Wednesday, December 28, 2011
These Are a Few of My Favorite Reads
First, join me in two weeks, on Wednesday, Jan. 11, when Preternatura Book Club will be back! We'll be reading two chapters a week of the first book in Patricia Briggs' Mercy Thompson series, Moon Called. I hope you'll join in the read.
It's the end of the year, so that means it's time to look back. I think 2011 for me was kind of like a train. It started out really slow...nothing going on...then page proofs for Royal Street came in, then the cover, then more proofs, then more proofs, then ARCs. Revisions on River Road, book two in the Sentinels series. Drafting Elysian Fields, book three in the series. Full-time day job. Yikes!
There were also a couple of extra-secret surprises, which you can find out in mid-to-late January if you want to sign up to receive my newsletter and haven't already done so. Just click HERE and tell me you want it--I promise not to bombard your email inbox.
On a reading level, because I'm kind of obsessive about these things, I can tell you I read 92 novels this year--this is novels I actually finished. That doesn't count a half-dozen writing books and at least five or six reference books. So...can I pick my top 10? Nope, and here's why: In the interest of reviewing books for the blog as they came in my mailbox or Netgalley account, I neglected some of my favorite all-time series so I think a "top five" list would be skewed.
Instead, here's my five all-time favorite authors and/or series. And since I like to share my reads here on this blog, tell me which series you haven't read that you'd like to start....and I'll send you the first book in the series. How's that?
So, in absolutely no order:
Patricia Briggs' Mercy Thompson series
This series is smart, has very understated humor, and was the first urban fantasy series that ever made me cry. Just a really solid UF series.
JR Ward's Black Dagger Brotherhood series
Le sigh. Nobody, and I mean nobody, writes deep point of view like J.R. Ward, and this dark paranormal romance series makes my all-time fave list despite having a glossary in the front and strhange spellings.
Jim Butcher's Dresden Files series
Everytime I think this series just has to fizzle out, Jim Butcher throws in a monkey wrench and sends the series spinning in a new direction. A book from this series is the first UF I remember making me put the book down because I was laughing too hard to read. The scene involved Walmart and marbles.
Kim Harrison's Hollows series
Kim, Kim, Kim. I'm putting you here despite the Kisten episode. You know what I'm talking about. I still haven't gotten over it all these years later, so I guess you probably did the right thing from a storytelling standpoint. But still...the best ensemble cast in urban fantasy, although Ivy annoys me on occasion.
Simon R. Green's Nightside series
This series stumbles now and then, but I love it for the sheer fact that John Taylor and his companions in the Nightside--an alternative version of London--continually blow my mind. Green's mix of elements from sci fi, mythology, and sheer weirdness, plus his snarky British humor, are never, ever boring.
Runners-up
Charlaine Harris' Southern Vampire series
I debated on this one because the last book or two have gotten a little weird for me, but I still love Sookie and Eric and Pam and the gang...and, no, "True Blood" doesn't follow the books except in a VERY nominal sense.
Jeaniene Frost's Night Huntress series
You guys are the ones who introduced me to Cat and Bones, and even though I'm not yet up to date on this series, I will be soon. It could well move up into my top group by this time next year. I'm excited about attending the Authors After Dark con next August, so I can go all fangirl with JF.
So, there you have it! Want to try a book in one of these seven series? Just tell me YOUR favorite book or series, and which one you'd like to try. As always +1 entry for comment, +1 for blog follow, +1 for Twitter follow @Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for Tweet or Retweet.
I'll be taking off for the holiday again, but will be back on Monday, Jan. 2, with a HUGE Reader's Choice list. Y'all be good, now!
Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Double-Shot TBR Tuesday: New YA and Steampunk Releases
There’s
YA and Steampunk on the menu today!
First,
a little business. For those of you who are interested, in January I’m starting
a newsletter to keep you up to date on my urban fantasy series that begins in
April with Royal Street. If you’d like to get on my mailing list, email me at Suzanne.johnson.author@gmail.com
and include the email address you’d like it sent to. I promise (really) not to
bombard your email inbox—just want to be able to send you monthly updates on
new books, upcoming appearances, special promotions, occasional swag
opportunities, reviews of interest, and sneak peeks of new stories and
chapters.
Tuesday
is TBR day--where I share the love by passing along some books from my TBR pile. Today, I have a ‘double-shot’
of books from the folks at Pyr Books, who publish some of the most innovative
books you’re going to find—including the two today.
First
up is Planesrunner, the first in a
new YA series by Irish science fiction author Ian McDonald that I guess you’d
call “adventure fiction.”
THE
OFFICIAL BLURB: When Everett
Singh's scientist father is kidnapped from the streets of London, he leaves
young Everett a mysterious app on his computer. Suddenly, this
fourteen-year-old has become the owner of the most valuable object in the
multiverse—the Infundibulum—the map of all the parallel earths, and there are
dark forces in the Ten Known Worlds who will stop at nothing to get it. They've
got power, authority, and the might of ten planets—some of them more
technologically advanced than our Earth—at their fingertips. He's got wits,
intelligence, and a knack for Indian cooking. To
keep the Infundibulum safe, Everett must trick his way through the Heisenberg
Gate his dad helped build and go on the run in a parallel Earth. But to rescue
his Dad from Charlotte Villiers and the sinister Order, this Planesrunner's
going to need friends. Friends like Captain Anastasia Sixsmyth, her adopted
daughter Sen, and the crew of the airship Everness.
Can they rescue Everett's father and get the
Infundibulum to safety? First in the Everness series.
Can’t get enough of steampunk, or want to give it a
try? Also up today is Andrew P. Mayer’s Hearts
of Smoke and Steam.
THE
OFFICIAL BLURB: Sir Dennis Darby has been murdered, the
Automaton has been destroyed, and Sarah Stanton has turned her back on a life
of privilege and comfort to try and find her way in the unforgiving streets of Victorian-era
New York. But Lord Eschaton, the villain behind all these events, isn't
finished with her. His plans to bring his apocalyptic vision of the future to
the world are moving forward, but to complete his scheme he needs the clockwork
heart that Sarah still holds.
But she has her own plans for the Automaton's clockwork
heart—Sarah is trying rebuild her mechanical friend, and when she is attacked
by The Children of Eschaton, the man comes to her rescue may be the one to make
her dreams come true. Emelio Armando is a genius inventor who had hoped to
leave his troubles behind when he and his sister left Italy for a life of
anonymity in the New World. Now he finds himself falling in love with the
fallen society girl, but he is rapidly discovering just how powerful the forces
of villainy aligned against her are, and that fulfilling her desires means
opening the door to a world of danger that could destroy everything he has
built.
THE
GIVEAWAY: Want to win Planesrunner
and Hearts of Smoke and Steam? Have
you read any of the new spate of YA sci-fi novels (Across the Universe,
anyone)? What do you think? Four entries possible: +1 for comment, +1 for blog follow, +1 for
Twitter follow @Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for Tweet or Retweet. Go!
Monday, December 26, 2011
New Releases Dec. 27-31, Reader's Choice Contest, Weekly Winners
Merry
post-Christmas and pre-New Year’s…or something like that. We’re back for
another short week on the blog, with a new Reader’s Choice contest and a
medium-sized list of new releases—but this list has some awesome choices in
urban fantasy, paranormal romance, YA, and science fiction. What to choose,
what to choose... (And next week’s list…Ginormous!)
First,
congrats to the winners from last week’s contests. If you see your name, please
email me HERE and send me your
snail-mail address if you prefer a print book or email/format if you prefer an
ebook. (Some contests may specify one format or the other.)
Congrats
to:
LESLEY D, who won Lev AC
Rosen’s All Men of Genius. (print
only)
FAIRY WHISPERS, who won the
Reader’s Choice and chose Touch of Power
by Maria V. Snyder (choice of print or ebook)
Now,
for this week’s list of new releases—comment to win your choice!
*Genre
key (at the end of each listing): SF=science fiction; F=high/epic fantasy;
UF=urban fantasy; H=horror; PNR=paranormal romance; YA=young adult; MG=middle
grade; alt history=alternative history; dyst=dystopia; steampunk.
Every Other Day,
by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
(Dec.
27, Edgmont)
Every
other day, Kali D'Angelo is a normal sixteen-year-old girl. She goes to public
high school. She attends pep rallies. She's human. And then every day in between
. . .She's something else entirely. Though she still looks like herself, every twenty-four
hours predatory instincts take over and Kali becomes a feared demon-hunter with
the undeniable urge to hunt, trap, and kill zombies, hellhounds, and other supernatural
creatures. Kali has no idea why she is the way she is, but she gives in to
instinct anyway. Even though the government considers it environmental
terrorism. When Kali notices a mark
on the lower back of a popular girl at school, she knows instantly that the
girl is marked for death by one of these creatures. Kali has twenty-four hours
to save her and, unfortunately, she'll have to do it as a human. With the help
of a few new friends, Kali takes a risk that her human body might not survive.
. .and learns the secrets of her mysterious condition in the process. UF-YA
Archon,
by Sabrina Benulis
(Dec.
27, Harper Voyager)
Angela
Mathers is plagued by visions of angels, supernatural creatures who haunt her
thoughts by day and seduce her dreams by night. Newly released from a mental
institution where she was locked away for two years, she hopes that her time at
the Vatican’s university, the West Wood Academy, will give her a chance at a
normal life. Unlike ordinary humans, Angela is a blood head — a freak, a
monster, the possible fulfillment of a terrifying prophecy of overwhelming
death and destruction. Only in Luz, the Vatican’s wondrous enclave, are blood
heads accepted and encouraged to discover what kind of powers or special
abilities they might possess. But within West Wood, a secret coven plots, and
demons and angels roam the streets searching for the key to open Raziel’s book
— a secret tome from a lost archangel. Some are determined to destroy Raziel,
while others, like the beautiful Supernal Israfel, one of the highest of the
high, wish to free him. And when the Archon — the human chosen to possess the
spirit of a dead angel — rises as foretold, they will control the supernatural
universe. Torn between mortal love and angelic obsession, Angela holds the key
to Heaven and Hell — and both will stop at nothing to possess her. UF-YA
Empire State,
by Adam Christopher
(Dec.
27, Angry Robot)
It
was the last great science hero fight, but the energy blast ripped a hole in
reality, and birthed the Empire State – a young, twisted parallel
prohibition-era New York. When the rift starts to close, both worlds are
threatened, and both must fight for the right to exist. SF
The Demon Lover,
by Juliet Dark
(Dec.
27, Ballantine)
Since
accepting a teaching position at remote Fairwick College in upstate New York,
Callie McFay has experienced the same disturbingly erotic dream every night: A
mist enters her bedroom, then takes the shape of a virile, seductive stranger
who proceeds to ravish her in the most toe-curling, wholly satisfying ways
possible. Perhaps these dreams are the result of writing her bestselling
book, The Sex Lives of Demon Lovers. After all, Callie’s lifelong
passion is the intersection of lurid fairy tales and Gothic literature—which is
why she finds herself at Fairwick’s renowned folklore department, living in a
once-stately Victorian house that, at first sight, seemed to call her name. But Callie soon realizes that
her dreams are alarmingly real. She has a demon lover—an incubus—and he will
seduce her, pleasure her, and eventually suck the very life from her. Then
Callie makes another startling discovery: He’s not the only mythical creature
in Fairwick. As the tenured witches of the college and the resident fairies in
the surrounding woods prepare to cast out the incubus, Callie must accomplish
something infinitely more difficult—banishing this demon lover from her heart. PNR
Spirit Bound,
by Christine Feehan
(Dec.
27, Jove)
Lethal
undercover agent Stefan Prakenskii knew a thousand ways to kills a man—and
twice as many ways to pleasure a woman. That’s what made him look forward to
his new mission: arrive in the coastal town of Sea Haven and insinuate himself
in the life of an elusive beauty who had mysterious ties to his past, and a
link to a dangerously seductive, and equally elusive master criminal who wanted
only one thing: to possess her. Judith Henderson was an artist on the rise—an
ethereal, and haunted woman whose own picture-perfect beauty stirred the souls
of two men who have made her their obsession. For years she has been waiting
for someone to come and unlock the passion and fire within her—waiting for the
right man to surrender it to. But only one man can survive her secrets, and the
shadow she has cast over both their lives. Second in the Sisters of the Heart
series. PNR
Hell Train,
by Christopher Fowler
(Dec.
27, Solaris)
Four passengers meet on a train journey through Eastern Europe
during the First World War, and face a mystery that must be solved if they are
to survive. As the ‘Arkangel’ races through the war-torn countryside, they must
find out: What is in the casket that everyone is so afraid of? What is the
tragic secret of the veiled Red Countess who travels with them? Why is their
fellow passenger the army brigadier so feared by his own men? And what exactly
is the devilish secret of the Arkangel itself? Bizarre creatures, satanic
rites, terrified passengers and the romance of travelling by train, all in a
classically styled horror novel. H
Shadow
City, by Diana Pharaoh
Francis
(Dec. 27, Pocket)
The world is falling apart. The magical apocalypse has come. Now
is the time to guard the covenstead against both raiders and refugees. But Max
has been stolen by a powerful demi-god who is determined to force her to find a
way to use a magical power she never knew she had—even if it kills her.
Meanwhile, back in Horngate, a Fury is birthing. When the creature breaks free
of the fragile bonds that enclose her, her rage will scour the covenstead from
the earth. Max finds herself in the Shadow City, a place of mysteries and
magic, where she must battle for her freedom or become a slave to creatures of
dreadful greed and power. Back in Horngate, Alexander must swallow his anger
and pride if he hopes to defeat the Fury, a creature that no one has ever
successfully fought before. In the end, it will be courage, friendship, faith
and loyalty that win the day. Or else so one will live to see tomorrow. Third
in the Horngate Witches series. UF
Bedeviled,
by Sable Grace
(Dec.
27, Avon)
She has done the unthinkable—turned her best friend into a dark
breed: part Vampyre, Lychen and Witch . . .Kyana thought only to save her
friend’s life when she fed Haven her blood; instead, she created a monster. Now
the woman she thought of as a sister is under the spell of an ancient, vengeful
god, determined to set him free and wreak havoc on the mortal world . . . and
only Kyana can stop her. But time is running out. In just seven days, Kyana’s Vampyre
and Lychen abilities will be gone and she’ll be completely transformed into the
Goddess of the Hunt—and her blood ties to Haven will be severed. By her side is
Ryker—ally, demigod, lover— who will sacrifice everything to keep Kyana safe .
. . even the attraction that burns between them. Together they have one chance
to save Haven from herself . . . to save humanity from hell on earth. PNR
77 Shadow Street,
by Dean Koontz
(Dec.
27, Bantam)
Enter
the world of the Pendleton, a beautiful limestone Gilded Age palace that's been
converted into a set of highly desirable condominiums. Its tenants feel lucky
to live there. Yet luck and the Pendleton have little in common—its years have
been colored by madness, kidnappings, murder, and strange, inexplicable
accidents. But all of that is in a past mostly unfamiliar to the people of the
Pendelton. To them, their building is a sanctuary....That is, until it turns on
them. Shadows with no source begin to skitter across the walls, voices whisper
in unknown languages, security cameras show impossible feeds, and a little boy
starts talking to an imaginary playmate, who turns out to be all too real.
These are only prelude to a terror that will soon fully engulf the tenants of
Pendleton, in an unimaginable world from which there may be no escape. H
Ghoul Interrupted,
by Victoria Laurie
(Dec.
27, Signet)
M.J.
Holliday and her crew interrupt the frantic schedule of their reality TV show,
Ghoul Getters, and hotfoot it to New Mexico, where a dreadful demon is waging
tribal warfare. Same Whitefeather- M.J.'s spirit guide-urgently needs her help
to stop this evil spirit from wiping out the descendants of his tribe. It
doesn't take a psychic to predict that M.J.'s going to have a devil of a time
making New Mexico a demon-free zone. The sixth Ghost Hunter mystery. UF
The Mortal Bone,
by Marjorie M. Liu
(Dec.
27, Ace)
When
the bond Maxine Kiss shares with the demons tattooed on her skin is
deliberately severed, the demon hunter is left vulnerable and unprotected. For
the first time in ten thousand years, the demons have a taste of freedom. And
as the little demons grow more violent and unpredictable, Maxine starts to fear
they will lose their minds without her. Reuniting won't be easy, since a
greater temptation waits for these hellions: a chance to return to their lives
as Reaper Kings, and unleash hell on Earth. Fourth in the Hunter Kiss series. PNR
Warrior’s Redemption, by Melissa Mayhue
(Dec.
27, Pocket Star)
Malcolm
MacDowylt, laird of Clan MacGahan, is a man ruled by guilt. His wife’s death,
his struggling clansmen, even his sister being held prisoner—all hangs on his
shoulders. As a descendent of the Norse gods himself, he’s not surprised when
his Faerie “mother-in-law” arrives determined to deliver justice for his
treatment of her daughter. At least not until that justice appears in the form
of a woman whose every look speaks to his very soul...A woman who claims to
come from 700 years in the future. PNR
The Bitter Seed of Magic, by Suzanne McLeod
(Dec.
27, Ace)
For
once, Genny's life seems quiet. Her sexy boss isn't pushing for a decision on
their relationship, and the witches have declared that she is no longer a
threat. But when a teenaged faeling is fished out of the River Thames and
another disappears, Genny finds herself in a race to stop a curse from taking
its next victim. Third in the Spellcrackers series. U.S. release. UF
Shadow Heir,
by Richelle Mead
(Dec.
27, Zebra)
Shaman-for-hire
Eugenie Markham strives to keep the mortal realm safe from trespassing
entities. But as the Thorn Land's prophecy-haunted queen, there's no refuge for
her and her soon-to-be-born-children when a mysterious blight begins to
devastate the Otherworld. The spell-driven source of the blight isn't the only
challenge to Eugenie's instincts. Fairy king Dorian is sacrificing everything
to help, but Eugenie can't trust the synergy drawing them back together. The
uneasy truce between her and her shape shifter ex-lover Kiyo is endangered by
secrets he can't--or won't--reveal. And as a formidable force rises to also
threaten the human world, Eugenie must use her own cursed fate as a weapon--and
risk the ultimate sacrifice. Fourth in the Dark Swan series. UF
The Demi-Monde: Winter, by Rod Rees
(Dec.
27, William Morrow)
The
Demi-Monde is the most advanced computer simulation ever devised. Created to
prepare soldiers for the nightmarish reality of urban warfare, it is a virtual
world locked in eternal civil war. Its thirty million digital inhabitants are
ruled by duplicates of some of history's cruellest tyrants: Reinhard Heydrich,
the architect of the Holocaust; Beria, Stalin's arch executioner; Torquemada,
the pitiless Inquisitor General; Robespierre, the face of the Reign of Terror.
But something has gone badly wrong inside the Demi-Monde, and the US
President's daughter has become trapped in this terrible world. It falls to
eighteen-year-old Ella Thomas to rescue her, yet once Ella has entered the
Demi-Monde she finds that everything is not as it seems, that its cyber-walls
are struggling to contain the evil within and that the Real World is in more
danger than anyone realises. U.S. release. SF
Wicked
Circle, by Linda Robertson
(Dec. 27, Pocket)
Persephone Alcmedi has helped her waerewolf lover Johnny unlock
his powers. Now she must come to the aid of Menessos, the vampire overlord she
has secretly marked. Beset by a trio of truth-seeking vampire sisters so
dangerous their own kind keep them confined in stone, he now needs her more
than ever...and she realizes her need for him. Seph has magical promises to
fulfill for the waeres, multiple mundane family challenges to meet, vampire
politics to confront, both the supernatural males in her life to balance, a
dragon to deal with...and then a government investigator shows up to complicate
matters. Fifth in the Persephone Alcmedi series. UF
Magic of the Moonlight, by Ellen Schreiber
(Dec.
27, Katherine Tegen)
Celeste
has more to worry about than a secret romance with a hot guy from the wrong
side of town. That guy, Brandon, is a werewolf. With gossip and hostility
swirling at school, it’s time to find a cure for his nocturnal condition, and
perhaps the one person who can help is his scientist father. But what if a
“cure” makes things worse and Brandon becomes a werewolf full time? And with
rumors circulating that there are werewolves in Legend’s Run, is it possible
that there is another among their classmates? To keep Brandon’s secret safe,
Celeste must hide her relationship with him from her best friends, but with the
Moonlight Ball approaching, she must make a choice. Her dream is to go with her
one true love—Brandon. But once the sun goes down, the clouds separate, and the
full moon appears, could she really walk into the dance on the arm of a
werewolf? Second in the Full Moon series. PNR-YA
Babylon Steel,
by Gaie Sebold
(Dec.
27, Solaris)
Babylon Steel,
ex-sword-for-hire, ex-other things, runs the best brothel in Scalentine; city
of many portals, two moons, and a wide variety of races, were-creatures, and
religions, not to mention the occasional insane warlock. She’s not having a
good week. The Vessels of Purity are protesting against brothels, women in the
trade are being attacked, it’s tax time, and there’s not enough money to pay
the bill. So when the mysterious Darask Fain offers her a job finding a missing
girl, Babylon decides to take it. But the missing girl is not what she seems,
and neither is Darask Fain. In the meantime twomoon is approaching, and more
than just a few night’s takings are at risk when Babylon’s hidden past reaches
out to grab her by the throat. F
Switchblade Goddess, by Lucy A. Snyder
(Dec.
27, Del Rey)
When
Jessie Shimmer traveled to a nightmare underworld to save her lover, Cooper
Marron, she gained magical powers . . . which soon seemed more like curses. Her
beloved familiar, the ferret Pal, became a monster. Her enemies multiplied like
demons. Worst of all, she hasn’t found a moment of peace to be with the man she
adores. Now a
switchblade-wielding demigoddess commanding a private hell stocked with
suffering innocents is after her. The blademistress’ vengeance sends Jessie and
Pal on a dark journey through strange, perilous realms. Their quest for
salvation will push her newfound abilities—and her relationship with Cooper—to
the breaking point . . . and beyond. Third in the Jessie Shimmer series. UF
Angel Fire,
by L.A. Weatherly
(Dec.
27, Candlewick)
Only
Willow has the power to defeat the malevolent Church of Angels, and they will
stop at nothing to destroy her. Willow isn’t alone, though. She has Alex by her
side – a trained Angel Killer and her one true love. But nothing can change the
fact that Willow’s a half-angel, and when Alex joins forces with a group of
AKs, she’s treated with mistrust and suspicion. She’s never felt more
alone…until she meets Seb. He’s been searching for Willow his whole life –
because Seb is a half-angel too. Second in the series. PNR-YA
City of Light and Shadow, by Ian Whates
(Dec.
27, Angry Robot)
The
monstrous Rust Warriors are back! In a land struggling to cope with the onset
of the fatal bone flu, street-nick Tom and Kat - the leader of the Tattooed Men
- must find a way to despatch both threats. Meanwhile, the Soul Thief is still
at large, and still killing. Book three in the City of a Hundred Rows series. UF
Silver-Tongued Devil, by Jaye Wells
(Dec.
28, Orbit)
Life
is looking up for Sabina Kane. Now that her scheming grandmother is dead, the
threat of war has passed and the rulers of the dark races are about to sign a
treaty to ensure ongoing peace. Her relationship with sexy mage Adam Lazarus is
strong and all her friends are around her. Even her magic training is
progressing further than she ever expected. The only two dark spots in her
otherwise settled life are her guilt over her sister Maisie's fragile mental
state and Sabina's own sinking sense that she's got unfinished business with
Cain, the mysterious cult leader she let get away months earlier. When a string
of murders rock the New York dark races community and threatens to stall the
peace negotiations, Sabina finds herself helping to find the killer. Her
investigation leads her down troubling paths that have her questioning everything
- and everyone - she knows. And the closer she gets to the murderer, the more
Sabina realises this is one foe she may not able to kill. Fourth in the Sabina
Kane series. UF
Hidden, by Kelley Armstrong (Dec. 31, Subterranean)
Hiking
through the snow, holiday baking and playing board games by the fire – what’s
not to love about an old-fashioned family Christmas? Werewolves Elena Michaels
and Clayton Danvers want to give their four-year-old twins, Kate and Logan,
something their parents never had: a nice, normal holiday. No Pack
responsibilities, no homicidal half-demons or power-hungry sorcerers to deal
with – just the four of them, alone, at a chalet outside Ontario’s Algonquin
Park. Then a strange werewolf shows up at their door…while the town is buzzing
about a young man, back from college, found half-eaten in the woods. And
there’s the missing little girl … With all the signs pointing to a rogue mutt
with a taste for human flesh, Elena and Clay have no choice but to investigate.
But are they the hunters – or the hunted? A special-edition novella in the
Otherworld series. UF
As
always, four entries possible and please include your e-mail: +1 for comment to
tell me what book (any book) you want, +1 for blog follow, +1 for Twitter
follow @Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for a Tweet or RT about the contest. Now….go!
Thursday, December 22, 2011
Going All Non-Politically Correct with Aaron Neville
Whatever your religion or culture, happy holidays to you.
But, as the title says, I'm going all non-politically correct today to wish you all a Merry Christmas with my favorite "reason for the season" song, by New Orleans' own Aaron Neville.
Preternatura is on hiatus until Monday, December 26, when I'll be back with a finished first draft of a novel and a big old honkin' end-of-the-year Reader's Choice award. Until then, Joyeux Noel, y'all.
But, as the title says, I'm going all non-politically correct today to wish you all a Merry Christmas with my favorite "reason for the season" song, by New Orleans' own Aaron Neville.
Preternatura is on hiatus until Monday, December 26, when I'll be back with a finished first draft of a novel and a big old honkin' end-of-the-year Reader's Choice award. Until then, Joyeux Noel, y'all.
Wednesday, December 21, 2011
From the ROYAL STREET Photo Album: Christmas at Tujague's
Now....DJ, the wizard heroine of my upcoming Sentinels of New Orleans series, is quite talented when it comes to mixing potions and devising magical rituals. Cooking? Not so much.
So, DJ goes out for Christmas dinner every year--and where she goes is Tujague's, the second-oldest restaurant in New Orleans behind the venerable Antoine's. (It's pronounced "Two-Jacks," by the way, sort of a bastardization of "Two-Jags".) In a city teeming with really, really GOOD restaurants, there are pitifully few open on Christmas Day. But Tujague's is always open. The restaurant has operated continuously since 1856 from its spot on Decatur Street across from the French Market and the Cafe du Monde, initially catering to the tradespeople who worked the riverfront.
Tujague's was the ONLY place open the Christmas after Hurricane Katrina. So off to Tujague's we went for a late afternoon/early evening Christmas dinner. Oh, did I mention I also don't cook Christmas dinner? We waited for our table inside the old bar (above).
Once we arrived at our table in one of the tiny dining rooms (and I swear this is the exact table where we were seated), we enjoyed the fixed holiday menu of turkey, oyster dressing, and bread pudding. It was all kind of surreal that year. People at the tables started exchanging Katrina stories. "How'd you make out?" was the question on everyone's lips, and everyone had a story to share. It became like a big family, just us and all these other people we'd never met before or since, sharing a common sorrow, a common love of our city, a common joy at being home again. At some point, a guy at the table next to us pulled out a ukelele and began playing a funny song about evacuating, then he stopped and began singing this strangely beautiful unplugged ukelele version of "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans," and I swear everyone in that dining room was crying. It was a Christmas I'll never, ever forget.
So, in honor of Christmas at Tujagues in December 2005, here's Louis Armstrong doing the original--a song that also plays an important role for the characters in ROYAL STREET.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Sharing the TBR: ALL MEN OF GENIUS by Lev AC Rosen
We start a new occasional feature at Preternatura today!
I’m
on a heavy writing schedule between now and early spring, finishing up the third
book in my upcoming Sentinels of New Orleans series (yeah, I know, crazy,
right? I’m finishing book three and book one isn’t out until April!). So what I
want to do is continue to share the love with some books from my TBR pile that
I just don’t think I’m going to get to in a timely manner. So I’m giving them
to you! Comment at the end to win the day’s featured book. And if you want to see how the new book is progressing I have a jarring blue progress bar over to the right and down a bit.
Today,
I’m looking at All Men of Genius, a
steampunk from debut author Lev AC Rosen that got great reviews, and looks like
a fun read. I do love stories where the girls pretend to be guys so they can
get somewhere in life…and then get in all kinds of “situations” because of it. The book was inspired by Shakespeare's Twelfth Night and Oscar Wilde's The Importance of Being Earnest, which is...sort of mind-boggling, actually.
THE
OFFICIAL BLURB: Inspired by two of the most
beloved works by literary masters, All Men of Genius takes
place in an alternate Steampunk Victorian London, where science makes the
impossible possible. Violet Adams wants to attend Illyria College, a widely
renowned school for the most brilliant up-and-coming scientific minds, founded
by the late Duke Illyria, the greatest scientist of the Victorian Age. The
school is run by his son, Ernest, who has held to his father’s policy that the
small, exclusive college remain male-only. Violet sees her opportunity when her
father departs for America. She disguises herself as her twin brother, Ashton,
and gains entry. But keeping the secret of her sex won’t be easy, not with her
friend Jack’s constant habit of pulling pranks, and especially not when the
duke’s young ward, Cecily, starts to develop feelings for Violet’s alter ego,
“Ashton.” Not to mention blackmail, mysterious killer automata, and the way
Violet’s pulse quickens whenever the young duke, Ernest (who has a secret past
of his own), speaks to her. She soon realizes that it’s not just keeping her
secret until the end of the year faire she has to worry about: it’s surviving
that long.
MY
THOUGHTS: I like the steampunk genre as long as the character
development keeps pace with the whirligigs and machinery—and from what I can
tell, this one does a good job of it.
The
author has some links to reviews on his website, which you can find HERE.
THE
GIVEAWAY: Want to win a hardcover copy of All Men of Genius? Have you tried reading steampunk, and what do
you think about it? Four entries possible: +1 for comment, +1 for blog follow, +1 for
Twitter follow @Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for Tweet or Retweet. Go!
Monday, December 19, 2011
New Releases Dec. 17-23 and Reader's Choice Contest
You’d
think the week of Christmas would be the really slow release week, but we have
a pretty decent list of new speculative fiction releases this week after last
week’s drought. So…see what appeals to you—and one reader will win his or her
choice. As always, international entries welcome.
*Genre
key (at the end of each listing): SF=science fiction; F=high/epic fantasy;
UF=urban fantasy; H=horror; PNR=paranormal romance; YA=young adult; MG=middle
grade; alt history=alternative history; dyst=dystopia; steampunk.
Legacy,
by Molly Cochran
(Dec.
20, Simon & Schuster)
When
her widowed father dumps 16-year-old Katy Jessevar in a boarding school in
Whitfield, Massachusetts, she has no idea that fate has just opened the door to
both her future and her past. Nearly everyone in Whitfield is a witch, as is
Katy herself, although she has struggled all her life to hide her unusual talents.
Stuck at a boarding school where her fellow studens seem to despise her, Katy
soon discovers that Whitfield is the place where her mother commited suicide
under mysterious circumstances when Katy was just a small child. With dark
forces converging on Whitfield, it’s up to Katy to unravel her family’s many
secrets to save the boy she loves and the town itself from destruction. UF-YA
On a Dark Wing,
by Jordan Dane
(Dec.
20, Harlequin Teen)
Five
years ago Abbey Chandler cheated Death. She survived a horrific car accident,
but her lucky break came at the expense of her mother’s life and changed
everything. After she crossed paths with Death—by taking the hand of an
ethereal boy made of clouds and sky—she would never be normal again. Now she’s
the target of Death’s Ravens and an innocent boy’s life is on the line. When
Nate Holden—Abbey’s secret crush—starts to climb Alaska’s Denali, the Angel of
Death is with him because of her. Abbey finds out the hard way that Death never
forgets. UF-YA
Blood Wolf,
by Steve Feasey
(Dec.
20, Feiwel & Friends)
Trey
Laporte believed he was the last werewolf. But he’s found his pack, and they’re
more dangerous and wild than he'd ever guess. If they are monsters, does that
make him one, too? Back in London, Trey’s vampire guardian, Lucien, is
battling his own darkness. Meanwhile, Lucien’s daughter, Alexis, is trying to
hold off a Necrotroph that is after her father. U.S. release. UF-YA
Dragon Age: Asunder, by David Gaider
(Dec.
20, Tor)
Return
to the dark fantasy world created for the award-winning, triple platinum
game, Dragon Age™: Origins in this third tie-in novel! A mystical killer stalks the halls
of the White Spire, the heart of templar power in the mighty Orlesian Empire.
To prove his innocence, Rhys reluctantly embarks on a journey into the western
wastelands that will not only reveal much more than he bargained for but change
the fate of his fellow mages forever. F
Dragon Mound,
by Richard A. Knaak
(Dec.
20, Sea Lion)
More
than two centuries ago, the three kingdoms of Rundin, Wallmyre, and Tepis
banded together at the urging of the wizard Paulo Centuros to combat the
ambitions of the sorcerer-king, Novaris. Yet, although they were triumphant and
the forces of the sorcerer-king were scattered, Novaris himself was not to be
found. Uncertain as to whether their foe was dead, the wizard sent forth the
knight Evan Wytherling on a quest to seek the truth about Novaris, no matter
how long it took. Still alive despite the great passage of time and the dark
forces he has confronted during his fruitless search, Evan returns to the scene
of the climactic battle and discovers that the truth may have been under his
nose all this time. However, in ferreting out the secrets of Novaris''s
disappearance, Evan uncovers the sorcerer-king''s long-dreamt plot of
vengeance...and the fact that not only is he key to them, but that the dead -
even dragons - may not rest easy! F
Claim the Night,
by Rachel Lee
(Dec.
20, Nocturne)
Jude Messenger felt the
hunger deep inside him. From the moment he'd rescued Theresa Black from a
late-night attack, he'd ached for things he knew he could never have. The touch
of her skin. The taste of her blood. But if the vampire claimed her, one of them
might not survive. So Jude did everything he could to make Terri stay away. But
a demon stalked the sexy spitfire, and Jude had no choice but to protect a
woman who created a longing inside him that could never be sated. PNR
Death and Resurrection, by R.A. MacAvoy
(Dec.
20, Prime)
The
award-winning writer of Tea With the Black Dragon and other acclaimed novels
returns to fantasy with the intriguing story of Chinese-American artist Ewen
Young who gains the ability to travel between the worlds of life and death.
This unasked-for skill irrevocably changes his life - as does meeting Nez Perce
veterinarian Dr. Susan Sundown and her remarkable dog, Resurrection. After
defeating a threat to his own family, Ewen and Susan confront great evils -
both supernatural and human - as life and death begin to flow dangerously close
together. UF
Enchanted Again,
by Robin D. Owens
(Dec.
20, Luna)
Magic
has a price—and for Amber Sarga it's days and years off her life. Each curse
she breaks ages her—and the bigger the curse the bigger the cost, and not only
to her. That's why she hides away and has vowed not to get involved again…
That's why she hates looking in a mirror…And then an ill-fated
stranger arrives. Rafe Davail doesn't believe in curses—not even knowing that
in his family every first son dies young. Amber offers guidance but she won't
break the curse. Still, as she grows closer to Rafe and discovers the secrets
of their pasts, she wonders if for this time, this man, she should risk it
all….
PNR
The Doctor and the Kid, by Mike Resnick
(Dec.
20, Pyr)
Doc
Holliday needs to replenish his bankroll quickly and uses his skill as a
shootist to turn bounty hunter. The biggest reward is for the death of Billy
the Kid. Doc enlists the aid of both magic (Geronimo) and science (Thomas
Edison). Steampunk
Touch of Power,
by Maria V. Snyder
(Dec.
20, Mira)
Laying
hands upon the injured and dying, Avry of Kazan assumes their wounds and
diseases into herself. But rather than being honored for her skills, she is
hunted. Healers like Avry are accused of spreading the plague that has
decimated the Territories, leaving the survivors in a state of chaos. Stressed
and tired from hiding, Avry is abducted by a band of rogues who, shockingly,
value her gift above the golden bounty offered for her capture. Their leader,
an enigmatic captor-protector with powers of his own, is unequivocal in his
demands: Avry must heal a plague-stricken prince—leader of a campaign against
her people. As they traverse the daunting Nine Mountains, beset by mercenaries
and magical dangers, Avry must decide who is worth healing and what is worth
dying for. Because the price of peace may well be her life. PNR
Count to a Trillion, by John C. Wright
(Dec.
20, Tor)
After
the collapse of the world economy, a young boy grows up in what used to be
Texas as a tough duellist for hire, the future equivalent of a hired gun. But
even after the collapse, there is space travel, and he leaves Earth to
have adventures in the really wide open spaces. While humanity, and Artificial Intelligence grow and change, he
is catapulted into the more distant future and becomes a kind of superman. SF
Vampire Academy: The Ultimate Guide, by Michelle Rowen
and Richelle
Mead
(Dec. 22, Razorbill)
The official guide to the #1 international
bestselling Vampire Academy series. Sink your teeth into the perfect holiday gift and
must-have collector's item for every fan of Richelle Mead's totally addicting
Vampire Academy series. Discover the
history of St. Vladimir's Academy, explore the dark psychology behind Rose and
Lissa's spirit bond, and find out even more illicit secrets about Moroi
society. This ultimate guide will feature everything readers want and need to
go even deeper into the world ofVampire Academy, Frostbite, Shadow
Kiss, Blood Promise, Spirit Bound, and Last
Sacrifice…every heartache, every betrayal, every sacrifice, and so much
more! UF-YA
As
always, four entries possible and please include your e-mail: +1 for comment to
tell me what book (any book) you want, +1 for blog follow, +1 for Twitter
follow @Suzanne_Johnson, and +1 for a Tweet or RT about the contest. Now….go!
Sunday, December 18, 2011
From the ROYAL STREET Playlist---And Did You Win a Contest This Week?
Happy
Sunday!
Today,
from my Royal Street playlist, I’d
like to share a holiday song from New Orleans’ own Aaron Neville called “Louisiana
Christmas Day.” So, here’s my Aaron Neville story. I had gone down to the
French Quarter a number of years ago and had some time to kill, so I decided to walk over to the
Tower Records store on Decatur Street (which “ain’t dere no more,” as the
locals would say). It was raining. Just as I was walking in the door, this huge guy came barreling out and we had a major collision. We apologized, and I looked up and
almost swallowed my tongue because, yep, it was Aaron Neville. That’s it, nothing
more exciting than that, but it's my story--LOL.
Now,
on to the business of the day. Did you win a prize last week? Here are our
weekly winners.
Congrats
to VAN PHAM for winning the Zombie
Repellent Soap.
Congrats
to AMBER HUGHES for winning werewolf
day—she picked the “animalistic” werewolf soap J
Congrats
to JENNIFER C for winning Ellie
James’ Shattered Dreams.
Congrats
to STACIE D for winning this week’s
Reader’s Choice: She chose Slade by Sarah McCarty.
That’s
it for this week--check back tomorrow for a new Reader’s Choice contest!
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