October 03, 2011
Results - 100 followers and 1 year blogoversary Giveaway
Hello everyone!
Numbers are out. We had nearly 50 participants, which is pretty big considering I had only 90 follower when I started the giveaway and a total of 183 numbers to draw.
First draw is for the Brazilian-Only prize, Sétimo by André Vianco.
And the winner is....
#93 Rolinka Nuse!
Second draw is for "The last will of Moira Leahy" a wonderful drama and beautiful book.
And the winner is...
#110 - Emily L.
And there are still two swag packs to give away...
The winners are...
#165 Laura H.
and
#173 Nick H.
Congratulations to all! \o/
But. I have a warning to make - our post offices are on strike (yes I know, awful) and international deliveries would take 40 days if they weren't, so you can expect the prizes for.. Erm. Christmas.
Winners - I will be contacting you to get your address data.
To everyone else, don't feel down, we will have several other giveaways, soon :)
September 30, 2011
Review: Nebador - Book 3 - The Selection - J. Z. Colby
First of all, please do not forget my Blogoversary and Followers giveaway (click on the button to the left) Remember, it's only until tomorrow (October first)!
Hello there, I'm back!
After the Mati scare, I grew fond of both Mati and Kibi. However Neti started to be unbearable. While during The Journey she showed she wasn‘t really interested on being a crew member, she also showed she was going to apply herself and try to get the most out of the studies and earn the 3 gold pieces. On The Selection, she starts whining because they are lost, running out of food or just about anything. She had her reasons, but she was annoying. More than annoying... I was deeply frustrated, she was being given knowledge way beyond people on that world and yet, she chose to just, basically, tag along.
Also, on this book, we lose several characters. Some at the selection: they go their way and we don‘t follow their stories, but one before that. It‘s a very sad and story-changing point, but since I wasn‘t very attached to him, so I didn‘t really feel it.
I don't usually post more than one review a week or so, unless I have several reviews late, but this time I waited until I had finished these two books to write their reviews.
I'm talking about The Selection, book 3 on the Nebador Series, which started with The Test, continued with The Journey and reaches a major plot point on The Selection.
The Selection picks up from where The Journey ended. I hope you have read The Test and The Journey or I might just spoil it for you. (So, SPOILER ALERT for The Journey!)
The Selection picks up from where The Journey ended. I hope you have read The Test and The Journey or I might just spoil it for you. (So, SPOILER ALERT for The Journey!)
After the Mati scare, I grew fond of both Mati and Kibi. However Neti started to be unbearable. While during The Journey she showed she wasn‘t really interested on being a crew member, she also showed she was going to apply herself and try to get the most out of the studies and earn the 3 gold pieces. On The Selection, she starts whining because they are lost, running out of food or just about anything. She had her reasons, but she was annoying. More than annoying... I was deeply frustrated, she was being given knowledge way beyond people on that world and yet, she chose to just, basically, tag along.
Also, on this book, we lose several characters. Some at the selection: they go their way and we don‘t follow their stories, but one before that. It‘s a very sad and story-changing point, but since I wasn‘t very attached to him, so I didn‘t really feel it.
So there are two major plot turners, one is the loss of that character, which changes some of the team, but not really everyone, and The Selection, which shows the best in all of them.
I think the best "pre-selection" part (because the selection itself only happens around half the bok) is the monastery. Even if some of them are a bit reluctant to meditate and even accept the required silence, eventually they are all in awe with the ritual, the wonders they see while there, the beautiful place and how diferent and benevolent these religious people are, compared to the regular people of their world and, specially, to the religious orders they‘ve known before.
After a while, you can‘t help it, it‘s the selection. All of my hunches were right, specially after two things that happened and made it all very obvious.
And then, finally, we get to meet Ilika‘s ship: Manessa.
I think the best "pre-selection" part (because the selection itself only happens around half the bok) is the monastery. Even if some of them are a bit reluctant to meditate and even accept the required silence, eventually they are all in awe with the ritual, the wonders they see while there, the beautiful place and how diferent and benevolent these religious people are, compared to the regular people of their world and, specially, to the religious orders they‘ve known before.
After a while, you can‘t help it, it‘s the selection. All of my hunches were right, specially after two things that happened and made it all very obvious.
And then, finally, we get to meet Ilika‘s ship: Manessa.
Of course, as we knew, Manessa is actually no ordinary ship, it's (or she's) a spaceship.
The ship is wonderful and all very sci-fi but without losing touch of things us mortals need (rooms, bathroom, kitchen), which pleased me. Kibi and Ilika get to share a room - and there we see a few lessons for young adults, which is cool, but everyone else separates (boys to one room and girls to another) I guess because Ilika and Kibi are "grown ups" - they're both much older than the other crew members, from what I remember, since Kibi is 17 or 18 and Ilika is on his early 20's.
I loved watching them learning to be good to the world - and when they could or couldn't help, as humans. I loved watching them lean to deal with the ship - that was pretty cool - and how to deal with societies and what they could or couldn't do as crew members.
And then I felt the book was just too short. It wasn't, really, short. I just wanted to read more, I wanted to follow them and see more of them. I'm dying to hear and see them interacting with other people, with people much more educated and from other worlds, specially if you consider Ilika isn't the most educated from where he comes from and he is the most educated where they are... I hope everything gets well explored, way beyond their boundaries - and Ilika's as well. I want to see their relationships develop - or not - as well.
I'm very curious to see the rest of the series - I heard there will be over 10 books, and I believe it, there is so much to tell, so much to explore! The universe and beyond!
Go see for yourself. You can buy Nebador Book Three at Amazon (paperback or Kindle) and several other places.
I loved watching them learning to be good to the world - and when they could or couldn't help, as humans. I loved watching them lean to deal with the ship - that was pretty cool - and how to deal with societies and what they could or couldn't do as crew members.
And then I felt the book was just too short. It wasn't, really, short. I just wanted to read more, I wanted to follow them and see more of them. I'm dying to hear and see them interacting with other people, with people much more educated and from other worlds, specially if you consider Ilika isn't the most educated from where he comes from and he is the most educated where they are... I hope everything gets well explored, way beyond their boundaries - and Ilika's as well. I want to see their relationships develop - or not - as well.
I'm very curious to see the rest of the series - I heard there will be over 10 books, and I believe it, there is so much to tell, so much to explore! The universe and beyond!
Go see for yourself. You can buy Nebador Book Three at Amazon (paperback or Kindle) and several other places.
September 26, 2011
Review: Nebador - The Journey - J. Z. Colby
First of all, please do not forget my Blogoversary and Followers giveaway (click on the button to the left) Remember it runs only until next saturday!
Hello everyone!
I just recently finished the second and third books on the Nebador series, called "The Journey" and "The Selection", but I am here today to talk about "The Journey".
After your read Nebador Book One: The Test, you are left with a sense that it may be grand, but you're not quite sure. You like it and you think it's very informative and interesting - but's not quite loveable. You have several characters: one ship’s captain, one innkeeper's daughter, nine ex-slaves and several secondary characters like Doti, the healer, Pica the painter, the baker, Sata’s parents and so on. It’s even quite hard to remember who are the boys and the girls, since their names are so alike.
Everything changes on The Journey. Suddenly, we understand them. We follow them around their country, their realm, and see them interacting with the several experiences in life – from different people to different ideas, from customs to dangers, from trusting people unconditionally to weighing your options.
We follow along their lessons of math, English, logic, trigonometry, geometry and, well, things that I honestly barely remembered from high school. But that’s not the most important part, and I’m sure Ilika thought that way as well, the most important part was to see how they interact with the world. Or else he would have just taken them somewhere and stayed there until they were all done.
Around half the book, we can be pretty sure who we are leaving behind and who’s going to the ship. We have one innkeeper’s daughter and 8 former slaves, all wanting to get into Ilika’s ship, which we are sure isn’t like a normal ship and, well, most likely not even from this world. And yet, there’s place for only 5 crew members, so 4 of them must go.
I had only one or two doubts on who was going, after a while, but near the end J. Z. Colby almost had me confused: he almost made me lose one of my favorite characters and one I was sure to get in the ship…
You may relate more to one or another character, but their strengths and weaknesses aren’t much obvious, they are subtle. You can see who’s strong in math and who’s strong in English, you can also notice who’s a strong leader (like Boro and Kibi) and who’s made for more following than leading, who’s made for more dreaming than doing, who’s more emotional, who’s cool and rational.
Until the end of the book, I finally could tell who was a boy and who was a girl (with one very small exception – I couldn’t tell who Rini was until around half of “The Selection”), I could tell where couples were forming and where they were set apart. I could tell who’s making in the ship and who wasn’t (at least have a very strong guess) and I could sense their differences. They weren’t just young teens, they weren’t ex-slaves or innkeeper’s daughters anymore, they were people of the world. They were people of the universe, even, as they knew much more than most people on their world knew.
I had only one or two doubts on who was going, after a while, but near the end J. Z. Colby almost had me confused: he almost made me lose one of my favorite characters and one I was sure to get in the ship…You may relate more to one or another character, but their strengths and weaknesses aren’t much obvious, they are subtle. You can see who’s strong in math and who’s strong in English, you can also notice who’s a strong leader (like Boro and Kibi) and who’s made for more following than leading, who’s made for more dreaming than doing, who’s more emotional, who’s cool and rational.
Until the end of the book, I finally could tell who was a boy and who was a girl (with one very small exception – I couldn’t tell who Rini was until around half of “The Selection”), I could tell where couples were forming and where they were set apart. I could tell who’s making in the ship and who wasn’t (at least have a very strong guess) and I could sense their differences. They weren’t just young teens, they weren’t ex-slaves or innkeeper’s daughters anymore, they were people of the world. They were people of the universe, even, as they knew much more than most people on their world knew.
Also we are introduced to a new character, Misa. She's a young girl, younger than the ex-slaves and innkeeper's daughter, Misa is a survivor on a major tragedy the team walks through, they save her and since she has no family, she stays with them until the very end - the separation. She's the only one not being considered to Ilika's staff, but she's also picking up some of the lessons and all, so she's getting something out of everything.
Ilika, too, was changed by them, as he should be. Kibi, more than the others, I suppose, which strikes me as slightly unfair – she had a certain spot on the ship. The fact that her abilities could also be used (leadership and people skills) were secondary to Ilika’s affection to her, so there were 4 spots left for everyone else. But ok. I can deal with that. Ilika was also changed by the situations. One of the harder ones being Lumber Town, I believe, and the cave during high tide, where they were under tremendous stress. He could deal with it, but he also had to direct them and that was harder than just dealing with the situation.
I thought the book was great, it was exciting and everything could happen – because they were free. They were off to an exciting and dangerous world and they were friends. Even if they had their diferences, if they had any issues, they'd work it out or work around them. Some of them weren't fit for ship crew, but that doesn't mean they aren't spectacular human beings.
I just now, looking for links and images for this post, found the "Deep Learning Notes". I love them. They make me think but don't give answers and they would've been very interesting to read while I read the book (at each chapter, for example). If you are interested in learning (and, if you liked the Nebador Series I am sure you do), I strongly advise you to use them.
After I finished it, I was supposed to read another book, but I rationalized (somehow) that I had to read The Selection. And I advise you all to do the same - buy all 3 books together (or the "Nebador Trilogy" version), or, better yet, make it 4, since book 4 is out too and read them all. It is all worth it. I want to read it all over again now... But maybe some other time, after I work out part of my TBR pile.
Also, on a side note, I feel much more attached to this book now that I wrote the review. Thinking about the book and researching to tell you about it, made me think about the subtle details on the plot and read the Depp Learning Notes and the short stories on the series' website. It's another thing that makes me glad about having a blog - you end up loving your loved books even more.
September 21, 2011
Unread Interview and Giveaway - Matt Xell
First of all, please do not forget my Blogoversary and Followers giveaway (click on the button to the left)
Please welcome Matt Xell for this week's Unread Interview! Matt is promoting his book, Tower of Parlen Min!
Unread Interview is a series where I feature authors whose books I couldn't accept for review because of time or logistics issues.
Summary: Ves Asirin wins a trip to the Tower of Parlen Min. There, with 19 other children, he competes in the Sword Challenge; a series of puzzles and tasks, for $12 million. As fantastic and glorious as the tower seems to be, Ves finds that it keeps a dark and secret history that he has been connected to for over 150 years, a secret that will define his destiny ... if he can escape 'The shadow'.
It can be bought on several online vendors: Amazon (where it was split into 3, for the kindle, but don't let that hold you back), Smashwords and Lulu.
Also, I will be giving away 3 copies of Tower of Parlen Min to 3 lucky readers - all I ask of you is that you comment with your name and email (use the Disqus name/email option) and I will draw a number with random.org on October 14th.
This post is part of a Virtual Book Tour, you can keep up with all the posts at the Facebook Event or Facebook Page.
Have you ever wanted
to be a writer?
To be honest, if you
went back in time and told me back in Junior High that I'd be an Author, I'd
probably die of shock or try to kill you. I'd always liked fantasy literature and the visual arts, and
back then I used to do a lot of penciling (I was terrible at it) and what
little writing I did were comic book plots. What I wanted to be when I grew up
was be an IT speacialist; a software programmer or a web developer. So, no,
novel writing or any serious kind of writing was never on my life-time-to-do-list.
When did you start
writing "seriously"?
After I failed the
ninth grade (why, yes, I did). After that year, my self-esteem and much of the
ego and personality attached to it at the time took a massive dip and so too
did my love for expressing myself using art -- I absolutely loathed having my
artwork criticised.
My friends weren't
interested in my written comic book plots so no one criticized them like my
art. I turned to writing more and more as the years went by, my handwriting
became more and more minuscule so I could better hide my work, so small that
even I can't read my earlier works. By the time I was in my final year of High
School, I'd filled out several 180 page A4 notebooks with comic book plots and
scripts. At the time I didn't know there was a proper format for scripting, so
I wrote in novel prose. So all my earlier works read like novellas.
Do you read much?
I'd say a fair bit.
I'd say I've only read about 50 to 70 books in my life. Which is why being a
'natural' (he boasted) at writing when I've read so little is just as
surprising to me as it is to anyone else.
What kind of books do
you usually read?
Young adult fantasy
novels (Harry Potter, Hunger Games, Percy Jackson, The Golden Compass, A Series
of Unfortunate Events, Artimus Fowl; and old stuff like Enid Blyton's Famous
Five and Secret Seven, The Hardy Boys, Oliver Twist, Huckleberry Finn and
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory ) and Adult mystery/suspense thrillers ( Tom
Clancy's Rainbow Six, Dan Brown's Angels and Demons, The DaVinchi Code
and The Lost Symbol and Stieg Larsons Millenium Trilogy). My Favourite book
though is surprisingly a french romantic novel set in during and after World
War 1 called A Very Long Engagement by Sebastien Japrisot.
What are your
favorite or least favorite scenes to write?
My favorite scenes to
write are action scenes; realistic and gritty, play-by-play, choreographed
action scenes. I'd say those are my forte. I love writing mystery and suspense
scenes a lot as well.
My least favorite
scenes to write are drama and romantic scenes. Drama, because being partly
introverted for most my life, I can't say I know various kinds and types of
people well enough, and what their emotional and psychological reactions to
certain scenarios, themes, conditions and settings. So for most of my writing,
I'd say I draw a lot of influence from what I've seen from drama movies (I saw
a lot of Academy Award winning movies that were boring during the writing of Tower
of Parlen Min). Luckily a of the characters in my book kinda wrote
themselves, and so I never know if I did a good enough job with the drama in Tower
of Parlen Min.
Romance, obviously
because I'm a man (too much on the masculine side I think), so I can't say I
understand even a quarter of why Twilight and other paranormal romances
sell as well as they do. But I want me some of those millions so you can bet
that when I figure out that secret, I'm taking over the genre :)
Do you relate more to
any of your characters?
Yes. In all my
stories, my main protagonist is somewhat a vague version of myself. So I relate
with Ves the most in Tower of Parlen Min
Why?
In every story I
write I always like to ask an
important question and hopefully get an answer at the end of the story.
I feel I wrote The Narrow Escapes of Ves Asirin to ask, 'what is the
meaning and point of life if we are just going to die at the end
of it all?'. And I feel Ves and Zenis are the best characters I was ever going
to write that would help me answer this question. Because Ves, when he was at
the orphanage, was pretty much living a drab, boring and uneventful life until
he went to the Tower. There he competed in the Sword Challenge, saw many
fantastic things like Jinn fire falling from the sky, interacted with the
Canids (sentient wolves), saw Wicca (magic), saw ghosts and spectres,
made friends for the very first time in his life, and found that even he was
not as ordinary or rather as sub-normal as he thought he was. For the very
first time ever, he was vividly aware of his life and the world's wonders ...
then of course came The Shadow which is in the business of killing and
taking life on a massive scale.
Which genre do you
feel it would be a challenge to write?
Romance of course and
comedy. The reason I think comedy would be a challenge is because it's
subjective to certain cultures, people and languages.
What inspires you?
And I'd say a lot of
what influences my writing isn't from novels and books but from art, movies,
comics, video games, manga (japanese comics) and anime (japanese animation).
And how's your
writing environment - music, place, etc.?
I'm not so much
strict or partial on enviroment. I think can I write in any place peaceful
enough and provided I have the materials I need. Solitude and silence is a
requirement only when writing serious and dark scenes, a lot of the
mystery/supense scenes. The music is dependant on the specific genre I'm
writing; for Tower of Parlen Min I listened to a lot of alternative rock
like Placebo, AFI, Asian Kung-Fu Generation and Billy Talent.
What would you say
about the book - your words, no blurbs! - to convince someone to read your
book?
If you're bored to
death during this summer and want a temporary escape into a fantastic world,
get a copy of Tower of Parlen, it's a thrilling 'rollercoaster' of a read,
filled with action, adventure, suspense, mystery and horror. If it's your kind
of book, it'll keep you hooked to the end!
What are your plans
for the future, writing-wise? New books, sequels, publishing deals, etc.
The current state of
both the traditional publishing and
self-publishing industries scare me a whole lot. And this is because the
internet and social networking are pretty much changing how content is being
delivered through all media, and everyone is pretty much both a consumer and a
producer at this point. So at the moment I'm an Indie author and I'm publishing
and marketing Tower of Parlen Min with a few good friends. I'm going to
hold onto the rights of the book for a long while until a compromise between
the two sides of the industries is found. I'm looking into distribution
licenses and how I can pitch that to interested publishers as opposed to
selling the rights outright, because I don't (I won't say never) think that's
going to happen.
I'm still plotting
the second book in The Narrow Escapes of Ves Asirin series; Eclipse
Over Atuwis Wood. I think I'll start writing that in april. And I'll be
releasing a lot of novellas based in Everlon (Ves' world) which will be
introducing some characters that feature in later books of the series, some
from the series distant past. Some will be free for download (or set your own
price) and some will sell for only 99 cents.
Thanks for your time and patience with me (as I had this interview for a month in my inbox *shame on me*)!
You can also find Matt Xell at several social networks (and he's a really nice guy): Facebook, Goodreads, Twitter, Formspring and, of course, his blog.
September 10, 2011
Unread Interview - Kevin Newman
Hello! Before we start, we have a giveaway up and running, click on the button to the left and participate, it is worth it! The swag pack is beautiful, but I don't have pictures, sorry :S
Please welcome Kevin Newsman for this week's Unread Interview! Kevin is promoting his latest book, All Night By The Rose!
Unread Interview is a series where I feature authors whose books I couldn't accept for review because of time or logistics issues.
From Amazon: In this collection of short stories we are introduced to a city of depravity, a misanthrope who is compelled to blast away others’ delusions of grandeur, a psych ward terrorized by an author, the entropic boredom at the heart of a car plant, a man who finds himself caught in the act of becoming a spider, a building with character encompassing several eras, a fellow who must come to terms with how he treated his brother, two love stories that defy expectations, two tales of the fantastic to be found in the Middle-East, childlike theism and a trailer park in space.
Tell us a bit about your book (s).
I have two. One is a free ebook collection of short stories called “All Night by the Rose”. Here’s the blurb:
In this collection of short stories we are introduced to a city of depravity, a misanthrope who is compelled to blast away others’ delusions of grandeur, a psych ward terrorized by an author, the entropic boredom at the heart of a car plant, a man who finds himself caught in the act of becoming a spider, a building with character encompassing several eras, a fellow who must come to terms with how he treated his brother, two love stories that defy expectations, two tales of the fantastic to be found in the Middle-East, childlike theism and a trailer park in space.
The other is a novel I wrote and published promotional copies of in 2010. Here’s its blurb:
Jude Pender has troubles managing his emotions. Case in point: Cecile. He thinks he can bury his thoughts and that the rest of his neurons will naturally grow around them, leaving an obelisk that he can visit as if in a dream. He's wrong, and since he doesn't know when to give up, the result will be an explosive release after a series of betrayals.
Have you ever wanted to be a writer? When did you start writing "seriously"?
Yes, I’ve always wanted to be a serious writer but I wasn’t always seriously ‘at it’. There was a brief period after high school where I worked in the corporate world and I think it prevented me from writing as prolifically as I do now. In the last five years I’ve increased my pace and abilities due to the fact that my main focus is on writing.
Do you read much? What kind of books do you usually read?
I do read a lot, but there are periods in my life where I went without reading. That said, I’m still a pretty prolific reader. I read all kinds of books from classics to what an old teacher called ‘mind candy’. It depends on my mood really. I think the greatest writer humanity has ever produced is Yukio Mishima, so when I went a great serious read that’s where I go. But if I want something light and entertaining I read speculative fiction.
What are your favorite or least favorite scenes to write?
My favourite scenes are ones with large groups with lots of dialogue, usually at a party. My writing is pretty minimalistic and dialogue-heavy. A close second is scenes heavy with imagery. My least favourite? Exposition and I avoid it as much as possible.
Do you relate more to any of your characters? Why?
I relate to almost all of them. I’m a pretty empathic guy, and I really need to be with my characters as they mostly write my stories for me.
Which genre do you feel it would be a challenge to write?
I’d have to say the Vampire sub-genre because, so far, the only time I’ve seen it done well was when Joss Whedon was doing Buffy/Angel.
What inspires you? And how's your writing environment - music, place, etc.?
The forest inspires me, being surrounded by it really does help me write.
What would you say about the book - your words, no blurbs! - to convince someone to read your book?
For the short stories, I’d say that I take life and hold it up to a dark, shattered mirror. For my novel, Id say that I’ve taken several writing techniques and melded them into a story about how we treat one another and wrapped that into a plot that is both melodic and full of action.
What are your plans for the future, writing-wise? New books, sequels, publishing deals, etc.
The novel is the first part of a series and I have several other novels on the go, both part of that series or separate.
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