Back to School with Nonfiction: Top Ten Tuesday

So it’s time for the kids to go back to school.  My daughter started public school for the first time about two weeks ago, my boy started his homeschool coop last week, and our “Lastname Christian Academy” officially starts the Monday after Labor Day.  For today’s Top Ten Tuesday Topic (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) we are doing a back to school edition.  This week, I will be posting some of my favorite nonfiction books.  They’re in no particular order.

The Fourth Turning coverThe Fourth Turning has got to be one of my favorite nonfiction books.  It was my favorite book that I read for the first time in 2016.  It came out in 2007, but it’s very relevant today.  I just love how this book describes how history runs in cycles, and it is so amazing how this book is laid out.  If you like this book, Pendulum is also a good book with the same idea, but I liked this one immensely better, even though this one is older.

The Discoverers CoverI first read The Discoverers by Daniel J. Boorstin in college, and not for an assignment; it just looked interesting.  The book details the history of discovery, from things as simple as the clock and the calendar to more modern inventions, like navigation.  I’ve read this book twice, but it’s been a while since I’ve read it last.  I’ve also read a few of his other books; they’re also outstanding.  A couple of years ago I was able to find a copy of The Creators in hardback at a library book sale and I had to get that one too, even though I had already read it.

History of the Ancient World coverIf you are a homeschooler, then you are probably familiar with Susan Wise Bauer’s Story of the World series (they’re very popular).  She also has written a set of history books for adults: The History of the _______ World (she has books for the Ancient World, Medieval World, and Renaissance World).  They’re all great.  If you think you know history because you studied it in high school, you probably are missing a lot.  Some of the stories in these books are quite brutal, and I don’t think that they’d get taught in high school just for the brutality factor alone (history can be pretty nasty at times).  These are really thick books, and  you probably won’t finish it in a day or two like you can with most novels, but you can learn a lot from them.

History of Modern Europe CoverOne of my favorite history books is A History of Modern Europe by John Merriman.  I bought the third edition (pictured in the photo here) because if you buy the brand new edition, it’s really expensive.  There’s over 1400 pages of text here, so you won’t get this one read in one sitting either, but the book is very readable.

After the Flood by Bill Cooper is a lot shorter and a lot less academic, but I found it to be really interesting nonetheless.  I think it’s fairly typical for people living today to think of the ancient world being full of unintelligent people who didn’t know much, but I’m pretty sure that was not the case.  This book talks about some of the ancient records that shows that more than likely, ancient people in places like modern-day Britain already had knowledge of the Judeo-Christian God before the arrival of the Roman missionaries that started showing up there after the time of Jesus.  I found the ancient geneological records to be fascinating.

History of the FranksI read The History of the Franks by Gregory of Tours in college, but I also reread it once after that.  The stories here are pretty fascinating.  It’s hard to tell at times what in this book is real and what was exaggeration.  Whether some of the tales are made up or not, what is apparent is that there was corruption in the early medieval period just as much as there is now.

Decline and fall of the roman Empire Gibbon coverIf you’re looking for a reading challenge, then you might want to try tackling Gibbon’s The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (unabridged edition).  My Kindle says that I still have about 75 hours left in this book, and I’m 2 % of the way through (probably part of that is chapter indexes though).  I read the abridged edition years ago, but I’d like to one day read the entire thing, because there’s some fairly interesting stories here (although the reading is not the easiest).

There are several different Kindle editions of this book floating around, some free, some you have to pay for, but I’ve found that this particular edition is the best, because 1) the footnotes are all there and linked, and 2) all six volumes of this book are all together.  I’ve downloaded a few copies of this book and have decided on reading this particular edition because it seems to have the best formatting.

1421 CoverI love 1421: The Year China Discovered America, because there is so much about the ancient and even medieval world that we don’t understand.  If you like the History Channel shows where they go look at unexplained evidence and try to figure out what it all means, then you might be interested in reading this book too.  I’ve always wanted to read his other book, 1434:  The Year a Magnificent Chinese Fleet Sailed to Italy and Ignited the Renaissance, but I could never remember the title, but I finally found it.  Now that it’s on my Goodreads TBR, I’m more likely to read it.

Freakonomics coverSo far, all the books I’ve put on this list have been history books, which is most of the nonfiction that I read (well, that and political fiction) but I do read whatever nonfiction looks interesting.  Freakonomics is a thought-provoking non-history nonfiction book.  It explores the economic factors behind things like drug dealing, danger, abortion, and other subjects, but not in a boring way.  I haven’t read this book in a long time, but now that I’m talking about it here, I want to read it again.

The Dark Net coverWildcard seems to be one of the most anticipated books of the year, and if you’ve read Warcross already, then you probably remember that there’s a place that Emika goes to that is the dark side of Warcross.  It’s actually based on a real thing called The Dark Net.  While I was reading Warcross, I was reminded about the things that I read about in this book, including the Assassination Market (which is a real thing).  If you find those sorts of dark things interesting, you might be curious to read this book.  It’s a fairly easy and enjoyable read.

So that’s this week’s Back to School edition of Top Ten Tuesday.  Stay tuned for next week where I talk about books that that were made into movies, and which one was better (because I don’t really watch too many movies or TV shows and I’m certain that most of you aren’t interested in watching something like Кухня, so I’m straying off topic a little).

Give the Dark My Love…

Give the Dark My Love CoverI was recently given the opportunity to read Give the Dark My Love by Beth Revis.  I received it through Penguin’s First to Read program.  It was a good book, although I can’t say that it was my favorite.

Nedra is a 17 year old girl who grew up in a poor village.  She doesn’t have many prospects in life… until she gets a scholarship to a prestigious school, where she plans to train to become a medical alchemist.  While she doesn’t feel quite like she fits in, she develops a friendship with another student there, Grey, that seems to be developing into more than friendship.

There’s a plague crossing the land, and Nedra wants to stop it, or even try to find a cure.  As the story progresses, she ends up discovering that there may be necromancy involved.  Necromancy is illegal.  Grey is not too excited about this.  At the end, there are some twists and turns, and Nedra seems to be sliding into the dark side.  Will she be a villain in book 2?  I hope to find out.

The Good

There are a lot of good things about Give the Dark My Love.  I liked the characters and the family relationships that Nedra had.  There’s some political intrigue, and it speaks a little bit about class and privilege.  The magical system is well thought out (except in this world, it’s not magic, it’s science).  I liked the plot twist at the end of the story as well.

The Not as Good

Overall, I enjoyed the book.  I would have liked to have seen more of the relationship between Nedra and Grey, and there was a lot that went on between Nedra and her professor that wasn’t shown either.  The writing style didn’t draw me in as much as some of the other books that I’ve read recently have, but it was still quite good.

Conclusion

Give the Dark My Love has at least two books to it, and I would like to continue with the series (although I’ll probably try to obtain an ARC or check it out from the library).  For me, I don’t think that this book has endless rereadability, but it I did like it.

This book is expected to go on sale on September 25th, but you can pre-order it now.

How’d That Happen? Finished my 7th Novel/Novella!

Medieval Writing DeskTwo and a half years ago, I began what I thought would be a short story of around ten pages. Today, I wrote the final sentence down in my first draft of what had become Like Normal People.

I had just finished reading the Legend trilogy for the second time, and I thought to myself “you know, I really would like a story that would tell what happened to Day and June.”  This was before Life After Legend came out.  They say that you should write the story that you want to read, and that’s exactly what I did.

I learned a lot while writing this story.  One thing I learned was to never publish part of a story when you don’t at least have the first draft finished.  At the moment, I have two novels that are about 2/3 of the way done that I haven’t started publishing on AO3 because of this.  I had written about 14 chapters of this book… it just came to me, and I was a writing fiend.  Then I had to write a chapter where Daniel (Day) and June went mountain climbing — and I don’t know a thing about mountain climbing.  After watching a few videos about mountain climbing, and about El Capitan, I still wasn’t ready to write this chapter.  Then I moved, and I forgot about this story.  I forgot about writing (although I was writing in a journal, so I was still writing something).

This February, I got a message from someone asking me to finish this story.  I had already started writing fiction again, and I was partially through writing Saving Adelinetta.  I decided to reread Legend and work on this again.  You never know what a difference your encouragement will make.

I wrote like mad for a while, and then… I got writer’s block again on this book, on chapter 22.  It took five months for me to write that chapter.  In the meantime, I wrote more on Saving Adelinetta, wrote two novellas, and wrote about 2/3 of another novel that I got the idea to write, Hero.  I’ve written a ton this year.

I was tired of not having Like Normal People finished.  So when I realized that I only had three months left until NaNoWriMo this year, I decided to set goals: finish Like Normal People in August, finish another one of my WIPs in September, and finish another one in October.  I have another partially finished novella that I’m setting aside until 2019, and it looks like I should scale down my goals and only do one of my WIPs in September/October.  So right now I hope to finish the first draft of Hero next month, and polish it in October.

In addition to not publishing until I’m done, I also learned a little bit about making stories a little bit more exciting while working on this.  When I originally envisioned this story, it was going to be a short story where everything moves quickly to the happily ever after.  I think how it actually turned out was a lot better.

I’ve learned even more this year.  Hopefully it will show when I finish my as-yet unpublished stories.

The other day I saw a Twitter post asking how many novels someone had written before they had gotten published.  This was after reading Paperfury’s post where she said that she had written 30 novels before getting published.  I thought I hadn’t written much at all, but then I realized that I had actually written more than I thought I had.  I’ve written nowhere near 30, but I have written 7 novels/novellas now, which really surprises me:

  • How I Lost _______ (I’m not going to mention the band’s name here) in 11th grade (novella)
  • Save the Best for Last – 12th grade (this one had a soundtrack with it) (novella)
  • SelflessDivergent Fanfiction where Tris chooses Abnegation instead of Dauntless (novella)
  • Dauntless – Continuation of Selfless.  Follows the alternate history of Insurgent (short novel; I won NaNoWriMo 2014 with this)
  • Republican PhenomsLegend fanfiction where Daniel (Day) is given the trial score that he deserves (novella)
  • My New Best FriendLegend/Divergent fusion fanfic where Day and June live in the Divergent universe and choose Dauntless (novella)
  • Like Normal PeopleLegend fanfic where I continue past the Champion epilogue; not canon with Life After Legend or Life After Legend II (short novel)

I finished the last three this year.

Well, that’s enough celebrating.  Tomorrow I’ll start making the last few chapters of Like Normal People look good so I can finish publishing it.  Then I’ll continue worldbuilding my NaNoWriMo 2018 project and finish up another one of my WIPs.

Caraval Invites You to a Magical World

Welcome to the exciting world of Caraval!  That is what my library could have told me when I found out it was available for download after a short time on the waiting list.  Caraval is a book full of magic, mystery, danger, and love (mostly between sisters).

Scarlett had always wanted to experience the magic that was Caraval.  From the age of ten, she wrote to Legend, the Master of Caraval, hoping to get tickets for her and her sister Donatella (Tella).  Her grandmother had told her stories and made it seem wonderful.  It seemed like a wonderful dream, while in her own life…

Her father was abusive, he wouldn’t let them leave the island that they lived on, and she decided to get married to someone that she had never met just to escape.  One day, she finally gets tickets to Caraval, after she had given up.  She no longer wants to go, thinking that her marriage will save her from her toxic life.

She ends up going anyway; you’ll just have to read the book to find out how.  After she gets there, she discovers that it’s not quite what she was expecting.  It seems to be a magical, more dangerous version of Las Vegas, where everything that happens in Caraval is supposed to stay there.  We find out that not everything stays there, however.  Scarlett’s sister is kidnapped, and she has to find her before it is too late.

She ends up partnering up with Julian, a brash sailor who is definitely not Scarlett’s type, although deep down inside, she finds him to be devastatingly handsome.  Over the course of the search, Scarlett grows as a person, and comes to the realization that maybe she’s putting her hopes into the wrong things.

In the end, we find out the truth about what went on in Caraval.  Maybe… Scarlett wasn’t actually saving Tella after all.  Perhaps Tella was saving her.  Maybe Julian isn’t actually a sailor.  Again, you’ll have to read to find out.

What I Liked

I enjoyed this book.  The characters were likeable, and they grew as people as they struggled through the book.  Scarlett is very practical (maybe a little too much so) and protective of her impulsive sister.  Tella is a little too impulsive.  The love between these sisters is what drives the story, which I found to be a really sweet underlying theme.


There was a lot of mystery to this book, and as I read, I couldn’t help but to wonder what was really going on.  In Caraval, nothing is exactly as it seems.  The book reveals much of its mysteries by the end of the book… but then we realize that there is one more mystery to be solved.  Now I can’t wait to read the next book, which I’m on the waiting list to read at the library.

Anything I Didn’t Like?

I can’t think of anything that I didn’t like about this book.  Maybe at the beginning of the book, Scarlett seems a little hopeless and clueless, but as she grows throughout the book, she becomes a strong person in her own right.

I enjoyed Caraval quite a lot and am looking forward to reading the next book, Legendary, as it becomes available.  If you haven’t read it yet and choose to check it out, I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.

Origin: Not as Good as I Originally Hoped

Origin by Dan Brown coverThe other day I was at the library and I found Dan Brown’s book Origin on the shelf.  When it came out last year, I thought it sounded interesting, so I decided to pick it up.  I really enjoyed the puzzles in his book  The Lost Symbol, and I was hoping for a book that had a similar feel to it.  Sadly, I was disappointed in this book.

Our main protagonist, Robert Langdon, is a professor who was invited to an event by a former student and friend of his, Edmund Kirsch, who promises to unveil earth-shattering news that would destroy religion forever.  Unfortunately, the event ends with a horrific crime, before the earth-shattering news could be delivered.  Professor Langdon and the future queen of Spain, Ambra Vidal, need to find out a way to release this information to the world… before it is too late.

I didn’t feel the whole sense of puzzle-solving and excitement in this book that I thought I would.  There was some symbology and some poetry to decipher, but there wasn’t as much in this book as I would have hoped.  There were some drawings in this book, but the symbols printed weren’t really critical to solving the character’s problems.

The future queen, Ambra Vidal, didn’t really seem to be that interesting of a character, I thought.  I just didn’t connect with her.  When they finally are able to make the big reveal about the origin of life that was supposed to be so earth-shattering?  That was a little disappointing as well.  Rather than being an amazing discovery, it seemed to be something that futurists have been talking about for years… and as part of the presentation, the author made jabs at more conservative religious people, which I found to be unnecessary.

At the end, we find out who the criminal was that orchestrated the crime, and while it was surprising, it wasn’t incredibly shocking.

I did like some things about this novel.  Since the novel is set in Spain, I like the liberal use of Spanish throughout the novel.  It’s used in such a way that even if you don’t know Spanish, you can still figure out what is going on.  I enjoyed translating it.  If you’re an art lover, there is plenty of art talk.  I found the buildings, description of architecture, and some of the concepts in here that are real (like the inclusion of the Palmarian church, for example) to be interesting as well.  Even though the overall plot didn’t grab me, there were some elements that I found to be intriguing.

Although Origin wasn’t my favorite Dan Brown book, I think that there are people that will like it.  It just wasn’t my favorite.

Wildcard Pre-Order Info! And My Wonderful Day!

Wildcard Pre-Order Gifts

I know that I just posted my Top Ten Tuesday post, but I was so excited to tell you all about this that I just had to post it tonight before I went to bed.  Sunday I mentioned that Life After Legend II was going to be offered as a pre-order gift, but now I have pictures!  And a link!

So here’s all of the details.  Not only do you get Life After Legend II when you pre-order Wildcard, but you also get some Wildcard buttons and a postcard with a thank you note from Marie Lu.  They look completely awesome.

You can get your own pre-order gifts by filling out the pre-order gift form.  If you still haven’t ordered your copy of Wildcard, you can click on this Wildcard link.

Oh, and if anybody has a copy of the original Warcross pre-order gift Life After Legend that they want to part with, I’d be happy to buy it off of you for a reasonable price.  I’d be willing to send money via Paypal, or I could send you a finished copy of another book (I’m sorry, I only have two physical ARCs and they’re not for really sought after books), or I would be happy to pay it forward and fulfill a #bookishwish for someone else if you’re interested.  It’s probably a long shot because I never see it up for sale on eBay, but you never know.  You could either email me, or you could send me a DM on Twitter @Brookelorren.

Part 2:  My Great Day!

So that was only part of my wonderful day today (I already knew what the gifts were because I saw Penguin Teen’s video on Friday).  Anyway, it started out kinda boring because I had to finish rewriting the booklet I hand out to my Spanish students, but then, I had a short amount of time to write fiction after that.

And I finished chapter 22 of Like Normal People!  Yay!

You have NO CLUE how much writer’s block I had with that chapter.  Ugh.  I literally wrote two novellas, four short stories, and most of the first draft of another novel while I was trying to overcome writer’s block with that chapter.  And for the last week or so, I’ve had a hard time writing anything at all… on the days that I had time to write, I could crank out a sentence or two if I was lucky, and on a few days, “writing” consisted of highlighting passages that I wanted to expand upon.  And then I did this!  I was doing the happy dance on my way to work today.

Chapters 23 through 25 should be really easy to write too (it only will have 25 chapters).  I came up with what I want the rest of chapter 23 to look like while I was at work today, and I’ve known what I wanted chapters 24 and 25 to look like for months.  So I’m so excited to be wrapping this one up.

I hope you have a great day!

Books To Get You Out of a Reading Slump (Top Ten Tuesday)

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday Topic (hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl) is Books to Get You Out of a Reading Slump.  I don’t know if I’m the best person to write about this topic, since I don’t really think that I experience reading slumps, but I’ll try to take on this topic anyway.  More than specific books, I’ll recommend some ways to get out of reading slumps.

Caraval coverListen to an audiobook: most of your favorite books have been made into audiobooks, and a lot of them are available at your library (okay available might not be the right word for it, because there’s usually a waiting list for most popular YA books at my library, but you know what I mean).  Caraval is available in audiobook, as an example.

I’m not big into audiobooks myself, but I was thinking about checking one out from my library to listen to while I’m at the gym… but then I realized that there’s a waiting list for almost all the books, so maybe not today, at least.  Maybe in six months.

Legend Graphic Novel coverRead a graphic novel.  I’m not really a graphic novel person either, but if you’re in a reading slump, then maybe a graphic novel might help.  Doesn’t this Legend graphic novel look cute?  And can you believe that I don’t have these yet?  I might have to go out and buy them now… or maybe I’ll just ask for these as a Christmas present.  Otherwise they might have to excommunicate me from the Marie Lu fan club.

Wired magazine coverRead a magazine.  One magazine article might only take a few minutes to read, and doesn’t take a ton of your attention span.  There are tons of good magazines; Wired is one of the magazines I subscribe to via Zinio.

Summer Days and Summer Nights CoverRead Short Stories.  So I realize that summer is quickly fading away (where I am it feels like it’s been fall for weeks already) but I haven’t read too many short story books, so Summer Days and Summer Nights it is.  At least if you want a short story recommendation from me.  Short stories might be able to break you out of a reading slump because you don’t have to get too invested in any one particular storyline.

Read Something Useful.  Maybe you’re in a reading slump because you’ve just gotten bored by stories that are meant to entertain.  Perhaps you can read something useful instead.  A book like Friction can help you learn more about attracting customers (which is useful if you have a blog, run a small business, or are in some sort of management position).  If, perhaps, you don’t have a business, surely there’s something else you can learn that would be useful to your life.  You can keep on reading, yet not feel the expectation of being entertained.

Kiss Quotient coverRead Something Light.  A few months ago, I had just finished reading the first three books of the Ember Quartet, then I read a book about the Holocaust.  Those definitely weren’t light reads!  Plus, none of the couples were together at the end of the book!  So I needed to read something a little lighter.  That’s why I downloaded The Kiss Quotient.  So if you’re in a situation where everybody that you’re reading about seems to be dying or getting injured, perhaps you might want to try something a little lighter.

Twitter logoTake a Short Break.  Maybe you just need a break from reading in general.  It’s okay to take a short break, for an hour or two, at least.  I mean, let’s not go crazy and leave our collection of books at home when we go on vacation (or to the doctor’s office, or to work) or anything silly like that, but the books will still be there when you’re done taking a break.  Sometimes you need to do something other than reading for a while, right?

Learn Something New.  Maybe you’re just bored with fiction in general for the moment.  If you still want to read, you could always learn something new.  Like why the Apple logo was designed the way that it was.  Or what was Thomas Edison like?  Dreamers and Deceivers was a pretty interesting book that talks a little bit about those two subjects and more (I particularly found the story about Alan Turing to be interesting, but maybe that’s because I majored in computer science and love my Apple products).

Red Queen CoverRead Something Popular.  A few weeks ago, we had a Top Ten Tuesday post about books that were hyped up a lot.  I wrote about Popular YA Books That I Loved instead.  I found out that week that some people are afraid to read popular books because they’re afraid that they might not be as good as some people say they are.  A lot of times though, books might be popular because they’re good.  If you’ve been afraid of reading a popular book and you’re in a reading slump, maybe you should try one out instead.  The Red Queen series is pretty popular.

Unbroken coverTry a New Genre.  Maybe you just need to read something completely different for a change.  If you’re always reading young adult, or fantasy, or whatever you normally read, maybe you just need to try something different.  I really liked the story of Louie Zamporini, Unbroken.  Maybe I’m just biased because he went to the University of Southern California (I don’t think so, but I do like the fact that he’s a Trojan like I am) but this is a really good story about a runner who was captured during World War II and eventually ended up forgiving his captors that tormented him.

So these are my ten ideas of how you might break out of a reading slump.  Do you get into reading slumps?  What are your ideas of how to get out of them?  Next week’s Top Ten Tuesday topic is “Back to School”, so I’ll be posting ten of my favorite nonfiction books.

When Elephants Fly Was Good, But I Could Have Gotten More

I recently received a copy of When Elephants Fly, by Nancy Richardson Fischer.  I forgot that I had entered a sweepstakes to win it, and I was pretty excited to see it in my mailbox.  It is a wonderful story about a girl, Lily, whose mother had schizophrenia and tried to kill her.  She just turned 18 and thinks that if she just keeps a stress-free life between now and the time she’s 30, then she’ll be able to prevent getting it herself.

Unfortunately, life doesn’t quite work out that way.  Living a life without stress means that you also miss out on a lot of good things in life.  She’s reluctant to apply for any college other than her local community college (her therapist convinces her to apply for a good college anyway, and she decides to apply to the best college out there, USC).  She had been reluctant to apply for the internship at the local newspaper as well, but as our story begins, she had already been accepted and is working there.

At the internship, Lily gets to write little pieces for her local newspaper on local interest events, like the new baby calf being born at the zoo.  Unfortunately, after the baby calf is born, its mother rejects the calf and tries to kill it, which brings up her own memory of when her mother tried to kill her.  This triggers a series of events that changes Lily’s life forever, as she tries to save the baby elephant.  It brings more excitement into her life for sure, but also causes the risk of mental illness to increase.

I thought this book was pretty good.  I really enjoyed Lily’s friendship with her best friend, Sawyer, which unfortunately becomes strained during this book.  Sawyer is going through his own problems with detached parents, and Lily doesn’t see that for a while because of her own problems.  I would have liked to have seen more of their friendship though.

Lily meets a guy in this book that she develops a relationship with, but I don’t particularly feel it all that much.  Maybe if they would have spent more time together, I would have shipped them more, but as written, they were just okay together.  This part of the book could have gotten a little more attention.

The ending of the book leaves a lot unresolved.  Does Lily get into USC?  Does she develop schizophrenia?  What happens to her friend?  What happens to her and her new boyfriend?  What happens to the baby elephant?

Overall, I thought When Elephants Fly was good.  The subject matter is really important; there are so many people these days dealing with mental issues, so this book will be helpful for a lot of people.  The story was good, the characters were interesting, and the friendship in this book was represented well.  It goes on sale on September 4th, but you can pre-order it now.

The Life Choices Write Tag

I decided that I wanted to do the Life Choices Write Tag, where we talk about one of our works in progress.  I have several WIPs at the moment, all in various stages.  I originally was going to do this tag with the NaNoWriMo book that I’m planning, but I think I’ll just answer those questions to myself, for now, because I don’t even have all the main characters named yet!  I have a pretty good idea of where that story is going, but I’m still planning it.  Instead, I’ll be talking about Hero, which is a Legend fanfic… my first draft is at least 2/3 done, but I know exactly where the end of the story is headed.

RULES

  • Thank the person who tagged you but also link back to the original post(I want to see all your lovely answers, people!)

I found this tag over at Drizzle and Hurricane books.

  • Provide a short description of your WIP/story!

Hero is a continuation of the Legend trilogy written by Marie Lu.  It is not canon with Life After Legend or Life After Legend 2 (oops, did I just give something away that I wasn’t supposed to ;-)?  It’s going to be one of the Wildcard pre-order gifts.  Penguin Teen talked about it in a video they put out on Friday).

Anyway, Day, now going by Daniel again, returns back to the Republic with his brother Eden.  He runs into June on his first day there, and ends up going to her 27th birthday party.  Daniel of course is interested in her right away, but there’s one small problem… she has a 10 year old boy.  The party pretty much ends when the boy, John, unwittingly announces that his dad is Day.  Everybody has to get over that little snag, but after they all get to know each other, John is kidnapped.  They have to rescue him, but after they find him, they also find someone else that needs their help…

  • This is pretty focused on main characters but don’t hesitate to use several characters for the answers if you want to! (We want to get to know as many of your characters as possible)

Just for clarification… I’m using the questions in the original form, but I never consider Day, June, Tess, Pascao, or any of the original Legend characters to be “my” characters.  I’m just borrowing them.  John (the boy), Rosie, and some of the other assorted characters in the story are mine, because I made them.

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Where does your main character (MC) live? Were they born there or did they move to that place?

This story has three Point of View (POV) characters, plus Rosie, a girl that John runs into after he is kidnapped.  Daniel, June, and John were all born in Los Angeles, CA, while Rosie was born in Salina, Kansas (in the Colonies).  Daniel lives in Antarctica for the first chapter, but for the rest of the story he lives in Los Angeles, where June and John live for the entire story.  Rosie lives in Salina, Kansas, until she moves to Los Angeles.

Does your MC have a dream career? What (if anything) stops them from pursuing it?

Daniel and June are both military people.  They are pursuing their dream careers.  John and Rosie are too young to think about their dream careers… and up until now, Rosie has been too busy trying to survive to even think about a career.

Did any of your characters ever go against their parents/family’s wishes? How did that change their relationship?

Daniel and June’s parents are dead, so there’s nothing happening there.  Rosie did run away from home… but her father was a child molester that had killed her mother, so I really don’t blame her.  She no longer has or desires a relationship with her father.  She doesn’t even know if he’s alive or is in jail or anything like that.

If faced with their greatest fear – would your MC try to overcome it or run the other way?

I think they all have to try to overcome their fears out of necessity.  Their biggest instinct is survival, and, in Daniel and June’s case, the survival of their son.

Did any character have to cut a person out of their life? Why?

Rosie had to cut her father out of her life.  He was so toxic that it’s better to live on the streets than to live with him.

What is your main character’s biggest regret?

In hindsight, June probably regrets not contacting Daniel sooner.  There wasn’t much they could do to prevent the kidnapping, however; it wasn’t a random kidnapping.

Which character is most likely going to help a stranger, even if they got nothing out of it in return?

Daniel.

If your character got good/bad news, who would be the person they first tell?

At the beginning of our story, Daniel would tell his brother, Eden.  June would probably tell Tess, and John would probably tell his best friend, Tanis.  Rosie really has nobody at the beginning of the story, but later on, she’d probably tell John.

BONUS: Make an aesthetic for your MCs life if there had been no obstacles (money, geographical, etc.) and they had everything they wanted. (It is up to you if you want to explain it or not!)

I’m skipping this one.

I TAG THEE
If you want to do this, there is no obligation!

I’m not going to tag anybody, but if you want to do this one, then go ahead.  🙂

Strange the Dreamer is Like a Beautiful Dream

Strange the Dreamer CoverJust recently I finished reading Strange the Dreamer, by Laini Taylor.  Her writing has been described as beautiful prose.  If you’re unfamiliar with her writing, you’ll just have to read her works to see it.  I didn’t want to put down this book, and I’m looking forward to reading the second half of this duology, Muse of Nightmares, later on this year.

Lazlo Strange is an orphan.  He was originally raised in a monastery, but he is drawn to stories.  When he gets the opportunity to deliver books to the library, he decides not to leave.  He becomes an apprentice librarian, reading books in his spare time.  With his head in a book and his mind in a fairy tale all the time, he becomes known as Strange the Dreamer.  Above all other stories, he is fascinated by the story of a city called Weep.  Or at least, that’s what everybody calls it now.  Lazlo knows that it had another name… once.  He felt it disappearing from his mind.

Lazlo would have continued this life indefinitely, living out his life as a lowly librarian, until fate intervened.  He decides to take a chance and do something bold, which is a move that will change his life forever.

In the city of Weep, there is a girl called Sarai.  She lives with a few other people, isolated from the rest of the world.  Until the day that she finds herself in Lazlo’s dreams.  This is the beginning of an unlikely romance.

Lazlo and Sarai are from two different worlds that don’t understand each other.  Will their relationship ever evolve from anything outside of dreams?  You’ll have to read the story to find out.

The characters in this story are outstanding.  Lazlo is not particularly handsome on the outside, but he’s an interesting character that more than one avid reader will probably be able to identify with.  In contrast to Lazlo’s rough exterior and beautiful insides, the people that are beautiful on the outside aren’t always the most beautiful people on the inside.  Our other main protagonist, Sarai, is also a wonderfully complex character, who has changed over time as she gains understanding about the people around her.

Like the prose of this story, the world of this story is also beautiful.  Ms. Taylor’s writing is wonderfully descriptive, which makes the deserts and cities and library come alive.  Even though this world contains creatures and magic not present in our own world, it’s not hard to imagine.

Strange the Dreamer seems to have underlying themes to it.  Revenge and hate is not the answer.  Good people sometimes do bad things.  Often, both sides of a conflict have good reasons to have grievances against the other, but if we let hatred simmer forever, it hurts everyone.  If those aren’t messages that we need more than ever, I don’t know what are.

If you’re looking for a beautiful story in an imaginative world that you won’t want to put down, consider getting this book.