Showing posts with label guest author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label guest author. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2018

{Author Interview} Sara Wolf || Author of Bring Me Their Hearts (June 2018)


Hey, guys!

      Today I'm bringing you an awesome interview that I had with the talented New York Times bestselling author Sara Wolf! Her novel Bring Me Their Hearts. This is her latest release and it is the first book in a fantastical fantasy trilogy about an immortal soldier girl who is sent to steal a prince's heart. I'm very excited to read this book. I hope you guys enjoy this interview with Sara!

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Page Count: 400 
Published on: June 5, 2018
Published by: Entangled Teen
Genre(s): Fantasy, YA
Age Rating: YA
Where To Find ItGoodreads // Amazon // Book Depository


Goodreads synopsis:

A lush, unique new fantasy trilogy about a girl tasked with stealing the prince’s heart…literally, from the New York Times bestselling author of the Lovely Vicious series.

Zera is a Heartless – the immortal, unageing soldier of a witch. Bound to the witch Nightsinger ever since she saved her from the bandits who murdered her family, Zera longs for freedom from the woods they hide in. With her heart in a jar under Nightsinger’s control, she serves the witch unquestioningly.

Until Nightsinger asks Zera for a Prince’s heart in exchange for her own, with one addendum; if she’s discovered infiltrating the court, Nightsinger will destroy her heart rather than see her tortured by the witch-hating nobles.

Crown Prince Lucien d’Malvane hates the royal court as much as it loves him – every tutor too afraid to correct him and every girl jockeying for a place at his darkly handsome side. No one can challenge him – until the arrival of Lady Zera. She’s inelegant, smart-mouthed, carefree, and out for his blood. The Prince’s honor has him quickly aiming for her throat.

So begins a game of cat and mouse between a girl with nothing to lose and a boy who has it all.

Winner takes the loser’s heart.

Literally.

~~~

Interview with Sara Wolf:


O: What inspired you to write? 

S: Believe it or not, when I was young I was hugely into fanfiction writing. I wrote about pretty much everything - from X-Files to Pokemon to Harry Potter. My longest fanfic ended up being 1k pages long and 700k words! Releasing a fanfic chapter every week really trained me to write a lot, edit later, and always keep a riveting story in mind. The cool part is if I ever need a warm up or I'm feeling really writers-blocked, I'll dive into my favorite fandoms (right now it's Final Fantasy and Star Wars!) and churn out a fanfic or two. It really helps to get my creative thoughts flowing. 

O: Are your characters inspired by real people? If so, who, and how did they influence the people you create?

S: Honestly, I'm not very good at getting into other people's heads. I'm much better at getting in my own head, so a lot of my characters are aspects of my personality refined and concentrated. Lucien, for instance, is the very protective and fair part of me - the part that always wants justice and to defend the underdog. Zera is the part of me that jokes around and doesn't want to take anything seriously, for fear of having to face her own feelings, but she's also got a bit of my tendency to self-sacrifice; martyrdom, self-blame before anything else. Malachite is sort of the strong and yet very straight-forward and casual person I've always wanted to be, and Fione is the part of me that hides her feelings behind a smile, who burns hot with (sometimes misplaced) revenge, and who puts on an outward show of obedience only to rebel every chance she gets. It sounds a bit arrogant, but my characters are me, my children in a way.  


O: What is your writing process? How do you plan out your stories?

S: I'm usually TERRIBLE at plotting out stories. I hate outlines with a passion, mostly because as I'm writing the book it tends to veer off and never really stay on the outline's track. A great joy of writing for me is to see where the story takes me, without knowing or guiding it, just sort of letting the characters and the world take the wheel instead. Of course, this sometimes doesn't make for a great story, which is where I step in. I had to rewrite BRING ME THEIR HEARTS four whole times before the characters and I finally agreed on how it came out. And by rewrite, I mean from scratch. And all the drafts were 100k words and above. Phew!

O: Do real events influence your writing?

S: I think real events usually subconsciously influence my writing - I tend to put what I want to see in books instead of what is actually happening in the world. But the themes of the real world are still very much present; engines of hate such as fascism, homophobia, and racism are what I modeled Archduke Gavik's entire character upon. He's not a good man, and he uses religion and fear to both control and mislead people. He's possibly one of the worst bad guy characters I've ever written - writing him at points made me sick to my stomach. But that's all the more reason to cheer as Zera, Lucien, Fione, and Malachite oppose him.   
O: That's kind of hilarious. I feel like that kind of how I write too. Is this your first time writing in this genre? If so, how is it different from your other works? Did it require a new planning style?

S: This is my first time writing fantasy, yes! Fantasy is pretty different from contemporary in the sense you can't make pop culture jokes (something I love and adore), and a lot of convenient things we take for granted in writing become unavailable. For example, I couldn't use the word 'devil' in this book, at all. Devilish, etc. That's because this world doesn't have the concept of 'the devil', or 'being devilish', because their religion has no devil. Things like that, that are very basic in the real world, turn out to be a huge hassle in fantasy. You always have to reinvent concepts like that to fit into the world you're writing. I had great influences though - Victoria Aveyard's Red Queen was really the catalyst that set me off into writing this book - she makes writing fantasy look so simple when it's actually SUPER HARD!

O: What was your favorite part of writing Bring Me Their Hearts?

S: My absolute favorite part was writing all four characters together. Zera, Lucien, Malachite, and Fione really mesh well and I love their antics together - I really want to explore their friendship as the books progress. Their hilarious banter cracked me up more than once, and I loved watching them grow and learn together. Another of my favorite parts was writing about the food, considering I'm SUCH a huge sucker for food. Food is life. It was great fun to think up foods for the Vetrisian court since it's such a huge part of any culture in general. 

That's amazing! Thank you so much, Sara for doing this interview with me. I truly appreciate it! I can't wait to read Bring Me Their Hearts and I wish you all the best in your future endeavors!

Happy reading!
Olivia

~LivTheBookNerd~

Thursday, March 8, 2018

{Author Interview} Jessie Hilb || Author of The Calculus of Change (February 2018)


Hey, guys! 

      Today I'm introducing you to the sweetest lady. Jessie Hilb is the author of the newly released Calculus of Change. Calculus of Change is Jessie's debut novel that is being released through HMH Teen/Clarion Books. This book came out on February 27 and it's a sweet contemporary novel that revolves around strong friendships and self-love. Through her experience in social work, Jessie wrote this novel to empower her readers through relatable characters and themes.  I haven't read her book yet, but I cannot wait to read it. This is one of my most anticipated ARCs that I'm to receive in the next few weeks. 


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Page Count: 336
Published on: February 27, 2018
Published by: Clarion Books/HMH
Genre(s): Contemporary, YA, Romance
Age Rating: YA
Where To Find ItGoodreads // Amazon // Book Depository


Goodreads synopsis:

A poignant and empowering teen novel of grief, unrequited love, and finding comfort in one's own skin.

Aden isn't looking for love in her senior year. She's much more focused on things like getting a solo gig at Ike's and keeping her brother from illegal herbal recreation. But when Tate walks into Calculus class wearing a yarmulke and a grin, Aden's heart is gone in an instant.

The two are swept up in a tantalizingly warm friendship, complete with long drives with epic soundtracks and deep talks about life, love, and spirituality. With Tate, Aden feels closer to her mom and her mom's faith than she has since her mother died years ago. Everyone else even Aden's brother and her best friend can see their connection, but does Tate?

Navigating uncertain romance and the crises of those she loves, Aden must decide how she chooses to see herself and how to honor her mom s memory."

~~~

I had an amazing discussion with Jessie via email about her writing, literature, self-love, friendships, and parental relationships. I'm really excited to read The Calculus of Change. I hope this interview encourages you to check out Jessie's book!

Here's what Jessie had to say!

Interview with Jessie Hilb:


O: What inspires you to write?

J: My mom gave me my first journal when I was five years old and told me that I could write my private thoughts inside. It feels like I've been writing ever since. I can't remember a time in my life when I haven't written. I do a lot of heart living and a whole lot of feeling, and writing is an amazing, cathartic, and totally necessary outlet for all of that internal energy.

O: What inspired The Calculus of Change?

J: I was inspired to write The Calculus of Change based on this deep, beautiful friendship I had in high school and college. Of course, the book is entirely fiction, but the feelings in the book and the soul of the book is real. I had never read a book with that type of confusing, unrequited love and I wanted to write about the hard-won and radical self-love that came out of it.

Your book deals with so many important topics, such as self-love. Why do you think it is important to share the importance of self-love with your readers? 

J: I am so passionate about radical self-love. Love radiates and transforms. Love is everything! I feel that when we approach ourselves with deep compassion (and it's a practice, not an arrival) we are able to give so much more to the world; we're able to show up and be present in radical, transformative ways. Teens (and all of us) are bombarded with messaging from our culture about how to be better, do better, get better. I'm all about self-growth, but I think it starts with loving and accepting who and where we are right in this very moment because the truth is that we are all so perfect in our human-ness right now

O: Your book also involves important friendships. Why do you think solid friendships are important in young adult literature? Do you believe that solid friendships can flourish into healthy relationships? 

J: One of the most important relationships in the novel is the one Aden has with her best friend, Marissa. I am so passionate about female friendships.I love when those of us who identify in some way as women love each other and support each other and lift each other up through life's challenges. I find the female friendships I've been fortunate enough to have since high school and the ones I've made beyond have been my deepest, most nourishing relationships. And I love portraying the complexity and love in those relationships in my writing.


O: Do you think that influential parental relationships positively shape young adult literature or should it? 

J: The parent relationships in TCOC are really important- the one she has with her living father and the one she carries on with her deceased mother. Of course, our parents shape us as human beings and we carry a lot of generational energy with us as we turn into adults. As a contemporary YA fiction author, I have no agenda in portraying these relationships, just a desire to reflect some truth through the parent-child relationship. 

O: What is your writing style and how did the process of writing go for you? I'm an aspiring author myself and I've found it quite challenging to write every day. (In fact, my schedule has hardly allowed me to write much at all this past year!) 

J: My writing style has been described as "lyrical," and one blogger recently described it as "verse," which I absolutely LOVE because I am also a poet. I don't think very much about style when I'm writing. I do read a lot of poetry and a lot of young adult fiction, and sometimes the rhythm of what I read gets into my bones in the best way and my style shifts. My intention in writing is to get deep down into the heart of things. And sometimes that looks like poetry or fragmented sentences or unapologetically breaking grammar rules.

Oh, the writing life!! Of course, I think it's important to write regularly and it certainly makes sense to have a regular writing "practice." That said, I wrote TCOC through two pregnancies, two postpartum, toddlers, and all the rest of this crazy human existence. What's most important is that in your heart, you identify as a writer, that you believe in yourself, and that of course, you LOVE yourself--that means being compassionate with yourself around times when you just can't get to your writing, being compassionate with the writing that you actually do, and loving yourself enough to write what's in your heart/head/soul.. 

Thank you so much for hosting me on your blog!!
Jessie

I will be reading this book as soon as I can! I'm waiting for my copy in the mail! If you'd like to see me unbox it, head on over to my Instagram and keep an eye on my stories! I do all of my unboxings and hauling and other bookish receiving on there!

Happy reading!
Olivia
~LivTheBookNerd~

Thursday, September 1, 2016

{Blog Tour: Q&A + Giveaway!} Trust (Between the Lions #1) by Jodi Baker



Page Count: 214
Published on: June 18, 2015
Published by: Between Lions Press
Genre(s): Fantasy, Mythology, YA
ISBN #: 9780986431708

Where To Find Trust:
Twitter: @jodibakerbooks




Average Goodreads Rating: 3.49/5 stars
Average Amazon Rating: 4.3/5 stars

My Review Coming Soon!!!

Price: $2.99 (Kindle) or $16.48 (Amazon/Paperback)



Goodreads synopsis:

TRUST is a young adult, mythological, urban fantasy thrill ride about the darkly fantastical, supernatural Museion that has secretly protected humanity’s greatest treasures for millennia, and Anna, the sixteen-year-old New York girl who is the unknowing Heir to it all:

TRUST.
That’s what the voice inside my head kept repeating when I woke up between the infamous lion statues of the New York Public Library, with no idea how I got there and no memory of the last year of my life.

The only person I ever trusted was my mother, who lied about everything.

I want to trust myself, despite my missing memories. But hearing a voice inside my head obviously isn’t a good thing, especially since it know things I don’t… like how to speak Ancient Sumerian, the fact that yellow-eyed people aren’t actually people, and that my mother’s Egyptian ankh necklace was the key to unlocking the truth she was hiding:

I’m the last in a long lineage of powerful women whose secrets date back to the ancient Library of Alexandria.

I’m fighting like hell to stay alive while searching for both my missing mother and the truth, desperate to find something or someone I can trust.
 

~~~


Trust Q&A With Jodi Baker:


Q: What inspired you to write Trust?

I had a dream about that I was following a young woman in a muddied and bloody toga, running up a gray and white marble, spiraling staircase that seemed to have no end. As we raced up, up, and up, she kept trying to gather up these ancient books and scrolls that were piled on the steps. I would always wake up before I could find out what was chasing us, or why she was trying to save books and scrolls.  I told a friend of mine about the dream. I said: “I really want to know who she is and what she was running from.” My friend, who happens to be an incredible playwright, said, ever-so-seriously: “Write it and find out.” That gave me the courage to begin!

Q: How did you start writing YA fiction? Were you a fan of it already?

The most important, soul-searing books were those I read between the ages of nine and eighteen. I always felt that those writers took me seriously, even though the world around me didn’t yet. I write the kinds of book that I love to read, which is why it’s a thrilling honor to be a Young Adult Author.
Q: What is your favorite YA book or series?

I love to read as much as I love to write (my walls are lined with books instead of wallpaper!) so I’ve got a HUGE list! My YA Must-Reads always have a kick-ass female heroine and take place in an intricate, intoxicating world I’d love to live in, like Laini Taylor’s Daughter of Smoke & Bone trilogy, Kendare Blake’s Antigoddess, and of course, anything by Cassandra Clare. I adore urban fantasy that takes place in/alongside our mortal world, like Shadowshaper, by Daniel Jose Older, but right now, I’m obsessing over Sarah J Maas’s stunning A Court of Thorns and Roses fantasy series. 

(SAME!)

Q: The Arriviste has stated that Trust is "America's answer to Harry Potter...". How does it feel to have that kind of praise and would you consider your book to be another Harry Potter-esque novel or something entirely different?

To see TRUST mentioned in the same sentence as Harry Potter was a total out-of-body experience! When I read that review, I literally fell off my chair. The Arriviste review pointed out that the two series have characters that are born into extraordinary circumstances that they knew nothing about. Anna and Harry both find themselves forced into epic supernatural wars that began before their time. Both are gifted with the enormous responsibility and opportunity to make choices that will affect our destiny. Both series have a world that expands and characters that grow within each book. I love that Harry Potter has mysterious British castles and a magical world ruled by wizards. I also love that TRUST has a diverse, ‘melting-pot’ set of characters that walk right out of ancient mythology to fight each other in the cement and steel, high-tech world of modern-day New York City. The biggest difference is that TRUST has a female heroine, which is intrinsic to the story of the Between Lions Series. I would be beyond ecstatic if readers related to Anna, Styx, and Cax as they do to Harry, Ron, and Hermione. That is every writer’s dream!

Q: Which of your characters is your favorite?

Anna rescues boys from prisons, fights off Werejaguar attacks and always makes a way out of no way. One of my favorite lines in TRUST is when she realizes: “Yesterday things happened to me. Today I want to be the Girl Who Happens To Things.” Anna Perankios is my extraordinary hero. 

Q: Do you have advice for aspiring authors?

I recently spoke on a panel about how to ‘Unlock Your Inner Creativist’, which you can check out on my JodiBakerAuthor Facebook page. I also created a set of inspirational Writing/Creativity Rules, which are posted at http://www.jodibakerbooks.com/muse-ings-blog. The best advice I have is what my amazing friend told me: If you have an idea, whether it’s a line of dialog, a character, or a place you see in your head, give yourself permission to follow that spark of curiosity on the page, to ’Write it and find out!”

About Jodi Baker:

As a child the only punishment Jodi ever feared was not being allowed her weekly visit to the library. At boarding school, though an enthusiastic student, her late night reading fests frequently made her late for first period. Luckily, it was a high school for Performing Arts, where the classes she was good at (writing, theatre, dance & visual art) happened in the afternoon. After attending Carnegie Mellon University, she spent several months performing plays on the island of Cyprus, which was where she fell in love with mythology. When she returned to the U.S.A. Jodi lived in New York City. After a summer of working as a tour guide for the Natural History Museum, Jodi developed an addiction for wandering through all of NYC's incredible Museums - especially the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She also spent many hours sitting between the infamous library lions dreaming up the kinds of books she wanted to create. Now she happily lives in Los Angeles with two Anubis-y looking dogs in a house lined with books instead of wallpaper. Jodi Baker loves writing & reading Young Adult Urban Fantasy Mythological stories tinged with romance. In addition to her young adult BETWEEN LIONS series, Jodi is also working on a middle-grade fiction fantasy series. 

TRUST is her first book.  

~~~

AWARDS & ACCLAMATIONS:

USATODAY:

JODI BAKER'S DEBUT NOVEL TRUST ON USATODAY
MUST-READ ROMANCE LIST FOR 2015!

Link to article: {click here}
Picture


JODI BAKER'S TRUST: "MUST READ YA"

Happily Ever After at USAToday.com calls Jodi Baker's TRUST, "MUST-READ YA"! 
Link to author interview with Jodi & great puppy pic: {click here}

What Other Bloggers Are Saying:
~“I enjoyed this book from the beginning. The story and plot line were very intriguing and unique from the start. Baker seems to have a lot of interesting ideas planned for this series.” 
- Mad Tea Party Book Reviews (award winning blogger)  

~“I was pleasantly impressed with this novel” 

Giveaway!

To win a copy of Trust, hit the like button on the LivTheBookNerdBlog Facebook Page!

If you've already liked the Facebook Page, then you've already been entered to win!

{click here} to like my Facebook Page for a chance to win!



Between Lions Press will randomly choose the winner from those who have liked my Facebook Page and contact them privately and send them the book.
Prize: an e-book copy of Trust
Giveaway Start: September 1st
End: September 16th
How To Enter: Like the LivTheBookNerd Facebook page!
Good luck! May the odds be ever in your favor!


Update!


Congratulations, Georgia! 


Happy reading, everyone!
Olivia
~LivTheBookNerd~
@LivTheBookNerd on Books