My Giveaway + Announcements

*My first foray into an Author Interview with Andrew Xia Fukuda is up! (Should I do more?)
*My first manga review for Natsume Yuujinchou V.1 - please let me know what you think

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Mai Idea for Future Book Giveaway Contest, along with Poll

So, I mentioned previously about a book giveaway contest idea I had, and now I'm finally gonna talk about it!

A while back, Sarah Rees Brennan made a post about book covers wherein she made up a Summary of Lies (with an inkling of the truth sprinkled in) for the books she wished to discuss. I loved these lying summaries and I thought it'd be a lot of fun to use this idea for a giveaway! Basically the idea is that I host a contest for a book, write up a lying summary, and the winner is chosen based on who can tell me which part of the summary is true, either by whoever answers first or I do a draw of all the ones who got the right answer.

Let's use one of Brennan's lying summaries as an example:

What do you do when your girlfriend Katherine leaves you? Well, you could go on a heartwarming road trip with your best friend and learn a little about love and life, OR you could clone Katherine a thousand times, in order to make a clone army and TAKE OVER THE WORLD. Nothing says 'I'm over you, baby' like being God King of the Universe.


This one is fairly obvious on which part of the summary was true (HINT HINT answer is in bold), but I thought it was the simplest example to use in order to illustrate how this contest is going to work. So, assuming I use this summary above, all you have to do to be eligible to win is quote the true statement, leave your comment with the answer and your email (they will all be screened so no one should see the answer) and then I draw lots on the people who got the answer right and the winner gets a prize!

HOWEVER, one problem: I'm having a hard time deciding what prizes to give out. Also, I don't know what kind of books y'all would be interested in me doing lying summaries of. So, I'd be really grateful if you'd fill out these polls. ALSO, if you want advanced dibs on this contest I'll be hosting in the future, leave a comment after filling out the polls with your username and a link to this page and I'll give you an extra point on the first contest I host. =D Point form version below, to make this easy on the eyes~

Advanced Dibs on the First Future Book Giveaway Contest
+1 pt - link (leave a comment on this post with the linked URL)
+1 pt each - leave the name of the person who referred you to the contest and BOTH the referrer and the referred get a point each



Sunday, December 20, 2009

In My Mailbox - #14 12/20/2009

(Meme from The Story Siren)

Sooooo many books this week eeeeeeeeeeee~~!! =D

1 giveaway
4 catologue
3 bought
6 borrowed
Total = 14!! =D

GIVEAWAY:




The Hour Glass by Hilary Spiers

Won this from Goodreads. It's a short story anthology. Will be using the holidays to go through the short stories, along with my little towering pile of anthology collections I neglected this year... I'll do my best to get a full review up, but no promises.




CATALOGUE:



Flygirl by Sherri L. Smith

Eeeeeeee so excited for this book! There's WWII and women and plane pilots and POC and it just sounds like a really, really promising YA historical novel, if the first chapter is anything to go by. >D






Kira-Ki
ra by Cynthia Kadohata

A;LSKDFJASDLKFJ I GOT THIS HARDBACK FOR $9.99 CDN!!! ASL;DKJFDASL;JF Did I ever mention how much I love Kadohata? I love, love, love Kadohata. I haven't read Kira-Kira yet (blasphemous, I know), but if her other books are anything to go by, I'm confident that I'm going to love this one.






A Curse Dark As Gold by Elizabeth C. Bunce

Rapunzel retelling! =D I love retellings, and I'm interested in how Bunce relocates the setting into 1700s England.









Luv Ya Bun
ches by Lauren Myracle

It just looks like a cute MG novel. And bonus: a diverse cast! =D







BOUGHT:

BLUE BLOODS BOXSET -
Blue Bloods, Masquerade, Revelations by Melissa de la Cruz

You know how everyone has their guilty vampire reads? Well, the Blue Bloods series is mine. Yes yes it's generic and way too much brand-name dropping and the writing is horrid and the cast sucks but THE CRAZY MYTHOLOGY OF EPIC, YOU GUYS. REINCARNATIONS! PSEUDO-INCESTUOUS TWINS. It's like Gossip Girl meets Twilight meets Angel Sanctuary and it makes my heart die in happiness.

BORROWED:



The A
bsolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie

I already reviewed this. SO GOOD. I'M BUYING MY OWN COPY THIS WEEK OR WHENEVER IS THE CLOSEST CHANCE I GET TO HIT A BOOKSTORE.








Shrinking Violet
by Danielle Joseph


Cute, light-hearted read. Lots of fun, but not exactly a book I'm going to remember in the future or thinking about getting my own copy though. Will do a write up for it soon.








The Kiss of Death
by Marcus Sedgwick


It's about time I started a Sedgwick novel, and I thought I'd start of with this copy. From the first few pages it looks really promising.








The Swan Kingdom by Zoe Marriot

Retelling of the Wild Swans! Which is like, only one of my favourite fairytales of alllllll tiiiiiime~~ I'm crossing my fingers and hoping that it'll end up being good.







Strange Angels
by Lili St. Crow


Borrowed on a whim. it's one of those titles wherein I see the cover on sites so many times that I finally got curious enough to check it out.








Riot
by Walter Dean Myers


Because I felt the need to check out more of Myers stuff, and the whole draft riots aspect of this novel sounded interesting.

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Review: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

I FINALLY HAVE A REVIEW FOR Y'ALL. Sorry it took so long, had majorrrr review slump. T_T Also the whole tv distraction thing...


Title: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
Author(s): Sherman Alexie, Art by Ellen Forney
Genre: YA Contemporary Tragicomedy
Page Count: 230
Publisher: Little Brown

The Summary: Junior is a budding cartoonist growing up on the Spokane Indian reservation. Born with a variety of medical problems, he is picked on by everyone but his best friend. Determined to receive a good education, Junior leaves the rez to attend an all-white school in the neighboring farm town where the only other Indian is the school mascot. Despite being condemned as a traitor to his people and enduring great tragedies, Junior attacks life with wite and humour and discovers a strength inside of himself that he never knew existed.
--Summary from backcover

The Skinny: Hilarious and heart-breaking. Run, don't walk, to buy yourself a copy of this novel. You won't regret it.

The Review: Alright, first things first: I LOVE LOVE LOVE THIS BOOK. Gawd why did I not read this sooner? Okay, I do in fact know the reason why: despite many people’s insistence that this book was funny, I have been hearing things about the whole heartbreaking aspect and that scared me. I mean, I love tragedies and all, but I have to be in the mood to dive into that kind of stuff. And most importantly, this whole comedy + tragedy paradox puzzled me because, to be honest, I didn’t think it could be pulled off properly. None of those old-time Shakespeare plays convinced me in their tragicomedy elements, nor did they in the Moliere plays I’ve read, and I mostly mock this genre whenever I see a work get labeled as such. From my experience, it’s either a little be a funny moments in largely a melodrama angst tragic!fest or mostly comedic with a tiny pinch of bittersweet moments here and there. Having never come across a fictional piece of work that convinced me of their “tragicomedy” element, I couldn’t see how it could be a perfect blend of both.

Well, now that I’ve read this novel by Sherman Alexie, I was proven wrong. There can most definitely be a book that does the perfect blend of the tragicomedy genre. How does Alexie do it, you might ask? By handling grief and suffering by sheer, vigorous humour. This is not a little pinch of comedy dabbled in to mask the overwhelming sadness of the story, or vice versa. The best way I can explain this mix of two opposing genres is that it runs parallel. It is at once laugh-out-loud funny in its narration and heartbreaking in its subject matter, and this way of narrating the story’s presented topics and issues bring the best of both comic and tragic elements. Because it chooses to depict suffering with a humourous voice, the heavy subject matter never feels preachy or worn down. (This is doubly notable to me because this is Alexie’s first YA novel, and I can’t tell you how many times I’ve come across works by Adult genre writers trying their hands on the MG/YA genre and fail miserably by trying to shove down morales and whatnot down our throats.) I felt elated from laughter and tearful at the same time when reading over this novel, and I don’t think I’ve ever experienced such a thing in my years of reading novels before. Usually I wait a couple novels before deciding whether or not a particular author’s writing style is a must-read, but if Alexie writes like this for all his novels, then he isn’t just a must-read. He is a Must-Buy.

Gawd, what else is there to say beyond lavishing praises and insisting that everyone should read this novel right now? The story and plot were so tightly woven, the kind that is so smoothly done that I don’t even think about how the future developments will pan out or whatnot--I just trust in Alexie’s narration and run with it. And the characters! Everyone’s lots of fun, and I suppose this should be a warning: this is one of those books wherein your enjoyment level is reliant on how much you like the main character and the narration. I’m personally having a hard time imagining someone hating Junior, but then again anything is possible. I really liked how Alexie balanced out Junior’s experience on the rez and in his new all-white upper class school. Thinking back, there is a lot of duality in this novel, the sad and the funny, the residence and his school, the two opposing sides of the basketball court, his two very different best friends, etc. The contrast is not jarring but blends so perfectly that they bring out the most of the two sides, and it’s hats off to Alexie’s deft writing talent for pulling this off splendidly.

Also, I think this may be my favourite novel-that-incorporates-art-into-its-story evaaaaaaar. Junior is an aspiring cartoonist, and the art in the novel works showcases this side of Junior’s character perfectly. All the art is amazing and totally relevant to the storyline. It even one ups this and gives a deeper look at how Junior views the world around him, beyond just the straight words out of his text. It’s not just artwork that complements the story: it’s artwork that adds to the novel, showing something beyond just the text and adding richness to the work. It’s sorta similar to the art in Phoebe Gilman’s picture book Something from Nothing, in that sense. And the art reflects the tragicomedy aspect of the text as well. Soooooooo good, argh my review is not doing this book justice, everyone, just jump this review and run straight to the nearest bookstore and order it. Okay? Okay.

So I’m going to end off by quoting some stuff. This book is soooooo quotable, but I really wanted to pick one that showed a little bit of how the art worked with the text without using a section that was overly spoilery. (I even took the pic of this cartoon with my camera because I love y'all so much) So I picked the following in the book. =D

My school and my tribe are so poor and sad that we have to study from the same dang books our parents studied from. That is absolutely the saddest thing in the world.

And let me tell you, that old, old, old, decrepit geometry book hit my heart with the force of a nuclear bomb. My hopes and dreams floated up in a mushroom cloud. What do you do when the world has declared nuclear war on you?


Rating: 4.5/5
Enjoyment: 100++++++++++++%

Title and Cover Discussion: Okay, I’ll admit, I hate the cover. I must have passed by this cover a million times and didn’t bother to pick up the book because it’s so BLAND. First off, I really like the shiny type YA covers, so this drab black backdrop isn’t really doing it for me. Now, I don’t mind black backdrops if there is an eye-catchy object or something in the front to contrast it, but there isn’t. It’s just these two action figures of an Indian and a White guy and the only real eye-catching part is the name of Sherman Alexie. I mean, I get that Sherman Alexie is a well-known name, but he is not known in the YA shelves and YA readers who don’t branch out much beyond this genre is going to look at this name and be like ‘huh, am I supposed to know this person?’ But this is one of those rare and exceptional situations where the title is so much fun that you really don’t care whether or not the cover is boring. I mean, look at the title: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian. It speaks of fun, and a little bit of curiousity being sparked ‘cause you’ll go, “hmm, part-time Indian? How can some choose to be Indian part-time?” and may give the novel a few page flips to figure this out.

Title: A
Cover: D

Sunday, December 13, 2009

In My Mailbox - #2 + #3

(Meme from The Story Siren)

So I was like, lalala speed marathoning all my tv shows now that my papers are done and spamming twitter with ninefly over our diff American/Taiwanese/Korean(just me) shows [For the curious: ninefly - Firefly (US) and Black & White (TW), me - Vampire Diaries (US), Autumn's Concerto (TW), You're Beautiful (KR)] and then I looked at the time and was like, homg I need to post something on my book blog to prove I'm alive or something.

'sides I missed out last week and I got some really cool books (IMO anyhow) so I really wanna talk about them! =D

LAST WEEK:

The Sigh of Haruhi Suzumiya by Nagaru Tanigawa (bought)

The sequel to The Melancholy of Haruhi Suzumiya!! Which was only like, ONE OF THE MOST EPIC JAPANESE LIGHT NOVELS EVAAAAAAAAARRRRRRRRRRR~~~!!! *___* I haven't gotten around to reading this yet due to school (cursesssss) and being waylaid by tv shows, but I willllll find time when the holidays come around and I finish the last of my exams. *determined*


Bound By Your Touch by Meredith Duran (borrowed)

Honestly, nothing could have induced me to check this out of the library if it weren't for the fact that Sarah Rees Brennan enticed me with her Book Summaries of Awesome to ignore the hideous, hideous cover and check out some Meredith Duran stuff. I finished it and it's gonna appear on my Triple Snapshot feature soon. =D

Last Week's Book Count: 2

THIS WEEK:

The Summoning +
The Awakening by Kelley Armstrong (swapped)

I swapped Warchild in order to borrow these two books. While I can't say it was worth the trade, the series was an interesting read and I enjoyed it despite its issues. There shall be meta post on this series soon.

Born Confused by Tanuja Desai Hidier (bought)

Got it half price!! =D As this is a book from the PUSH line, I'm pretty sure I read this book already back in middle school when I was in a major PUSH phase. But I don't really remember much from it except that I thought it was funny and I liked the girl's sister (tres cool. xD). This is, if I'm remembering the right book, lol. If this book does happen to be the one I remember from childhood, I'll post it under the Throwback Thursday feature. =D

This Week's Book Count: 3*

*This excludes all book gifts I bought this week.

Friday, December 11, 2009

Open Letter From a Very Annoyed Asian Reader

So, I am more or less free from the rest of the december (DONE MY LAST RESEARCH PAPER OF THE SEMESTER W00T!!), and since it's a friday I should get those link round ups ready but DAMN, I just read three books in a row that did this thing I really, really hate and piled up with all my pent-up school stress I'm going to have an Open Letter From a Very Annoyed Asian Reader. But before I rant I will have gratuitous pic of Kang Ji-Hwan. Just to balance out the letter that follows.



Dear White Writers That Choose to Depict Asians In Their Works,

Now, I'm a reader, and I love reading English-language books with Asians in them. Since they're so hard to come by, whenever I find a book with Asians in it, they almost always get top priority in my reading list. Writers like you who choose to make the attempt to have diversity in their work by having an Asian character in the cast give me hope that someday I might, you know, see more Asian representation in the world of Novels and less white-washed casts as defaults in the story.

However, there's these three words that I am finding extremely common in books written by White authors when describing their Asian character of choice:

Almond-shaped eyes.

Almond

Shaped

Eyes.

*breathes*

Okay, first up, my eyes are not fucking almonds. They're not little pieces of edible nuts you can chew on for a fucking snack. They aren't food. And what is with this blanket term "Almond-shaped eyes" to allude to your Asian character's Asian-ness? For one thing, not all eye shapes of Asian look the same! I know, this may be a shocking revelation to you, but they aren't and whenever I see this term being used to describe the Asian character, it kind of makes me think that you have never talked or interacted with an Asian person in any real way in your entire life. Either that, or you're just being lazy and copying this commonly used terminology as a blanket term to describe all Asian facial features. Both these reasons don't exactly make me appreciate or respect you as a writer.

FYI, This is not to discourage white writers from choosing to depict Asian characters! Please, do carry on in your attempts. But maybe next time you might want to consider doing a bit of research. Take a good hard look at the Asian population. And maybe then you might get into your head that Asian eyes are not almonds. Even if you think Asian eyes somehow do equate to almonds, just, pretend you aren't an ignorant sod and don't use the term anyway. I cannot and will not speak for all Asians, but I personally find it offensive and it's slowly becoming one of those buttons where once I see it, I'm put off from finishing the whole thing.

Signed,

Ah Yuan aka wingstodust

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Wishlist Wednesday - Book Count: 5

Lalala, what do you do when you don't want to work on your essay? BLOG, of course. >D

So, today is Wednesday... I'd do a Waiting for Wednesday post, but then I'm looking at the books I want and some of them have already been published and I really, reallyyyyy want to talk about them, so we're gonna have a little change around here. Today shall be WISHLIST WEDNESDAY~ *throws confetti around*

(similar meme called 'On My Wishlist' can be found at Book Chick City)
ETA (original WW meme from My Tea Time is Book Time)

We Have Always Lived in this House by Shirley Jackson

Um, seriously you guys, WHERE HAS THIS BOOK BEEN ALL MY LIFE?! How come I only heard of this book now!? Anywho, Misty from Book Rat has a review wherein she described the narration of WHALITH as, and I quote "I Capture the Castle's Cassandra Mortmain if she were maybe OCD and slightly disturbed." Guhhhhhh must read this. And maybe reread my copy of I Capture the Castle 'cause I miss it.



The Thirteenth Tale by Diana Setterfield
An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
Suite Scarlett by Maureen Johnson

Now, you may or may not be wondering, what in the world do these three novels have in common? Nothing! Except that Sarah Rees Brennan talked about them in her blog post, wherein she discussed cover changes and gave us hilarious lying summaries of lies. I read three out of the six books she commented on, and could tell the lies from the truth in her lying summaries, but I didn't read these three books I listed yet, so obviously this means I have to go, read them, and then look back at Brennan's lying summaries to figure out what part of it was true!!

Also, her lying summaries gives me this idea I may or may not want to do for future giveaways, but as I'm currently in finals week right now, I do not get the privilege to give these giveaway thoughts the time it deserves. ^^; Just know that I'm thinking of giveaways though.

(And, if anyone cares, yes, the covers I picked to show are my preferences in the cover change. I like seeing books so that's why I liked the cover of TTT. For AAOK, I like seeing faces and this is a face cover, so yay! (sry ninefly) And for Suite Scarlett, honestly my first reaction was the other cover, because I was all like 'YAY, FACE!' Then it was pointed out to me that the key was in the shape of NYC skyline and I'm just a big fat sucker for gimmicks like that, so I changed my mind.)

A Million Shades of Gray by Cynthia Kadohata

The one book that would have counted if I had decided to do a Waiting on Wednesday post.
AL;SKDFJASDL;JF OMFG NEW CYNTHIA KADOHATA'S STUFF. You guys, I love, love, love Cynthia Kadohata. ♥ And this is set in Vietnam like Cracker! so it is like, a spiritual sequel in my mind!! And I looooove Cracker, so obviously I must have this. Seriously, IS IT JANUARY YET!? ALDKJFA;SDLFKJALSK;FJSD;

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Waiting on Wednesday: Bleeding Violet by Dia Reeves

(Hosted by Breaking the Spine, will link etc when I'm less busy)

Summary:

Love can be a dangerous thing....

Hanna simply wants to be loved. With a head plagued by hallucinations, a medicine cabinet full of pills, and a closet stuffed with frilly, violet dresses, Hanna's tired of being the outcast, the weird girl, the freak. So she runs away to Portero, Texas in search of a new home.

But Portero is a stranger town than Hanna expects. As she tries to make a place for herself, she discovers dark secrets that would terrify any normal soul. Good thing for Hanna, she's far from normal. As this crazy girl meets an even crazier town, only two things are certain: Anything can happen and no one is safe.


I will confess, I wasn't interested, (not even with the gorgeous cover, the intriguing title, which are very awesome, y/y?!) until I read the first chapter excerpt. Then I was like, IS IT JANUARY YET?! Dia Reeves is really pulling in the crazy, and I dig it.

*goes back to cram midterms* (sry for lack of replies, peeps. =/)