Waiting on Wednesday 07/04/18

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that first originated at Breaking the Spine but has since linked up with “Can’t Wait Wednesday” at Wishful Endings now that the original creator is unable to host it anymore. Either way, this fun feature is a chance to showcase the upcoming releases that we can’t wait to get our hands on!

Mogsy’s Pick

Murder on Millionaires’ Row by Erin Lindsey (October 2nd, 2018 by Minotaur Books)

Not my usual type of read, I know, but then I’m a huge fan of Erin Lindsey from her epic fantasy Bloodbound trilogy and I was thrilled to discover she’ll be delving into the mystery genre. I’ve also just gotten an ARC so I’m super excited!

Erin Lindsey takes readers on a chase through Gilded Age Manhattan, filled with wonderful historical details, ghosts, romance, and Pinkerton detectives in Murder on Millionaires’ Row, a delightfully charming debut mystery. 

Rose Gallagher might dream of bigger things, but she’s content enough with her life as a housemaid. After all, it’s not every girl from Five Points who gets to spend her days in a posh Fifth Avenue brownstone, even if only to sweep its floors. But all that changes on the day her boss, Mr. Thomas Wiltshire, disappears. Rose is certain Mr. Wiltshire is in trouble, but the police treat his disappearance as nothing more than the whims of a rich young man behaving badly. Meanwhile, the friend who reported him missing is suspiciously unhelpful. With nowhere left to turn, Rose takes it upon herself to find her handsome young employer.

The investigation takes her from the marble palaces of Fifth Avenue to the sordid streets of Five Points. When a ghostly apparition accosts her on the street, Rose begins to realize that the world around her isn’t at all as it seems―and her place in it is about to change forever.

#FearlessWomen: The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal Spotlight & Exclusive Excerpt

Women are shining in every genre of speculative fiction, and it is no longer enough to say “Women arehere.” Instead, #FearlessWomen everywhere are taking a stand to say “Women will thrive here.”

Highlighting major titles from bestselling authors V.E. Schwab, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Jacqueline Carey as well as titles from acclaimed and debut authors such as Mary Robinette Kowal, Tessa Gratton, Sam Hawke, and Robyn Bennis, #FearlessWomen will be a coordinated social media celebration encouraging fans to start a dialogue about women in publishing, their worlds, their voices, and their unique stories.

The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal

On a cold spring night in 1952, a huge meteorite fell to earth and obliterated much of the east coast of the United States, including Washington D.C. The ensuing climate cataclysm will soon render the earth inhospitable for humanity, as the last such meteorite did for the dinosaurs. This looming threat calls for a radically accelerated effort to colonize space, and requires a much larger share of humanity to take part in the process.

Elma York’s experience as a WASP pilot and mathematician earns her a place in the International Aerospace Coalition’s attempts to put man on the moon, as a calculator. But with so many skilled and experienced women pilots and scientists involved with the program, it doesn’t take long before Elma begins to wonder why they can’t go into space, too. 

Elma’s drive to become the first Lady Astronaut is so strong that even the most dearly held conventions of society may not stand a chance against her.

Exclusive Excerpt

When the week of shiva passed, I called every mechanic in the phone book. None of them had the parts or time to repair my plane. But I had to do something.

I had survived, and there must be some reason for that. Some purpose or meaning or . . .  something. I took to going to the hospital with Mrs. Lindholm every day to roll bandages, clean bed pans, and serve soup to plane after plane after plane of refugees.

They kept coming. I called the mechanics again. And then again.

About the Author

Mary Robinette Kowal is the author of the historical fantasy novels Ghost Talkers and the five books in The Glamourist Histories series. She is also a multiple Hugo Award winner. Her short fiction has appeared in Uncanny, Tor.com, and Asimov’s. Mary, a professional puppeteer, lives in Chicago with her husband Robert and over a dozen manual typewriters.

 

Join the Conversation

Tor Books’ handles across Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram (@torbooks) will be using the hashtags #FearlessWomen (and #FearlessFantasy and #FearlessSF) to promote excerpts, exclusive content, quizzes and giveaways beginning in May. There will also be exclusive giveaways at BookCon, San Diego Comic-Con, and New York Comic Con. Follow Tor Books online, join the conversation – and get reading!

Be sure to also check out the other blogs on the #FearlessWomen tour to read more exclusive content and reviews!

This is a Metaphor | Dark Faerie Tales | Cherry Blossoms & Maple Syrup | Sci-fi Chick | Books, Bones, & Buffy | Tenacious Reader | Itching for Books | Across the Words | Fantasy Literature

#FearlessWomen: City of Lies by Sam Hawke Spotlight & Exclusive Excerpt

Women are shining in every genre of speculative fiction, and it is no longer enough to say “Women arehere.” Instead, #FearlessWomen everywhere are taking a stand to say “Women will thrive here.”

Highlighting major titles from bestselling authors V.E. Schwab, Sherrilyn Kenyon, Jacqueline Carey as well as titles from acclaimed and debut authors such as Mary Robinette Kowal, Tessa Gratton, Sam Hawke, and Robyn Bennis, #FearlessWomen will be a coordinated social media celebration encouraging fans to start a dialogue about women in publishing, their worlds, their voices, and their unique stories.

City of Lies by Sam Hawke

Poison. Treachery. Ancient spirits. Sieges. The Poison Wars begin now, with City of Lies, a fabulous epic fantasy debut by Sam Hawke

I was seven years old the first time my uncle poisoned me…

Outwardly, Jovan is the lifelong friend of the Chancellor’s charming, irresponsible Heir. Quiet. Forgettable. In secret, he’s a master of poisons and chemicals, trained to protect the Chancellor’s family from treachery. When the Chancellor succumbs to an unknown poison and an army lays siege to the city, Jovan and his sister Kalina must protect the Heir and save their city-state.

But treachery lurks in every corner, and the ancient spirits of the land are rising…and angry.

Exclusive Excerpt

By the time I headed back to our apartments I was exhausted. The road seemed endless. I had let myself go too far past my energy limits, and now the way home felt like an arduous trek. Worse, one of the crowd of petitioners lined up along the street outside the Manor caught sight of me, and the disheveled woman peeled off to follow me as I tried to walk away.

“Credola! Credola!” she panted, hobbling after me. She walked with an obvious limp and apparent pain. Guilt made me slow down, though I knew I couldn’t help.

“I’m sorry, but I’m really not able to take petitions,” I told her. “You can report matters to the Order Guard in charge of your sector, or you can leave your issue with the clerk at the Manor at the end of the week. Please—”

Though she moved slowly, when her hand snaked out and grasped my elbow the grip was firm. Too firm, in fact. I tried to pull it back but it was as if she couldn’t even feel it. “You must help me.”

About the Author

A black belt in jujitsu, Sam Hawke lives with her husband and children in Australia. CITY OF LIES is her first novel.

 

 

 

Join the Conversation

Tor Books’ handles across Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram (@torbooks) will be using the hashtags #FearlessWomen (and #FearlessFantasy and #FearlessSF) to promote excerpts, exclusive content, quizzes and giveaways beginning in May. There will also be exclusive giveaways at BookCon, San Diego Comic-Con, and New York Comic Con. Follow Tor Books online, join the conversation – and get reading!

Be sure to also check out the other blogs on the #FearlessWomen tour to read more exclusive content and reviews!

This is a Metaphor | Dark Faerie Tales | Cherry Blossoms & Maple Syrup | Sci-fi Chick | Books, Bones, & Buffy | Tenacious Reader | Itching for Books | Across the Words | Fantasy Literature

Book Review: The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay

I received a review copy from the publisher. This does not affect the contents of my review and all opinions are my own.

The Cabin at the End of the World by Paul Tremblay

Mogsy’s Rating: 3 of 5 stars

Genre: Horror

Series: Stand Alone

Publisher: William Morrow (June 26, 2018)

Length: 288 pages

Author Information: Website | Twitter

I was a huge fan of Paul Tremblay’s A Head Full of Ghosts. But his next novel Disappearance at Devil’s Rock? Not so much. Which is why I was curious when I found out about The Cabin at the End of World, because I wondered just how it would stack up. And as it turned out, I think it fell somewhere in between. Still, one thing is certain—this one feels very different from the author’s previous work.

The story opens on a remote cabin by a lake in New Hampshire, where seven-year-old Wen is on vacation with her parents, Eric and Andrew. On a quiet afternoon, while Wen catches grasshoppers in the front yard, a very tall young man suddenly appears out of nowhere and asks to speak to her. He tells her his name is Leonard, and that he would very much like to be her friend. Although she knows it is wrong to talk to strangers, Wen falls into a comfortable conversation with him, until three more people come walking out from the woods towards them, each dressed like Leonard in jeans and a buttoned-up shirt while brandishing scary improvised weapons. Despite Leonard telling Wen that these newcomers are no friends of is, he is clearly on familiar terms with them, and together they are adamant that they must be allowed into the cabin to speak to her parents.

Terrified, Wen runs inside to alert Eric and Andrew, who are alarmed at the appearance of these four menacing strangers. However, Leonard continues to swear that they mean no harm, that they only want to have a heart-to-heart talk—so if they would just please open up the door and let them in. He claims that what they must discuss concerns the fate of the entire world. But if Leonard and his companions are as harmless as they claim, then why did they cut the phone lines, their only means of communication in these isolated woods with no cellular reception, where their closest neighbors are miles away in all directions? Why are they still on their front porch clutching their strange makeshift weapons, refusing to go away?

It appears the response is split when it comes to this novel. A couple of my blogger friends loved it, though I know just as many people who had the complete opposite reaction, with one even claiming that the book was a complete waste of their time. After finishing it myself, I think I can better understand now why the reviews have been all over the place. The Cabin at the End of the World is definitely not a book for everyone, and personally, I would not recommend this to readers who prefer stories that tie up neatly with no ambiguity. I would also caution those who are sensitive to violence and horror to stay away. Bad things happen in this book, but not really the sort that would fill you with revulsion or terror. No, in some ways, it’s even worse. This is more like the kind of horror that breaks your heart and hollows you out. Indeed, there’s not much happiness or hope in this story, just a sense of anxiety and despair that keeps your mind teetering constantly on a knife’s edge. If you enjoy heady, atmospheric psychological thrillers, then the tension and dread you’ll find here will make you feel right at home.

That said though, I can also see where some of the criticisms are coming from. Apart from not answering any questions, this story also often made me feel as though not much was happening. For one thing, the plot became very repetitive after a while, with half the book consisting of the same conversation presented in multiple ways. At first, Leonard’s emphatic promises that they weren’t out to hurt anyone paired with his disclination to actually reveal any information was an effective device to ratchet up the suspense. I mean, small wonder that Eric and Andrew would refuse to have anything to do with this apparent bunch of crazies. However, after pages of this same exchange going absolutely nowhere, it started to become tedious. One wonders why Leonard and his pals didn’t just leave their weapons in the woods and approach the house pretending to be a family in need of some help after their car broke down, as it would have spared us all this pointless time-wasting and back-and-forth.

In some ways, I feel The Cabin at the End of the World would have probably made for a better short story. The ideas here were good, but there just wasn’t enough material to sustain a full-length novel. And while I usually have nothing against open endings, I did sort of wish there had been something a little more to this one. Most ambiguous endings still offer a bit of closure, presenting a point to which you can anchor your imagination and let it take care of the rest. But this book felt like it ended in the middle of a longer scene, as if the author himself had no idea how to bring it to a conclusion, so he simply decided not to finish writing it.

In truth, despite some of the issues I was having with the novel, I overlooked a lot of them due to the story’s incredible tension and atmosphere. However, the disappointment I felt at the ending hit me so hard that it probably dragged my final rating down by a full star. Had the final chapter wowed me as much as the first one did, The Cabin at the End of the World might have easily become my favorite Tremblay book. As it is though, I can only recommend this one cautiously. Like I said, it is certainly not for everyone. Keep in mind it’s a book in which horrible things happen to good and bad people alike, and you might not like the way things play out. Definitely not a light read, but it does have the potential to generate a lot of pondering and speculation.

YA Weekend: Damselfly by Chandra Prasad

I received a review copy from the publisher. This does not affect the contents of my review and all opinions are my own.

Damselfly by Chandra Prasad

Mogsy’s Rating: 3.5 of 5 stars

Genre: Young Adult, Adventure

Series: Book 1

Publisher: Scholastic Press (March 27, 2018)

Length: 240 pages

Author Information: Website | Twitter

Aptly described as a modern Lord of the Flies, Chandra Prasad’s Damselfly follows a group of prep school teens as they try to survive after the private jet carrying their fencing team crashes onto a deserted tropical island. The story is told through the eyes of Samantha Mishra, an unassuming and unassertive girl who often finds herself overshadowed by her more confident and socially extroverted classmates. Sam doesn’t always feel accepted by the others, and in fact, she only has one real friend, the eccentric but extraordinarily gifted Mel Sharpe, who is in many ways as much of an outcast as our protagonist.

After surviving the crash, Sam manages to locate Mel in the jungle, and the two of them quickly set out to gather up as many of the others who made it out alive. The group then decides to establish a base camp near a fresh source of water, and Mel, applying her vast knowledge and experience, begins directing everyone on how to gather food, construct a shelter, and provide protection while waiting for help. But then days go by with no sign of rescue. Worse, strange and unexplainable things start happening around the island, leading our survivors to think they might not be as alone as they first thought. As fears and pressures continue to mount, bitter rivalries and disagreements begin tearing the group apart. Before long, Sam finds herself caught in the middle of a dangerous power struggle, torn between loyalty to her best friend and a desire to fit in.

Not unlike William Golding’s classic that no doubt provided a bulk of the inspiration, Damselfly takes a look at survival and the effects of it on the basic state of human nature. Namely, when Sam and her classmates find themselves marooned on deserted island with no adults and no rules, a new form of tribalism eventually emerges to fill that void. Over time, the cutthroat dynamics at their elite high school also becomes adopted as the status quo on the island, with rich, beautiful, and popular Rithika heading up her own little circle of supporters, while Mel winds up being the de facto leader to a second group of outcasts consisting of Sam and all the others. In a way, this makes the novel’s perspective all the more cynical and disturbing, because it speaks to the inevitability of how people acting from fear will always end up creating the very reality they fear the most. Ultimately, this group of modern teens—privileged, well-educated, diverse, and made up of both boys and girls—still failed to prevent themselves from devolving into society of cruelty and savagery.

In fact, the modern setting somehow makes this situation even worse. Teens today face a myriad of issues including body image, peer and family pressure, relationships, and social acceptance. Damselfly explores many of these themes, further speculating on how they might play out in this deserted island scenario. Another factor that adds a layer to this situation is racism. I really appreciated how the author tackled this subject candidly and doesn’t gloss over the fact that it is a universal problem. Racial division is one of the first methods Rithika uses in an attempt to sway Sam to her side, using their shared Indian heritage to try and convince her that non-whites (the “Golds”) are superior to whites (the “Pales”). Our protagonist is obviously appalled by this, though later on, she also reflects upon how society has a way of fetishizing race and minorities, thinking back to her school admissions interview and how the administrators reacted with glee to her mixed-race heritage, seeing her only as a way to increase their diversity quotas. Rarely do you see topics like these addressed in such an open and unflinching manner, and I loved that about this book.

There’s also something deliciously creepy about the story. While it contains no overt fantasy element, plenty of bizarre occurrences take place to make you think there might be some weird shenanigans afoot, such as the large prints left in the sand by some unidentifiable bipedal creature, or the presence of birds on the island that are thought to be extinct. In fact, what bothered me the most about this book was the lack of answers, and I was also extremely unhappy with the ending, which left things hanging on a pretty big and annoying cliffhanger.

That said though, I wouldn’t hesitate to read the sequel if given the opportunity. I like all the groundwork that has been established here, and I’m enjoying the characters a lot. There’s so much more room for Sam to grow, and I’m curious to see how she and Mel will fare on the next stage of their journey and what that would mean for their war with Rithika. Despite the frustrating ending, I also can’t deny that I really, really, desperately want to find out what happens next. I’m crossing my fingers that the next book will bring some clarity and resolutions to all the mystery.

Mogsy’s Bookshelf Roundup: Stacking the Shelves & Recent Reads

Bookshelf Roundup is a feature I do every other weekend which fills the role of several blog memes, like Stacking the Shelves where I talk about the new books I’ve added to my library or received for review, as well as It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? where I round up what I’ve read since the last update and what I’m planning to read soon. Mostly it also serves as a recap post, so sometimes I’ll throw in stuff like reading challenge progress reports, book lists, and other random bookish thoughts or announcements.

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Received for Review

My thanks to the publishers and authors for the following review copies received. For more details and full descriptions of the books, be sure to click the links to their Goodreads pages!

My thanks to Wunderkind and Saga Press for sending me an ARC of Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse, which I’ve been looking forward to SO MUCH. I’m actually reading it right now, and it’s everything I could hoped for. Since I’m drafting this post in the middle of the week, by the time it goes live I should be close to finished with the book and will have a review up soon.

Next up is another exciting one: Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames, with thanks to Orbit for the ARC! The first book Kings of the Wyld came out last year to great acclaim and I’m all jazzed up to see what new adventures this standalone sequel will bring.

Also thanks to DAW Books for this ARC of Gift of Griffins by V.M. Escalada, sequel to Halls of Law. I haven’t started this series yet, but I’m curious about it.

The amazing team at Night Shade Books also sent a couple more surprise ARCs this week. I was all excited about Trial by Treason by Dave Duncan (a historical fantasy with Saxon enchanters and demons!) until I did some research and realized it was a sequel. I doubt that it can be read as a standalone, so now I might just have to pick up the first one. MJ-12: Endgame by Michael J. Martinez is also a sequel, the third installment in Majestic-12 which is another series I haven’t had the chance to start yet. I’ve enjoyed the author’s other books in the past though, so I’d like to check it out at some point.

And hooray for a finished copy of Smoke and Iron by Rachel Caine! This series has had its ups and downs, but now that we’re past the halfway point, I’m optimistic that the momentum will pick up again. With thanks to Berkley.

My thanks also to Tor books for the following new arrivals: The Calculating Stars by Mary Robinette Kowal is the first book of a series set in an alternate 1950’s about women who strive to become astronauts. It’s part of the publisher’s summer #FearlessWomen campaign, so be sure to keep an eye out for my spotlight post coming next week. Drop by Drop by Morgan Llywelyn is the first book of a dystopian trilogy where all the world’s plastic mysteriously liquefies, and this is another one I’ve been really looking forward to.

From the kind folks at Crown Books I also received new paperback editions of a couple big titles that came out last year: Artemis by Andy Weir and Paradox Bound by Peter Clines. If interested, you can read my reviews of them here and here, respectively.

And a huge thank you to Del Rey for sending me a finished copy of Age of War by Michael J. Sullivan, the third book in The Legends of the First Empire. I’m still really enjoying this series a lot, so I was pretty psyched when this arrived.

Finally, big thanks to Pyr Books for The Last Sun by K.D. Edwards. This is a book I really enjoyed, so I’m so happy to have a finished copy!

 

Last week I also received this really cool sampler from the upcoming Art and Arcana: A Visual History by Michael Witner, Kyle Newman, Jon Peterson, and Sam Witwer, which is an illustrated guide to the history and evolution of Dungeons & Dragons. There’s a lot of great artwork and information here, and if this preview is anything to go by, I think D&D fans are going to want to keep an eye on this one. With thanks to Ten Speed Press/Penguin Random House.

  

In the digital pile this week, I received a couple of new ALCs from Penguin Random House Audio: Bright We Burn by Kiersten White is the third book and conclusion of The Conqueror’s Saga, also known as the And I Darken trilogy. I also grabbed Something in the Water by Catherine Steadman because I’ve been hearing so much about this thriller lately. With thanks to Listening Library and Random House Audio.

The only e-ARC I got this week was from NetGalley, where I received War Cry by Brian McClellan. I’m a big fan of the author’s Powder Mage universe books and I just couldn’t resist hitting the download button on his new novella. With thanks to Tor.com.

Reviews

Here you’ll find a list of my reviews posted since the last update. A few of these were pretty good reads, but I’m desperately in need of something to break me out of my 3-3.5 star funk.

Awakened by James S. Murray with Darren Wearmouth (3.5 of 5 stars)
The Last Sun by K.D. Edwards (3.5 of 5 stars)
The Mermaid by Christina Henry (3.5 of 5 stars)
Season of Storms by Andrzej Sapkowski (3.5 of 5 stars)
Provenance by Caroline Kepnes (3.5 of 5 stars)
Devil Sharks by Chris Jameson (3 of 5 stars)
Furyborn by Claire Legrand (3 of 5 stars)

What I’ve Read Since the Last Update

Here’s what I’ve managed to “unstack” from the TBR since the last update. More reviews coming up!

   

  

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Have you heard of or read any of the books featured this week? What caught your eye? Any new discoveries? I hope you found something interesting for a future read! Let me know what you plan on checking out. Until next time, see you next Roundup!:)

Cover Reveal & Excerpt: No Sleep till Doomsday by Laurence MacNaughton

Exciting news! Today I am absolutely thrilled to participate in a cover reveal and excerpt teaser for a book that I’ve been looking forward to for a long time. Later this year, Pyr Books will be releasing the third book of the Dru Jasper series No Sleep Till Doomsday by Laurence Macnaughton featuring our protagonist as she once again battles the demonic forces of evil to prevent them from bringing about the end of the world. I’ve been enjoying the hell out of these books so far (no pun intended) and I can’t wait to read this one. To give you a taste, we also have an excerpt from the first chapter to share, but first, take a look at the book’s electrifyingly eye-popping cover!

An inexperienced sorceress must retrieve a priceless artifact from the enchantress who stole it, break the curse on her half-demon boyfriend, and stop her friends from turning on each other before the enchantress calls down doomsday.

When a deadly enchantress steals an amulet of unimaginable power, crystal sorceress Dru Jasper must risk everything to get it back. With this amulet in hand, the enchantress could break the sixth seal of the apocalypse scroll. If she does, the seas will boil, the stars will fall from the sky, and the earth itself will split apart. Overall, bad news.

There’s only one way to stop doomsday: find the apocalypse scroll first. But Dru’s attempts to track down the scroll run smack up against the dark secrets of her half-demon boyfriend, Greyson. His uncanny connection to the demon-possessed muscle car Hellbringer could threaten the fate of the world–unless Dru can find a way to break his curse for good. 

Which isn’t easy, since one of her friends has decided to solve the problem by eliminating Greyson. As her boyfriend battles her best friends, Dru is locked in a high-speed chase with the enchantress, fighting a fierce magical duel she cannot win alone. Can Dru save Greyson’s soul, salvage her friendships, and find the apocalypse scroll in time to stop doomsday?

Dru gently spread her fingers across his broad chest, feeling the smooth fabric of his blazer, so different from the usual black leather and zippers of his motorcycle jacket. This close, when she looked deep into his blue eyes, she could see the faint sparks of demonic energy lurking deep inside, waiting to be fanned to life again. At the first sign of danger, they would erupt into a hellish red glow.

And every time they did, she had to wonder how close he was to once again becoming one of the Horsemen of the Apocalypse, driving the world toward extinction.

She had a duty to break his curse. As a sorceress, she was responsible for doing whatever it took to keep the world safe from doomsday. But once she found a way to fix Greyson, would she lose him forever?

Without saying a word, Greyson pulled her to him. The heat from his body enveloped her, so familiar and yet still strange and new. The rugged scent of him intoxicated her. He looked into her eyes, and suddenly she had trouble swallowing. Her heart drummed in her chest.

He bent down, and her head tipped back. She lifted her lips toward his.

A resounding thump from the crystal shop downstairs interrupted them. Dru pulled back, suddenly alert. Someone was down there.

A swirling, fiery red glow lit up Greyson’s eyes, as if someone had stoked the embers of a nearly-cold fire and brought it to roaring life again. His chest swelled, and a dark shadow passed across his features. “What was that?”

The grid of powerful protective crystals Dru had placed strategically around the old brick building was strong enough to keep out any intruders, short of someone crashing a truck in through the front window. Dru winced at that particularly painful memory, which was still too raw in her mind. With these potent crystals in place now, anyone who tried to break in without using a key would suffer a distinctly unpleasant magical surprise.

Yet no magical backlash shook the building, which meant that someone had unlocked the door normally. Only Dru and her business partner Opal had keys. Dru realized her mistake, and inwardly groaned. “I just remembered. The other day, I gave Rane a key to the shop.”

Greyson squinted his glowing eyes, as if trying to decide whether she was joking. “That’s . . . brave.”

“Well, you know, it’s kind of self-defense. Rane has this bad habit of breaking in anytime she wants to,” Dru said.

He appeared consider that, but he didn’t look too happy with his conclusions.

“Before you say anything, I want you to know it’s complicated,” Dru said. “I mean, I love her, but oh, my God.” Dru took a deep breath, trying to calm the conflicting emotions that raced through her. “Just give me five minutes. Don’t go anywhere. If she finds out you’re here, she’ll want to play chaperone, and then things will get awkward. More. Awkward.”

He nodded once.

“I’ll be right back. I promise.” It took a force of willpower to pull herself free from his arms and head down the stairs that led to the back room of the shop.

As she padded down the old brick stairwell, feeling each gritty step beneath her bare feet, she cursed silently to herself. Why did Rane have to show up right this very second? Why did Greyson have to worry so much about becoming a normal guy again? Why did she have to get so wrapped up in her work that she never got around to showering today?

Plus, she was pretty sure there was a cold, dried-out burrito stinking up the microwave.

Other than that, for the first time Dru could remember, everything was finally be coming together. After much struggle, Rane and Salem were an item again, Opal was happily dating Riuz, and Dru had Greyson back safe and sound.

She’d even been able to pay all of her bills this month, because of the recent surge of business. As word had spread that Dru could cure magical afflictions, dozens of new faces had started showing up at her crystal shop. That included the sorcerers who had lost their powers to the spiked drinks in the underground masquerade a couple of weeks ago.

Dru had cured so many of them that she’d run out of cave calcite and had to rush-order an entire new shipment from her supplier in South America. In the process of treating the sorcerers, she’d run her hands across so many of the lumpy, white, brain-shaped crystals that her palms felt permanently exfoliated.

Now she had enough money in the bank to pay the rent for several months. Even better, she also had the undying gratitude—and, at long last, the hard-won respect—of dozens of sorcerers. Finally, she felt like she was somebody. As if she’d earned the right to truly call herself a sorceress.

Now, she just had to figure out what Rane needed. Hopefully there wasn’t any new drama with her on-again off-again boyfriend, Salem, the self-proclaimed most powerful sorcerer around. Maybe she could shoo Rane out the door, put on some makeup, slip into clothes that didn’t feature an elastic waistband, and finally go out on her first official date with Greyson.

Dru paused mid-step, realizing how strange it was that she had never actually gone out with him, not even once. The closest they had ever come to a date was when he had crashed a business dinner with her ex, and then promptly turned into a demon and started tearing up the city.

Not exactly a fairytale start to a relationship. No wonder the poor guy was having cold feet.

She resolved to make tonight special. She would tell him just how she felt. Somehow, she would make him understand that whether or not he had magical powers, he was the guy she wanted to be with.

She hustled down the stairs and opened the door at the bottom, preparing to greet Rane with a blast of good-natured sarcasm. “Hey, you crazy—” The words dried up on her tongue.

Because it wasn’t Rane.

A thin older woman, clad all in black, with gaunt cheekbones and straight red hair, studied Dru’s wall safe. It was usually hidden behind a framed photo of Ming the Merciless. But now, Ming’s picture lay discarded on the floor, missing its old yellow sticky note that read, Pathetic Earthlings! Who can save you now?

The dull metal face of Dru’s vault of cursed artifacts lay exposed, its black-and-white dial and polished steel handle shining in the faint light from the stairwell. As Dru hesitated in the doorway, the woman turned her head, her long red hair flowing with the movement. Before Dru could say another word, the woman raised a long arm and extended her fingers, claw-like. Crystal-encrusted rings bristled across her knuckles, pulsing in all different colors at once.

A prickling, suffocating pressure seized Dru. She tried to call out to Greyson for help, but managed only a faint wheeze. Her arms were pinned tightly to her sides, and an unseen weight squeezed her ribs, as if she were being crushed in an invisible fist.

The woman swung her arm, and Dru was yanked into the room by the unseen force. Her legs kicked uselessly in the air, managing to do nothing more than knock a few books off a nearby shelf.

The woman’s fierce hazel eyes gleamed with satisfaction. Her thin red lips drew back in a savage smile. She raised one long, ring-covered finger to her lips. “Shh.”

Aw, there goes Dru and Greyson, melting my heart. And the cover is just glorious, perfectly reflecting the fun and quirky nature of the series while also matching the covers for the previous books, not to mention yellow is a color that really jumps out at you from a shelf. No Sleep Till Doomsday is currently scheduled to come out in October, which can’t come soon enough. Happily, it is now available to preorder on Amazon, and don’t forget to also add the book and series on Goodreads!

Have you read or heard of the Dru Jasper books? What do you think of the cover and description of No Sleep Till Doomsday? Do you have plans to check it out? Tell me your thoughts!

Friday Face-Off: Red

Welcome to The Friday Face-Off, a weekly meme created by Books by Proxy! Each Friday, we will pit cover against cover while also taking the opportunity to showcase gorgeous artwork and feature some of our favorite book covers. If you want to join the fun, simply choose a book each Friday that fits that week’s predetermined theme, post and compare two or more different covers available for that book, then name your favorite. A list of future weeks’ themes are available at Lynn’s Book Blog.

This week’s theme is:

“Lips as red as the rose.”
~ a cover that is predominantly RED

Mogsy’s Pick:
Sorcerer to the Crown by Zen Cho

Set in a world reminiscent of Austen meets fantasy, Sorcerer to the Crown is so wonderfully adaptable that pigeonholing it into any one category would be impossible. That said, “fantasy of manners” is a term that also frequently crops up when describing novels like this, with a focus on a rigid set of expectations within a hierarchical societal structure. Take our protagonist Zacharias Wythe, the first black man to ever hold the Sorcerer Royal title in Britain. Skilled as he may be, he still faces intense opposition and bigotry from those who feel that a freed slave should not have risen so far above his station.

Despite the possibility of war with France, the dwindling magical resources of England, and the political entanglements involving difficult witches and diplomats, it appears the greatest threat to Zacharias might very well be some of his own neighbors and peers. Already plagued with ugly rumors surrounding the death of his predecessor and adoptive guardian, Zacharias now finds himself targeted by someone who wants him dead. And just when he thinks life couldn’t get any more complicated, along comes Prunella Gentleman, a mixed-race young woman of considerable thaumaturgical power. In a world where women using magic is considered anathema, Zacharias decides to flout social norms, taking it upon himself to mentor Prunella and teach her how to control her powers.

Let’s take a look at the available covers:

From left to right:
Ace Books (2015) – Macmillan UK (2015)
Pan Paperback (2016) – German Edition (2016)

 

 

Winner:

I own the Ace Books edition, whose deep red cover originally inspired me to feature this book for today’s topic. But the truth is, I’ve never really cared for it. Aside from being too bland, the contrast also isn’t sharp enough, making it difficult to make out all the fine detail. Rather, I’ve always much preferred the UK cover with its elegant style and gold-on-black color scheme (plus, I bet it looks even more amazing in real life). When the UK paperback came out, Pan went with a red-on-cream theme which I also thought was pretty–but it’s still nowhere near as dramatic or eye-catching as the original.

I think my mind is set. It’s the Macmillan UK (2015) all the way. But what do you think? Which one is your favorite?

Gate Crashers by Patrick S. Tomlinson: Excerpt and Giveaway!

***The giveaway is now over, thanks to everyone who entered!***

The BiblioSanctum is thrilled to be a stop on the blog tour for Gate Crashers, a rollicking new sci-fi novel of adventure and humor from author Patrick S. Tomlinson. Following the crew of the space exploration vessel Magellan, the story throws readers into the middle of an intergalactic conflict complete with alien artifacts and government conspiracies! Today we’re very happy to share with you an excerpt from Chapter One, as well as an exciting opportunity to win your very own copy of the book. Released on June 26th from Tor Books, Gate Crashers is now available wherever books are sold. We hope you enjoy the excerpt, and be sure to also check out the other blogs on the tour!

Monday, June 25 Sci Fi Chick
Tuesday, June 26 Books, Bones & Buffy
Tuesday, June 26 Espresso Coco
Wednesday, June 27 Civilian Reader
Thursday, June 28 Bibliosanctum
Friday, June 29 For Winter Nights
Saturday, June 30 Just a World Away

On humanity’s first extra-solar mission, the exploration vessel Magellan discovers an alien construction. Deciding that finding advanced alien life is too important to ignore, the ship’s captain chooses to return to Earth while reverse engineering technology far beyond anything back home.

Meanwhile, at mission control, the governments struggle to maintain the existence of aliens a secret while also combating bureaucracy, the military industrial complex, and everyone else who wants a piece of the science that could sky-rocket a species into a new technological golden age.

Little does everyone involved know that the bumbling of a few highly-evolved apes in space hasn’t gone unnoticed, and humanity has put itself on a collision course with a far wider, and potentially hostile, galaxy.

Because, in space, no one can see you screw up… 

Excerpt from Gate Crashers by Patrick S. Tomlinson, published by Tor Books. Copyright © 2018 by Patrick S. Tomlinson

CHAPTER 1

It was a cold, dark night in deep space. Of course, that’s the sort of night experienced spacers preferred. A hot, bright night meant you’d flown into an uncharted star. Such nights were known for their brevity.

The American/European Union Starship Magellan streaked through the vacuum at a sliver under half light speed. When christened sixty-two years ago, Magellan was heralded by reporters, tech writers, and industry mouthpieces as a marvel of engineering, which she was.

They also described her using words like gracefulelegant, and sleek, which she most certainly was not. The sight of Magellan brought to mind a seventeen-hundred-meter-long mechanical jellyfish with an inverted bell made of a giant dinner plate, drainage pipes, and an entire box of novelty bendy straws.

Buried beneath a jacket of water built into the ship’s hull to shield them from cosmic radiation eager to redecorate their DNA, the crew chilled through the dull bits of their journey in cryogenic pods set at less than a tenth of a degree above freezing. Hearts beat once every other minute. Blood flowed with the speed of buttercream frosting. Dreams played at a pace that would make a Galápagos tortoise glance at its watch.

The year was 2345, and Magellan’s 157 peoplecicles were just a sliver over thirty light-years from Earth. As they slept, Magellan was hard at work. She balanced the deuterium flow to the beach-ball-sized star in her stern, which was the source of her power, extrapolated the trajectories of thousands of bits of stellar dust no bigger than a flake of crushed pepper, and then used her battery of navigational lasers to vaporize those flakes on intercept courses.

One would usually attribute the quaint human tendency to anthropomorphize machines as the reason the pronoun she was applied to a starship. However, Magellan herself had decided long ago that any entity that selflessly nurtured so many helpless children must be female.

As she pondered her myriad duties, one of her ranging lasers blinked, beeped, and generally made a nuisance of itself. Magellan gave it the cold shoulder for several nanoseconds before she caved to its persistence and queried its data packet to see what was so important it couldn’t wait a millisecond.

What she found caused her only the second moment of confusion in her sixty-two years of operation. The first happened many years ago when her chief engineer had tried to explain the appeal of chewing tobacco, with little success.

This time was worse. The laser revealed an object, sixteen meters long, less than two light-hours ahead of her. After a few milliseconds of data streamed in, Magellan determined, while abnormally large for space dust, the object did not pose a direct threat, as it was not on an intercept course. Curiously, it was not on any course at all.

Out of tens of millions of particles Magellan had spotted, projected, and vaporized, she’d never observed one that wasn’t moving. You didn’t end up in the void between stars without inertia; it just wasn’t possible. Because she was an exploration vessel, her software possessed a certain baseline curiosity, and the paradox of the object ate at her processors. However, her ability to make command-level decisions was deliberately limited to the protection of her crew while they were incapacitated. Since the object didn’t pose a danger to crew safety, her programming didn’t permit a course alteration. If she wanted more than the meager data she could acquire in a two-hundred-million-kilometer flyby, she’d need to wake the captain.

* * *

Safely waking from cryosleep was a two-hour ordeal. As the body slowly warmed, neurons fired with the vigor of an asthmatic 4×400 relay team. Imagine the pricking-needles sensation felt when an arm falls asleep and map it over one’s entire body. If that weren’t enough, the sluggish metabolism of cryo caused a buildup of the same toxins that result from a three-day bender.

This marked Allison Ridgeway’s sixty-second cycle. As her consciousness stirred, Allison drew on the considerable experience she’d acquired in college to deal with the worst hangover imaginable. She kept her eyes closed until they stopped lying to her, placed one foot on the ground to anchor her sense of balance, then grabbed the pod’s hydration tube and sucked down as much fluid as she could stomach. After an eternity, Allison sat up and pondered how to use her feet.

Something was missing.

Maggie?

“Yes, Captain Ridgeway?” answered a soothing voice that sounded suspiciously like her mother.

“Why don’t I have a soul-crushing headache?”

“I don’t know, Captain, but I can probably synthesize a compound to approximate the effects.”

Allison smiled. It was tough knowing if Maggie, as she liked to call the ship, was still naïve or if she had developed a dry sense of humor. She suspected the latter.

“How long have I been out?”

“Three weeks, two days, seven—”

“Three weeks?” she asked. Crews woke for one week per year to keep their minds fresh. They’d gone through the cycle less than a month ago. “We just crossed the thirty. We won’t reach Solonis B for eight months.”

“That’s correct, Captain. However, I require your judgment.”

“You mean you require my authorization to indulge your judgment.”

The Magellan reflected on this for a moment, and decided there was no reason to lie. “Yes, Captain. Please join me on the bridge.”

“I’m not dressed.”

“You’re the only person awake.”

“I’m freezing and covered in cryo snot, Maggie.”

“Yes, of course. I await your arrival on the bridge once you’re more comfortable.”

“It’s all right. You’re in a hurry, I get it.”

Allison staggered along the wall toward the showers. The hot water rinsed away the cold, viscous fluid clinging to her body, which felt and smelled like used fryer oil. She was glad not to wake with the headache for once.

Allison put her hair in a towel and walked to her locker. She retrieved a plush, embarrassingly expensive pink bathrobe with matching kitten slippers. It was a small luxury she afforded herself, and she sank into the depths of its soft warmth.

She moved to the RepliCaterer and finished her waking/hangover routine with an order of hot coffee with double cream, two sugars, and a grape popsicle, which it produced in seconds. The RepliCaterer was an amazing device. Half waste-recycling plant, half food processor. It was best for morale to ignore which half the food came from. Crews had long ago named it the DAQM—Don’t Ask Questions Machine. Feeling vaguely human, the fuzzy pink captain made her way to the transit tube.

The bridge was awash with the gymnastic light of holograms and the dry breeze of air processors. It had the sterile yet lived-in look of a small-town doctor’s lounge. Allison dropped into her chair and spilled the remains of her coffee into her lap.

She grabbed the towel from her head to rescue her bathrobe from the brown stain. “One of those mornings.”

“Actually, Captain, it’s 1537.”

“The worst mornings usually start in the middle of the afternoon, Maggie. So what’s important enough to wake me eight months early?”

A cloud of pitch black expanded in the air in front of Allison’s chair as an intense holographic field persuaded the ambient light to saunter off somewhere else. A faint, blue, 3-D grid materialized. A small icon representing the Magellan appeared at the center, with course and velocity information in red.

There was a green circle far in the simulated distance with nothing but a single pinprick of white at its center. It, too, had course and velocity data displayed in red, but they both read zero.

“Magnify, please.” A small box opened next to the green circle. The image inside was just a larger smudge. Allison grimaced, then glanced at the radar returns and spectrographic data. “Right, then. Our object is sixteen meters long with a high metal content. Great, we’ve discovered an iron meteor.”

“Captain,” Magellan purred, “is there anything else about this object you find interesting?”

Allison knew she was being patronized, but studied the numbers. With a flash of realization, her finger launched toward the ceiling, then pointed at the blurry image. “It’s not moving. How does a rock get into deep space without momentum?”

“I arrived at the same conclusion; hence my decision to wake you.”

“Good work, Maggie. What’s our time to flyby?”

“Forty-seven minutes, six seconds from now.”

“How close will we be able to get if we alter course?”

“At our current velocity, we will pass within ten light-minutes of the object.”

“That’s still more than an AU. If we start a full deceleration right now, how much of that can we cut?”

“Another four and a half million kilometers.”

“Not nearly enough.” Allison churned through a dozen other possibilities, but they were all worse.

Even with Magellan’s powerful eyes and ears, a flyby from such distance wouldn’t improve on the smudge by much.

Allison fixed on her decision. “Well, nothing for it. Maggie, begin a full decel and plot a spiral course toward the object. We should be close enough by the third pass to get decent readings. Once we’ve satisfied your curiosity, we’ll resume previous course and speed.”

“Immediately, Captain.”

“Why do I get the sense of playing a bit part in Kabuki theater?”

“I’m sure I don’t know what you mean, Captain.”

“Uh-huh.” Allison felt a sudden kinship with harps.

Maggie poured a flood of deuterium into the nuclear furnace at her stern. A torrent of enraged electrons charged through the scaffolding of superconducting conduits connecting the reactor to the engines at the bow.

The engines were front-mounted because gravity propelled Magellan, at least that’s what space was led to believe. In fact, protected behind the concave shield that formed her bow, bulky generators created and focused gravitons into a point ahead of the ship, duping the surrounding space-time into perceiving a large mass. Fooled by this theatrical bit of three-card monte, space obligingly curved itself into a well and pulled the ship forward. This was the origin of the slang term yank, as opposed to the more colorful etymologies proposed by several limericks popular among dockyard workers.

Allison felt the almost imperceptible lurch as the internal gravity adjusted to compensate for the appearance of a new gravity well a few degrees off their heading. Turn sharper than that, Magellan’s keel would break under the stress. With little to maneuver around in deep space, this wasn’t usually an issue. Seconds flew by as Allison tried to stay on top of the riot of raw data the various sensors returned.

“Are there any other crew members you’d like me to wake?” Magellan asked.

“So I can get blamed for putting them through two hours of amateur acupuncture and vertigo just to see an asteroid? No, none of them have done anything to deserve that kind of treatment for at least twenty years. Then again, there was that spittoon incident…”

“Chief Engineer Billings threw his supply of chew into a waste receptacle after that unfortunate event, Captain,” the ship added in defense of her personal physician.

“Really? He went cold turkey?”

“I don’t believe he switched to turkey, Captain.”

“No, it’s a … never mind. So he quit?”

“Yes, for three days. Then he started growing a tobacco plant in hydroponics.”

“It’s the thought that counts, I suppose.”

Crimson numbers on Allison’s display trickled down as the range fell. Telescopes slowly resolved the smudge into a slightly more coherent blur, which wasn’t much help. The spectrograph was another matter. It reported that the object was comprised primarily of titanium, with traces of several other metals, which was as likely to occur naturally as a petrified tree made of Portland cement. Allison was excited, and more than a little anxious.

Magellan broke the silence. “Captain, I’m detecting a signal coming from the object.”

“Why are you only detecting it now?”

“The signal is weak. I mistook it for background static, but after correlating the last several hours of data, a pattern emerged.”

Allison realized she was sweating. She felt torn between the hope of hearing a completely benign radio echo and the excitement and danger of discovering something more interesting. “Let’s hear it, then,” she said at last.

What came through the speakers had a musical quality. Specifically, the sound of a pipe organ being fed through an industrial shredder, complete with an organist in a mad dash to finish a concerto before the hammers reached his seat. Yet as alien as it was, she knew instinctively the sound wasn’t static. There were patterns and rhythm in the noise. Allison Ridgeway, captain of the AEUS Magellan, successfully beat back the impulse to hide under her chair.

She took a moment not to vomit. “Maggie, forget the spiral course. Bring us to a zero-zero intercept, five clicks from the object. Wake everyone. I want that thing in my—I mean, your—shuttle bay yesterday. And get the QER online. I need to talk to Earth.”

“Immediately, Captain Ridgeway.” Magellan tried not to let any smug vindication creep into her tone.

Without success.

black line

Gate Crashers Giveaway

And now time for the giveaway! With thanks to the publisher, the BiblioSanctum has one print copy of Gate Crashers up for grabs. The giveaway is open to residents of the US and Canada.  To enter, all you have to do is send an email to bibliosanctum@gmail.com with your Name and valid Mailing Address using the subject line “GATE CRASHERS” by 11:59pm Eastern time on Wednesday, July 4, 2018 and we’ll take care of all the rest.

Only one entry per household, please. The winner will be randomly selected when the giveaway ends and then be notified by email. All information will only be used for the purposes of contacting the winner and sending them their prize. Once the giveaway ends all entry emails will be deleted.

So what are you waiting for? Enter to win! Good luck!

Waiting on Wednesday: 06/27/18

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that first originated at Breaking the Spine but has since linked up with “Can’t Wait Wednesday” at Wishful Endings now that the original creator is unable to host it anymore. Either way, this fun feature is a chance to showcase the upcoming releases that we can’t wait to get our hands on!

Mogsy’s Pick

Keeper of the Bees by Meg Kassel (September 4th 2018 by Entangled: Teen)

So you might have heard, I have a bit of a weakness for Beauty and the Beast retellings, and yes, despite how wonderfully crazy and bee-zarre this one sounds, I’ve been assured it does indeed contain a B&tB story at its core. Needless to say, I’m still a bit skeptical, but if this book does end up living up to the “Beauty and the beast like you’ve never imagined!” blurb, I’m sure it would be one hell of a unique and imaginative retelling. Also, it takes place in the same world as Meg Kassel’s Black Bird of the Gallows which I haven’t read, but the good news, each book in the series can be read as a standalone.

KEEPER OF THE BEES is a tale of two teens who are both beautiful and beastly, and whose pasts are entangled in surprising and heartbreaking ways.

Dresden is cursed. His chest houses a hive of bees that he can’t stop from stinging people with psychosis-inducing venom. His face is a shifting montage of all the people who have died because of those stings. And he has been this way for centuries—since he was eighteen and magic flowed through his homeland, corrupting its people.

He follows harbingers of death, so at least his curse only affects those about to die anyway. But when he arrives in a Midwest town marked for death, he encounters Essie, a seventeen-year-old girl who suffers from debilitating delusions and hallucinations. His bees want to sting her on sight. But Essie doesn’t see a monster when she looks at Dresden.

Essie is fascinated and delighted by his changing features. Risking his own life, he holds back his bees and spares her. What starts out as a simple act of mercy ends up unraveling Dresden’s solitary life and Essie’s tormented one. Their impossible romance might even be powerful enough to unravel a centuries-old curse.