Top 5 covers of 2019

This week’s edition of Shanah’s Top 5 Tuesday, we’re talking about the best covers of 2019. I’m glad it specified this year, otherwise I probably would have carted out 5 covers that I’ve been talking about since they were first published. Looking into 2019 only made me do some digging, looking at both books I’ve read and haven’t read so far this year. Enough rambling, let’s look at pretty books!

 

VIGILANCE
by Robert Jackson Bennett

Okay, so maybe this one isn’t necessarily pretty, but it’s intense and draws my eye. And I’m not a gun nut. I don’t own gun. I’ve only fired a gun 2 or 3 times on a farm, and only ever at inanimate targets. But still, there’s something about this cover. The background is great, but I think it’s the text that really pulls me in. It’s simple and printed small, which you don’t see that often. It almost looks like it could be corporate branding for a gun company. I just love it.

 

WICKED SAINTS
by Emily A. Duncan

I like the mixed media on this. Blood drip, monotone city scape, and a sky made of crumpled paper.

 

DARK AGE
by Pierce Brown

Yup! Managed to squeeze in Red Rising. To be fair, this is very cookie cutter to the rest of the series, but it’s such a strong design in the first place, and the when you put them all in a row…

 

THERE WILL COME A DARKNESS
by Katy Rose Pool

A feast for the eyes. It’s not of those covers that you can’t actually take all in at once. You need to look at it piece by piece or it’s just all going over your head.

 

DARKDAWN
by Jay Kristoff

Maybe it’s only on this list because it’s my most anticipated read of the year, but LOOK AT IT! A lot of people will say it’s not as good as the UK cover, and while I’m not sure if I agree with that or not, this is still something to behold. Wonderful illustration and you just know that cover is telling you all kinds of things, but we’re just too blind to truly see any of it.

Fun fact about this post: Cruel irony has  Darkdawn sitting on my shelf until I can get through an ARC. WHY?! WHY MUST I PROCRASTINATE SO MUCH!??!?!

Are You Working for YOUR Dream? | Motivational Monday

In the course of my day, I’ll usually hear someone say the words: Living the dream.

But are you living your dream? Or your boss’s? Or the dream of the people that own the company you work for?

Maybe it’s both. If your dream is to have a decent job, a family, and maybe a boat, maybe you’re already living your dream.

If you work a job that isn’t your dream, but then go home and grind on your true dream, then that job is financing your dream. You’re not living your dream yet, but you’re on your way.

But if you aspire to something more, working a job you hate, then going home and doing nothing, you’re only serving the dreams of others. Not yours. And if you aren’t working for your dream, who will?

If it’s your dream, you have to go out and get it.

Go get it.

Top 5 Books I Don’t Talk About Enough

There are the books we talk about all the time, endlessly, to anyone who’ll listen (and even some who won’t.) And then there are books that we absolutely loved, but never seem to come up in conversation. They easily slip our minds when coming up with lists of top books, despite great they really are. And those are the books we’re talking about in this week’s edition of Shanah’s Top 5 Tuesday.

 

Foundryside
by Robert Jackson Bennett

The characters, the heist plot-line, and the magic system. THE MAGIC SYSTEM! Can’t wait for more from this series and this author.

 

Station Eleven
by Emily St. John Mandel

This book gives some incredible insights to our world and will have you asking yourself some questions about what’s truly important.

 

Grim Lovelies
by Megan Shepherd

There’s me and Meeghan and… that’s about it. We love this book, even though we’re two of the very few people on the planet shouting from the rooftops about it. It’s Cinderella meets Harry Potter and it’s incredible.

 

The Bear and the Nightingale
by Katherine Arden

This book gave me my very first glimpse into Russian folklore and I loved it. Nothing will stop me from returning to read the rest of this series.

 

They Both Die at the End
by Adam Silvera

This is another read that makes you question what’s important in life. Makes you think while feeling all the feels. Simply fantastic.

Fun fact about this post: I chose to write this post over going to bed early. We’ll see if it was the right decision.

Top 5 Tuesday – Dystopian Books

This week’s edition of Shanah’s Top 5 Tuesday talks about the best dystopian books. I’ve always had a general idea of what dystopian is, but that wasn’t good enough. What if I left books off the list that should have been on, or included ones that didn’t belong there because my understanding was lacking. So I looked it up, and here’s what I learned.

Dystopian is the opposite of Utopian. Should have been painfully obvious, but never occurred to me.

Great, but still didn’t feel all that clear.

As bad as can be; characterized by human misery.

Okay! This I can work with. Wait. Does that mean the world we live in is closer to being a dystopia than a utopia…….

 

The Warehouse
by Rob Hart

This is one of my most recent reads (just posted a review on it today!) and it blew me away. Hard to say if it’s dystopian by the classic definition, but there’s definitely a butt-load of human suffering in The Warehouse world.

 

Wool
by Hugh Howey

In the world of Wool, everyone lives in massive underground silos and they’re all lied to about the real state of the world. This actually started as a short story and people who read it liked it so much they demanded more of the story.

 

Station Eleven
by Emily St. John Mandel

Most of the world is dead. How much more miserable could that possibly be? Except in Station Eleven people are able to find happiness in one form or another, in a world completely different from the one they were born in.

 

 

Hunger Games
by Suzanne Collins

Certainly not the first, but it seems to me that The Hunger Games trilogy is the ultimate example of a dystopian novel.

 

 

Fahrenheit 451
by Ray Bradbury

 

I think the most interesting thing about this book is how close our world is to this one. Sure, our firemen still fight fires instead of creating them, but we’re surrounded by screens at all times, and it seems like there are less and less readers all the time.

Fun fact about this post: Of course I wanted to include Ready Player One and Red Rising on this list, but I think they might have to be retired from Top 5 Tuesdays….

Down the TBR Hole #6

Down The TBR Hole is a meme, hosted @ Lost in a Story, that revolves around cleansing your TBR of all those books you’re never going to read and sort through it all to know what’s actually on there.

It works like this:

  • Go to your goodreads to-read shelf.
  • Order on ascending date added.
  • Take the first 5 (or 10 (or even more!) if you’re feeling adventurous) books. Of course if you do this weekly, you start where you left off the last time.
  • Read the synopses of the books
  • Decide: keep it or should it go?

ALL SYSTEMS RED
by Marth Wells

This has been on my TBR for a while and it’s right up my alley. Combine that with hearing nothing but good things since it came out, this one is a no-brainer…

IT STAYS!

 

INKHEART
by Cornelia Funke

This one is too great of a concept to drop off my list. I loved the movie, even though it didn’t do well and they never made a sequel, so as far as this one goes…

IT STAYS!

 

IRON GOLD 
by Pierce Brown

Ha! Do I even need to say anything with this one? It’s part of one of my favourite series, I already own a copy, and…

IT STAYS!

 

THE MAZE RUNNER
by James Dashner

Ugh. This one is tough. I’m not chomping at the bit for this one, but I can’t seem to cut it from my list. So, for now, tentatively…

IT STAYS!

 

SEA OF RUST
by C. Robert Cargill

Ahhhh. Recent winner of the Contest of Covers and possibly my favourite cover of all time (even though I haven’t read the book). This one is easy…

IT STAYS!

Fun fact about this post: Yikes! 5 books and no cuts. I guess that TBR isn’t getting smaller anytime soon…

Writing on Wednesday – Short Story Time

Crazy times, everyone. I haven’t posted a writing update in a while. I’m happy to say it’s not from lack of writing. Let’s see… what have I been up to with the old word smithing?

I wrote a play!

First one since high school (and we don’t talk about how bad EVERYTHING I wrote back then was/is.) I’ve been wanting to write one for the last few years as I’ve been acting with a local community theatre. It’s a farce that takes place in the lobby of an apartment building where one elevator is broken and the other takes people to a random floor. Hilarity ensues. I wrote specifically with our stage and our troupe in mind. And as long as it’s good enough, hopefully we’ll see it on the actual stage.

I got a whole bunch more rejections

I’m so proud of Vicarious, and I think it’s the best book I’ve written yet, but  the query rejections keep rolling in. I had one agent request the full manuscript, which was the first time and really exciting, though that also did not work out. There are still plenty of agents left to query, but I’m putting the breaks on and changing my focus for a little while.

My change of focus

Short stories! I’m going to be putting most of my efforts into getting short stories published in literary magazines or into short story competitions. My hope and strategy is to get something to catch on somewhere so that when I do restart the querying process, I can tell agents that I’ve been published somewhere before and maybe even won a contest or two. Speaking of…

I’M ENTERING A CONTEST

I stumbled across this little gem of a contest from Writer’s Digest. Your Story is a quarterly contest with a quick 650 word yarn based on their story prompt, which is a photo. I’ve already got something cooked up for this one, and I think it’s pretty good. Unfortunately, I’m not sure I can share it here because it might become ineligible. Rest assured, if anything happens, you’ll hear about it. And if it doesn’t, then I’ll be free to post the story.

That’s all for now, but I hope to have more updates in the weeks to come, hopefully with more exciting news as well!

Top 5 Tuesday – Books Starting with U – V – W – X – Y – Z

This week’s edition of Shanah’s Top 5 Tuesday is being brought to you by the number 5 and the letters U, V, W, X, Y, and Z. And yes, I used that exact joke for every single post this month. Deal with it.

HEY LOOK OVER HERE! MORE BOOKS!!

U – United as One
by Pittacus Lore

Again, this one is more about the whole series being great as one thing (and the fact that I haven’t read many books starting with U). Though, to be fair, this is the BEST book of the series. If you’ve tried to start this series before and was scared off by the first one or two, consider persevering. This last book is WORTH IT!

 

V – Vicious
by V.E. Schwab

Over to my TBR for this one, because I haven’t read a single book starting with V. This is one of those books that’s been on my shelf for over a year and I keep telling the world that “this is the month I’m finally going to read it,” but then it still doesn’t happen. I’ve put it off for far too long, but, this is the month I’m finally going to read it.

 

W – World War Z
by Max Brooks

Before I read Sleeping Giants, The Illuminae Series, or Robopacalypse, World War Z made me stand up and take notice of a book written in a unique and really enjoyable format. I’ve read it multiple times, even taking in the audiobook a few times (which stars Mark Hamill among many other voice actors.) Also, you should know this is NOTHING like the movie. The only thing the book and the movie share is the title.

 

 

 X – X-Men: A v X
by Marvel Comics

Okay. This is cheating, big time. But I really didn’t have an X-book. And this is one of the coolest stories out there. The Phoenix is coming back to Earth, and they believe it’s going to take Jean Grey’s daughter and they’ll have to deal with another Dark Phoenix situation (one of the most powerful beings EVER.) The Avengers insist on taking the girl to protect her, and the X-Men insist they’re plenty capable of protecting her themselves. Shouting happens, ego inflate, feelings are hurt, and then… super awesome fights.

 

 

Y – The Young Elites
by Marie Lu

Back to my TBR for this one. Plague, super-powered people, and a society bent on hunting down said people? So in.

 

Z – Zero Sum Game

Imagine James Bond was a brilliant mathematician instead of just having several horseshoes up his butt, and that’s what you’ve got here. Our lead seems to see the world more like the Matrix, with numbers and calculations everywhere. So when she does something nearly impossible (which is all the time) it wasn’t chance. She made it happen.

Fun fact about this post: Almost picked World War Z for Z instead of W, but felt like more cheating…

First Impression Friday – The Warehouse by Rob Hart

Welcome to another First Impression Friday. In case this is your first time, here’s the rundown:

• Based on this sampling of your current read, give a few impressions
and predict
what you’ll think by the end.
• Did you think you’d love and ended up hating it? Or did you think
you’d hate it and wound up loving it? Or were you exactly right?
• Link back to Storeys of Stories so I can enjoy reading all the
First Impression Fridays out there!

Paxton never thought he’d be working for Cloud, the giant tech company that’s eaten much of the American economy. Much less that he’d be moving into one of the company’s sprawling live-work facilities.

But compared to what’s left outside, Cloud’s bland chainstore life of gleaming entertainment halls, open-plan offices, and vast warehouses…well, it doesn’t seem so bad. It’s more than anyone else is offering.

Zinnia never thought she’d be infiltrating Cloud. But now she’s undercover, inside the walls, risking it all to ferret out the company’s darkest secrets. And Paxton, with his ordinary little hopes and fears? He just might make the perfect pawn. If she can bear to sacrifice him.

As the truth about Cloud unfolds, Zinnia must gamble everything on a desperate scheme—one that risks both their lives, even as it forces Paxton to question everything about the world he’s so carefully assembled here.

Together, they’ll learn just how far the company will go…to make the world a better place.

Let’s talk about The Warehouse by Rob Hart.

I have a digital ARC through NetGalley, but I didn’t find it. It found me. I don’t search for a lot of NetGalley titles, because that got me buried in ARCs for most of 2018 and I didn’t enjoy it. But then I received an email from a Marketing Manager at Crown books. She mentioned since I enjoyed Foundryside (which I did, very much) I should check out the Warehouse. And I’m so glad she did.

I LOVE this book. So unique. So intriguing. Funny in all the right ways, yet still mysterious.

My Prediction: 4.5 stars

Fun fact about this post: The Warehouse is also a very possible future for the world we’re living in.

Mini Book Review Bonanza, Part 2!!

Since 2019 began, I’ve had lots of things popping up to create a week where little to no blogging happens. Work trips, my son’s break dancing competitions, performing in a play, and of course, Netflix and laziness.

I think the only thing that I didn’t slack on was reading. Which means I’ve read all kinds of books that I haven’t reviewed in the least. So here is the second of what might equal a few more MINI-REVIEW BONANZA posts!

Challenger Deep
by Neal Shusterman

While this isn’t a book that I would put at the top of my list, it seems like an important book that everyone should read. It’s a novel from the perspective of a boy with mental illness, and a glimpse into what it might be like.

I have no way of telling how accurate that look is, though considering it’s rooted in Shusterman’s own experience with his son, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia as a teen, there’s some undeniable truths between the covers.

 

The End of the World Running Club
by Adrian J. Walker

In the spirit of novels like Station Eleven, this one is all about the journey. A husband and father desires nothing more than to return to his wife and children after being separated in a post-apocalyptic world.

Oddly enough, the part I found most interesting was before the world ended. That little slice that shows you the life of the characters before the main plot goes down. I know that seems weird, but I just liked it.

Our main character, Edgar Hill, isn’t a bad father, but he struggles with fatherhood. Thinks about what life would be like if he hadn’t settled down to have a family. He gets annoyed by his kids. He struggles with his temper. It was all very genuine, and something that I think most of us can relate to on the really rough days.

 

Here and Now and Then
by Mike Chen

I’m a sucker for a time travel tale (and alliteration.) And this one handles the old “guy trying in live in 2 different timelines” really well without it feeling old and tired.

Time travel is one of those things that doesn’t have a lot of rules. Who can prove whether details are true or not? This makes it very easy, and tempting, for authors to say things like, “they can change the future here, but not there because… reasons.”

This book gives logical reasons that, not knowing anything about quantum physics (or whatever leg of science could lead to time travel) makes sense.  

 

Survivor
by Chuck Palahniuk

Palahniuk is a unique author, and one that I always seem to enjoy. His characters  are real and surreal at the same time, if that’s possible. I suppose what I mean by that is you’ve probably never met people like his characters, but it’s also not hard to believe that those characters actually exist somewhere in the world.

The plot of Palahniuk’s books almost doesn’t matter because the characters are so interesting you’d watch them go to the grocery store and the dentist before turning into bed early.

 

An Ember in the Ashes
by Sabaa Tahir

I read this one based strictly on the series covers. Especially Reaper at the Gates. And there are a lot of fans of these books, but I found myself left wanting, just a little. 

I still enjoyed the book, and will most likely continue the series, but there were things that I thought would happen—and wanted to happen—that just didn’t come about. That usually leaves me feeling like the book made promises in the beginning that it didn’t deliver on. Maybe they will be as the series continues?

 

A Confederacy of Dunces
by John Kennedy Toole

This one stuck with me for quite a while after I was done. The voice of Ignatius Reilly went with me everywhere.

This guy finds fault in everything that everyone does, and has no problem telling anyone how they should live their lives. Nothing much happens in the book, but to just watch this guy complain his way around New Orleans trying (and failing) at jobs that come his way is 110% entertaining. There’s nothing that doesn’t offend this guy. It’s like someone took all of the internet and stuffed it into a character, even though this book was written before the internet was a thing.

Fun fact about this post: Yup. I’ve been slacking enough to have more posts like this. At least one more.

Top 5 Tuesday – Books Starting with P – Q – R – S – T

This week’s edition of Shanah’s Top 5 Tuesday is being brought to you by the number 5 and the letters K, L, M, N, and O. And I know what you’re thinking. Didn’t I use that joke a few times already? I sure did!

HEY LOOK OVER HERE! MORE BOOKS!!

 

P – The Power of Six

Slim pickings for P… The Power of Six isn’t a great book on its own, but the Lorien Legacies series as a whole is pretty worth while.

 

 

 

Q – ????

Speaking of slim pickings, I have nothing for Q. Not a book that I liked, not a book I hated, and not even a book on my TBR.. I guess I’ll just have to pick a few books for the next letter…

 

R – Ready Player One

R – Red Rising

No surprises here. The two books that I try to squeeze into as many Top 5 lists as humanly possible.

 S – Station Eleven

This was a tough one. Six of Crows and Steelheart were up near the top as well, but Station Eleven is not only a great read, but it has a meaning that feels truly important.

T – To Kill a Kingdom

This was one of those books that I wasn’t expecting a lot from and then it floored me. Such a fun read.

Fun fact about this post: I just received an ARC for Alexandra Christo’s new book, and I’m so excited to dig into it!