Friday, April 19, 2013

Feature and Follow: Hanging with the Homies

Despite all the craziness that is currently happening in Massachusetts, I'm participating in Parajunkee and Alison Can Read's Feature & Follow Friday.  Today's question is:
Q: If you could hang out with any author (living) who would it be and what would you want to do?
A. Wow.  So many authors are running through my head, but I have to go with Stephen King, because I've wanted to hang with him since I was a kid.  His books symbolized adult books, and what it meant to be a writer.  I know some of his characters better than I know real life friends.  His words have kept me up late at night, crying over the loss of fictional characters and started my path towards full fledged book worm.  I'd just hang out with him and his wife Tabby (because she seems like she'd be cool too).  Maybe play some baseball with them before heading to a cookout and talking about the Loser Club over a beer or three. And I don't even like baseball, or beer for that matter- although since it's my fantasy he'd have a few Guinness set aside just for me. Oh, and he'd give me the manuscript of the latest book he finished to "get my ideas".  Hey, it's my fantasy, might as well go big, right? 

Can't wait to read you're responses! 

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Sunday, April 14, 2013

Sundays in Bed With... The Book of Broken Hearts

 Welcome to my Sundays In Bed With... Meme! The meme that dares to ask, what book has been in your bed this morning?  Come share what book you've spent time curled up reading in bed, or which book you wish you had time to read today!

This morning I'm reading:
I'm really liking it so far and I'll be finishing it today.  The cover is fitting... but it's not exciting.  I'd rather the book look more like the one described in the book.  This book has made me cry, and want to brush up on my Spanish.  


What are you reading (or wish you had time to read) this morning? Are you reading the book you thought you'd be reading, or has today found you with a surprise? Link up below!
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Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Rush (The Game #1) Review

Rush (The Game #1)
by Eve Silver
Genre: YA Sci-Fi
Format: ARC from Around the World ARC Tours in exchange for my honest review.  I do not get to keep the books.
Midnight Minute: Miki is enlisted to play a game, with very real life and death consequences.
Expected Publication: 06.11.13
From Goodreads:
So what’s the game now? This, or the life I used to know?

When Miki Jones is pulled from her life, pulled through time and space into some kind of game—her carefully controlled life spirals into chaos. In the game, she and a team of other teens are sent on missions to eliminate the Drau, terrifying and beautiful alien creatures. There are no practice runs, no training, and no way out. Miki has only the guidance of secretive but maddeningly attractive team leader Jackson Tate, who says the game isn’t really a game, that what Miki and her new teammates do now determines their survival, and the survival of every other person on this planet. She laughs. He doesn’t. And then the game takes a deadly and terrifying turn.
Midnight Thoughts:
~ I absolutely love the concept of this book.  It's like Tron meets Starship Troopers meets YA.  
~ But I had a hard time with some of the characters.  It took me almost half the book to really connect with Miki and Jackson.  
~ Miki starts off the book hearing voices, which we know from Harry Potter, is not normal for muggles or witches.
~ The voice she hears actually gets her to save someone, instead of killing someone, so that's new.  
~ So, Miki saves a kid and takes a truck to the body, wakes up in a weird, forest-y setting and is told that she's been recruited for a game.  
~ Miki already knows one of the game players, her old friend and classmate Luka.  There's also a mysteriously hot guy who wears sunglasses.
~ Seriously, Jackson wears sunglasses all the time.  I am not going to make a Corey Hart reference, because I think I've referenced him more times on this blog than is healthy.  But I know immediately that he wears glasses to hide his special eyes.
~ Miki also has special eyes.  Sorry, normal eye colored people, you're lives are destined to be mediocre.  On the bright side, you don't have to battle aliens!
~ Everyone is all cryptic about the game and it's stakes.  Which I find mildly annoying.  Most video games come with some kind of manual!
~ Miki finds out that she's on borrowed time.  As long as she plays the game and doesn't die in it, she gets to stay alive in the real world too.  So the book deals with time travel as well as Scientologist like aliens. 
~ Miki somehow survives the first part of the game despite the fact that she's given very limited information on how to battle the aliens.  This is partly because even though Jackson is a lone wolf bad boy, he can't help but break all his cool boy rules for Miki. 
~ Back in the real world, Miki is struggling with a suddenly bitchy best friend, her widowed father and confusion and mind effery that is the Game.  She keeps getting pulled from her real life to play a game that quite frankly isn't any fun. 
~ Part of the reason that I had some issues connecting with the characters is that we're told things but not shown them.  We're told what a great friend Carly has been to Miki, but she's incredibly wenchy 97% of the time. We're told that Jackson is this loner danger boy, but he immediately treats Miki differently.  
~ The aliens are all scary and less Alf and Mork from Ork-ish. The other-world building history that Silver creates is interesting.  
~ Jackson eventually tells Miki that their missions in the games not only effect whether they live or die, but all of humanity.  And you thought studying the SAT's were tough on teenagers!
~ One of the best aspects of the book for me was Miki's complicated relationship with her father.  Her mother died of cancer, and her dad quit smoking but took up drinking.  He's not quite at alcoholic levels, but it's a problem.  Still, there's a lot of love there, and he felt like a real person and not the usual absent parent that is the bane of most YA. 
~ Miki does a lot of victory dances, for doing things like resetting the computer modem or using a search engine.  I think it's important to celebrate our selfness. 
~ I thought the book was going to be more of a love triangle, because I really liked Luka from the start, but it didn't really happen like that.  Which is kind of refreshing.  But I still want to know more about Luka. 
~ It turns out the Drau (the bad aliens) steal girls, eat their brains and turn them into mindless clones. In otherwords, MTV uses the Drau army clones to cast their reality TV shows. 
~  After awhile, Jackson grew on me.  Plus he reads.  And he and Miki are kind of steamy together. 
~ Miki also grew on me, because I realized how tightly wound she is, and it's hard not to feel for her in this impossible situation dealing with these things she can't control.  
~ Jackson pulls the "I'm no good for you, baby" card, and Miki actually calls him on all the mixed signals he gives her.  I loved that!
~ The ending surprised me, and I think it sets up the next book nicely.  I'm not sure it's a series I'll continue with... but Eve Silver will be at BEA and I'm sure if I meet her I'll like her, and then I'll want to read the rest of the series. ;)


Timeless Characters:
Miki- health nut, our heroine is all kick ass and in control.
Jackson- he wears his sunglasses at night, and day, and bedtime, and Sundays.
Luka- cutie patootie
Richelle- fellow gamer chick, very cool 
Tyrone- gamer dude, brings the humor
Carly- Miki's bestie
Deepti, Sarah and Kelley- Miki's other friends
The Drau- bad ass aliens, best not look them in the eye!
Maylene- girl that Miki tutors
Lizzie- the girl Miki dreams about
Kendra and Lien- gamers

Midnight Moment:
Definitely when Jackson takes off his sunglasses, and also when his past his revealed.


Stop The Clock:
While this wasn't my favorite book, I think there's an audience for it.  I'm not a huge sci-fi fan, and I probably would have found the gaming aspect better without aliens.  But, aliens are the new zombies, right?


Eve Silver — Website |Eve Silver





Rush (The Game #1) gets a Midnight Book Rating of: 
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Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Before I Was a Blogger

It's that time of the week, midnighters!  Top Ten Tuesdays is hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

April 9: Top Ten Favorite Books I Read Before I Was A Blogger 


I was always a reader, but I will say that book blogging opened up my bookish world tremendously.   Mostly because of bloggers like you, introducing me to books I might not have heard of otherwise and challenging me to read genres outside of my old favorites.  But here are some of my favorite books before I became a book blogger:

1. Odd Thomas by Dean Koontz- I listened to audio books with my dad when I was younger, but Odd Thomas is the book that really got me hooked.  I read this for the first time back when I was still living in Oklahoma, long before I made move back to the East Coast and discovered blogging.  

2. Something Blue (Darcy and Rachel #2) by Emily Griffith- I read a lot of chic lit in my days, but this is one of my all time favorites.  Sadly, it's not a genre that I read much these days, and other than Something Blue, I haven't much enjoyed her other books.

3. Garden Spells by Sarah Addison Allen- the book that launched my love for magical realism!  It was everything I wanted Alice Hoffman's Practical Magic to be (the movie is much more light-hearted than the novel), and Allen instantly become a must buy author. 

4. It by Stephen King- so many of his books could have been on this list, but this is the one that I've read the most, the one where I connected the most with the characters.  I am an honorary member of the Loser's Club!

5. The India Fan by Victoria Holt- This was my very first Holt book, and I have a vivid memory of picking it from the library shelves.  The first time I read it I was in 7th grade, and I've read it, or parts of it, every year since then.  Before I became a book blogger I probably re-read it even more, but that's because it used to be hard to find books I liked, if you can believe that!  

6. Lonely Werewolf Girl by Martin Millar- his books are strange and quirky, and very different from anything I've read before or since.  I love his style, and I've since read the sequel to this, his The Good Fairies of New York and Lux the Poet.  I think he's brilliant!

7. Falling by Christopher Pike- obviously I have lots of love for all things Pike- especially his YA.  Falling is an adult novel, and it deals with revenge, love and obsession.  I think it's one of his very best books, but so few people have read it!!

8. The Stranger Beside Me by Ann Rule- I used to read a lot of true crime, which will surprise absolutely no one.  Ann Rule was actually friends with Ted Bundy, they met while working on a suicide prevention hot line, and she'd already gotten the job of writing about the killings before it was revealed that her old friend Ted was the prime suspect.  I've always found that fascinating. 

9.  The Witching Hour by Anne Rice- Being a midnight girl, I of course read all her vampire books, but this book is one of my all time favorites. I really dislike the sequels, but this book is vast and huge and I loved it.  I especially love the history of the Mayfair witches and the New Orleans setting.  I was hoping to re-read this on audible, but they only have a 3 hour abridged version... and the book is 1200 pages long so I have no idea how they how they condensed that into 3 freaking hours. 

10.  Harry Potter, Twilight and Hunger Games- just going to lump these all together because they are responsible for getting me back into YA and led to me becoming a blogger. 

There's a million other books I could have listed, but this is all my brain could dredge up on just one cup of coffee.  I can't wait to see your lists!  If you give me a follow, let me know and I'll return the favor! And give a shout out if you're going to BEA, because I will be there!
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Monday, April 8, 2013

You Look Different in Real Life Review

You Look Different in Real Life
by Jennifer Castle
Genre: YA Contemporary
Format: ARC received from Around the World ARC Tours, in exchange for my honest review.  I do not get to keep the books.
Midnight Minute: Justine deals with life, fame and friendship, and finds her place in front and behind the camera.
Expected Publication: 06.04.13 from HarperTeen
From Goodreads:
For the rest of the world, the movies are entertainment. For Justine, they're real life.

The premise was simple: five kids, just living their lives. There'd be a new movie about them every five years, starting in kindergarten. But no one could have predicted what the cameras would capture. And no one could have predicted that Justine would be the star.

Now sixteen, Justine doesn't feel like a star anymore. In fact, when she hears the crew has gotten the green light to film Five at Sixteen, all she feels is dread. The kids who shared the same table in kindergarten have become teenagers who hardly know one another. And Justine, who was so funny and edgy in the first two movies, feels like a disappointment.

But these teens have a bond that goes deeper than what's on film. They've all shared the painful details of their lives with countless viewers. They all know how it feels to have fans as well as friends. So when this latest movie gives them the chance to reunite, Justine and her costars are going to take it. Because sometimes, the only way to see yourself is through someone else's eyes.

Smart, fresh, and frequently funny, You Look Different in Real Life is a piercing novel about life in an age where the lines between what's personal and what's public aren't always clear.
Midnight Thoughts:
~ This book surprised the heck out of me- I loved it!  I want to say that up front, because reviews of books I really like are so much harder than any other reviews I write.  So, you can skip everything else and just go ahead and put this book on your To Be Read pile. 
~ Justine, the main character and narrator, has taken part in two documentary films- Five at Six and Five at Eleven that have followed her and four other kids in her school at those ages.  Now they want to make a Five at Sixteen, but Justine is unsure she wants to go through with it. 
~ One of the things that I love is that Justine is not thin.  She's not the type of character who can eat anything she wants and never exercise and still not gain weight.  She's not even a character who just never eats.  Granted, she's only 20 pounds overweight, but I loved how she was disappointed because she thought by age 16 she would have lost the weight, because that's something I can easily identify with. 
~ Justine has a great family, in particular her older sister, Olivia.  Families don't have to be super effed up or absent to make a character compelling. Yes, her parents are divorced, and her dad still comes over once a week for dinner and the occasional sleepover (ew!), but it feels real and honest.
~ Justine has flaws, and she's mostly aware of them.  She's funny and snarky, and she makes mistakes.  I seriously adore her.  
~ There is so much tension between the five main characters, but particularly between Felix and Nate, and while I guessed some of the stuff about Felix, I was surprised by the layers of complications to all of their relationships.  
~ A big issue in this book is how much of Justine, who she really is, is captured, and how much of who Justine and the others are is because they're on camera.  Trust me, I could not just be myself.  I'd either disappear or I'd be ON like a drunken comedian on acid.  Plus, my voice would probably be pitched so high that only dogs could hear it. 
~ We get to "see" scenes from Five at Six and Five at Eleven, which just made me love all of the kids so much!  I don't know if ya'll have seen the HBO show Kindergarten, but that's totally what it reminded me of!  I'd love to see those little ragamuffins as they are now. 
~ Ian has a friend named Dashiell, which I loved.  Can we all just agree to give our future kids cool, literary names? Even if it means we'll have a lot of Darcys, Fours, and Anna-Dressed-In-Bloods running around?
~ It took me awhile to warm up to Felix, but making friends with apple-cider donuts?  I can be friends with someone like that!
~ Justine's past friendship with Rory is complicated, but again, it felt true.  Sometimes we outgrow friends, or we want to hang with new friends, and sometimes we are even the friend who got left behind. 
~ Kiera's dad is a complete snobdouche.  You'll understand why when you get to the part of the book where he purposely lets a scene play out for the cameras.  
~ Seriously, I felt the pressure that Justine feels to be interesting for the camera, especially since it was so easy for her when she was a kid. 
~ These kids!  Just, wow.  They are so separate from one another now, yet so tangled together.  This book highlights the power friends have to wound us.  
~ I mentioned the HBO show, but now I'm digging deep for Bravo's show called The It Factor that followed struggling actors.  It featured Jeremy Renner before he hit it big, and because of that I've always felt like I had some kind of "I saw him first" claim on him.  And it reminded me of the book, because Justine and Nate are kind of the stand out stars of the movies.
~ In order to keep the film going and to get the kids together, they have to go to one of those trust building camps with work shop leader, Pam, who Justine says is paid to make people uncomfortable.  I did not know I could get paid for something I do so naturally!
~ I think all the flashbacks made me love these kids.  I wonder if we could all see how we once were as kids, we'd like each other more?
~ 'Bouldering' sounds hellish.
~ The character of Rory, and how the others interact with her, was pretty wonderful to read about.  
~ Felix and his future struggle with his family is heartbreaking, but again, some families are exactly like his.  Poor Felix.
~ I want to hug this book.  I also want a rabbit.  Aaron, in case you are reading this, you might want to just build the rabbit hutch now, because when I say I want a rabbit, what I really mean is I'm going to get a rabbit. 
~ So much love for this book!!!

Timeless Characters:
Justine- our pink-streaked, snarky heroine!
Rory- wonderfully unique!
Felix- has personality and talent out the wazoo!
Kiera- the smart, pretty girl with real issues!
Nate- golden boy with real issues and a thing for bunnies!
Ian- loser who dumps Justine, but starts sniffing around once the new film begins production, he's a tool.
Leslie and Lance- filmmakers, I actually began to like them too!
Olivia- Justine's cool older sister (who won't be in the new film because in the Five at Eleven she was a bitchy, whiny teenager).
Dashiell- Ian's friend.  Only on this list because I like his name.
Kenny- the sound guy. 
Pam- work shop leader, I want her job!
Doug- friend of Nates's, now in college.
Ratso, a New York bunny rabbit.
Brennon/Brendon/Brandon- or whatever his name was. 
Midnight Moment:
There's several: Justine and Leslie switching roles, because I think that was a big moment in Justine's life.
How the gang deals with Rory and her needs.
Justine and Felix on the bench in New York City.
Stop The Clock:
This is another book I just want everyone to read.  You, read this now!  Or, wait until June 4th, when it comes out for sale because I get that it might be hard to get your hands on a copy before then.  But after June 4th, no excuses!  I want to see the blogging world lit up with reviews and hearts and flowers for this book. ;) 

Jennifer Castle — Website |Jennifer Castle




You Look Different in Real Life gets a Midnight Book Rating of: 
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Readathon Ear Worm


Dewey's 24 Hour Readathon is later this month, but my excitement and anticipation is already HUGE.  I signed up to cheer, and honestly, I think that's what I'm going to focus on.  I always try (and kind of fail) to read.  But the most fun I have during Readathon is the social aspects.  So that's what I'm doing.  I'm going to listen to audio books, cheer and tweet.  Maybe even host a mini-challenge with Fake Steph

So I was thinking up cheers, and this song has been in my head since I watched Pitch Perfect.  Here it is, midnighters, my ear worm, which I Readathonized for your pleasure: 


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Sunday, April 7, 2013

Sundays In Bed With... Dare You To

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 Welcome to my Sundays In Bed With... Meme! The meme that dares to ask, what book has been in your bed this morning?  Come share what book you've spent time curled up reading in bed, or which book you wish you had time to read today!



This morning I'm reading:

 Dare You To (Pushing the Limits #2) by Katie McGarry. 
 The covers look super smexy, but there's not a lot of sex in the books.  This one, since it focuses on the character of Beth,is loaded with f-bombs though.  Seriously- hope there's a little soap in that water so Ryan can wash her mouth out before taking her home to meet the parents.   I started this one yesterday, so I'm almost half-way done.  So far, so good!
 
 What are you reading (or wish you had time to read) this morning? Are you reading the book you thought you'd be reading, or has today found you with a surprise? Link up below!
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Thursday, April 4, 2013

Undone (Unraveling 1.5) Novella Excerpt

I loved Unraveling by Elizabeth Norris- it totally satisfied the part of me that yearns for all night X-File marathons.  And I'm super excited for the upcoming sequel, Unbreakable.  Until then, my lovelies, I've been given an excerpt from the Undone (Unraveling 1.5) to share with you!  It's available now, and it's stories from Ben's perspective- including a prequel to the events in Unraveling


BEFORE SHE KNEW ME

The first time I opened a portal, it was an accident.
It was nine days after my birthday at a joint party with one of my best friends. It was at his house. We played games in his backyard, ate ice-cream cake, opened presents, then challenged everyone to a video game tournament. My brother was older though, and he had an advantage. I ended up knocked out quickly, as did three of my friends.
Once we were out, we got bored, so we went in search of something else. We just didn’t expect to find what we did. In the basement, instead of old board games, we found his father’s home lab, and the locked door didn’t keep us out. We knew it was where he kept his failed experiments and we wanted to check them out.
One of them wasn’t as failed as we thought, and after messing with the wires, the motor flared to life, connecting to a laser beam, and a portal opened in front of us: a huge black hole that rippled like it was made of oil. We dared one another to touch it, but no one would step up.
I don’t know who it was who shoved first, but it happened. Somehow, I tripped and fell. And I brought two of the three of them with me: through the portal.
We ended up in another world. In the ocean.
The second time we opened a portal, it was different.
It was because of a girl, and it changed everything.

1
It all started with a fight. 
It was the first Thursday in March of my sophomore year. I knew because I kept track of the days and months and years that passed since we’d fallen through. 
It had been an uneventful day. I skateboarded to Eastview, got to first period on time, made an appearance in my first class, ditched my second one to hang out with Eli and a couple guys while they got high behind the football stadium, and then made it through my last two. At the end of the day, I headed to It’s a Grind for the afternoon coffee that would get me through work.
I didn’t usually frequent the unofficial campus coffee shop. It backed up to the school parking lot and was always crowded, which meant long lines and a high probability of getting sucked into a conversation with someone from class. I didn’t do conversation well. I didn’t know what to say to most people. It was hard to know what to talk about when my mind was usually on things they wouldn’t understand.
I usually stopped at a gas station or something because I didn’t have any coffee shop loyalties. I just wanted something strong and convenient and preferably cheap. That day, though, my foster parents had been out of coffee, and I spilled the cup I’d bought on the way to school when a group of freshman girls knocked into me before first period. The caffeine withdrawal combined with my fourth period world history class had given me an unbearable headache.
If even one thing had been different: if my foster parents hadn’t run out of coffee, if those girls hadn’t knocked into me, if I had ditched world history… I wouldn’t have been there, and things might not have worked out the way it did.
*
When the fight broke out, I was trying to place my order. I’d only been in one real fight myself. I was more of a keep my head down and stay out of trouble kind of guy. So I didn’t see how it started.
“Small black coffee,” I ordered.
The words had barely left my mouth when the door jingled open and some guy I didn’t recognize leaned in to shout to one of his friends. “Dude, get out here, there’s a cat fight!”
For a split second, the conversations halted. Just about everyone else turned to the door and froze, straining to see behind him to the parking lot where the “cat fight” was allegedly taking place. My muscles tensed. Most of the fights near or on Eastview’s campus involved Eli. He had always been the get right in the middle of it kind of guy, and I was his best friend, which made it my responsibility to make sure he didn’t kill someone by accident. Or get killed himself.
Then I remembered he caught a ride with Reid in the new car fifteen minutes ago, and if this was a cat fight, it would be girls going at it, not guys. Thankfully Eli usually stayed away from that. Satisfied he couldn’t be involved, I forced my shoulders to relax.
If Eli wasn’t beating someone up, I didn’t really care. I looked at the girl behind the cash register and offered her my two dollars.
I didn’t even look up when the guy behind me said, “Oh shit, that’s Brooke Haslen.”
“Small black coffee,” I repeated to the cashier.
She unfroze, took my money, and asked, “You want me to leave room for milk?” all without looking at me.
I shook my head, about to repeat “just black” when I heard it.
*
It was more a yell than a scream, I guess. It might have even been a word, but it was to far away and too muffled to be sure.
But I recognized the voice.
It was the same one I heard six years ago, when she pulled me half drowned out of the ocean.
It was a voice I’d know anywhere.

I don't know about ya'll but I am down with all these novellas.  It's such a great way to get more information about the world the books are set in and the characters who might have stories and points of view that will only enrich our reading experience.  Undone is already out and Unbreakable comes out April 23rd!  

Here's some more places to check out Elizabeth Norris:


And head over to Books of Wonder- if you pre-order a signed copy of Unbreakable prior to April 23rd you'll get some swag as well!
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Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Fragments (Partials #2) Review

Fragments (Partials #2)
by Dan Wells
Genre: YA Dystopian
Format: ARC received from Around the World ARC Tours in exchange for my honest review.  I do not get to keep the ARC.
Midnight Minute: Even with the cure for RM at hand, Kira is in an even more perilous situation, as both the humans and the Partials fight to survive.
From Goodreads:
Kira Walker has found the cure for RM, but the battle for the survival of humans and Partials is just beginning. Kira has left East Meadow in a desperate search for clues to who she is. That the Partials themselves hold the cure for RM in their blood cannot be a coincidence--it must be part of a larger plan, a plan that involves Kira, a plan that could save both races. Her companions are Afa Demoux, an unhinged drifter and former employee of ParaGen, and Samm and Heron, the Partials who betrayed her and saved her life, the only ones who know her secret. But can she trust them?

Meanwhile, back on Long Island, what's left of humanity is gearing up for war with the Partials, and Marcus knows his only hope is to delay them until Kira returns. But Kira's journey will take her deep into the overgrown wasteland of postapocalyptic America, and Kira and Marcus both will discover that their greatest enemy may be one they didn't even know existed.

The second installment in the pulse-pounding Partials saga is the story of the eleventh hour of humanity's time on Earth, a journey deep into places unknown to discover the means--and even more important, a reason--for our survival.


Midnight Thoughts:
~ I forgot a lot, so it took me several chapters to remember who everyone was and what had happened.  I would have re-read Partials, but seeing as Fragments is close to 600 pages, I just didn't have the time.
~ That said, it didn't really matter that I couldn't recall everything that had happened in the first book.  You know how, especially in dystopian tales, book 2 can get all wonky and kind of suck?  No suckage here!  Fragments was an awesome book, and I'm telling you, those 550+ pages flew by. 
~ I can't remember if Partials featured Samm's pov, but he opens the book in Fragments and I quite liked his voice, although I probably enjoy Kira's voice a bit more.  If I had a choose.  Like, if you held a gun to the book and were threatening to shoot the book if I didn't pick my favorite character.  Actually, I might pick Marcus.  
~ Speaking of Marcus, I had no real love for him in book 1.  He and Kira had a good, mutually respecting kind of relationship, but he was just kind of blah to me.  I loved his story in this book, loved that he respected and believed in Kira, and was able to deal with the shiz going down back home.  Despite the fact that he's technically Kira's boyfriend, there's not really a love triangle, and any real romance between any of the characters takes a back seat to survival. 
~ Basically the Partials are freaking out because most of their Partial leaders are expiring as they reach the old age of 20.  The humans in Long Island are freaking out because they've only managed to save one baby and can't replicate the cure without getting their hands on some Partials.  Neither side is interested in teaming up and helping each other. 
~ I know that genetically enhanced humans are a bad idea (seriously, has science fiction taught us nothing?), but MyDragons?  Those sound awesome!
~ Again, I don't remember thinking that much of Heron in the last book, but she's a real stand out in the second installment.  Like Kira, she's tough, unlike Kira though, she's realistic.  
~ I love the term 'Plague Babies'.  How is that not a band yet?
~ I love that the subways of New York have become underwater lakes and that Central Park is now a jungle (complete with wild animals).  I love that imagery. 
~ While Kira, Samm, Heron and messed up Afa try to head West and find information on the mysterious Trust, Marcus and the rest of Long Island are dealing with a Partial invasion.  Both stories were compelling and the book has a lot of action.
~ Humorous moment: Kira says that saving the world would be a lot easier if the people they were trying to save would stop killing each other.  Sadly, it kind of applies to our world today.
~ Genetically altered animals, smart enough to speak, plot and kill scares the crap out of me.  Maybe I shouldn't be a cat owner after all...
~ There's not a lot of funny, light hearted moments in dystopian novels usually, but I cracked up when Samm said, " Did that dog just call me a bastard?"  
~ I remember in the first book being put off by how smart all the Plague Babies were, but it makes sense in light of who Kira is, and the fact that most of the human kids had gene modification. 
~ I really think Arial and Heron could be bffs. 
~ I love how little race factors in to current world, but now Partials vs. Humans has taken it's place.  There is something in us that feels the need to judge others and feel superior. 
~ As Kira travels, she comes across a library.  Kira reads a thriller that sounds an awful lot like it could Dan Well's John Cleaver series. ;)
~ So much tension throughout the whole book!  You wouldn't think you'd be able to keep the plot exciting over hundreds and hundreds of pages, but Wells does it.  I may need a nitro-glycerin patch when the last book comes out!
~ At some point in the book, Samm says the world hasn't ended, it's reset.  Usually when we talk about destroying the planet, what we really mean is destroying the life on it, including our own.  But the earth will survive us, it's us that we might not survive. 
~ Kira's life is rapidly becoming a walking nightmare: attacks by superior Partials, talking dogs and acid rain.  I just wanted to give her a chocolate bar and a quiet place in which to cry.
~ The last part of the book made my head spin.  My head was spun, people!  I can't tell you why, because it's all spoilers, but I did not see a lot of that coming. 
~ Oh, Mr. Wells, you and your moral dilemmas!  What would you choose, dear readers?  The comfort of being morally right while people all around you die, or would you sacrifice the few to save the many?  Like most people, I'd choose the sacrifice... as long as I wasn't one of the people chosen to be thrown in the volcano to appease the gods.
~ The ending is kind of holycrap,holycrap!  As much as I want another John Cleaver novel, Mr. Wells had best be working on the next Partials book!

Timeless Characters:
Kira- our heroine, seeking answers about her origins, and trying to save what's left of her world. 
Samm- renegade Partial with feelings for Kira.
Marcus- the boy Kira left behind, doing his part to help the world.
Heron- kick ass Partial.
Afa- extremely paranoid and messed up human.
Dr. Morgan- mad Partial doctor, kidnapped Kira in the first book.
Nandita- the woman who raised Kira after the Partials war, and now everyone is looking for her. 
Isolde, Haru, Madison, Xochi- friends of Marcus and Kira's back in Long Island.  Madison's baby Arwen is still alive and thriving, and Isolde is pregnant. 
Ariel- one of Nandita's foster daughters, teams up with Marcus. 
Calix- human girl that crushes on Samm.
Dr. Vale- possible member of the mysterious Trust, he also leaves Kira with a difficult dilemma. 
And a billion other characters, both Partials and human, but I don't want to break my computer.  Fortunately I do have the notes on them to read over for Book 3!

Midnight Moment:
Honestly after the first 50 or 60 pages, everything is kind of a Midnight Moment.  What happens on the way to Colorado (a certain death) was completely unexpected, so I have to give that points.

Stop The Clock:
Fragments is a roller coaster of action and thrills, but Wells still manages to grow the reader's interest and connection with the main characters.  If Partials was the appetizer, than Fragments is the deliciously spicy main course.  I originally only going to do 4 and 1/2 stars, but it's been almost a week since I read it and it's still with me.


Dan Wells — Website |The Dan Wells





  Fragments (Partials #2) gets a Midnight Book Rating of: 
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Wordless Wednesday 4.3.13

Wordless Wednesday (or I'm so tired and on the run this week that this is all I can manage, but isn't the Chihuly glass exquisite?)
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