For more details on all prizes, go here.
Today is the last day to enter our giveaway draw! You have until midnight tonight to get your name in. If you need a refresher, or are hearing about this for the first time, here are the RULES:
Contest ends at midnight tonight. We’ll announce the winners tomorrow, here on the blog. So check back then!
*This rule has been altered: If you REALLY want to enter, don't live nearby, and are willing to pay for shipping, then feel free to enter.
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“Fairy tales are more than true: not because they tell us that dragons exist, but because they tell us that dragons can be beaten.” ― Neil Gaiman
Monday, June 24, 2013
last chance to win!
Friday, June 21, 2013
Q & A with Vikki Vansickle
Vikki VanSickle is the author of three middle grade books: Words That Start With B, Love is a Four-Letter-Word, and Days That End in Y. Her most recent book, Summer Days, Starry Nights, is a YA novel that was just released this month.
Kristen: Vikki, I mention in my review that I couldn’t put Summer Days, Starry Nights down. It cast this warm, lovely spell over me, which is why I was so
excited about this interview. I have so many questions!
Vikki: Yay! That is so nice of
you to say!
Kristen: First of all, where did this story come from or
what inspired you to write it?
Vikki: Reenie Starr literally
walked into my head one day while I was on a two day break between camp
sessions up north, staying at a friend’s house in Sudbury. I had a very clear
sense of her voice and her family right away.
When I was a child my
family rented a cottage on a family resort much like Sandy Shores for a week on
Lake Dalrymple (near Orillia, ON), which I loved. I never wanted to leave, and
so as an adult I imagined what it would be like to live there! One of the joys
of fiction-writing is living out your own fantasies (to an extent).
Kristen: I loved everything about the setting: northern
Ontario, the resort environment, the 60s! What about this place and time period
appeals to you?
Vikki: I’ve always loved the
60s, particularly the music and the sense of change that was in the air. My
favourite kind of story is a poignant coming of age tale and in the 60s it was
like the whole world was coming of age. It was a particularly interesting time
for women. All three women in the story, Reenie, Gwen, and Mimi, are products
of their respective eras and are pushing against what was expected for girls at
the time. Mimi is less successful, but in 1960s women were breaking boundaries
all over the place. I read two fabulous nonfiction titles about women and music
in the 60s, Girls Like Us by Sheila
Weller and Girl Groups, Girl Culture
by Jacqueline Warwick, which really helped shape Gwen’s character and provide
insight into what the music industry was like for women at the time.
As for the location, it
was loosely based on the resort my family visited when I was a child. I have
very vivid memories of my time there. I’ve always associated summer with the
60s, probably due to movies like Dirty
Dancing, My Girl, and My American Cousin. A summer story NOT set up north
would have been very strange for me!
Kristen: Mimi, despite her flaws, was
probably my favourite character in the book. I really felt her longing, and her
sadness, and I so badly wanted to know why she was the way she was. Her running
away right at the beginning had me immediately hooked. Which was your favourite character to write and why?
Vikki: I’m glad you felt for
Mimi! She was the most interesting and difficult character to write because she
makes some bad parenting decisions which end up hurting her children,
particularly Reenie. Depression was not talked about widely in the 50s and 60s.
Mimi would probably not refer to her own sadness as something as chronic as
depression, which is something people today still don’t do and why it’s
important to be open about mental illness. Mimi isn’t a bad mother, nor does
she hate her lot in life. But she does have difficulty facing the world
sometimes.
Gwen was the most fun
to write about. She is the cool, older sister I would have loved to have. I
love how fully she embraces life and how willing she is to take risks. She is
the girl Mimi could have been in a different time period given different
choices.
Kristen: How long did it take to write Summer Days, Starry
Nights? Was the process mostly the same as your other three books, or
completely different?
Vikki: The process was similar
in that I didn’t write in order. I don’t outline and I am wary of too much
pre-planning. Instead I wade around the story, jump from scene to scene, and
try things out until I eventually have so much material I need to step back and
think about ordering it in some way.
Summer Days, Starry Nights took a bit longer to write (about 2 years) and was
almost double the length it is now. Originally it took place over a number of
years and was titled The Seven Summers of
Reenie Starr (I still really like this title, although it clearly doesn’t
work anymore!) Eventually I realized a lot of those summers were back story for
my benefit, but the reader didn’t need to be privy to all that detail. This
meant that I made a huge cut, which is something I’ve never done before. It was
scary, but also very liberating.
Kristen: I'm fascinated by authors who write out of order. I'm also curious about where you write. Do you have a special or favourite place?
Vikki: I tend to write in my
room or in a little sun room/office space off the kitchen in the house I share
with my roommates in Toronto. I prefer to write early in the morning when my
brain is open and no one else is up yet. I drink pots and pots of tea and take
many breaks to pet the cat. If I don’t, she takes it out on my poor laptop!
Kristen: Okay, more writing-related questions: Why do you write? What are the best and worst
parts? What was your favourite part of writing Summer Days, Starry Nights?
Vikki: I love people. All of my
books start with a character’s voice in my head. Eventually it gets to the
point where I can’t ignore the voice and so I start writing. For me, the best
part of writing is getting carried away by the story and all of a sudden two
hours have gone by and you have a new twist or a new character.
The worst part for me is
breaking to go about the regular business of life, like going to work or doing
chores. Some days my story is taking up such a huge part of my brain it’s a
miracle I can get anything else done!
Kristen: What have you been reading lately that you
absolutely love? Or what is one of your all-time favourite books? (Feel free to
name a few if you can’t pick just one.)
Vikki: I am bad
at picking favourites, but lately I have loved Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell and Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein. One of my favourite summer
books is Kit Pearson’s Looking at the
Moon. I love how Pearson catches the mood of the 1940s and Nora’s growing
sense of self in the world around her. In some ways Summer Days, Starry Nights is just as much a tribute to that book
as it is to Dirty Dancing.
Kristen: I definitely felt the Kit Pearson influence in Summer
Days, Starry Nights, which I adored. And I loved Eleanor & Park too! Ow, my heart. Okay,
last question: Do you have a favourite band from the 60s?
Vikki: Again, I am terrible at
picking just ONE, but I love The Marvelettes, The Shirelles, The Crystals,
Lesley Gore, and The Beatles (of course)!
Kristen: Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions, and thank you doubly for writing such a lovely book!
For those of you who haven't read Summer Days, Starry Nights yet, check out our review and Vikki's awesome pinterest board, and then go grab it!
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Summer Days, Starry Nights by Vikki VanSickle
Summer Days, Starry Nights is a sun-kissed story that opens with a spark which quickly turns to flame: Reenie’s mother, Mimi, is missing. When she reappears we find out that shiny, exotic Mimi who once dreamt of being a star and whose dark, silent moods could strike at any time, ran away without even leaving a note. The secrets and uncertain moods of Reenie’s mother aren’t the only threat to her family’s happiness, though. Business is in decline at their resort, Sandy Shores, and Reenie is worried; she loves her home - the lake and the sand, the cabins and the customers - more than anything. She can’t bear the thought of losing it.
Then Gwendolyn Cate arrives – Mimi’s solution to all their problems. Gwen is a ballet dancer in training from Toronto, come to shine things up a bit. But Reenie’s memory of the fairy-like girl turns out to be just that: a memory. At first, Gwen seems like another person entirely, keeping secrets and not letting Reenie in. Gwen is friendly, but not as friendly as Reenie wants her to be. She wants a best friend, not an older sister. So Reenie decides to take matters into her own hands and figures out a way to simultaneously draw out Gwen’s secrets, make everyone happy, and save Sandy Shores. Only things don’t quite go as planned.
Then Gwendolyn Cate arrives – Mimi’s solution to all their problems. Gwen is a ballet dancer in training from Toronto, come to shine things up a bit. But Reenie’s memory of the fairy-like girl turns out to be just that: a memory. At first, Gwen seems like another person entirely, keeping secrets and not letting Reenie in. Gwen is friendly, but not as friendly as Reenie wants her to be. She wants a best friend, not an older sister. So Reenie decides to take matters into her own hands and figures out a way to simultaneously draw out Gwen’s secrets, make everyone happy, and save Sandy Shores. Only things don’t quite go as planned.
I found Reenie so endearing. She's eager to prove herself, as well as at ease in her home - whether she’s fishing with her dad, taking care of her little sister, or accommodating customers. She’s on the cusp of adolescence, a teenager and yet not quite a teenager, wanting more responsibility but not realizing what that responsibility entails. Inevitably, she makes mistakes and learns about herself along the way. I most especially loved her relationship with her father. She admires him and longs for him to see just how capable she is.
Altogether, Summer Days, Starry Nights is warm and delightful summer reading, perfect for preteens and younger teens. It evokes that camp or cottage feel, as well as that time in life where you just want to be able to test your wings and see if you can fly.
I couldn’t put it down.
-Kristen
-Kristen
Thursday, June 13, 2013
featured June releases: *The Oathbreaker's Shadow* and *The Moon and More*
So many exciting books are out this month! Here are two new arrivals that we've been waiting impatiently for:
THE OATHBREAKER'S SHADOW is a fantasy pitched to fans of Philip Pullman and George R.R. Martin, and Kristen can't wait to read it. Forgotten oaths? Broken vows? Exile? Her heart-rate doubles just thinking about it.
The Oathbreaker's Shadow by Amy McCulloch:
From the flap copy:
In the land of Darhan promises are bound by magic, tied into knots, and worn with pride. Those who break them are physically scarred, cast out into the desert, and tormented by vengeful shadows of their treachery. So when Raim agrees to give his life as a warrior to the future Khan, he knows that he must honour his word until the day he dies.
But on the night he takes his vow, Raim accidentally breaks a mysterious promise that he has worn since the day he was born. Yet how can he break an oath he has no memory of making?
With the dark mark of a traitor seared into his skin, and forced into exile, Raim flees on a journey that will reveal the true meaning of honour, and uncover truths that will change his world for ever.
In the land of Darhan promises are bound by magic, tied into knots, and worn with pride. Those who break them are physically scarred, cast out into the desert, and tormented by vengeful shadows of their treachery. So when Raim agrees to give his life as a warrior to the future Khan, he knows that he must honour his word until the day he dies.
But on the night he takes his vow, Raim accidentally breaks a mysterious promise that he has worn since the day he was born. Yet how can he break an oath he has no memory of making?
With the dark mark of a traitor seared into his skin, and forced into exile, Raim flees on a journey that will reveal the true meaning of honour, and uncover truths that will change his world for ever.
The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen:
From the flap copy:
Luke is the perfect boyfriend: handsome, kind, fun. He and Emaline have been together all through high school in Colby, the beach town where they both grew up. But now, in the summer before college, Emaline wonders if perfect is good enough.
Enter Theo, a super-ambitious outsider, a New Yorker assisting on a documentary film about a reclusive local artist. Theo's sophisticated, exciting, and, best of all, he thinks Emaline is much too smart for Colby.
Emaline's mostly-absentee father, too, thinks Emaline should have a bigger life, and he's convinced that an Ivy League education is the only route to realizing her potential. Emaline is attracted to the bright future that Theo and her father promise. But she also clings to the deep roots of her loving mother, stepfather, and sisters. Can she ignore the pull of the happily familiar world of Colby?
Emaline wants the moon and more, but how can she balance where she comes from with where she's going?
Sarah Dessen's devoted fans will welcome this story of romance, yearning, and, finally, empowerment. It could only happen in the summer.
Luke is the perfect boyfriend: handsome, kind, fun. He and Emaline have been together all through high school in Colby, the beach town where they both grew up. But now, in the summer before college, Emaline wonders if perfect is good enough.
Enter Theo, a super-ambitious outsider, a New Yorker assisting on a documentary film about a reclusive local artist. Theo's sophisticated, exciting, and, best of all, he thinks Emaline is much too smart for Colby.
Emaline's mostly-absentee father, too, thinks Emaline should have a bigger life, and he's convinced that an Ivy League education is the only route to realizing her potential. Emaline is attracted to the bright future that Theo and her father promise. But she also clings to the deep roots of her loving mother, stepfather, and sisters. Can she ignore the pull of the happily familiar world of Colby?
Emaline wants the moon and more, but how can she balance where she comes from with where she's going?
Sarah Dessen's devoted fans will welcome this story of romance, yearning, and, finally, empowerment. It could only happen in the summer.
Mandy loves loves loves Sarah Dessen and thinks that this should be in everyone's to-read pile this summer.
Also! Be sure to check out and enter our GIVEAWAY DRAW here. The contest ends on June 25th, so enter as many times as you can before midnight on June 24th to win really awesome books.
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Book Links
A round-up of bookish news going around the interwebs:
Maggie Stiefvater is holding an art contest to win an ARC of the The Dream Thieves. Go enter!
Maggie Stiefvater is holding an art contest to win an ARC of the The Dream Thieves. Go enter!
Check out the first few film stills of the Divergent movie over at Veronica Roth’s blog. (And if you haven’t seen the cover reveal for Allegiant yet, it’s here.) Oh, here she is again with Leigh Bardugo (Siege and Storm) talking about badass heroines.
Similarly, here's an author-editor interview with Sarah Dessen and her editor, Regina Hayes.
Two intriguing articles, one on female sexuality in YA fiction and the other on the lack of female road narratives and why it matters.
Also, the LAMBDA award winner for the YA Category was just announced: Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Saenz.
And the Seattle Public Library just broke the world record for their Domino Book Chain:
Last but not least, don't forget to enter our GIVEAWAY DRAW. The contest ends at midnight on June 24, so make sure you enter before then.
Monday, June 10, 2013
Relaunch Giveaway!
In celebration of our blog's relaunch (YAY!) we're giving away three prizes of books and ARCs (baskets not included):
Basket #1: The
Testing Series
The Testing by Joelle Charbonneau
Independent Study by Joelle Charbonneau (Advanced Reader’s
Copy)
Basket #2: Jenna Fox
Chronicles
The Adoration of Jenna Fox by Mary E. Pearson
The Fox Inheritance by Mary E. Pearson
Fox Forever by Mary E. Pearson
Basket #3: 7 Advanced
Reading Copies!
To Be Perfectly Honest by Sonya Sones
Earthbound by Aprilynne Pike
Ashes on the Waves by Mary Lindsey
Spellcaster by Claudia Gray
Confederates Don’t Wear Couture by Stephanie Kate Strohm
How to Lose Everything by Philipp Mattheis
The Wells Bequest by Polly Shulman
RULES.
There are a few ways to enter. These are the ways:
- Post a link to this giveaway on Facebook, twitter, tumblr, etc. Then come back here and leave a comment with a link to where you posted it.
- Like our shiny new Facebook page. Similarly, come back here and leave a comment saying you did this.
- Go into our store and sign up for our newsletter. Make sure to sign up using the ballot box, instead of writing your name down on our sign-up sheet, or your name won't be entered in the giveaway draw.
- Do all of the above. The more things you do, the more times your name gets entered, and the more likely you are to get picked. Aw yeah.
- *IMPORTANT* The winner MUST be able to pick up their books in store (96 King St. N, Waterloo, Ontario). So if you live in Halifax or Vancouver or New York, that's totally cool, as long as you have a way to get here. :)
Contest ends at midnight on June 24. We’ll announce the winners on June 25 here on the blog. So check back then.
Good luck!!
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Monday, September 3, 2012
(you) set me on fire by Mariko Tamaki
Mariko Tamaki’s earlier graphic novel, Skim, (about an adolescent girl struggling with her sexuality) was beautifully written and handled with honesty and sensitivity. Her new novel, (you) set me on fire, has a lot of the same insight.
You’ve probably heard people say that life after high school
is really just a rehash of the same old dramas. Or maybe it’s more accurate to
say that high school social structure is a super-concentrated slice of life.
However you look at it, it’s fair to say that the teenage years are a goldmine
of dramatic possibility for novelists, and Mariko Tamaki takes advantage of
this in the best way possible. (you) set me on fire is reminiscent of the John Green at his best.
-Erica
Monday, August 20, 2012
I really hope this has something to do with the story...
Working at a bookstore, it's great fun to see the books that people special order. Often they are bestsellers from years back; sometimes they are obscure or hard to find titles; and, occasionally, they are kids titles that make me nostalgic.
And, every once in a while, they have terrifying covers like the one to the right.
I've never read any Trixie Belden books, but I think if I owned this one as a kid, I would have hidden it in the attic. Why is Trixie wearing a severed head on her hand like a puppet? I always suspected Nancy Drew had a bit of a dark side, but Trixie, you're, like, twelve years old! In all seriousness though, I probably would have read the book just to figure out what the heck was going on. I am always fascinated by book cover art. I'm particularily interested in the differences between the US/Canadian/UK versions of books. Or when a book wins a medal and they change the cover to supposedly appeal to the masses. Case in point: Shannon Hale books. The original cover (illustrated one) for Princess Academy is so much more representative of the story, in my opinion. What do you think?
-Erica
Sassy Mag Lives
Back in the late 80s, a friend lent me her copy of a yet-unheard-of-by-me teen magazine called Sassy. As I flipped through it's glossy, colourful pages I could almost feel my 13-year-old mind collapsing under the weight of all of my subverted expectation.
Sassy, for those who've never read it (and it's long defunct), was like a big, bad, sarcastic older sister to all the other goody-goody teen mags (Seventeen, I'm looking at you). Sassy introduced me to bands and musicians like Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Juliana Hatfield, and Liz Phair, and frequently published candid articles about sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll.
But the very thing that made Sassy so great, eventually led to the magazine's demise. A group of angry mothers killed Sassy. Not happy with the magazine's content ("How dare you try and inspire our daughters to be independent-minded, informed young women!"), the mothers started an advertising boycott. They wrote to all of Sassy's major advertising clients and asked them to boycott the publication. And, as you can imagine, it didn't take long for things to go south.
Sassy folded in 1996, and, since then, my heart has longed for another magazine to come along and fill it's stylish combat boots. Bust has been a worthy seatwarmer for a few years now, but it's more of a young women's (20+) Sassy and lacks some of the tongue-in-cheek charm of it's predecessor, though it definitely is a topnotch magazine.
Anyway, let's skip to the happy ending. Through a recent article in Bust magazine, I discovered that 16-year -old fashion blogger Tavi Gevinson, with the help of a few others including Jane Pratt (!) and Ira Glass (!), have created an online magazine called Rookie that effectively blows my mind. It's everything Sassy was and more. Tavi, thanks for loving Sassy even though you were not born before the last issue rolled. You have made my world a better place.
And...just to send me right over the edge of happiness, Rookie has a book coming out this fall. It's a collection of the best of the magazine's first year.
-Erica
Sassy, for those who've never read it (and it's long defunct), was like a big, bad, sarcastic older sister to all the other goody-goody teen mags (Seventeen, I'm looking at you). Sassy introduced me to bands and musicians like Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr., Juliana Hatfield, and Liz Phair, and frequently published candid articles about sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll.
But the very thing that made Sassy so great, eventually led to the magazine's demise. A group of angry mothers killed Sassy. Not happy with the magazine's content ("How dare you try and inspire our daughters to be independent-minded, informed young women!"), the mothers started an advertising boycott. They wrote to all of Sassy's major advertising clients and asked them to boycott the publication. And, as you can imagine, it didn't take long for things to go south.
Sassy folded in 1996, and, since then, my heart has longed for another magazine to come along and fill it's stylish combat boots. Bust has been a worthy seatwarmer for a few years now, but it's more of a young women's (20+) Sassy and lacks some of the tongue-in-cheek charm of it's predecessor, though it definitely is a topnotch magazine.
Anyway, let's skip to the happy ending. Through a recent article in Bust magazine, I discovered that 16-year -old fashion blogger Tavi Gevinson, with the help of a few others including Jane Pratt (!) and Ira Glass (!), have created an online magazine called Rookie that effectively blows my mind. It's everything Sassy was and more. Tavi, thanks for loving Sassy even though you were not born before the last issue rolled. You have made my world a better place.
And...just to send me right over the edge of happiness, Rookie has a book coming out this fall. It's a collection of the best of the magazine's first year.
-Erica
Monday, February 13, 2012
In Defence of Romance

Enter Patrick, Elyse’s next door neighbour, secret admirer, and indomitable flirt. Elyse tries her darnedest to deflect his advances, but gradually begins to realize that Patrick may really be the good guy that he seems to be. As in “what you see is what you get,” and “yes, there really are good guys out there.” Remember Darcy from Pride and Prejudice? Good guy, just some trouble with sharing his feelings. Lloyd Dobler from Say Anything is another good example. He’s cool enough without you, but you’re still worth his time. Patrick Verona from Ten Things I Hate about You turns out all right in the end. And Cyrano de Bergerac has all the right words, if not the confidence to speak them himself.
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-Erica
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars...
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John Green, with misplaced manuscript |
Sixteen-year-old Hazel Grace has stage four cancer that is spreading to her lungs. Thanks to a hopeful new trial drug, the growth of her cancer has been halted for a time. At a cancer support group meeting to help her deal with her depression, Hazel meets Augustus Waters, a handsome, charming young man whose own cancer prognosis looks better than Hazel’s. Hazel is drawn to Augustus' sense of humour, unique worldview and thorough grasp of irony and metaphor. Augustus has a weird habit of dangling an unlit cigarette between his lips, but later explains: “It's a metaphor, see. You put the killing thing right between your teeth, but you don't give it the power to do its killing.” Hazel’s relationship with Augustus and their shared love of a book called An Imperial Affliction by a reclusive Dutch writer named Peter van Houten take them along an unusual path of self-discovery.
Beautifully written and filled with humour, The Fault in Our Stars is also one of the most highly anticipated Young Adult titles this year. And it’s no wonder. It’s author, John Green, has almost two million followers on Twitter (http://twitter.com/realjohngreen) and a whole community of nerdy fans at vlogbrothers (http://www.youtube.com/vlogbrothers) , a collection of video journals that are a back and forth correspondence with his brother Hank. The videologs are caffeine-fuelled musings on just about everything worth talking about. It’s not an exaggeration to say that Green’s fans are of the die-hard variety, regularly posting encouraging comments on his website like “I can’t wait to receive my signed, pre-ordered copy of your new book so I can lick your signature!” OK, maybe no one actually said that, but you get the idea.
1) John Green’s previous (and award-winning) book Looking for Alaska deals with death in a sensitive, intelligent, and even, at times, humorous way.
2) Green writes teenage dialogue good enough to make Joss Whedon (Buffy) and Amy Sherman-Palladino (Gilmore Girls) sit up and take notice.
3) The Fault in Our Stars is filled with lots of literary references and poetry. I love that Green never assumes that his audience is stupid.
The Fault in Our Stars will be a feast for existing John Green fans, and--for new readers--a great introduction to a young adult writer at the top of his game.
-Erica
Labels:
For the Dudes,
Normal Romance,
Reviews A-I
Thursday, November 10, 2011
*Wonderstruck* giveaway!
Ever since his mom died, Ben feels lost. At home with her father, Rose feels alone.
He is searching for someone, but he is not sure who.
She is searching for something, but she is not sure what.
When Ben finds a mysterious clue hidden in his mom's room,
When a tempting opportunity presents itself to Rose,
Both children risk everything to find what's missing.
With over 460 pages of original drawings and playing with the form he invented in his trailblazing debut novel, The Invention of Hugo Cabret, Brian Selznick once again sails into uncharted territory and takes readers on an awe-inspiring journey. Rich, complex, affecting, and beautiful, Wonderstruck is a stunning achievement from a uniquely gifted artist and visionary.
Wednesday, November 2, 2011
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