their wolf-forms, the same way that grey wolves would in the natural world. I tried to anchor the pack’s “conversations” and interactions in real wolf behavior, elaborating and embroidering from there. Ear positions, body postures, snarls and tail position stand in for dialogue tags. No one can “say” anything if the communication is non-verbal, but bared teeth or a lowered, cowering posture have just as much impact. For me, keeping the werewolf’s behavior rooted in actual wolf behavior kept the pack’s interactions and decisions feeling honest. Fitting the magic into the empty spaces made it seem smooth to me – made the Claire’s world feel internally logical and consistent, which is so critical in a paranormal novel.
Part of what makes paranormal so interesting, so evocative, is the possibility that it *could* be happening. It’s the “normal” part of paranormal. It’s not something that takes place on Kronos 9, it takes place here. With humans. It explains the mysteries and oddities that science hasn’t neatly slotted away. Paranormal novels peek at the shadows under the beds. They have a more interesting explanation for that odd, middle of the night noise on the roof. But it all starts with the real, solid, known world. And that’s what I wanted to do with the werewolves in Claire’s world. I wanted them to be a real animal species that was *more*. That was beyond. That was literally – Para. Normal.
It made sense to me that if wolves and dogs are related species that share many of the same behaviors (trufax, both of those,) then perhaps werewolves would be a sort of bridge species that would have characteristics of both wolves and humans, plus some magic thrown in, because, really, who can resist that? So, in their wolf form, they behave much as wolves do, and in their human form, they act like any other person, and the ability to switch back and forth between those forms creates the opportunity – the need – for magic, which opens the door for things like the ability to create fire from nothing, or the special talent of hearing humans who are miles and miles and miles away.
Part of writing is trusting your instincts, I think. Researching and searching and thinking until you come across something that just fits into the story, and then building around that. Stacking the next “right” stone on top of the first one until you’ve got a novel built. (Then, of course, you have to tear the whole thing down and rebuild – aka revisions – but that’s another story.) Putting real grey wolf behavior into Claire de Lune was one of those perfect stones, for me.
Thanks so much for sharing, Christine! I thought the wolf-detail in Claire de Lune was spot on and, as a wolf-lover, was really impressed. I also love the idea of werewolves as a kind of intermediary species between wolves and humans – never thought of it that way before. ♥
- US Cover
- UK Cover
If you want to know more about Christine and her books, check out her website here! Also check out some of the other Claire in the UK blog tour stops – Christine has done a bunch of fab guest posts this week.
Review: Forgive My Fins by Tera Lynn Childs
Forgive My Fins by Tera Lynn ChildsSeries: Fins #1
Published by HarperCollins
Pages: 293
Genres: Middle Grade, Paranormal YA, Young Adult
Source: Purchased myself
Add to Goodreads
Rating:
Lily Sanderson has a secret, and it’s not that she has a huge crush on gorgeous swimming god Brody Bennett, who makes her heart beat flipper-fast. Unrequited love is hard enough when you’re a normal teenage girl, but when you’re half human, half mermaid like Lily, there’s no such thing as a simple crush.
When Lily’s attempt to win Brody’s love leads to a tsunami-sized case of mistaken identity, she is in for a tidal wave of relationship drama, and she finds out, quick as a tailfin flick, that happily-ever-after never sails quite as smoothly as you planned.
Thoughts: Wow, is that summary ever… perky! Let me confirm – the writing in Forgive My Fins is about as cheesy and pun-ridden as its summary. Very cute, and very simple to read. If you know a Middle Grader who wishes she were a teen, well, she’d love this book.
Forgive my Fins was really quite cute. It was as Technicolor as its cover and was set in a fishy world that was extremely unique. Think The Little Mermaid, but in jeans and wearing lip gloss. Fun Fun Fun! I really enjoyed the adorable verse and could have swum right into it, had the pages allowed!
But, God, were the characters – and plot – ever simple: X loves Y who is in love with Z (who is kinda annoying). But wait! Y sees the error of her ways after spending time with X. And they all swim off happily ever after. The End!
Admittedly, this could be done brilliantly, but in Forgive My Fins it was just done… simply. Nothing truly bad ever happens to any of the characters, and reaching the final happy ending simply took patience. No baddies running in to ruin the day, just a girl who needed time to to come to her senses. This – along with the writing – is what made it a Middle Grade book for me.
On the other hand, Lily is actually a pretty fair (albeit fishy) representation of a typical teenager. She thinks she knows what she wants – she even claims to be in love – but she hasn’t a clue. Even though this ended with an OTP, it does remind you that not all teen love is meant to last – half the time it only exists in your head!
Bottom line? Very fun, light-hearted read. If you are looking for something to perk you up, look no further! Just don’t expect a serious discussion about the complete and utter decimation of the world’s fisheries… or a serious discussion about anything, really.
To those of you who have already read it: What was with that last chapter??? Bizarre.
Monday Reading (Oct. 4th, 2010)
It’s Monday! What are you reading this week? is a weekly event now hosted by One Persons Journey Through a World Of Books where we discuss our week of reading!
Currently Reading:
- A Madness of Angels by Kate Griffin – This is fantastic, but OMG so dense! I am only about 120 pages in and have already read about two novels worth!
- Claire de Lune by Christine Johnson – Really enjoying this. I love verses where the supernatural is known
Finished this week:
- Forgive My Fins by Tera Lynn Childs – Absolutely adorable, but a little simple. Almost MG instead of YA.
















