Exclusive Cover Reveal & Excerpt: The Transference Engine by Julia Verne St. John
Posted on April 28, 2016 7 Comments
Today I’m totally thrilled to break out a cover reveal for a book I’ve had my eye on for a while, and with thanks to DAW Books/Penguin, we also have an exclusive excerpt of Chapter 1 to share. It’s no secret that I was excited when I got to get my hands on a copy of The Transference Engine by Julia Verne St. John – but did you know it also has one hell of an amazing cover? My jaw just dropped. Without further ado, here it is in all its glory!
A fantastical steampunk novel of magic and machines set in an alternate 1830s London.
Madame Magdala has settled comfortably into her new life in London, as the proprietress of the Book View Café, a coffee shop and extensive library. Her silent partner is Ada Lovelace, who will one day become the world’s first computer programmer—but who now is simply the young woman for whom Madame Magdala was a nursery maid.
Ten years ago, Ada’s father, Lord Bryon, was known as a great writer. But few knew of his powers as a necromancer. Upon his death, his devoted followers tried to repair the Transference Engine—a device that would allow Byron’s soul to claim the body of its choice. Magadala, along with Mary Godwin—a.k.a. Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley—had to stop them.
While the original Transference Engine was destroyed, they were unsure whether they truly stopped Bryon and his followers. Together, they fled to safety in London, and built new futures for themselves.
Now, Magdala and Mary care for the Book View Café’s community, leading fashion, following gossip, and reading the latest periodicals. But when members of the café’s community mysteriously disappear, and rumors of a threat of royal assassinaton grow, Magdala finds herself with new mysteries to solve. The more she learns, the clearer it becomes that this is the same mystery returned—the Transference Engine is back with a vengeance.
EXCERPT
From The Transference Engine by Julia Verne St. John, on-sale July 5, 2016. Published by DAW Books.
Chapter One
Above London, early June 1838
The gas flames hissed like a malevolent adder as Jimmy Porto, the hot air balloon’s pilot, pushed more gas into the envelope above us. I looked up and up to the interior of the dull gray silk. Cool dawn air caressed my cheeks. I marveled that no wind blew my blonde braids where they dangled down my back. But we moved at the same speed as the gentle wind, rather than standing still on the ground, defying it.
“Thank you again, Jimmy, for bringing me up today,” I said.
“No problem, Miz Elise.” He tugged the brim of his cap once. “We owe you.”
Yes, indeed, the Rom did. I thought they’d repaid me a hundred times over. But the Rom . . . carried this debt through several lifetimes. One lifetime for each of their lives I had saved back in southern France in 1817.
He met my gaze in gratitude, something Romany men did not do with a gorgí female, or even one of their own females unless she was a wife or a sister.
“I know what it is to have violently angry men on my trail. I could do nothing less.” I’d also seen more than enough needless death. The demise of an entire clan would have fueled a drunken vicomte’s necromancy for a year or more. “I had to warn you. Not one of you would be left alive if I didn’t.”
“That’s a risk you didn’t have to take.”
Yes, I did. For reasons I’d not tell him. “Still I thank you for letting me observe from your balloon this morning.”
Up here, one thousand feet above civilization, the air was fresh and crisp; the golden light of early morning clear and sharp. None of the smells of too many people crowded into too small a space penetrated my sensitized nose. The smoke of tens of thousands of coal fires lay like a pall over the rooftops with only an occasional church spire rising toward heaven, giving a hopeful pathway for all the prayers of people trapped below.
Steam-powered engines lightened the burdens of life, giving us many advances in transportation, communication, and household appliances. But the burning coal needed to convert ordinary water into steam left behind a filthy residue.
Below us, the city sprawled in unruly lines and clumps, blurred by smoke. The dome of St. Paul’s stood out from the jumble of London, one of a few distinctive landmarks. But once I’d anchored my sense of direction in the eternal symbol of solidity, permanence, and hope, my eyes pushed aside the pall and found other familiar places. Tower Bridge, Westminster, Piccadilly Circus. The winds pushed us west and north, following the Thames, the heart vein of transportation and commerce of southern England.
“There be Windsor, Miz Elise,” Jimmy pointed upriver. Farther than I wanted to go.
I winced at his use of my original name. Jimmy had known me too long. But he was useful as a pilot when I needed one, as a friend and go-between with his family of Romany spread across the entire island and half the continent.
Since Miss Ada Byron had married, I’d transformed myself into a new personality (not with Lord Byron’s dreaded transference engine, merely a new name, a new attitude, and a new wardrobe). No more the drab, respectful governess.
Jimmy’s people had helped me protect Miss Ada many times over the last decade—more of their perceived debt to me, which they had extended to my pupil. They also kept me apprised of necromancers taking up residence in ruined castles, and scientists moving their experiments away from the ethical and moral strictures of Oxford and Cambridge.
“Deploy the ailerons, Jimmy. I need to circle the city,” I said.
“Be prettier out here,” he replied, not moving his hand to the brass lever near the ring joining the firebox to the envelope. He drew in a long breath of the clear country air smelling of freshly tilled fields, trees leafing out, and meadow flowers. I mimicked his inhalation and appreciated why he wanted to linger, drifting aimlessly with the breeze.
“This is important, Jimmy. I love the green land as much as you do. I love the freedom of the roving life that you have transferred to roaming the skies. But I need to see the patterns of movement through the city. I have heard rumors. Possibly of violence at the queen’s coronation. My visions have confirmed them. I need to know which malevolent force drives those rumors. Or if my visions are failing me.”
We spoke in Romany. Most of Jimmy’s country accent disappeared in his native language. He even spoke correctly . . . mostly.
“Aye, Miss Elise. I feels it, too. Something wicked stirs the air and the people. I’ll get you as low as I dare.” He flashed me a cheeky grin as he engaged the lever that sent semi-rigid folds of silk outward and tacked back to the city, much as a sailboat would move against the wind. “Used fog gray for the envelope just so we’d stay invisible a bit longer.” A true Romany at heart, flamboyant and audacious when needed, equally quiet and hidden when skirting the law and distrustful gorgí.
He really was attractive in his slender, olive-skinned, and dark-eyed way. Alas, he was much too young for me, and though his tribe respected me for my visions and thanked me for my help, I was gorgí: an outsider, forbidden to touch.
“Romany know how to hide.” I returned his grin, grateful for the lessons they’d taught me.
We drifted back over the city, taking in more of the dark, poverty-stricken jungle of Southwark, south of the river. Evil could hide in the open streets and opulent houses on the north side just as easily as in the tenements. Armed military men were reluctant to enter Southwark. Criminals lived openly there, protected by neighbors who closed in on themselves like any impoverished ghetto. The military might of the country was put to better use protecting our new queen, young and beautiful Victoria. I had my own ways of making sure her upcoming coronation occurred on time, without the blemish of an assassination attempt.
It would be an attempt only. My enemies would use it as a diversion for other nefarious activities.
“There, Jimmy!” I pointed to a dark object hovering in the lee of St. Paul’s.
Another balloon. Black envelope, black basket, seemingly empty.
“Hovers, it does,” Jimmy said quietly on a long exhale. “Balloons need to move, flow with the air which is never still.”
I dropped a single magnifier over my flying goggles. The black basket jumped into sharper detail. Not a lot of room between the rim and the firebox.
Then a long telescope snaked out over the edge and pointed down. Whoever was in there looked at individuals, not large patterns.
“Pointing that thing toward Trafalgar Square, they be,” Jimmy muttered.
His young eyes were better than mine. I hated admitting that I needed spectacles.
“What is there? Besides a monument to a beloved but fallen admiral and his mighty victory over the French.”
A memorial to the dead. Necromancers needed death to fuel their magic.
And then the light patterns shifted, and I spotted the glint of sunlight on a brass circular opening in the bottom corner of the basket. A musket barrel? Or a small cannon? Aimed directly at Westminster Abbey where the coronation would take place in a matter of three weeks.
We descended rapidly, away from that black monster.
* * *
By the time I got to the Abbey and the Parliament buildings, all was normal and the black balloon had disappeared. I could neither see nor smell anything out of the ordinary. If Jimmy hadn’t corroborated my view of the situation, I might think I’d dreamed it.
So I returned to my home amid the morning bustle along Charing Cross Road.
“That’s Madame Magdala,” a stout woman dressed in black from bonnet to boots to lace parasol whispered, (a widow of minor means, I guessed from the classic cut of her gown that would take time to go out of style), jabbing her younger companion in the ribs with that wicked parasol. I wondered if she could extend the tip into a knife. I knew I wasn’t the only woman in London who’d purchased such an instrument from Georges’ Emporium of Fine Imported Lace. “She may be a widow and allowed some leeway in propriety, but she takes it too far.” The woman in black sniffed in disdain.
“The natural daughter of the Gypsy king?” asked the slight woman in awe. She wore a traveling gown in dark green, a fashion at least two years out of date. Must be the daughter, goddaughter, or niece of the widow, down from the country for the coronation—and the opportunity to meet an eligible man.
The girl continued in a whisper, “I heard that she’d only been married a few weeks when her husband was killed at Waterloo. She never remarried. How romantic.” The girl sighed and held her hand to her heart.
At least the myth I’d created to give me license to run my own business and control my own affairs held true.
“I don’t know any way to birth a child but the natural way,” I muttered. If they wanted to parrot my new name and way of life they should use the appropriate term. Bastard. Yet I was sure they considered themselves upright and faithful daughters of the Church of England, too proper to use such language.
Hastily, I shoved my goggles atop my leather flying helmet and peered at the crowds of people on the walkways and spilling over into the carriage-jammed road. A number of genteel couples adjusted their path around me. My leather jacket atop jodhpurs and high boots couldn’t disguise my feminine figure, even if I did stand taller than most of the men. Many of them let their gaze linger while their female companions sniffed in disdain.
“Too damn many people in London these days,” I said. The crowd gave me more room to move out of their way as I found the key to my café and reading room in a convenient pocket. The dustmen were late, and the back door was more than a bit noisome in the June heat. Otherwise I’d have used it and avoided the contemptuous crowd.
I sniffed and peered around to see if any of the passersby bore the taint of magic manipulation. Nothing. Whoever spied upon the crowds today had not used magic. One more piece of a giant puzzle of odd bits of information I stored for Ada Byron King, Countess Lovelace. Yes, the dark-haired and frightened little girl I had nurtured through adolescence and taught to appreciate the joys of life as much as the beauty and magic of numbers had grown up and married a wealthy man who adored her. She had helped me purchase the café and left her name off the deed so that our inquiries could not be traced back to her ever-so-proper husband and his titles: the gift of Victoria.
I’d heard rumors that Victoria would return a semblance of propriety to English society after the . . . delicious . . . scandals of her royal uncles. At least her mother hoped so.
I hoped not. Life would be ever so dull without new scandals every other day.
A “lady” jabbed my knees with her parasol as she passed. “Thank you for reminding me that if I linger gawking I’ll be late to my own salon,” I whispered just loud enough to make sure she heard me.
The bells inside my door tinkled invitingly as I strode inside with long, mannish strides. I know I should affect a more feminine walk. But why waste the freedom of trousers and boots?
That freedom was short-lived. I needed to bake sweet and savory delicacies for my guests as Violet, my assistant, would not return from her free morning with her mother until the afternoon. Then I would repair to my quarters upstairs to prepare myself so that I could greet my guests properly corseted, beribboned, and draped in fine silk. I wondered if anyone new would grace us with scintillating conversation or controversial issues to debate. Hmm . . . I needed to collect the latest newspapers from Hong Kong, New Delhi, Peking, and Tokyo, delivered weekly by dirigible express, so we’d have new information to dissect. Amazing what insights and patterns of unrest or transfer of raw goods to indicate a petty tyrant was building an army of automata I could uncover when I listened while others read aloud interesting tidbits from afar.
Those automata might also serve the purpose of housing the soul of a necromancer after the body had succumbed. I didn’t know how or why, but Lord Byron’s quest for the perfect body might involve an artificial one. The metal men were still crude devices. Scientists worked hard at making them more human looking.
I kept a neat kitchen, but no order survives the first onslaught of sifted flour and sugar. Butter and cream, cheeses and herbs, fruits and glazes, all my ingredients came readily to hand. I fell into a soothing rhythm combining them in proper ratios, losing myself in recipes based upon my mother’s confections that I’d perfected for British tastes. Modern scientists extolled the virtues of coal-fired steam ovens that added moisture and an even baking temperature. While I embraced much of the new technology, properly banked coals from a wood fire still suited my baking best.
When I looked up from removing a fifth batch from the oven, the clock chimed six.
“Six?” I asked aloud, somewhat alarmed.
“Violet?” I called. My assistant should have returned five hours ago. I would have noticed her return no matter how deeply immersed I was in the rituals of baking. Between batches, I had set the wine to breathing and arranged a nice store of hard liquor safely locked into its cupboard in my parlor.
“Violet?”
Silence inside, subdued traffic noise outside.
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I hope you enjoyed the cover reveal and excerpt! I love the beautiful soft colors and the style seems perfectly fitting for the story, and I can’t wait to read the book. Steampunk and fantasy? Magic and necromancy? Seems right up my alley. What do you think of the cover and description? Tell me your thoughts!
Week 4: The Lies of Locke Lamora Read-Along
Posted on April 28, 2016 9 Comments
“Come along on an epic adventure! Flights (of fancy), accommodation (ethical) and food (for the imagination) included. Poison not guaranteed. All travel is at your own risk. Late nights, sore eyes, and an overwhelming desire to spend hours in the kitchen creating something wonderful may ensue. All belongings are the responsibility of the traveller; travel will not be reimbursed if limbs are lost to sharks, or hearts to thieves.”
You are cordially invited to join The Lies of Locke Lamora read-along. Our itinerary is as follows:
- April 7th: Prologue and Book 1 – hosted by Imyril at X+1
- April 14th: Book 2, Ch4-6 – hosted by Imyril at X+1
- April 21st: Book 2, Ch7-8 – hosted by Wendy at The Bibliosanctum
- April 28th: Book 4 and Epilogue – hosted by Lisa at Over the Effing Rainbow
1. Locke returns to finish the Salvara con, after a bit of a trying start. What did you think of the clothes con at Meraggio’s? Entertaining interlude, or timeline nuisance?
Wendy: Lynch is a teeeease. Let’s call these particular interludes an entertaining nuisance. Fortunately, Lynch had already established that the actual interludes, flashbacks, and other sidetracks lay groundwork for future events, so it was just a matter of time before the pay off of these particular shenanigans came to fruition. I also liked the reality of it. We’re heading into the final showdown, but Locke and Jean have almost nothing to their name and no one to turn to. It would have been unrealistic to have him simple stumble upon good fortune now, and contrived and disappointing to have him show up for angry revenge without plotting out an elaborate ruse to back it.
Tiara: Not gonna lie. I was a little antsy through all of this because I finally figured out that Lynch was totally screwing with my emotions with all this anticipation by dragging out all the scenes. I wouldn’t say it was a nuisance since we needed to know what the next scam was going to be to help them achieve their goals. The ending just started to feel like the author was intentionally adding all this padding because he knew, he knew, I was going to be salivating about this ending. (Yes, I’m making this all so personal… LOL.) I was so anxious to see what was going to happen that I was almost literally screaming, “WILL SOMEONE GIVE HIM THE CLOTHES SO I CAN SEE WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?” *sings* Anticipation, anticipation…is making me late… keeping me waiting…
2. The plot is back on, and before long Locke and Jean are facing the Falconer – with better results, this time… What were your thoughts on how this confrontation turned out?
Wendy: The interlude here is pretty damn ominous. It might be signing a death warrant to kill a bondsmagi, but somehow I think utterly maiming one is going to come back and bite the boys pretty hard in future books.
Tiara: Even though a part of me knows that they’ve probably made a terrible mistake (but a mistake I would’ve made for my loved ones, too!). While I was listening to that part, I pretty much hopped out of my chair and did the Melbourne Shuffle because I really, really hated that guy. I felt such satisfaction in my soul after that confrontation. Like there are so few moments of comeuppance in books that leave me totally satisfied, and that moment is one of them.
3. So it turns out that Capa Raza did indeed have bigger fish to fry than just Barsavi. What did you make of Locke’s decision between going after Raza/Anatolius and saving the nobility?
Wendy: I like the way this seemed like Locke actually had a heart, but ultimately was and has always thought only of himself and his brothers. He’s not heartless. He just shares his love sparingly. Based on the fate of the plague ship, it seems to me that it wasn’t about weighing the lives of the nobility versus seeking vengeance, but about weighing his promise of a death offering to end all death offerings, versus avenging the lost Bastards. Despite his state of mourning and pain and anger, Locke proved himself (even with the interlude to get the clothes and continue with the Salvaras) to be calculating no matter what, never letting his emotions get the better of him, even with so many emotions churning within him. That he could set aside the immediate hope of vengeance to focus on their tribute was very impressive.
Tiara: It just felt right that this was about so much more than being the Capa. Everything he’d done was just so distinctly brutal and personal in this book. As for Locke, well… whatever he is, I don’t think maliciously vicious is one of those things. He may steal from those people, but it’s just thieves’ business with him and the nobility of Camorr. There’s no anger toward them or some revenge plot. He just wants their money. While he could have just decided to step to the side and let whatever happened happen and wouldn’t have been wrong for that. I get the feeling that he doesn’t exactly want to see people suffer at the hands of cruelty either if he can prevent it, though, especially when he factored in the children. Being a thief doesn’t automatically mean he’d want to see people get hurt. And in the end, he weighed that saving the lives of many, after he’d lost so many people he’d love to Raza, was the right thing to do. He saved others from suffering the same pain that he felt by losing loved ones.
4. “I just have to keep you here… until Jean shows up.” Locke gets his chance at revenge after all… Thoughts on this final showdown?
Wendy: I didn’t expect it to end so cleanly. Well, not cleanly, but I thought Locke would lose the chance to face Raza–but again, his decision to go for the nobles (aided by Jean’s note) helped ensure that Raza had no where to go and would not want to go. Of course I thought Jean was going to fly in for the save, but I really like that Lynch once again did not take the obvious route, keeping me anxiously guessing right to the end.
Tiara: My heart when he said that. I mean, I knew Jean wasn’t coming or he wouldn’t make it in time due to his injuries, but there was just something so poignant about that moment with him using that line after reading the interlude with it earlier in the novel. It was true to who Locke Lamora is even when fighting. He’s not the strongest or the biggest, so he has to use what abilities he does have to the best of his advantage. Then, my heart again when he started naming all the people he’d lost. So touching. I ended going back and reading the ending in the eBook after listening to it, and I happened to be listening to a song called Retrograde while I was reading this. I might’ve gotten a little choked up during the fight scene when I heard these lyrics, “And your friends are gone, and your friends won’t come […] we’re alone now, so show me why you’re strong…” Then, MIA came on and it was LIVE FAST, DIE YOUNG, BAD GIRLS DO IT WELL! Annnnd… Moment over.
Final thoughts
Wendy: I started out really enjoying this book and Lynch’s unique method of storytelling and world building. I love the mysteries teased with the Eldren, and the alchemical aspects, and I adore the Bastards. But Nazca’s death (which got her out of an unwanted marriage she was sold into without her consent) really soured me. I understand why she died and recognize that she didn’t die alone, but fridged women is a tired, tired trope, especially within a world where, while women can hold places of power, they have to earn it with far greater effort required to do so than a man. It’s fantasy. That means we can change the reality. Lynch’s world is far better at dealing with sexism than other works I’ve read, but it made me sad to think: “well a vat full of horse piss is better than rape, right?”
I was strongly considering bowing out of the next readalong, unless something really compelling happened. Well. Something really compelling happened. Not just one thing. It was a whole lot of insidious things that kept digging under my skin to writhe there with everything else that got me eagerly turning the pages from the beginning until the big meeting in The Spider’s office where I decided that I wanted the next book to feature Locke and Jean teaming up with the Salvaras to reclaim the underworld that would now be in turmoil after the loss of not one, but two Capas, with The Spider and the super sexy Reynart to be both friend and foil to their plans, with the Daughters of Camorr stepping in to take control. The ending didn’t exactly give me that, but I have high hopes of seeing Sofia Salvara especially again, even though Locke and Jean have been forced out of town. And in chatting with Tiara today, it seems like we’re already sold on reading the third book too. So, while I don’t forgive Lynch for Nazca, it looks like I’m here for the long haul. Bastard.
Tiara: I’m not going to add too much more. I’ll just say that I’m not certain what I was going to get while reading this story, but that turned out to be much more than I thought it would be. I enjoyed the unique storytelling style along with the vulgar humor. It also managed some seriousness without losing that humor. A fine showing, and I can’t wait to see where the Bastards’ adventures take them.
That’s my excited for next book dance right now.
Review Bites: A Taste of African Horror
Posted on April 27, 2016 8 Comments
My Soul to Keep by Tananarive Due
Series: African Immortals #1
Genre: Horror, Supernatural
Publisher: Harper Voyager (April 8, 1998)
Tiara’s Rating: 4 of 5 stars
David Wolde is an immortal man who has married a mortal woman. She’s a journalist who’s starting to taste success, and he’s an accomplished professor turned freelance writer who dotes on his wife and their young daughter. However, his wife doesn’t know he is immortal. David took a blood pact many years ago in Ethiopia that granted him and fifty-nine other men immortality. They promised to never tell any others of this pact, and they promised never to get too attached to the mortal world. David’s immortal family has decided that it is time for him to leave his family and return to them. They fear that he is about to break their fragile existence by revealing himself to his wife and child. Little do they know that David plans to go one step further and attempt to grant them that which is forbidden to his family–immortality.
Prior to reading this novel, I’d only encountered Ms. Due’s work in various anthologies I’d picked up over the years that featured horror stories by writers of color. Some of those books I’ve held onto for years and revisit them periodically, and any time I’d reread one I’d always think to myself that I need to get around to reading some Due because she’d been touted a writer of color who was really making waves in the horror genre with her stories. (And her stories are almost always one of my favorites in the anthologies that I find her in.)
It was a treat to finally read a complete novel by her. I was completely captured by this story and especially enjoyed hearing about David’s past as he journeyed from Africa to America. Much like Octavia Butler she weaves African and African-American history in this story to give it such a different flavor and context than you’d find in most horror stories while adding an element of emotion that really speaks to the reader. While I don’t think there is anyone who can manage to weave race and genre fiction together quite the way Octavia Butler has with her novels, Due has certainly made quite an impact as well with her efforts. There were some parts of the novel that seemed to go on longer than they should’ve such as the ending, but this is definitely a series that I will continue.

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The Icarus Girl by Helen Oyeyemi
Genre: Horror, Mythology
Publisher: Audible Studios
Length: 10 hrs 50 mins
Narrator: Bahni Turpin
Tiara’s Rating: 3.5 of 5 stars
Jessamy Harrison is a somber, contemplative child who keeps to herself. She loses herself in her world and her imagination. Her mother, a writer originally from Nigeria, decides to take her family (which includes Jess and her English husband) to her home country where Jess learns about her mother’s roots for the first time from her mother’s family. There Jess meets a little girl named TillyTilly who becomes one of Jess’ closest friends despite the fact that there’s something a little strange about TillyTilly. As the story progresses, Jess realizes there’s something disturbing about TillyTilly as strange things begin to occur in her world that makes the reader questions what’s real and what’s part of Jess’ imagination.
Part myth and part horror story, this was certainly an engrossing read. I don’t think this story will surprise too many people, especially if you read much horror. However, that’s true of most horror, and it’s more about the atmospheric quality of the story than anything. There’s not creepier than children interacting with ghosts/monsters in horror stories because of the innocence that most children bring to the story and the helplessness they can pull from the reader because they’re a child involved in something that’s much bigger and scarier than they can truly comprehend. Jess is no exception, and it’s quite a harrowing ride to follow her as TillyTilly firmly plants herself in Jess’ world.
Bahni Turpin narrated this story. I’d forgotten that I had this book when I reviewed Unholy Ghosts, which is narrated by Turpin as well, and I didn’t have to get that one to sample her work. However, the style she used for the books couldn’t have been more different. I was much more moved by her narration of this book, but her narration of Unholy Ghosts is nothing to laugh at either. She’s a talented narrator, and her range and depth of character and emotion is amazing. I did think this story went on way too long. It felt like it would’ve been a great short story. If it had been tight and concise this would’ve probably resonated with me a little longer and the ending would’ve had a great impact. I’m floundering on how I feel about the ending a bit, but I think, if this had cut out much of the story, it would’ve been more fitting. Still, this was a lyrical, haunting story that certainly left me mulling over for quite some time after I listened to it.

Waiting on Wednesday 04/27/16
Posted on April 27, 2016 14 Comments
“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme hosted by Breaking the Spine that lets us feature upcoming releases that we can’t wait to get our hands on!
Mogsy’s Pick
Heroine Complex by Sarah Kuhn (July 5, 2016 by DAW)
You can’t just dangle a superhero book in front of my nose without expecting me to bite, especially one that looks this fun. I’m getting vibes that remind me a bit of The Devil Wears Prada meets The Incredibles, and for once it’s nice to look forward to a story about quirky superheroine.
“Being a superheroine is hard. Working for one is even harder.
Evie Tanaka is the put-upon personal assistant to Aveda Jupiter, her childhood best friend and San Francisco’s most beloved superheroine. She’s great at her job—blending into the background, handling her boss’s epic diva tantrums, and getting demon blood out of leather pants.
Unfortunately, she’s not nearly as together when it comes to running her own life, standing up for herself, or raising her tempestuous teenage sister, Bea.
But everything changes when Evie’s forced to pose as her glamorous boss for one night, and her darkest comes out: she has powers, too. Now it’s up to her to contend with murderous cupcakes, nosy gossip bloggers, and supernatural karaoke battles—all while juggling unexpected romance and Aveda’s increasingly outrageous demands. And when a larger threat emerges, Evie must finally take charge and become a superheroine in her own right… or see her city fall to a full-on demonic invasion.”
Book Review: HEX by Thomas Olde Heuvelt
Posted on April 26, 2016 16 Comments
A review copy was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Mogsy’s Rating: 4.5 of 5 stars
Genre: Horror
Series: Stand Alone
Publisher: Tor (April 26, 2016)
Length: 448 pages
Author Information: Website | Twitter
Oh, how scary could this be, I asked myself. It can’t be as creepy as everyone says, I foolishly thought. Seriously, a story about a three-hundred-and-fifty-year-old witch who just appears wherever she wants around town, and all everyone does is throw a dish towel over her face or otherwise pretends she’s not there. The whole business sounded more comical than frightening, to be honest.
Well, fast forward to about a quarter way into the book, and I was no longer laughing. Things got dark quick, and I’m prepared to eat my words.
In spite of its seemingly peaceful and picturesque façade, Black Spring is probably the last place in the world I’d ever want to find myself broken down and stranded. But as an outsider, at least I could always leave. On the other hand, the town’s residents—those who were unfortunate enough to be born there, or those who unwittingly decided to move in despite all efforts to deter them—they are doomed to live in Black Spring until they die, claimed by the curse of the Black Rock Witch.
Back in the seventeenth century, when the town was just a Dutch trapper colony, there lived a woman named Katherine van Wyler who was accused of being a witch and was swiftly dealt with in much the way you would expect from your typical puritanical colony back in those days. Thing is, though? Katherine might have been the real deal. Now her soiled husk of a body, chained with eyes and mouth sewn shut, still haunts Black Spring to this day. The townsfolk have slapped on their brave faces and come to accept their curse, trying to make the best of the situation, but deep down they all know that one day those stitches will come off and then everyone will be at the mercy of Katherine’s deadly whisperings and Evil Eye. Still, the first order of business is to contain her, and generations going back centuries have been successful in quarantining Black Spring and keeping its witch a strict town secret. But as times change, so too does the area and its people. New technology has certainly made keeping track of Katherine’s random appearances easier, but internet and social media have also made the world seem like a bigger place, and some of the town’s younger residents are no longer content with being silenced and trapped in Black Spring.
What amazes me about HEX is how it diabolically draws you in by degrees, first presenting you with an all-is-well scenario to get you all settled in and comfortable so that by the time things go to hell, it’s too late to turn back (not that you’d really want to) and the only way through is forward into the nightmare. The build-up is so gradual that, little by little, a premise which initially sounded so absurd to me ultimately transformed into something frighteningly convincing and very real. Even as the situation for the characters in Black Spring gets worse and worse, I just couldn’t bring myself to tear my eyes away. This is my favorite kind of horror novel, the kind that sneaks up on you and infuses your mind with its terror without you even realizing it.
A story about a haunting by a seventeenth century witch is creepy enough if you ask me, but the decision to have it all take place in a modern day setting is also a stroke of genius. It’s so easy to look back on the witch trials of history now and blame the fear and mass-hysteria on superstition and lack of understanding; after all, these days we have science to explain strange but natural phenomena like aurora borealis or fairy rings. But the book’s themes suggest that perhaps human beings are wired the same way no matter where or when we’re from. When faced with something supernatural and unexplainable, like the Black Rock Witch and a nefarious curse that appears to drive its victims to suicide outside the borders of Black Spring, it’s hard not to imagine an entire town driven to the lengths we see in this story.
Plus, just when you think to yourself “Oh my, things can’t possibly get any worse and more disturbing, can they?” the author shows us that, yes, yes indeed they can! As the suspense builds with every page, Thomas Olde Heuvelt gleefully keeps insisting on poking this already high-pressure situation with a stick, ratcheting up the horror even more. Parts of this book actually remind me a lot of Stephen King’s Under the Dome, where paranoia, claustrophobia and the stifling fear of the unknown can drive otherwise sane and normal people to horrible extremes, even without the help of a supernatural curse. That’s the scariest part about HEX, the fact that even if you succeed in blocking out the paranormal aspects of the story, you can’t ignore the dark side of human nature. All you can do is stand by and watch as the chilling events unfold.
Finally, I have to praise the quality of the translation and the way the changes were implemented from the original Dutch version of this book for the US edition. Since I have no basis to compare the two versions, I can’t really comment on the actual changes themselves, like the one that switched the location of the setting from a small town in the Netherlands to one nestled in the Hudson Valley region in upstate New York, but I can say that they were done really well and the transposition felt practically seamless (pardon the pun). I was really impressed, and if anything, this exercise showed me that the things that terrify us and keep us up at night are pretty much universal.
So if you’re a fan of horror fiction and strong of nerve, I would definitely check this one out. Deliciously creepy and all consuming, HEX was an absolute thrill. The chills will stay with you long after the final page is turned.
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Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten Bookworm Delights
Posted on April 26, 2016 29 Comments

Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish. They created the meme because they love lists. Who doesn’t love lists? They wanted to share these list with fellow book lovers and ask that we share in return to connect with our fellow book lovers. To learn more about participating in the challenge, stop by their page dedicated to it and dive in!
This week’s topic: Top Ten Bookworm Delights
01. Bookmarks
Bookmarks are perhaps one of my favorite bookworm delights. I’ve completed many over the years and even got crafty and made a few. These are two of my favorites right now.

02. Book Related Cosplay
I love cosplay in general, but there’s something special when you find cosplay of one of your favorite book characters! Marvel even endeavored to make variant covers for their comics featuring cosplayers.

Credit: Marvel Comics
03. Used Book Stores
While I do enjoy going into some of the bigger booksellers’ stores, nothing beats a good used book store. My latest used book store obsession is a bit of a hip chain of stores called 2nd & Charles that trades games and videos as well, but it manages to feel a bit homey with game nights, book clubs, etc. But there are many small independent stores that I could live in for the rest of my life, too.
04. Book Recommendations
I love book recommendations from other book lovers. There’s something special about asking for or being given a well-thought out book recommendation. And in my experience, book lovers tend to be very thoughtful with their recommendations and the reasoning why they recommend certain books.
05. Book Swapping
This probably goes hand-in-hand with book recommendations. I enjoy swapping books with other bookworms, especially those who like to write thoughts and highlight in their books. I love reading other people’s handwritten thoughts in a well-loved book.
06. Book Memes
Memes in general are fun, but nothing beats a good book meme whether it’s a list like this one or a witty graphic with a joke only book nerds will understand.

07. Book Related Merchandise
Another ultimate favorite of mine next to book marks. I love buying merchandise that relates to my bookish loves. I collect everything from figurines of my favorite comic characters to jewelry modeled after pieces from books to handmade pillows with my favorite book quotes.

Part of my Funko/figurine collection
08. Book Quotes
A good quote can stay with you through life. It can be a source of inspiration, a reminder, something to laugh about, and a million other things. It’s also fun to discuss quotes with other readers and what the quote means to them.
“By way of this unprecedented, unbridled literary promiscuity, I have made some pleasant discoveries.”
― Anna Lyndsey, Girl in the Dark
09. New Book Smell
It’s like new car smell, but better! Ahhhh, books!

10. Flipping Book Pages
I love technology, and I’ve been into e-readers pretty much since they’ve been on the scene. Before then, I did read books on my laptops and PCs. However, for all my technology loving ways, nothing is as comforting as flipping through pages. It might be a psychological thing with me, but there’s something calming and delightful about the act that no e-reader will ever be able to replicate.

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What bookworm delights are you digging?
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Audiobook Review: Anywhere But Here by Jason D. Morrow
Posted on April 25, 2016 6 Comments
Genre: Science Fiction, Dystopia, Post-Apocalyptic
Series: The Starborn Ascension #1
Publisher: Smashwords (May 25, 2014)
Information: Website | Twitter | Goodreads
Tiara’s Rating: 3 of 5 stars
A review copy of this book was provided by the author, narrator, or publisher in exchange for an honest review. All opinions expressed are my own.
Narrator: Sophie Amoss | Length: 7 hrs and 36 mins | Audiobook Publisher: Jason D. Morrow (December 18, 2015) | Whispersync Ready: Yes
Zombies. There are zombies in this book.
Despite being a fan of The Walking Dead, you all know how I feel about zombies. If you’re new in town, refer to this post. Even though I can be a bit of a killjoy about this particular genre, I’m not so obstinate that I won’t give zombie books a chance. Sometimes, I am pleasantly surprised, and sometimes, I’m left thinking: “Well, that was… a zombie book.”
Anywhere But Here follows a teenaged girl named Waverly and a young woman named Remi as they navigate the zombie-infested wasteland they’ve been living in for the past three years. Waverly has been fortunate that she’s hasn’t been alone during those years, even if they’ve been unable to secure a community to live in while Remi has been living on her own wits during that time, longing for somewhere to stay. Remi’s story starts in Crestwood, a town know for taking in strangers. Waverly arrives at the town much later in the book after dealing with raiders and the death of someone close to her. The leader of Crestwood poses an interesting question to both on their arrival, “Do you have special abilities? Powers? Supernatural?”
This was not a bad book. In fact, I enjoyed it far more than I was expecting given the genre. My Kindle clocked it at about 454 pages, but the story moved quickly and didn’t dawdle about much. Even the back stories that we’re given for context are presented during points where the story is moving rather than giving readers a wall of exposition. It’s concise, to the point, and moves on with the story. The plot is familiar. Zombie stories often explore things such as morality because people and their machinations are scarier than mindless zombies. It’s typically bleak with the constant threat of raiders and starvation. There are some amenities still around such as fuel used for vehicles, electricity, and weapons, but everything is measured and used with care as you’d expect in the situation. There’s a little bit of romantic fluff in the book, but nothing that’s overwhelming. I did feel like maybe one character too easily started crushing on another character, but love in the time of zombies may warrant being hastier in these things.
Morrow does try to give some explanation for what caused the outbreak instead of just dumping readers into the story where no one knows what happened which I appreciated. (Not that I necessarily have anything against stories using the “origins unknown” angle.) He did add a twist by adding characters who have developed “powers” during this outbreak. These people are called Starborn. Calling anything Starborn during a zombie apocalypse feels a bit frilly, but thankfully, that name isn’t overused in the story. How–or why–they developed these powers isn’t explored in this book, but since this is a series, I’m expecting we’ll get an explanation in later books.
Remi and Waverly were interesting as characters. There was a little more time invested in Waverly’s story. For this reason, I connected with her more than I did Remi. This book was more focused on the “in the now,” so there isn’t a ton of character development. The action makes up for it, though. There’s always something going on in this book. One thing of note, I would’ve liked if Remi and Waverly’s stories converged a bit sooner than they did. It’s fairly easy to spot the significance the characters have to one another early in the story, but I felt like I was just listening to two separate stories about two people who happened to be inhabiting the same world for most of the book. I’m sure that was intentional, but it didn’t really work for me. It also made some of Remi’s parts feel like filler.
The narration by Sophie Amoss was top-notch. She voiced Waverly’s kindness and Remi’s tenacity well. Her characterization of other characters worked, too. You could hear the roughness in her voice with the raiders and more curmudgeonly characters. There were a couple of production quality issues in this, but nothing that was so glaring that I stopped listening.
If you regularly read zombie fiction, this may be a bit too formulaic for you, especially if you’re always looking for something innovative in the genre, but if you don’t mind tried and tested plot points coupled with fast action and a little bit of a twist, this book is worth checking out.
Story
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YA Weekend: Tell the Wind and Fire by Sarah Rees Brennan
Posted on April 24, 2016 21 Comments
A review copy was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Tell the Wind and Fire by Sarah Rees Brennan
Mogsy’s Rating: 2.5 of 5 stars
Genre: Fantasy
Series: Stand Alone
Publisher: Clarion Books (April 5, 2016)
Length: 368 pages
Author Information: Website | Twitter
Well, it wasn’t the best of books, it wasn’t the worst of books, but for me Tell the Wind and Fire can only be summed up as underwhelming. I think like most, I came to this novel after hearing that it was inspired by Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities—not that I have any great love for that book, or Dickens for that matter, but it was the idea that initially intrigued me and drew me in.
What we end up with is a very loose retelling, infused with a smattering of fantasy elements and a generous dose of Young Adult dystopian tropes. The story takes place in New York, which has been split in two: the Light City and the Dark City. The two are separate but symbiotic; each side reluctantly needs the other, for balance and for survival. Our protagonist is Lucie Manette, a Light magic user who was born of a forbidden union between a Dark magician and a Light magician. A child of the shadows and destitution of Dark City, she came to the comfort and luxury of the Light after her father was punished for trying to save her mother, and Lucie was subsequently made into a symbol by those in power.
Now living a life of fame and opulence, Lucie has also claimed the heart of Ethan Stryker, heir to one of Light City’s most powerful families. When the book starts though, Lucie stumbles upon a shocking secret about her boyfriend, discovering that Ethan has a doppelganger named Carwyn. Doppelgangers are illegal because they are a product of dark magic when it is used to save a person’s life, after which the dark energy manifests itself as a perfect double of the person. Usually doppelgangers are killed soon after they come into being, but Ethan’s soft-hearted mother had insisted on sparing Carwyn and raising him in secret, after dark magic saved the newborn Ethan at the time of his birth. But now Lucie knows the truth too, and that knowledge might ultimately lead her to her downfall. As rebellion erupts in Dark City, Lucie may have inadvertently handed the bloodthirsty revolutionaries their most important weapon.
To be fair, in spite of some of the more obvious parallels to Dickens’ masterpiece, I stress the “loose” in loose retelling and in the end Tell the Wind and Fire is an entirely different beast. In truth, the book probably has more in common with the countless YA offerings out there than anything to do with A Tale of Two Cities, which makes me wonder if the author had tweaked the book some more and perhaps titled it something different, then maybe it could have been spared the crushing pressure of being compared to one of the most well-known and celebrated classics ever written? Granted, there were some parts in the story that I really liked, those which didn’t immediately strike me as a YA cliché or too formulaic, but that too presented its own unique set of problems. For example, if I’d never read A Tale of Two Cities, I might actually have been delighted and bowled over at the analogous ending in Tell the Wind and Fire…but then again, how could I bring myself to praise these “unique” aspects of the story when the ideas were originally Dickens’? It just feels like a no-win situation all around.
For every positive thing I liked about this novel, there would also be something else I didn’t care for, dampening my enthusiasm. On the one hand, I loved the magic system and was enchanted by the descriptions of the way light and dark magic coexisted, always in motion and fighting and feeding off one another. On the other hand, for such a vast and major city which has the added benefit of having two sides to it, the version of New York City in this book felt painfully small. Then there was the character of Lucie. For a young woman with such fame and magical power, her role as main protagonist was disappointingly passive. This girl seems to only take action when she shouldn’t, and yet stands idly by with her mouth shut when she should. Not only is she constantly acting like a dolt, she feels the need to point it out every single time she makes a mistake, drawing even more attention to her shortcomings as if readers need the extra help. We really don’t.
Overall, I thought Tell the Wind and Fire started strong and had an excellent introduction to the magic of this world, but things started going downhill after the first half. I applaud the book for its ambitious goals, but there were clear issues in the implementation those ideas, leading to an imperfect outcome. While it’s not all bad, I can only give this one a middling rating due to all the other issues that didn’t sit well with me.
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An Artificial Night Read-Along Week No.3
Posted on April 23, 2016 8 Comments
We’re journeying through the third book in the October Daye series. If you’re interested in joining this Read-Along, visit the SF/F Read-Along group for more information and to join the discussion.
“October “Toby” Daye is a changeling-half human and half fae-and the only one who has earned knighthood. Now she must take on a nightmarish new challenge. Someone is stealing the children of the fae as well as mortal children, and all signs point to Blind Michael. Toby has no choice but to track the villain down-even when there are only three magical roads by which to reach Blind Michael’s realm, home of the Wild Hunt-and no road may be taken more than once. If Toby cannot escape with the children, she will fall prey to the Wild Hunt and Blind Michael’s inescapable power.”



Week 1: Saturday 9th April, Chapters 1-7, hosted by Over The Effing Rainbow
Week 2: Saturday 16th April, Chapters 8-17, hosted by Books By Proxy
Week 3: Saturday 23rd April, Chapters 18-24, hosted by Lynn’s Book Blog
Week 4: Saturday 30th April, Chapters 25-End, hosted by Over The Effing Rainbow

1. We’ve seen a good deal more of May and her interactions with Toby – any speculation on how this might play out yet??
I haven’t had as much time to sit and think about this book as I’ve had with the recent books because of my schedule. The only thing I can think right now is either May is going to be the one who ends up being the one who truly dies either by choice or by intervention from Toby’s friends.
2. Tybalt – what did you make of his rather cryptic comment about what he found out and particularly that he now knows that Toby didn’t lie to him?
I think I’m going to have to go back and listen to that part again because I wasn’t sure if I missed something or what was going on there. That sort of broke my listening experience because I was thinking, “WTF is he talking about?” So, I’m a little up in the air about the comment right now until I re-listen or read more of the book and just find out.
3. We finally discovered a little bit more about Luna. What are your thoughts on her now, why did she run away, thoughts about her character, why she sent Toby into Michael’s realm?
Right now, I am not feeling Luna at all. I mean, not even a little bit. While I certainly understand self-preservation, I guess it just gets on my nerves so bad because Toby is so willing. She’d do anything for these people, and they know that. She doesn’t have half their strengths or their gifts, but she always gives her maximum effort for them. It just gets a little tiresome with everyone being so secretive when you expect a changeling to put their life on the line for you or send them into certain danger. Her story certainly is a sad one, but at the same time, it’s still gross how she’s manipulated Toby at this point and how I’m sure Toby will still drool all over her shoes in acquiescence regardless of what happens. Maybe Luna will fix this. Maybe not. But right now, I’m just not feeling her or her reasoning and excuses.
4. What were your first impressions of the Court of Cats?
Oh, cats. Cats, cats, cats. I would pet you, but you might rip my arm off.
I enjoyed seeing more of the court, and they’re perhaps my favorite court in the book right now because they seem like a world apart from the other fae. Sure, they follow a basic set of rules that all fae follow, but other than that, they seem to live in their own world that is much more brutal and unforgiving than the rest of fae. And I may just think that because any time we see the Court of Cats we see much more of their rules and hierarchy at play than the other courts.
5. And, finally, back to Tybalt – what on earth just happened!!
Wh-what? What are you talking about?
Everything is beautiful and nothing hurts.
I think it’s safe to say at this point that this has been my favorite book in the series so far. It might be the darker story because I’m such a sucker for grimdark, but it seems like we’ve gotten a different feel with every story so far. It’s also nice to see the Luidaeg get more time to really shine this book. She’s probably my absolute favorite character in the series. Sorry, Tybalt!
Side Note: It has been a super busy month for me, and I’ve been terrible about getting around to people’s post to comment! I’m trying to fix that. Honest!

Rosemary and Rue by Seanan McGuire (October Daye #1)
Rosemary and Rue Read-Along Week No.1
Rosemary and Rue Read-Along Week No.2
Rosemary and Rue Read-Along Week No.3
Rosemary and Rue Read-Along Week No.4
A Local Habitation by Seanan McGuire (October Daye #2)
A Local Habitation Read-Along Week No.1
A Local Habitation Read-Along Week No.2
A Local Habitation Read-Along Week No.3
A Local Habitation Read-Along Week No.4
An Artificial Light By Seanan McGuire (October Daye #3)
An Artificial Night Read-Along Week No. 1
An Artificial Night Read-Along Week No. 2
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