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Monday Amusements 9

20th May 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

My reading journal, with my current favourite pen.

Happy Monday! A strange greeting, perhaps, but just think, you could read something really brilliant this week. And on that subject…

Keris Stainton wrote a beautiful post for Author Allsorts, I love libraries. I would love to know that my local library had a book that I’d written in stock. I really do love that place. I haven’t gotten any new fiction books out of my local library in months but every time I visit to renew something I find it impossible to resist walking around for a little while to soak up the atmosphere. Then I tell myself that I must get through my TBR so that I can fully enjoy discovering new books in the library like I used to. Not sure that will happen any time soon, but it’s a lovely thought!

I enjoyed reading Jo’s write-up of her experience speaking on a London Book Fair panel at Once Upon a Bookcase. It sounds like such an amazing event.

I was excited to read that SisterSpooky will be hosting another Geek Week! I caught up with the last one a bit late but it was really fun to read all the posts revelling in geekdom.

It seems like every book blogger has been posting about the state of their TBR piles recently. I loved seeing Clover’s pictures, and Lynsey of Narratively Speaking posted asking for ideas for TBR organisation. Last year I used a spreadsheet to help me calculate how many books I had left to read to help me finish each reading challenge I was participating in, but I haven’t set it up for this year yet. It’s not easily customisable because you’d need to change all the categories and numbers to fit your plans, but if anyone is interested in seeing it, I might upload it somewhere when I’m done.

I really enjoyed this video post by Paula at The Broke and the Bookish about learning to give people better quick reviews, though honestly I admire her for being able to openly enthuse to people about the books she loves! I’ve never been entirely comfortable expressing my opinions about anything cultural other than things that are really mainstream, like television and fashion. Talking about music makes me really anxious that I’ll be judged for my tastes and when I do have the opportunity to talk about books, sometimes I freeze up and don’t say anything because I don’t think the person I’m talking to would have any interest in reading the books I like, or because I’m worried I’ll bore them with my enthusiasm or criticism. It can be tough being an adult with a serious, academic interest in YA! (And this is why I blog)

I love a good list, and my recent favourites are Books I’d Like To See As Film Adaptations, at Fluttering Butterflies, Unlikable Female Characters in YA Fiction: A Reading List, at Stacked, and Stylist‘s 50 best books of the 1920s. I want to read my way through all three of these lists!

Did you ever stop to think and forget to start again?‘s Confessions of a Book Nerd (via @cloverness) made me giggle. I have gotten the bus to another library so that I can get out a specific book that I looked up on the online catalogue. Several times. Happily this bus ride only takes me about 20 to 30 minutes, not an hour, but I usually go straight to the library, get the book, and go home again, only spending about 20 minutes there in total.

On to reviews, and Michelle at Fabbity Fab Book Reviews made Cadillac Couches by Sophie B. Watson sound like an absolute must read. A coming-of-age book about twenty-somethings? With a road trip and music festivals? Yes please!

After reading Sophie’s review of Gail Carriger’s Etiquette & Espionage I thought, yet again: right, that’s it, this year I MUST read something by this author. I’ve had Soulless sitting on my TBR for years now, so I have no excuses.

Finally, Writing from the Tub and SisterSpooky both covered You Don’t Know Me by Sophia Bennett and made it sound amazing – it’s going straight on my wishlist for sure.

Do subscribe if you enjoy my link selections, and feel free to explore the archive! No Monday Amusements here next week, but Friday is the first day of my Diary of a Crush theme week (aka, my cunning plan to force myself to review this series)!

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, books, links, Monday Amusements

Book Review: The Secret of Ella and Micha, by Jessica Sorensen

18th May 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Ella doesn’t want to go back home, but her first year at college is over and she can’t avoid going back to confront the reality she ran away from: her past, and her fears about her changing relationship with Micha, her
best friend since childhood. Micha had refused to let her go,
telephoning colleges and asking for her, hoping that he could find her
and explain his feelings. Now she’s back, he wants to make his move, but she is determined to cling to the calm and collected façade that she built during her time away, to protect the old, impulsive Ella who couldn’t handle her life anymore.

If you follow me on Twitter, you might have noticed that I’m quite positive about the concept of ‘New Adult’. As much as I love YA and always will, I’ve been wanting for years to read more coming-of-age stories about characters in their twenties. I like the idea of a marketing category for books like this to make them easier to find – I think anything that helps people find books they might enjoy is a good thing. When I was invited to read and review The Secret of Ella and Micha, a New Adult title that has already made the bestseller lists in the USA, I jumped at the chance, because I hadn’t read any New Adult books before and I wanted to see what the hype was all about.

The Secret of Ella and Micha is essentially a romance, albeit one in which the protagonists also have serious family issues to deal with. Unfortunately, this book was the next book I read after the wonderful Pushing the Limits, which probably set it up at a bit of a disadvantage, especially as it features similar issues. The Secret of Ella and Micha is definitely more adult, and maybe more realistic in some ways, but I have to admit that it didn’t move me in the way that Pushing the Limits did.

The Secret of Ella and Micha is a much shorter book, and the characters are all drawn more quickly. My favourite thing about this novel is the setting. Ella and Micha’s background is almost completely different from mine, and I enjoyed discovering this small town where the young people have nothing much else to do than throw parties and go drag racing. I thought Lila, Ella’s roommate, was really intriguing and enjoyed finding more out about her.

When it came to the romance, I often wished that Ella and Micha would just get on with it, instead of acting up around each other and attempting to resist the inevitable. Many readers will probably enjoy the drawn-out tension, but I found myself wanting the story to hurry up so that I could find out how things would work out once they decided to date, and see
how they would handle all the challenges of life together.

I didn’t feel like the story really needs to be New Adult, because although Ella is a university student, almost all of the action takes place in the town where she grew up, and apart from her student status providing a reason for her to have left town for several months, and to return bringing a stranger (Lila), it doesn’t add anything to the story. Ella might as well have been a teenager who moved away with a parent or other relative and then came back. The story was more about resolving issues from her past than negotiating her future, and I think I would have been more excited about it had it been the other way around, because that’s the kind of content that I want to see in New Adult. Maybe Ella’s future is dealt with more in the sequel, The Forever of Ella and Micha. I’ll have to read some reviews and find out.

This is quite a minor criticism, but I think the text could have done
with an extra proofread or two – I spotted several spelling, grammar and formatting
mistakes.

I’m not entirely sure that The Secret of Ella and Micha was my kind of book in the end, but if you’re looking for a romance that touches on tough subjects, it might be one for you. Honestly, it seems likely that I’ll skip the second in the series, but I might keep an eye out for the third, The Temptation of Lila and Ethan, as I found Lila and Ethan, Ella’s roommate and Micha’s best
friend respectively, to be quite likeable and interesting, and I wanted to know what was going on between them when they went off alone.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, New Adult, review, romance

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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