Showing posts with label indie books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label indie books. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2018

{Guest Review: Alex} Never, Never and Never Again by K.M. Breakey


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Page Count: 563
Published on: January 4, 2018
Published by: K.M. Breakey
Genre(s): Historical Fiction, Romance
Source: Paperback- provided by author
Age Rating: sexual content - young reader advisory

Where To Find ItGoodreads // Amazon  

My Rating: 1.75 stars










Goodreads synopsis:

Audrey is a starry-eyed Brit, Pieter a tenth-generation Afrikaner. At the height of Apartheid, they fall in love. A life of splendour awaits, but the country is shifting underfoot. The winds of change fan revolution, and Michael Manzulu’s rage boils. He is hungry, and will risk everything to destroy his oppressor.

When white rule gives way, trepidation is tempered by precarious optimism. Mandela will make the miracle happen. Or not. Twenty-three years on, South Africa has suffered unprecedented decline. The country unravels and fear is pervasive. Fear of persecution, land seizure, slaughter. Pieter and Audrey march on. They navigate the perpetual threat. They pray the wrath will not strike their home.

Recently, voices of protest cry out, none louder than the bombastic scholar, Kaspar Coetzer. World leaders cautiously take note, but will they take action? More importantly, can they?

"Never, Never and Never Again" is a story of vengeance, greed and corruption. A story the world ignores, but a story that must be told…before it’s too late.
 



~~~


I was sent  Never, Never and Never Again by the author, K.M. Breakey, for the purpose of reviewing the novel. This is the second novel I have reviewed for Breakey. My review for Johnny and Jamaal can be read here. As with the first review, minor spoilers ahead.


Never, Never and Never Again follows the Van Zyl family from the 1970s to 2018. The first section of the novel follows Afrikaner Pieter Van Zyl as he charms and marries English Audrey Hudson. This first section dabbles in racial tension and conflict during Apartheid, but focuses on the romantic relationship as it unfolds.


The second section jumps to the end of the 20th century. Pieter and Audrey have two children and Nelson Mandela is elected President. The parents are worried about the end of Apartheid and a future with Black government.


The final section takes place in 2017-2018. The Van Zyl’s son moved to Canada and is returning home for his parents’ 40th anniversary. He brings his 4 year old son and coworker to see his homeland. South Africa has become hostile to White citizens and the family faces the effects of decades of social change.


I enjoyed the chapters of the book that talked of things other than the Van Zyl family more than the rest of the book. Overall, the novel is decent and brings up a topic that I didn’t think much of until recently. Part of my ignorance on South Africa came from a lack of information presented in high school World History classes. I appreciate Breakey’s desire to write on subjects that are often ignored by the general population. Breakey also writes out his character’s dialects when they are speaking. It was easier to read than in Johnny and Jamaal and I appreciate the balance between worldbuilding and legibility.


Unfortunately, that is more or less where the positive feelings end. The novel has a blatant right-wing, Pro-White/Anti-Black tone. The degree of political feeling doesn’t really have bearing on whether the novel is good or bad, but the characters that are clearly admired by the protagonists are comfortable with making fun of liberals and left-wing ideals. Rather than be professional, the “savior” in the story attacks people and not ideals. Repeatedly in the novel, the protagonists talk of how Blacks were happy under Apartheid and would still be savages if not for the Afrikaner settlers. In the last section, Breakey uses the characters to criticize Western governments for taking in non-white refugees and the danger they bring to those countries.


Apart from political and racial issues with the book, Never, Never and Never Again devotes too many pages to romances that feel forced. Pieter and Audrey fall in love over what feels like a month and are married approximately 13 months after their first meeting. Then, in the third section, the Van Zyl’s daughter falls in love with her brother’s Canadian coworker after maybe a month as well. This pairing feels especially forced and has awkward sex scenes and hurried romantic interactions.


Both criticisms could have been written better. I feel that if they were, I would not have issue with the book and would rate it much higher. But, the readers are clearly meant to like the protagonists and share their racial/political views that are, to be frank, problematic and unhealthy. The romances came across as awkward as well.


I could be completely wrong in how I read the book. It took me a few weeks to read it, only finishing it because I did not want to give up halfway through. I was disappointed with Breakey’s latest release, especially compared to Johnny and Jamaal. I may go back and reread that novel to compare the two.


I would love to hear other opinions on this novel, as I could have grossly misinterpreted it.

Recommendations by Alex:
Happy reading,
Alex

Tuesday, January 9, 2018

Rings of Time Giveaway Winner Announcement!







Congratulations, Julia (@jujuthereader)! You are the winner of the Rings of Time giveaway! I will be sending your paperback copy of Rings of Time very soon! 

Thank you all for entering! I'll have more giveaways soon!

Monday, March 27, 2017

{Cover Reveal} A Time To Die (The Legend of Carter Gabel) by Jonas Lee


Hey, guys!

I've been a fan of Jonas Lee's novels for the past two years and I was so excited when he asked me to help with the cover reveal. The first two books in The Legend of Carter Gabel series were really fantastic. I cannot wait to read A Time To Die. I've been dying to know what happens next. Jonas Lee was first author to ask me to review his book, so his books will always hold a special place in my heart. I can't wait to read what he puts out next.

My Carter Gabel Reviews:
Well enough stalling! Here's the gorgeous cover for A TIME TO DIE by Jonas Lee!!!!!


Displaying A Time to Die.jpg

~~~



A Time To Die Blurb:

Carter Gabel saved his own life, and rescued his city from destruction. But, after the Pirates forced him into hiding, he spent years holed up in Crighton, city of ghosts.  Just as he thinks the world has forgotten him, a knock on the door interrupts his life and as he opens it, his next journey begins. An unexpected foe waits for him at the end to challenge everything he knows and all that his future holds. What must Carter do to survive? And what does he sacrifice to become a legend?

Author Bio:
Writing out of the Black Hills of South Dakota, Jonas likes coming up with new and creative worlds that speak to the plausible while remaining believable. With a fist-full of peanut M&Ms and a cup of coffee, he has written three novels about a snarky, supernatural teen able to time travel and more. 

Beyond writing, Jonas has a gift for useless knowledge through watching trivia shows and a love for cinematic adventures. Music fuels his writing and you can see him with at least one earbud in every day.







Book Links
Amazon: Amazon.... (STILL LOADING)
Goodreads: {click here}

Author Social Media Links
Facebook: {click here}
Goodreads: {click here}
Website: {click here}
Twitter: {click here}
Instagram: @Author_Jonas_Lee
YouTube: {click here}


Amazon Pre-Sale Link

A Time to Die is $0.99 
It will remain $0.99 until after launch week!
Jonas is still working on the paperbacks and once those get set up on Amazon, then they will be $9.99
A TIME TO DIE COMES OUT JUNE 9, 2017 SO PRE-ORDER YOUR COPY RIGHT AWAY!

Happy reading!
Olivia
~LivTheBookNerd~
@LivTheBookNerd on Books Amino

Thursday, February 9, 2017

{Guest Review: Alex} [MINOR SPOILERS] Johnny & Jamaal by K.M. Breakey

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Page Count: 340 Published on: June 20, 2016 Published by: K.M. Breakey Genre(s): Contemporary, Political, Realistic Fiction Source: Print: Paperback -via author Age Rating: YA
Where To Find It: Goodreads // Amazon
Twitter: @kmbreakey
Alex's Rating: 4.25 stars







Goodreads synopsis:

Two athletes from different planets are on the verge of greatness. Johnny’s a carefree Canadian making his mark in the NHL. Jamaal’s set to follow LeBron and Kyrie out of the ghetto. When their worlds collide, the catastrophic clash ignites racial conflict not seen since Ferguson. The incident tests the fledgling love of Johnny’s best friend Lucas and his African-American girlfriend Chantal, and sets them on a quest for truth and justice in the perverse racial landscape of 2016.

As chaos escalates across American cities, an MLK-like voice rises from the ashes. Wilbur Rufus Holmes may be salvation for Luke and Chantal, but can he stop society’s relentless descent into racial discord?

Johnny and Jamaal is awash with sports, violence and political taboo, as America’s seething dysfunction is laid bare.
 



~~~

Minor spoilers ahead

      Liv was contacted about reviewing this book a couple weeks back. With a new semester starting up, she didn’t have time to check this out, so I decided to read it. This book ended up throwing me a curve. I expected the book to be  & about the titular characters. Early in the story, Johnny is killed with Jamaal being at least partially responsible. The story shifts to focus on Lucas, Johnny’s white best friend, and Chantal, Lucas’s black girlfriend, as the couple watch the racial discussion explode in the United States.

      Johnny and Jamaal were not what I expected at all. I anticipated a fairly generic sports story where Johnny and Jamaal meet, become best friends, and make an example of overcoming differences on a national stage. I was skeptical and then a bit appreciative that I was wrong. The author is not afraid to show every opinion of race relations in his book. I really enjoyed the different views presented throughout.

      There are a few issues that I’d like to mention. First is the language. Swearing is omnipresent in this novel. It is more realistic to the world today, but I would give an R rating if it were a movie. Another detractor is the abundant use of African American Vernacular English (AAVE). Again, its use makes the world more fleshed out, but written down is somewhat difficult to follow, at least for a small town white guy.

      Overall, I enjoyed reading Johnny and Jamaal. It was good to see someone write about race in the United States and present logical ideas. Not everyone will agree, and that’s okay. The book opens the dialogue to begin a discussion. It will surely upset some people, and that’s okay too. I think anyone remotely affected by race (so everyone) should check it out, as long as the reader is mature enough to handle the language and heavy material.

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

January 2017 Book Haul



Hey, guys!

     Well, I've managed to acquire more books this month. At least half were review copies, so I don't feel too bad. The problem is that I only read 4 books in January...I'm behind on reading, I'm behind on writing reviews, I'm behind on my own writing project. My main focus has been staying sane as I get through my second semester of college. I'm still figuring out how this semester is going to go, but so far I like my classes. It's kind of odd to have to go through the new teacher process all over again. I love the semester classes, but learning how my professors teach during the first few weeks can be really stressful. Anyway, I've acquired 15 books this month. One is not shown in this picture because it has been hidden in the stacks of books that I have yet to shelve on my new bookcases. They still have to be anchored to the wall, so it's better safe than sorry. I'll have a mini shelf tour once my bookshelves are full and fully situated. So enough rambling! Here are the books that I acquired this month! 



Review Copies:

  1. The Impossible Fortress by Jason Rekulak+
    • Review coming soon!
  2. The Aureate Spectacles by Eliott McKay+
  3. The Chronicles of Three: Bloodline by Tabitha Caplinger+
  4. The Intuitives by Erin Mitchelle Sky & Steven Brown+
  5. Dead Throne by Ryan David Fitzpatrick+
  6. Amish Weddings (Neighbors of Lancaster County #3) by Leslie Gould+
    • Not pictured
  7. If I Fix You by Abigail Johnson+
  8. Jorie and the Magic Stones by A.H. Richardson+ (For Bailey)

I Bought:

  1. Passenger by Alexandra Bracken
  2. Off the Page by Jodi Picoult & Samantha Van Leer
  3. Cloaked by Alex Flinn
  4. Spinning Starlight by R.C. Lewis
  5. Carve the Mark by Veronica Roth
  6. Beauty & the Beast: Lost In A Book by Jennifer Donnelly
  7. The Selection Coloring Book by Kiera Cass & illustrated by Martina Flor
Number of Books Read: 2
Number of Review Books: 8
Books I Bought: 7

A huge thank you to:
  • Inkitt
  • Tabitha Caplinger
  • Trash Dogs Media LLC
  • Ryan Fitzpatrick
  • Bethany House Publishing
  • HarlequinTeen & Abigail Johnson
  • Book Publicity Services
  • Simon & Schuster 
      Thank you so much for sending me these books. I promise to read them as soon as I can. I really appreciate that you all contacted me to work with me. It's such a cool experience and I love working with large and small publishing companies and independent/indie authors alike. Thank you for blessing the world with your stories.

Reviews for these books will be uploaded soon! I can't wait to share my thoughts with you all! 
Happy reading!
Olivia
~LivTheBookNerd~

@LivTheBookNerd on Books


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