Showing posts with label promotion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label promotion. Show all posts

Sep 25, 2013

Finding Angel by Kat Heckenbach: A Review




            The first time I met Kat, she was wearing more rings and ear cuffs than I could count, a headband that barely kept back a mass of curly reddish hair, and a black shirt with red letters that read ‘vampires don’t sparkle.’
            “Are you Kat?” I asked, eyeing the stacks of Finding Angel she was plunking down on a long table in the conference bookstore.
            “Yes!” she exclaimed, dropped her last stack, came round the end of the table, and enfolded me in a hug.
            Needless to say, we hit it off.
            To be fair, we had actually hit it off a few months before on Facebook when she asked for character Pinterest boards and I showed her my treasure trove. Our newfound friendship was sorely tested, however, when she began keeping a running count of days until the conference on my Facebook wall when I really didn’t want to be reminded. Becky Minor kept the peace by assuring me she would have smelling salts handy at the conference, which assuaged my fears. (Well, not really, but it at least made me realize I wasn’t the only nervous one.)
            Finding Angel was one of the few books written by conference attendees that I managed to finish before the actual conference rolled around. (I had a half-read copy of Merlin’s Blade in my dorm room the whole time. Sorry, Mr. Treskillard.) When I saw Kat’s disappointed status recently, saying she’d had a dream that Finding Angel got another review, I decided to surprise her. (Are you surprised? Well are ya?)

Overall: 3.5 stars
Finding Angel is the story of a girl separated from her magical heritage. She lives a normal life, until pieces of her past begin to catch up with her. A beetle, a charm bracelet, a boy with silver eyes…they all lead her back to Toch Island, the place of her birth, and her strange powers, which may help Angel solve the mysterious disappearances around the island – or reveal her to the evil man who desperately wants to find her.

This was a light, fun read with unique settings, new twists on the old fantasy elements, and a sojourn into a world where worldviews have consequences.

Concept: 4 stars
On the surface, this is your ordinary science-justified magic story. Dig a little deeper, and you’ll find such delightful creatures as fractal chameleons, modern-day unicorns, and elves with their own rock bands. During my mentoring session with Kat (though it felt more like a chance for us to sit down alone and fangirl about – well, everything) I reflected that when you meet creative people, you rarely fit them with their work on the first try. Perhaps it’s the preponderance of introverted authors, but usually it takes a little while for you to see their creativity shining through. Not so with Kat. When she started talking, I immediately saw through to the mind that created Toch Island – a flamboyant, colorful, I-don’t-care-what-you-think kind of mind.

Plot: 3 stars
Unfortunately, this book suffered from a case of SMS, or Sagging Middle Syndrome. The first third was good. The last third was great. The middle – not so much. For all that it was neatly paced, with things speeding up toward the climax (as they should), I felt Angel spent a little too much time socializing, training, and playing with animals. Of course, this may be due to my allergic reaction anything approaching relaxation or warm fuzzy feelings. Give me TRAGEDEHHH!

That said, I loved the way the clues to the mystery were sprinkled through the story. It was one of those “aw, shoulda seen that coming,” moments.

Characters: 2.5 stars
My favorite books are usually the ones where I can tell you what the characters would do months later. Few live up to that hope – Incarceron, and Outlander, and The Restorer. The trouble with Finding Angel was that I wanted to love the characters – they were unpredictable, they were human, and they drove the story well. However, I had trouble telling their personalities apart, especially the main characters. This is something I suffer from myself. Besides a few overarching characteristics, my FMC often plays hard-to-get and I end up having to make her behave the way she needs to for the sake of the plot. (Odd thing, actually wishing the characters would take the scene and run with it.) But oh well; that’s what development and rewrites are for.

Technical: 3.5 stars
Technical details are not something I pay a great deal of attention to unless there is a profusion of mistakes. I have a rather different method of dealing with them than most. Some people claim to throw the books, or yell, or write the author nasty letters. I sigh. If it’s really bad, it earns a closed-eyed sigh. Woe to the book that elicits such a response! Since I don’t recall any sighing for the duration of this book, I think it was clean of any glaring errors. (This, folks, is why you don’t write a book review months after reading the book.)

Execution: 3 stars
While not the most vivid writing I’ve ever read, the style of Finding Angel is clean, uncluttered work full of unique elements. In future works, greater attention could be paid to expanding the scenes and adding more action – not necessarily swashbuckling action, as I don’t think that would fit – but more action by the characters instead of so much summary. Still, it was a bold, admirable endeavor. Also, the author is delightful. Can I add extra points for the fractal chameleons? Thank you.

Jun 15, 2013

Two upcoming books in my to-read stack! PLUS giveaway update

Hey guys! Today I'm promoting a couple of upcoming books that are in my to-read list on Goodreads.
(Here's proof! They're down at the bottom. Meaning they're quite recent adds. ;) One by my crazy buddy Mirriam Neal, the other by fellow fantasy-goer Brian McBride.

Incidentally, the public release of Monster is today. Yep! You heard me! She's having a book blitz to boost her ratings, so go over there and buy it. Pronto, because I'm late posting this.




I had the pleasure of reading this book while it was being written, and let me tell ya, it is well worth the $15. It's clean but gripping sci-fi with characters that'll tear your heart out.
The year is 2053, and the world is recovering from a Morbus, a plague that swept across the globe, destroying millions of lives. Eva Stewart is a promising young WorldCure scientist assigned to a facility in Alaska where she is made a Handler and given her own human Subject for research and experimentation. What she believes to be a step up in her career becomes a nightmare when she discovers writing on her Subject’s cell wall. "I still have a soul." Soon Eva is drawn into a horrific plot kept quiet by WorldCure, and as everything she knew collapses around her, she must discover the truth behind her Subject, her beliefs, and herself.

Link to her Facebook author page: https://www.facebook.com/mirriamelinneal?fref=ts
Link to her book on Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18076372-monster
Link to her main character's fan page:https://www.facebook.com/subjectmir 






Paradox by Brian McBride is a Christian fantasy novel aimed at the young adult audience (14-18).

Four troubled teens, two worlds, one God, one goal: to defeat the Darkness before it's too late. When David, his twin sister Alicia, and their two best friends, Jake and Hannah, stumble through a portal and into another world, Paragon, they discover that they are not who they thought they were... they are descendants of an ancient race known as Starcrafters, and they've been endowed with God-given abilities - impossible abilities.

They train and learn to harness their abilities. Now, they are ready to take on the Dark Prince.
Their attack on the prince is interrupted, however, when they are taken by a group known as the Renegades who are after universal domination by means of an artifact known as the Paradox Stone.
They must escape the Renegades, retrieve the stone, and defeat the Darkness; all while learning to trust one another and work as a team, and to put their faith in the one true God.

Paradox is soon to be released by Outskirts Press and is the debut novel of seventeen-year-old author Brian McBride.

Link to his Facebook author page - www.facebook.com/authorbrianmcbride
Link to his blog - www.jointhestarcrafters.blogspot.com
Link to his Goodreads - www.goodreads.com/author/show/6917973.Brian_McBride
Link to the book on Goodreads - www.goodreads.com/book/show/17315275-paradox---the-starcrafters-saga-book-one



Now, in case you were wondering what the "giveaway update" was all about, I realized that in my last post where I announced said giveaway, I made a typo. It said you needed to turn in your entries by Tuesday, August 2. I meant Tuesday, July 2, but I had August on the brain. So after some thought, I have extended the deadline another month to Friday, August 2, which is the day I'll be at the conference (YAY). Perhaps I can even get the book signed for you. Perrrrhaps.

Also, if you can't find anything of interest on my Waiting for My Pen board, I may be persuaded to allow a few entries using pictures of people from my Souls board. Best of luck, and I'm still eagerly waiting to see what is sent my way. ;)

E