Monday, October 31, 2011

Guest Post with Melody Carlson




Today Im welcoming Melody Carlson to the blog, a very popular YA writer in the CBA market, with her thoughts on the supernatural and occult in today's soceity. While Im sure many of us celebrate Halloween and enjoy the fall, the myths and lures of a scarier side to witchcraft is alive and growing fast among teens.




Teens and Their Supernatural Pursuits
By Melody Carlson 2011 

Have you even wondered why some teens are drawn toward things like Ouija boards or psychics? Or why séances are still popular at sleepovers? Does it just have to do with Halloween and that spine-chilling need for a good scare? Or could it be something more? And, as a Christian, should you be concerned? 

Those questions, as well as some confused reader letters, prompted me to tackle the “supernatural” in one of my teen novels (Moon White, TrueColors, Nav Press). And whenever I write an issues-based novel, I’m forced to research—and often in some dark places. So I began scouring websites, learning more about Wicca and the occult, trying to grasp what was really going on with today’s teens—and how I could write about it in a helpful and relevant way. 

But, as usual, when I write a teen book, I go back to my own adolescence...trying to connect with my inner teen...and I suddenly remembered a short era when a friend and I got very interested in witchcraft. I had honestly forgotten about this time and was fascinated to recall how we scoured some witchcraft stores on a local campus—I think we even purchased a few things. Fortunately, this interest was short-lived and I became a Christian not long afterward. 

However, as I reconnected with my inner teen, I had to ask myself—why had I looked into witchcraft back then? Why do teens dabble with it now? Suddenly the answer became crystal clear. I was searching. I’d been calling myself an atheist for several years by then, but I was spiritually hungry—starving in fact. Consequently I was looking for spiritual answers—something that would fill that empty void within me. I wanted a supernatural force in my life and I didn't even care where it came from. I needed something bigger than me, more powerful than me, something to hold onto. I had no idea at the time that I was really searching for God. 

This realization changed the way I viewed my research. Instead of feeling disgusted and dismayed by the witchcraft/Wicca sites (which are not particularly enjoyable) I began to recognize that these people (mostly girls) were simply searching too. They wanted a power source in their lives just like I wanted one in mine. They just hadn't found God yet. This led to another discovery. A girl who’s attracted to a religion like Wicca is usually seeking to gain some control over her life. Something is wrong and she wants to change it. To do so, she’s often enticed to purchase something—like “magical herbs”—to create a potion that will give her some control over her situation. Unfortunately, she doesn't even realize she’s being tricked. 

But think about it, wouldn't you love to have control over a bad situation sometimes? Wouldn’t you love to be able to change the circumstances that make your life unpleasant? So what if someone offered you the “power” to do just that? Perhaps if you’re fifteen, you wouldn't see that person as a charlatan and you would fall for it. 

Which brings me to another important factor in understanding this generation’s attraction to the supernatural. Follow the money. The more I researched, the more it became painfully obvious that Wicca and witchcraft and the occult are money-making enterprises. Thanks to the internet, these savvy distributors sell anything imaginable—and many things you can’t. That leads to some serious motivation—these marketers want to hook their unsuspecting young customers and reel them in. Of course, these potions and trinkets and how-to books don’t come with a money back guaranty. Nor are they approved by the FDA. Yet they are a multi-million dollar industry. 

So, in a way, it’s a perfect storm. Teens that are insecure, lost, unhappy, and searching...meet up with an unregulated industry that offers supernatural answers and power and control...for a price. 
            




________________________________________________________________


~This post gives me a lot to ponder on. I've always been frightened of that side of occult activity. I had a friend in high school who liked to play with Tarot cards and Ouija boards......even though at that time I had no religion or faith.....it freaked me out! I can certainly see the appeal though of the occult and supernatural world....I think when we are searching for meaning in life, especially in the case of religion, darkness can mask itself as light. All the more reason why parents need to be aware of what their children are reading, watching and browsing the Internet for. Thanks Melody for stopping by today and sharing those thoughts.


Find out more about Melody Carlson at Goodreads~Web~Facebook

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Bookie Brunch Blog Hop- Talk Like Jane Austen Day







A Rather Lovely Soirée for Talk like Jane Austen Day

Event production by
Random Magic Tour
Sasha Soren (Random Magic)
Oct. 30, 2011


~Wit and Wisdom~
Being a top 10 list of Jane Austen quotes
Hosted by Tinasbookreviews


~Wisdom~

There is, I believe, in every disposition a tendency to some particular evil— a natural defect, which not even the best education can overcome.
Pride and Prejudice


“My good opinion once lost is lost forever.” 
 Pride and Prejudice


“It isn't what we say or think that defines us, but what we do.” 
 Sense and Sensibility


“Know your own happiness. Want for nothing but patience, or give it a more fascinating name: Call it hope.”
Sense and Sensibility


~WIT~



  • "I wish with all my soul his wife may plague his heart out."
    - Sense and Sensibility, Ch. 30



  • EPE! Sounds like a scorned woman to me.....how many of us have had that thought or fleeting feeling that the guy who left us would be forever wrecked with his new found love..??


    "Amusing herself in the consideration of the blunders which often arise from a partial knowledge of circumstances, of the mistakes which people of high pretensions to judgment are for ever falling into" Emma

    Friendship is certainly the finest balm for the pangs of disappointed love.
    Northanger Abby

    "Our pleasures in this world are always to be paid for."
    Northanger Abby

    “You pierce my soul. I am half agony, half hope...I have loved none but you.”
    Persuasion


    And my favorite Jane quote of all time comes straight from king of romance himself, Mr. Darcy....

    “You have bewitched me body and soul, and I love, I love, I love you.
    And wish from this day forth never to be parted from you.”
    Pride and Prejudice

    AHHHH- can you say make me fall over and die from swooning so hard!!!!!!???


    CHECK OUT ALL THE STOPS TODAY


    Shadow and Light
    Being a video gallery of excellent Austen movie adaptations
    Splash of our Worlds (@SplashOOWorlds)

    Silk and Satin
    Being a gallery of charming Regency gowns
    Elbit Blog (@MeriGreenleaf)

    Screens and Pages
    Being a video reading from Sense and Sensibility
    Video channel: I Love Books (@Booklover_622)
    Blog: The Book Addict (@christina_622)

    Worldly and Otherworldy
    Jane's Ghost
    Being a sweet mystery related to that late worthy, the writer Jane Austen
    vvb32reads (@vvb32reads)

    Tea and Sweets
    Being a visit to Jane Austen's home
    The True Book Addict (@truebookaddict)

    Ink and Pixels
    Being a video reading of a Jane Austen work
    Pre-event: Video reading from Sense and Sensibility
    Video channel: Coffee and a Good Book
    Blog: Inky Pages
    Souvenir schedule
    Inky Pages (@InkyPages)

    Past and Present
    Divine Jane: Reflections on Austen
    Being a video featurette on Jane Austen's literary influence
    Songs and Stories (@LiederMadchen)

    Audio and Artistry
    Being a collection of audio book treats as parting gifts
    Random Magic Tour - The Coven (@RandomMagicTour)




    *****More Jane! *****




    WIN this book at Bookie Brunch, offer open through December 15, 2011.
    About: When publisher Thomas Cadell declined an unsolicited manuscript offered to him by a Hampshire clergyman in 1797, he made one of the biggest mistakes in publishing history, for the manuscript was an early version of Pride and Prejudice, and the clergyman's daughter was destined to become one of the most recognizable names in literature... (More)




    Your Also Invited to:



    INVITATION to Pemberley Ball, Nov. 14-19, 2011
    You're also invited to another charming Jane Austen event, the annual Pemberley Ball, held every November and hosted by vvb32reads (@vvb32reads).
    More information on Pemberley Ball
    Pre-event reading from Pride and Prejudice: Listen
    Last season: The Party Scouts | Gallery of Gowns | Dance Card
    RSVP: Reply to RSVP for this year's ball




    Event production for A Rather Lovely Soirée by Random Magic Tour.
    About Random Magic: Trailer | Print | Kindle


    Thank you for attending A Rather Lovely Soirée. And here we have all of the charming posts from this event. Please feel free to select and click on any of the badges below, to uncover another wonderful feature for Talk like Jane Austen Day (Oct. 30).


















Saturday, October 29, 2011

The Saturday Spotlight with Ray Evans & Giveaway


Welcome to The Saturday Spotlight, a weekly feature showcasing debut, Indie, self-published and authors who specialize in Ebook publishing. This week I have the pleasure introducing readers to:


RAY EVANS~Debut Author

Ray Evans author of Before the Last all Clear~Find him at ~Twitter~Website~Goodreads~




Guest Post by Ray Evans 2011




When Tina agreed to feature my biography ‘Before the Last All Clear’ in her Saturday Spotlight, she asked if I would write a guest post. She was very kind and said I could write about any subject of my choosing which left me with a fair challenge though as I tried to come up with something that would interest readers and maybe also give them a bit of a clue as to what to expect from an autobiography of a relatively unknown person. I discussed my quandary with Lilian (my wife) and she suggested I share a little about how my childhood experiences during World War II and the six years I was separated from my family, affected me later in life.


I never considered my story that unusual. I know plenty of people who were evacuated during the war and had heard many a tale told among family and friends over the years, so I took some convincing to even start writing my memories down. When my son Ray and daughter Debbie were young children I used to often recount “evacuation stories” to them at bed time rather than read to them. I would recount some of the funny things we got up to as children similar to their age at the time. As a result and at the time they came to see most of my entire wartime evacuation experience as a big adventure.



When my wife and I retired, we moved to America to live with our daughter Debbie, her daughter Kimberly was about 5 at the time, so once again the stories were dragged out and recounted at bed time for another generation’s amusement. One evening after a marathon session of me telling the stories to Kimberly, my daughter said it was a shame that our other grandchildren who were living in England didn't get to hear the stories first hand. She suggested I start writing the tales down so they could be passed on among the family. Her theory was that she would never be able to recount the stories in the same way or with the detail I was able to add to them and if not written down they’d eventually be lost completely. So that’s how I found myself at 64 years of age back at school taking computer lessons! Now I may not have had the benefit of what most would call a ‘good’ education, but I've picked up some street smarts along the years, so I talked my wife into coming along with me. I knew if I got stuck she’d help me out and at least that way I wouldn't be the only ‘old fogey’ in the class. However, it wasn't long before the project took on a life of its own. As I was writing, I spoke with my brothers and sisters to get their input, helping me fill in some of the ‘blanks’ from my own memory. We were all evacuated to the same town in Wales, but there were so many of us we had to be billeted in different homes. Because we were separated our personal experiences, reactions and memories of the experience were sometimes quite different.

My evacuation ‘exile’ changed me tremendously and at the same time it made me who I am today. I learned to be self-reliant, I also learned that if you want something in life, anything really, the only person who will be truly motivated to give it to you is yourself. I knew when I returned to Liverpool after the war, to a city that was a devastated wasteland of rubble and bombed out buildings yet even at the age of 12, I knew the only way I would survive, let alone ever be happy again, would be to work hard and ‘get out’ as fast as I could.

I had no idea at the time of course where that journey would take me, but I embarked on it with some considerable vigor and voracity. As I've already said, I credit those early experiences with making me who I am today, the good - determined, single minded and tenacious and the bad impatient, a clothes horse (something I was unaware of, until it was pointed out recently and a bit rudely if you ask me by Debbie) and sometimes I’d have to admit, I still have a bit of an inferiority complex that is most surely rooted in those evacuation years. Looking back I couldn't honestly say I wouldn't change anything, I certainly would given the chance of course. But I am at least able to see where those challenges and experiences gave me what I needed to grow and those same things have in many ways been the driving force behind the many successes I've enjoyed in life since, from my very humble beginnings to building a successful business, right down to becoming a published author preparing to release a second book!



Wow- thank you Ray for sharing that inspiring story. Hearing about the war from people who actually experienced it, is always profound. Wishing you the best of success on your second book.



GIVEAWAY

Today Ray is giving away a copy of his biography to one lucky winner. Please leave a comment to enter and a winner will be drawn Nov 5, 2011. Thanks and goodluck!!



Before The Last All Clear by Ray Evans
Published by: Morgan James Publishing

Some recall it as the greatest adventure of their lives. For others, being a wartime evacuee was a nightmare. These are the witty yet deeply poignant memories of a man still haunted by the cruelties he endured. During World War II, around three and a half million British children were evacuated away from possible air raids in the big cities in one of the largest social upheavals Great Britain has ever seen. One of those children was Ray Evans. 


This is the story of a young evacuee from Liverpool sent to live in the Welsh town of Llanelli. Separated from his mother, brothers and sisters, six-year old Ray was dispatched to a series of families who ignored, exploited and brutalised him. Pushed from pillar to post, he finally finds happiness with a family who make him so welcome that he is reluctant to leave when war ends. Set in a world of ration books, air-raid sirens and ever-present danger, this is a candid and direct account of wartime Britain as seen through the eyes of a child.


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WWII-Photo Credit-Holme St. Cuthbert History Group

Friday, October 28, 2011

TGIF {18}- Spooktacular Reads







Tgif is a weekly meme hosted and created by Ginger at Greads. This feature lets us wrap up the week and also poses a weekly question pertaining to blogging, books and what have you. This weeks question is:




Spooktacular Reads: Which books do you consider festive Halloween reads? Which Stories have chilled you to the bone?






Today Im combining Tgif with the Bookie Brunch Tour and sharing five great reads for Halloween!




Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman 


When the beautiful and precocious sisters Sally and Gillian Owens are orphaned at a young age, they are taken to a small Massachusetts town to be raised by their eccentric aunts, who happen to dwell in the darkest, eeriest house in town. As they become more aware of their aunts' mysterious and sometimes frightening powers -- and as their own powers begin to surface -- the sisters grow determined to escape their strange upbringing by blending into "normal" society. But both find that they cannot elude their magic-filled past. And when trouble strikes -- in the form of a menacing backyard ghost -- the sisters must not only reunite three generations of Owens women but embrace their magic as a gift -- and their key to a future of love and passion. Funny, haunting, and shamelessly romantic, Practical Magic is bewitching entertainment.



The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson

Larson tells the stories of two men: Daniel H. Burnham, the architect responsible for the fair's construction, and H.H. Holmes, a serial killer masquerading as a charming doctor. 

Burnham's challenge was immense. In a short period of time, he was forced to overcome the death of his partner and numerous other obstacles to construct the famous "White City" around which the fair was built. His efforts to complete the project, and the fair's incredible success, are skillfully related along with entertaining appearances by such notables as Buffalo Bill Cody, Susan B. Anthony, and Thomas Edison. The activities of the sinister Dr. Holmes, who is believed to be responsible for scores of murders around the time of the fair, are equally remarkable. He devised and erected the World's Fair Hotel, complete with crematorium and gas chamber, near the fairgrounds and used the event as well as his own charismatic personality to lure victims.





Blackbird House by Alice Hoffman


On a small farm on the outer reaches of Cape Cod is a place that is as bewitching and alive as the characters we meet: Violet, a brilliant girl who is in love with books and with a man destined to betray her; Lysander Wynn, attacked by a halibut as big as a horse, certain that his life is ruined until a boarder wearing red boots arrives to change everything; Maya Cooper, who does not understand the true meaning of the love between her mother and father until it is nearly too late. From the time of the British occupation of Massachusetts to our own modern world, family after family’s lives are inexorably changed, not only by the people they love but by the lives they lead inside Blackbird House. These interconnected narratives are as intelligent as they are haunting, as luminous as they are unusual. Inside Blackbird House more than a dozen men and women learn how love transforms us and how it is the one lasting element in our lives. The past both dissipates and remains contained inside the rooms of Blackbird House, where there are terrible secrets, inspired beauty, and, above all else, a spirit of coming home.

**Do you see I have a thing with Alice Hoffman...honestly you could read any of her books and fit them into the fall/Halloween feel....my personal favorite is Practical Magic but I love all of Hoffmans books which have a flair for magic and the tone of fairy tales.



A Discovery of Witches by Deborah Harkness



Sometimes scholars should be more careful: Youthful researcher Diana Bishop briefly consults an medieval alchemical manuscript; then, after jotting down a few notes, sends it back to its prison in the stacks. Unfortunately for Diana, her quick dabbling has unleashed a long suppressed curse—and now only she can break the spell. Carefully researched, this debut novel will appeal to fans of historical novel infused with strong paranormal elements.





And....for a great chill you to the bone read:




Pet Sematary by Stephen King


When Louis Creed & his family move from Chicago into a beautiful old house in rural Maine, it all seems too good to be true: physician father, beautiful wife, charming little daughter, adorable infant son--and now an idyllic home. As a family, they've got it all...right down to the friendly cat. The road in front of their home frequently claims the lives of neighborhood pets. Near their house, local children have created a cemetery for the dogs & cats killed by the steady stream of transports on the busy highway. Deeper in the woods lies another graveyard, an ancient Indian burial ground whose sinister properties Louis discovers when the family cat is killed.


Stephen King is responsible for changing the face of literature for me at the tender age of 13. I devoured his books like mad and to this day still hate gray cats, clowns, sewer drains, head boards, abandoned hotels and Saint Bernard's!!!!!





The Saturday Spotlight- Win Coffee at Little Angels
Bookie Brunch Hop- Sweet Treats
Shelf Cravings 
Bookie Brunch Hop- Halloween Movies
Book Spotlight-Attracted to Fire
Tgif-Bookie Brunch Halloween Books

Have a safe and fun Halloween weekend~we are doing all the fun stuff- carving pumpkins, baking pumpkin seeds and drinking my delicious mulled apple cider. Im also reading Daughter of Smoke and Bone and for my "catching up on all the shows I've missed marathon" Im starting Sons of Anarchy.


(Credit- FX)




Thursday, October 27, 2011

Cfba Book Spotlight- Attracted to Fire by DiAnn Mills





Attracted to Fire by DiAnn Mills
October 1, 2011 by Tyndale House
Paperback, 384 Pages
Review Copy

Special Agent Meghan Connors’ dream of one day protecting the president of the United States is about to come true. Only one assignment stands in her way. After the vice president’s rebellious daughter is threatened, Meghan is assigned to her protective detail on a secluded ranch in West Texas. Unfortunately, working with Special Agent in Charge Ash Zinders may be as tough as controlling her charge. Ash has a reputation for being critical and exacting, and he’s also after the same promotion as Meghan. But when the threats escalate and security on the ranch is breached, it becomes clear this isn’t the work of a single suspect—it’s part of a sophisticated plan that reaches deeper and higher than anyone imagined. And only Ash and Meghan can put the pieces together before it’s too late.



DiAnn Mills

DiAnn Mills believes her readers should “Expect an Adventure.” She is a fiction writer who combines an adventuresome spirit with unforgettable characters to create action-packed novels. Her books have won many awards through American Christian Fiction Writers, and she is the recipient of the Inspirational Reader’s Choice award for 2005, 2007, and 2010. She was a Christy Award finalist in 2008 and a Christy winner in 2010. DiAnn is a founding board member for American Christian Fiction Writers, a member of Inspirational Writers Alive, Advanced Writers and Speakers Association, and is the Craftsman Mentor for the Christian Writer’s Guild. She speaks to various groups and teaches writing workshops. DiAnn and her husband live in Houston, Texas. Visit her website at: www.diannmills.com or find her on Facebook:http://www.facebook.com/diannmills



Book Trailer










**Im super excited to read this title. Be on the look out for my review in a few weeks**
Thanks to Tyndale for just received Review copy


Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Bookie Brunch Trick or Treat Blog Hop- Halloween Movies






Welcome to the Bookie Brunch Trick or Treat Blog Hop- this week through Halloween is a special time dedicated to the Bookie Brunch, everyday will be a celebration of treats, traditions and fall goodies.



Bookie Brunch is a weekly book chat for book lovers. A new Bookie Brunch posts every Sunday, and you're welcome to join any ongoing discussion whenever you like




My Five Favorite Creepy Movies


So I think most of you know Im not into horror movies or any psycho flick that will scar my eyes (Nightmare on Elm Street) or my brain or most important my heart, so I avoid the slasher movies or anything that resembles hands with knives....(shudder) I do love a good thriller or creepy ghost story though, so today on the hop Im sharing my five favorite creepy (creepy to me) movies.


The Sixth Sense


Synopsis: A young boy who can communicate with the dead seeks the help of a child psychologist who is guilty over the loss of one of his patients.


So who hasn't seen this???? The first time I saw this I think I jumped out of my seat about 100 times. That part when the little ghost girl grabs Cole's foot from under the bed, I may have screamed......and of course I was one of those who was completely shocked with gasps and moans when I discovered who Bruce Willis was......Ill never forget that wedding ring moment.




Frailty 

Synopsis: On a dark stormy night a man confesses to an FBI agent about his family's religious fanatic visions that have lead to a series of murders of not people...but demons.

So this didn't scare me....but it did creep me out and disturb me a bit. Freaks are freaks, be it religious nuts or nonreligious nuts doesn't change the fact that some people out there are really sick and this family of men takes the cake on the freak factor.

The end of this movie gave me the chilly willy's and seriously shocked the pants off me. With its great twisty end and the whole tone of dark rain and dread, makes it a perfect flick for Halloween night. 




Identity

Synopsis: Ten strangers who have all mysteriously arrived at a motel in Nevada on a stormy night, soon realize that being stranded isn't the only thing they have in common. When one by one they begin to die the remaining few will try and solve the mystery before its to late.

This is one of those who done it and who are these people movies. I got so caught up in the mystery of why these people were trapped in this motel that I completely overlooked some of the gore. The ending was very twisty, just when you think its over, they slam you with a completely different ending than you thought was happening. While a few of the actors are a bit cheesy in this, John Cusack's character and Rebecca De Mornay's head cameo..... Awesome!!





The Village

Synopsis: A group of like minded people live in an isolated village away from the outside world and are convinced that the creatures who inhabit the forest are coming to attack them. One girl blind to the world is the only one who can redeem the village's way of living.

So I cant help it... I loved M.Night's first few movies, I thought The Sixth Sense, Signs and The Village were fantastic.

I loved the whole vibe of this movie, the entire concept of this hidden village and the group of people kind of living like secluded Amish with the whole paranormal elements, were pretty genius. I thought the trip through the woods to save her love was romantic and brave yet terrifying. Facing the unknown and unseen fears can be the scariest things we ever do. And that part when Joaquin Phoenix walks into the woods and picks the berries, I kind of chewed one of my nails off waiting for some crazy monster to pop out.




The Others

Synopsis: A woman and her 2 photosensitive children live in an old house awaiting the return of their husband/father from the war. Soon they become convinced that the house is haunted. 

Nothing says creepy better than living in a mansion with locked doors and mist all about. This movie gave me the shivers- with the sick kids to the creepy servants...everything was just perfect for a Gothic ghost story. Did anyone else almost swallow their tongue when they found out who and what Nicole Kidman's character did???? 







What are some of your favorite Halloween movies? Want to find more treats, movies and prizes go HERE.










Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Shelf Cravings {31}







Welcome to Shelf Cravings a weekly dish on all things book. New, coming soon, just discovered and craving to read. This week Im excited for:


~Coming Soon~



Submerged by Dani Pettrey
Alaskan Courage book one-
(From Authors Website)
April 15, 2012 by Bethany House 



Dive Rescue Captain Cole McKenna has never worked a case like this, but who he’s working with may prove more dangerous than the assignment. It’s been a lifetime since Bailey mangled his heart. Now she’s back in town and he needs her expertise to track down the illusive treasure.

Professor of Russian Studies Bailey Craig vowed never to set foot in Yancey again, but when her beloved aunt dies, she has no choice. Her plan of attack is simple: return for Agnes’s funeral, get the family business ready for a quick sale, and then put Yancey and all the heartbreaking memories wrapped up in it behind her for good. Cole walking through her door, asking for her help on a murder investigation, wasn't part of her plan, neither are the feelings he’s resurrecting—feelings best left dead. Bailey agrees to help for the sake of the victims, and travels with Cole across Alaska’s rugged terrain and deep beneath is coastal waters. As the case escalates, so do their feelings for one another. Unfortunately, not everyone is willing to let go of the past and just when Bailey thinks she can’t take it any longer, the case shifts in a new and extremely personal direction, fastening her in for its duration. Racing against the clock and a rising body count, Cole and Bailey fight to find the treasure and uncover the hidden history at the root of it all. But will they be too late?




The Unquiet by Jeanine Garsee
Spring 2012 by Bloomsbury



16-year-old Rinn Jacobs has secrets: One, she’s bipolar. Two, she killed her grandmother. After a suicide attempt, and now her parents' separation, Rinn and her mom move from California to the rural Ohio town where her mother grew up. Back on her medications (again!) and hoping to stay well, Rinn settles into her new home and school. She refuses to be daunted by the fact that the previous owner hanged herself in Rinn's bedroom, or that her classmates believe the school pool is haunted by Annaliese, a girl who drowned there. But when a reckless séance goes awry, and terrible things start happening to her new friends—yet not to her—Rinn is determined to find out why she can’t be "touched" by Annaliese...or if Annaliese even exists.

With the help of Nate Brenner, the hunky “farmer boy” she’s rapidly falling for, Rinn devises a dangerous plan to uncover the truth. Soon reality and fantasy meld into one, till Rinn finds it nearly impossible to tell the difference. When a malevolent force threatens the lives of everyone she cares about--not to mention her own--she can't help wondering: who should she really be afraid of? Annaliese? Or herself?




Gone to Ground by Brandilyn Collins
March 1st 2012 by B&H Books


Amaryllis, Mississippi is a scrappy little town of strong backbone and southern hospitality. A brick-paved Main Street, a park, and a legendary ghost in the local cemetery are all part of its heritage. Everybody knows everybody in Amaryllis, and gossip wafts on the breeze. Its people are friendly, its families tight. On the surface Amaryllis seems much like the flower for which it’s named—bright and fragrant. But the Amaryllis flower is poison.

In the past three years five unsolved murders have occurred within the town. All the victims were women, and all were killed in similar fashion in their own homes. And just two nights ago—a sixth murder. Clearly a killer lives among the good citizens of Amaryllis. And now three terrified women are sure they know who he is—someone they love. None is aware of the others’ suspicions. And each must make the heartrending choice to bring the killer down. But each woman suspects a different man.



Breathe by Melanie McCullough
November 11, 2011 by Indie Ebook

Life's hard. People make it harder. They tether you to them. Make it difficult to breathe, and damn-near impossible to leave...

Seventeen year-old Abby Rhoades knows this all too well. Born to a mother who could never love her and who vacillates between a sloppy drunk and a suicidal maniac, Abby's never had it easy. But Abby can swim. And Abby has a plan--win the state championship, earn a free ride to Penn State, and leave her small town and suffocating mother behind. But then the body of Tom Ford, her mother's latest boyfriend and a man Abby adored, washes up along the shore of the Susquehanna River. His injuries suggest murder and suspicion quickly falls on Abby then on her best friend Garrett Scott, both of whom saw Tom the night he died. They both know what happened that night, but neither one is talking. There's too much at stake and the truth could tear them apart.





First Comes Love by Katie Kacvinsky
May 8th 2012 by Houghton Mifflin



Like his name, Gray is dark and stormy. Dylan, a girl always searching for what's next, seemingly unable to settle down, is the exact opposite: full of light and life. On the outside, they seem like an unlikely couple. But looks can be deceiving and besides, opposites attract.What starts as friendship, turns into admiration, respect and caring, until finally these two lone souls find they are truly in love with each other.

But staying in love is not as easy as falling in love. If Dylan and Gray want their love to last, they're going to have to work at it. And learn that sometimes love means having to say you're sorry.


Just Released




The Poison Diaries (2) Nightshade by Maryrose Wood
October 25, 2011 by HarperTeen

**RELEASE DAY**


A dark, Gothic tale of romance… and murder.
The latest book in the grippingly dark series, The Poison Diaries.

Our heroine, Jessamine, has lost her faith in the men she loved, and her innocence as well. She turns to the dark side and plots to kill her father, using his own poisons, before becoming an assassin, a poisoner for hire. Can she recover from her heartache and reunite with her true love, Weed? Find out in this thrilling story where poisons, darkness and horror are a part of everyday life, and love is the only cure.




Everything We Ever Wanted by Sara Shepard
October 11, 2011 by Harper


A late-night phone call on a Sunday evening rarely brings good news. So when Sylvie, a recently-widowed mother of two, receives a call from the head teacher of the school she's on the board of, she knows it won't be something she wants to hear. The school was founded by her grandfather, and she's inherited everything he strived to build up - a reputation, a heritage, the school and the grand old family house. And with this inheritance comes responsibility.So when her son Scott is whispered to be involved in a scandal that led to the death of one of the boys he coaches at the school, it throws the family into chaos: Sylvie has to decide between her loyalty to the school that has been part of her family legacy for years and her son who she feels wants nothing to do with her. She starts spying on the dead boy's father, making an unlikely connection.Sara Shepard's compelling new novel tells how hard it can be to really, truly connect to people, how making quick, easy judgments can come back to haunt you, and how the life you always planned for - and always dreamed of - often doesn't always turn out the way you imagined at all...



So while I think the cover male models nose on First Comes Love is a bit distracting, something about that cover screams Im sexy...read me....I cant wait to go cave diving, creep into the mind of Rinn, swim with Abby, find out who the murderer really is and get caught up in a school scandal and dive back into the Poison Diaries, which by the way- I really enjoyed book one.


And check out this crazy trailer for Gone to Ground. Thanks to Relz from Relz Reviewz for the heads up on this trailer and Submerged.








*Graphic created by The Unread Reader*

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