Chuyển đến nội dung chính

SPARK by Holly Schindler- Cover Reveal

Hey bookworms, Welcome back to MYABL! Today, I am happy to reveal the cover of a upcoming YA read, Spark by author Holly Schindler! Check it out! All of the juicy details about this novel, as well as the author, are posted below. Keep reading for more. SPARK comes out next year (May 2016)! Make sure you add it to your Goodreads if you'd like to read it. Links for Goodreads and pre-orders are at the end of this post. I'm excited because it has the most amazing elements of Romeo and Juliet wound into it's blurb. Description: Holly Schindler’s Spark: When the right hearts come to the Avery Theater—at the right time—the magic will return. The Avery will come back from the dead. Or so Quin’s great-grandmother predicted many years ago on Verona, Missouri’s most tragic night, when Nick and Emma, two star-crossed teenage lovers, died on the stage. It was the night that the Avery’s marquee lights went out forever. It sounds like urban legend, but one that high school senior Quin is ...

The Secret

Not Pretty Enough Blog Tour (GIVEAWAY+ Review+ Excerpt )



Welcome to Mera's YA Book List! Today we have a blog tour for Not Pretty Enough by Jaimie Admans. Keep reading for my review, a super awesome giveaway, and an excerpt from the novel.
Title: Not Pretty Enough
Author: Jaimie Admans
Date of Publication: August 1, 2013
Genre: contemporary YA comedy

Blurb:

“New Year’s Resolutions:
1. Lloyd Layton will know I exist. He once said three whole words to me, so this is obviously progress. If I don’t get a proper conversation out of him soon, then I’ll take my top off and streak through the cafeteria, because nobody could fail to notice these boobs.
2. I will not get expelled for streaking through the cafeteria.”

Those are the words that begin her mission.
Chessie is fourteen, not pretty enough, and very much in love. Lloyd Layton is hot, popular, and unaware of Chessie’s existence.
Her goal is clear: to get Lloyd to love her as much as she loves him, and she has exactly one year to do it.
As Chessie’s obsession with Lloyd reaches boiling point and she starts to spin a web of lies that spiral out of control, Lloyd turns out to be not quite the prince she thought he was. Can Chessie avoid the gathering storm before things go too far?

-- -- -- -- --
Not Pretty Enough is a contemporary young adult comedy suitable for ages thirteen and over.
Book two in the series will be released early 2014.
 
 
GIVEAWAY!

$40 Amazon GC + swag


MY REVIEW:

I received Not Pretty Enough by Jaimie Admans in digital format for the Not Pretty Enough blog tour hosted by Oops! I Read A Book Again.

Chessie, the main protagonist in Admans novel, was quite a character. She was just as dramatic and unreasonable as you'd expect any young teen to be, but honestly even a bit more.

Chessie, who is absolutely obsessed with Lance, a boy who goes to school with her, spends a lot of her time trying to find ways to get her guy.

From the beginning, I have no idea why she likes Lance so much. He's popular, sure, and even cute, but besides that it is obvious that they have nothing in common, and honestly, he seemed the tad bit like a jerk.

Chessie would have gasped dramatically if she were to hear me say that (and if her hearing me was possible) but Lance actually became more likeable throughout the novel. That is until the end when something happens that makes me regret ever redeeming him of his 'LAME LOSER' title earlier in the book.

But even Lance, despicable as he is, wasn't my main problem with Not Pretty Enough. It was actually Chessie. She was everything a young lady should grow up not to be. She wasn't confident in her self, and she'd easily go to drastic measures to change herself for someone who wasn't even worth it.

However these problems actually made the story good because though I cringed every time she acted completely moronic, and yes, she did screw up a lot, she learned a lesson at the end.

"You don't need a boyfriend to complete you, and you certainly don't need one to make you popular, prettier, or smarter. As long as you're being yourself, then you're perfect."

Lines like these at the end made the book more enjoyable, and made me hate Chessie's actions a lot less.

I like my tea with a good amount of sugar and a nice splash of lemon, and I think it's obvious that this book just wasn't my cup of tea. That doesn't make it horrible however. The book had plenty of morals that are definitely beneficial, tons of activity, and could be engaging.

For these reasons, I give Not Pretty Enough a three star review.

However, I'd recommend this book to my middle grade and lower YA crowd as the dialogue and the characters are definitely more MG geared than YA, and the lessons enclosed are presented in a way that is more MG & Lower YA appropriate.

Though Not Pretty Enough wasn't my cuppa tea, it definitely didn't fail in funny!
EXCERPT:

 

I’ve been in this school for two and a half years now. I’ve had this teacher – Mr Edmond – for a year and a half of them, and he has not yet realised that I am not interested in geography. In fact, the only thing even mildly interesting in this classroom is the fact that Lloyd Layton is in it.

I don’t know if it’s because my seat is directly opposite the teacher’s desk, or if it’s because he just doesn’t like me, but he loves to do quick fire questions, usually before you’ve even settled at your desk and got your books out. I’m always the first one he picks, and it’s always some rubbish about the Earth’s core or volcanoes that erupted fifty years ago. I never get it right, and I think Mr Edmond thinks I’m teasing him by pretending to be stupid when the truth is that I can just about find my way home from the bus stop.

“Miss Clemenfield,” Mr Edmond begins just as we are settling down in our chairs. “The population of Japan is?”

“Um…”

“Wrong. The population of Japan is not um. It is in fact…” He stops and stares at me for a moment. “Francesca, are you okay?”

I look up. “Yes, thank you. Yourself?”

“No, your face. It’s all red.”

“I had to run down from my last class. Mr Griffiths kept us behind.” I nod emphatically. Okay, so I’m seriously unfit. Why don’t you point it out to the whole class and have Lloyd Layton turning to look at my red, sweaty self, panting due to a short run from the maths block?

“If you’d like to go and get a glass of water from the fountain, you’re welcome to go now before the lesson begins.”

“I’m good, thanks.”

He walks away and starts the quick fire questions down the other end of the room.

“Are you sure you’re okay?” Ceri, who sits on one side of me, asks.

“You know, you do look a bit red and blotchy, Chess,” Ewan says from the seat on my other side.

“All right, I’m unfit,” I snap. “Why don’t you just announce that I’m a fat cow during school assembly and be done with it?”

“Sorry.” He holds his hands up and starts intently reading his textbook.

Leigh leans across from where she sits a few chairs down. “Don’t worry, Chessie,” she says with a sickly sweet smile that’s as fake as plastic flowers. “I suffer from PMT too. Do you want me to ask for a tampon for you?”

“At least mine’s not permanent,” I snap at her.

After ten minutes or so goes by, the teacher is about to fire another dumb question when he stops in his tracks and stares at me.

“You know, Francesca, I really think you ought to go and see the nurse.”

God, won’t anyone just leave me alone today?

“It’s Chessie, please.” I grab my bag from the floor and dig around in it until I find my compact mirror. “Is there something wrong with the lighting in this class or something today, Mr Edmond? Because I’m absolutely fi—”

Oh God. My face is all red and blotchy. It’s like I’ve come out in some sort of a rash. Crikey, no wonder the teacher was worried about me.

“Sorry,” I say quickly.

“Ewan, Ceri,” Mr Edmond addresses them. “Could you two move your chairs away a little bit, just in case it’s contagious. If everybody could just shift down a little.”

Contagious. Contagious? He thinks I’m contagious? And he’s just announced it to the rest of the class, and suddenly thirty pairs of eyes are peering at me and talking amongst themselves.

Crap.

Couldn’t he just have said something to me quietly, without making the entire class think I have the bubonic plague? That’s just great, isn’t it? Now Lloyd will never look twice at me because I’m like a walking wart. A giant walking wart that is contagious.

Although, perhaps a more pressing matter is what on earth is wrong with me. Why is my face all rash-like? I look like I’ve been sleeping in a nest of stinging nettles.

“I think you should go to the nurse, Chessie.” Mr Edmond puts unnecessary emphasis on my name.

“Yes, thank you.”

I grab my bag and rush out the door, grateful to be able to walk away from the staring eyes.



Goodreads link: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18142578-not-pretty-enough
Purchase links: Amazon
 
About Jaimie Admans
Jaimie is a 28-year-old English-sounding Welsh girl with an awkward-to-spell name. She lives in South Wales and enjoys writing, gardening, drinking tea and watching horror movies. She hates spiders and cheese & onion crisps. She has been writing for years but has never before plucked up the courage to tell people. Afterlife Academy is her third novel and she hopes you enjoy it. There are plenty more on the way!
 
 

Nhận xét

Bài đăng phổ biến từ blog này

In Which I Review... The Truth About You & Me by Amanda Grace

Paperback , 264 pages Expected publication: September 8th 2013 by Flux Received for review via NetGalley SYNOPSIS: Smart girls aren't supposed to do stupid things. Madelyn Hawkins is super smart. At sixteen, she's so gifted that she can attend college through a special program at her high school. On her first day, she meets Bennet. He's cute, funny, and kind. He understands Madelyn and what she's endured - and missed out on - in order to excel academically and please her parents. Now, for the first time in her life, she's falling in love. There's only one problem. Bennet is Madelyn's college professor, and he thinks she's eighteen - because she hasn't told him the truth. The story of their forbidden romance is told in letters that Madelyn writes to Bennet - both a heart-searing ode to their ill-fated love and an apology. BLURB: The Truth About You and Me is an engaging, unique read, written entirely through the form of lett...

In Which I Review... The Veil by Cory Putman Oakes

    Seventeen-year-old Addison Russell is in for a shock when she discovers that she can see the invisible world of the Annorasi. Suddenly, nothing is as it appears to be -- the house she lives in, the woman who raised her, even the most beautiful boy in town all turn out to be more than what they seem. And when this strange new world forces Addy to answer for a crime that was committed long ago, by parents she has never known, she has no choice but to trust Luc, the mysterious Annorasi who has been sent to protect her. Or so he says . . . Paperback , 288 pages Published November 1st 2011 by Octane Press The Veil. Wow! I loved this novel. Firstly, let me start off by saying, I wasn't planning on reviewing this novel. With my review pile being so incredibly long, I snuck in Oakes' book as a pleasure read. I mean, here I was drinking out of this mug daily that says, "Caffeine gives me Annorasi powers", eating Ghiradelli...

In Which I Review... A Really Awesome Mess by Trish Cook and Brendan Halpin

ebook , 288 pages Expected publication: July 23rd 2013 by EgmontUSA Received for review via NetGalley SYNOPSIS: A hint of Recovery Road , a sample of Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist , and a cut of Juno . A Really Awesome Mess is a laugh-out-loud, gut-wrenching/heart-warming story of two teenagers struggling to find love and themselves. Two teenagers. Two very bumpy roads taken that lead to Heartland Academy. Justin was just having fun, but when his dad walked in on him with a girl in a very compromising position, Justin's summer took a quick turn for the worse. His parents' divorce put Justin on rocky mental ground, and after a handful of Tylenol lands him in the hospital, he has really hit rock bottom. Emmy never felt like part of her family. She was adopted from China. Her parents and sister tower over her and look like they came out of a Ralph Lauren catalog-- and Emmy definitely doesn't. After a scandalous photo of Emmy leads to viciou...

Free $100