Recommend A…(13)

Recommend A... meme

…Book With a Blue Cover

Recommend A… is a SUPER meme hosted by Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit that lets us get a little random, and a little off the radar. I LOVE IT.

You know why this one was hard, guys? Not because blue is an underrepresented color on book covers. No. There’s plenty. This was hard because most of the books I’ve read with blue covers all seem to be second, third, fourth, or even fifth books in a series, and I don’t want to recommend things out of order. My OCD won’t let me. So, here’s my contemp-heavy list. Yay, blue!

Moonglass by Jessi KirbyMoonglass by Jessi Kirby. Bluish-purple. Indigo! Anyway, this is a super-cute story about a young girl whose mother has committed suicide, and she’s back at the beach where her mother spent lots of time growing up, still trying to figure out what was going on in her mom’s head, and why she would choose to die over living with her family. There’s obviously a sweet romance, but there’s also a father/daughter relationship that I liked very much as well.

Raw Blue by Kirsty Eagar. Blue twofer! It’s on the cover AND in the title! See those two Book cover for Raw Blue by Kirsty Eagarexclamation points there? That’s only a precursor to how much love and excitement and FEELINGS you’ll get from reading this Aussie contemp about a young surfer girl who’s got some damaging skeletons in her closet, and the guy who helps her move past them. Carly and Ryan are so amazing. PLUS, until this summer (until last week I believe!), this book was only available via generous friends with connections to Australian bookstores. But now that it’s pubbed in the UK, we can buy it online. This is the UK cover that will be in my hands shortly, but the original Aussie cover is blue, too.

Book cover for Dairy Queen by Catherine Gilbert MurdockDairy Queen (Dairy Queen #1) by Catherine Gilbert Murdock. One of my very favorite series, guys. Plus, I just LOVE the cow on this cover wearing the tiara. It’s such a hilarious image that, I think, gives a good idea of the vibe of this series about DJ Schwenk and her farm-dwelling family. I LOVE DJ, and I love the story of her struggling, hard working family. And I love her up-and-down relationship with Brian. So, so super.

Recommend A…(12)

Recommend A... meme

…Book That Someone Recommended To You

Recommend A… is a SUPER meme hosted by Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit that lets us get a little random, and a little off the radar. I LOVE IT.

I’ve been given some incredibly solid recommendations before, guys. These are three of my favorites. Books that, once I read them, I couldn’t believe I hadn’t read them sooner.

Book cover for The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss

The Name of the Wind: The Kingkiller Chronicle #1 by Patrick Rothfuss. Do yourselves a favor and read this book. Seriously. One of the best books I’ve ever read, and I have basically every bloggy friend I have to thank for pushing me to pick this on up off my shelves and finally read it.

Book cover for Eon by Alison Goodman

Eon: Dragoneye Reborn: Eon/Eona #1 by Alison Goodman. One of my friends from library school told me about this book and how great it was. I read it based on her recommendation, and the fact that it’s an Asian-based fantasy about dragons, something I haven’t read much about. I’m not sure I can read another fantasy in an Asian-esque world without comparing it to this one.

Book cover for Vampire Academy by Richelle Mead

Vampire Academy: Vampire Academy #1 by Richelle Mead. I know, I know. This is not a random, unknown book. But seriously, I was burned out from the vamps, guys. This series made me wary. But EVERYONE told me that this was series was amazing. Everyone. And everyone was not a liar. I read this series–five books–in pretty much a week. So good.

Recommend A…(11)

Recommend A... meme

…First Book in a Series

Recommend A… is a SUPER meme hosted by Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit that lets us get a little random, and a little off the radar. I LOVE IT.

So. First book in a series. This is HARD, mostly because I read so many series! But trust me when I tell you that this list could be a bazillion books long. First books in a series that rock my socks are pretty special, and I often always have the softest spots for the books that drew me into a series in the first place.

Book cover for Grave Mercy by Robin LaFeversGrave Mercy: His Fair Assassin #1 by Robin LaFevers. GUYS. I read this book in February, and it remains one of my favorite books of the year. Assassin nuns in medieval France who are basically the minions of Death, killing people whom he marks? It’s historical fantasy at its best. I can’t recommend this highly enough.

Book cover for The Iron King by Julie KagawaThe Iron King: The Iron Fey #1 by Julie Kagawa. I always recommend this series to people who don’t usually hold with fairies because it’s pretty legit. Meghan Chase is a stellar character, and Ash and Puck are two immensely lovable guys. The fairy realm in The Iron Fey series is vibrant and colorful and full of well-constructed characters, and the emotional depth of these stories shouldn’t be overstated either. It’s good stuff. REALLY good stuff.

Book cover for The Penderwicks by Jeanne BirdsallThe Penderwicks: The Penderwicks #1 by Jeanne Birdsall. SIGH. Friends, this is one of my very favorite series out there, and one of my very favorite middle grade books of all time. It’s the best story about a family of quirky, loving sisters living with their widower father. The first book takes place during their summer vacation, where the girls get into all kinds of shenanigans. I can’t do my love justice here, but trust me. They are seriously the most adorable, retro awesome family. I adore them to bits and pieces.

Recommend A…(10)

Recommend A... meme

…Book You Read This Year

Recommend A… is a SUPER meme hosted by Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit that lets us get a little random, and a little off the radar. I LOVE IT.

I’ve read SO many great books this year, guys. Seriously. Obviously I have a hard time only recommending one book as it is, but suffice it to say, this was an especially difficult list to narrow down. Here are three of my favorites so far:

Book cover for Unraveling by Elizabeth NorrisUnraveling (Unraveling #1) by Elizabeth Norris. Guys, this book surprised me with not only how much I loved it, but with how much it WASN’T what I thought it would be. The twist was pretty much the opposite of what I thought it would be. It was awesome.

Book cover for Wanderlove by Kirsten Hubbard

Wanderlove by Kirsten Hubbard. A solid contemporary/travelogue/coming-of-age/romance/AWESOME. There aren’t a ton of books around that are so vibrant that the places and the people just kind of hum themselves off the pages. WANDERLOVE is like that. Good stuff.

Book cover for Cinder by Marissa Meyer

Cinder (The Lunar Chronicles #1) by Marissa Meyer. If you haven’t yet read this sci-fi/dystopian retelling of Cinderella…you need to fix that pretty much ASAP. I’m not a huge science fiction reader/viewer/consumer, but when I do find something from that genre that I love, I love it HARD. CINDER is pretty genius. It’s clever, well-written, gripping, and a super beginning to what’s sure to be an amazing series.

Recommend A…(9)

Recommend A... meme

…Book by a Male Author

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme. Shanyn’s AWESOME Recommend A… meme is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

Trying to find some books for this week’s prompt wasn’t hard, guys, but it did spotlight something that I’m sure lots of us noticed: I don’t read very many books written by male authors AT ALL. I’m not sure if that says something about me or YA/MG literature, but it’s a shame either way. These two books REPRESENT, though. They’re fantastic.

book cover for Icefall by Matthew J. Kirby

Icefall by Matthew J. Kirby. Guys. THIS is a solid historical middle grade fantasy. I’m talking LEGIT. It’s the story of a young girl who is the daughter of a Viking king. He’s under attack, so he sends his children–led by the youngest girl, Solveig–to a faraway, secluded stronghold in the mountains. BUT. Turns out the king’s family isn’t safe there, either. There’s a traitor in their midst, and shizz hits the fan. ICEFALL is AMAZING, friends. One of my favorite recent middle grades.

Book cover for A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness. I don’t know how much more I can say about this book and how much it literally SLAYED me to tiny pieces. It’s the heartbreaking story of a young boy who’s mother is dying from cancer. As a means to help himself cope, he begins to see a monster who is a big Yew tree. He’s a badass, and the way he helps Conor (CONOR! He’s an outstanding, sad young boy) understand life and death, and come to grips with his mother’s sickness and all of the emotions he’s feeling is just perfect. No lie. A MONSTER CALLS is perfect. Sad, but brilliant.

Recommend A…(7)

Recommend A... meme

…Contemporary Book

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme. Shanyn’s AWESOME Recommend A… meme is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

Book cover for Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley

Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley. This book is Aussie magic. I loved it, and the way the romance between Lucy and Shadow is MAJOR slow burn. It takes place over just one night, and that’s the perfect atmosphere for this book. A stellar contemporary.

Book cover for Dtiched: A Love Story by Robin Mellom

Ditched: A Love Story by Robin MellomAH! This book is so much fun! There’s the hideous prom dress, apropos of a HIDEOUS prom. DITCHED is cute, funny, heartwarming, and a great, promising debut.

book cover for Playing Hurt by Holly Schindler

Playing Hurt by Holly Schindler. I need to review this one, friends. It is LEGIT. The relationship is hot and sexy, the emotional baggage is kind of intense but not overly emo, and the atmosphere is super. Big fan of this one, guys.

Recommend A…(6)

Recommend A... meme

…Book That You Thought Was Funny

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme. Shanyn’s AWESOME Recommend A… meme is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

You know what I realized while thinking on this prompt? I don’t read funny books. I read books that sometimes have funny PARTS, like a line or a scene, but the overarching story is either dramatic or action-packed or intense or sad. But very rarely is it funny. Even one of the books I chose here is a basically sad book that was simultaneously funny. They both made me laugh, though.

Book cover for The Hero's Guide to Save Your Kingdom by Christopher HealyBook cover for Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse AndrewsThe Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom by Christopher Healy. This was a humorous,REALLY clever and amusing take on fairy tales, told from the point of view of the princes instead of the princesses. It was super, and I laughed throughout. Not because it was particularly gut-busting hilarious, but because it was light-hearted and the characters were kind of bumbling idiots, or pompous fools, or total oddballs.

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl by Jesse Andrews. This book made me laugh all the way from the bottom of my toes. It has that sort of vulgar, cynical teenage boy humor that I find completely hysterical. But as funny as this book is, it’s also a little dark. It’s about a girl who is dying of cancer, and a boy–who isn’t really her friend–who is trying to make a movie for her. I laughed, and then I cringed a little. Still funny as hell, though.

Recommend A…(5)

Recommend A... meme

…Book That Made You Emotional

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme. Her AWESOME Recommend A… meme is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

So, books that made me emotional. To be honest, that’s not really a hard thing for a book to do. I’m an easy weller, and once I’m welling up, it almost ALWAYS turns into real tears. These three books made me cry for different reasons, but MAN. WATERWORKS.

Book cover for The Probability of Miracles by Wendy WunderThe Probability of Miracles by Wendy Wunder. Friends, this book just killed me. Really heartbreaking tears. Cam Cooper is one of those characters who has so much personality and is dealing with so much horrible crap that I couldn’t help but adore her spark, and feel real sadness for her troubles. I know that some people thought Cam was really abrasive and cynical, and I guess she was. But to me, I could tell WHY, and I couldn’t hold those things against her.

Book cover for A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness

A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness. THIS BOOK. Oh my God. Ok. This book gave me ugly, heaving, horrible, devastating sobs. I can’t even talk about it too much because basically, I DIED. Really. But you know how sometimes you just need a really good, hard, heartbreaking cry? Don’t even TRY to tell me that NONE of you know what I’m talking about. Just read this book, and you’ll understand.

Book cover for The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jessica E. Smith

The Statistical Probability of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E. Smith. SIGH. I loved this book, guys, because it made me cry, but not for the typical reasons that books make me cry: I wasn’t emotional because someone died. I cried because a pretty cool girl was dealing with a really difficult thing in life that LOTS of young people deal with–divorced parents–and it was heartbreaking in a different way. Thankfully, the parts that squeezed my heart were soothed a little bit by the romance. Oliver and Hadley are sweet together, guys.

Recommend A…(4)

Recommend A... meme

…Trilogy

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme.  Recommend A… is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

In case you haven’t noticed during previous weeks, this meme is supposed to only be ONE book. You might not guess that from my posts because they’ve always been at least THREE. WHOOPS! I figured, let’s change it up this week! Trilogies are fantastic, and I love that Shanyn was specific in saying “trilogy” and not “series.” There are GREAT three-book sets out there, guys, and these are few of my favorites, across all genres. Or, well, three genres. AH! Three! Anyway…

The Beka Cooper trilogy by Tamora Pierce. It’s Tamora. Obviously it’s amazing. I know that Tamora gets lots of love, but I feel like I most often hear about her older–and just as fabulous–series, like The Song of the Lioness. Beka, her newest series, is fantastic, too. Tamora basically never does me wrong.

The Firelight trilogy by Sophie Jordan. This was the first series I ever read that had dragons in it. Or at least dragon-esquecreatures. It’s AWESOME and clever and fun. The third book, HIDDEN, comes out this fall and I can’t wait to see how this trilogy concludes.

The Dairy Queen trilogy by Catherine Gilbert Murdock. GUYS. READ THIS. If you liked Catching Jordan, you will LOVE this even more. DJ Schwenk is one of my all-time “I want to be your bff” characters. She lives on a farm, plays boys sports, has a boyfriend who is by turns awesome and infuriating. SHE, though, is a star. Who would DIE from that description.

The Summer trilogy by Jenny Han. AHH, THE BROODING! These books are so emo, it’s amazing. Conrad Fisher is a boy worthy of all the crushes in the land, and his brother, Jeremy, isn’t too shabby either. This is a hardcore wonderful contemporary trilogy, guys. 

Recommend A…(3)

Recommend A... meme

…Book With A Bad Boy

Guys, I can’t tell you how ecstatic I was when Shanyn from Chick Loves Lit announced that she was starting this awesome meme.  Recommend A… is finally giving me the chance to cater to my inner nerd for specificity and randomness!! AND I LOVE IT. So props to Shanyn, who is fab for starting this up. I’m looking forward to giving some attention to books that might have missed everyone’s radar for one reason or another. Woo hoo!

I feel like we all know some books with bad boys in them, guys. But I’m trying to dig through the archives, friends. Maybe pick a few that I don’t see mentioned all the time. This is what I came up with. 

Book cover for She's So Dead to Us by Kieran ScottShe’s So Dead to Us (He’s So/She’s So #1) by Kieran Scott. So guys, you probably know by now that I’m from New Jersey. You probably also know that I’m pretty psyched about it. Maybe you also know that my hometown pride pretty much prevents me from skipping over books set in my home state. I HAVE to read them otherwise I feel guilty. SHE’S SO DEAD TO US, the first book in Kieran Scott’s series not only takes place in Jersey, but it also has all the drama and excess and shenanigans that come with rich teenagers. One of whom happens to be a bad boy, and thus the reason for this book’s presence here. Jake Graydon is one of those rich, popular, hot boys who I don’t even need to describe any further. He hooks up, drinks, flunks out of class, and gets pissed when his dad takes away his new Range Rover. But he wants to reform, ladies, so that he can get with Ally Ryan, the “she” from the title. These are FUN books, guys, made even more so by Jake. 

Book cover for Legend by Marie Lu

Legend (Legend #1) by Marie Lu. Often when I’m reading this book I tell myself that Day,the street urchin/thief/minor criminal/general trouble-maker/now fugitive of the Republic, is really older than he’s supposed to be in the books–15–so that I don’t feel so gross having a little crush on him. But he’s got that swagger, guys. That bad-boy confidence. Plus he’s smart and sneaky and flirts like a pro. Not surprised that June both hated him for a little bit and then fell for him. Big fan. 

Book cover for The Demon King by Cinda Williams ChimaThe Demon King (Seven Realms #1) by Cinda Williams Chima. Han Alister, guys. He was an effing STREET LORD OF THIEVES. A criminal. Who also happens to be hot, smart, clever, confident, and MAGIC (literally). Han is the epitome of a bad boy to me.  There’s no question that he has that charm. The magnetism that gets people to follow him and do what he asks. He has exes who hate him and powerful people who hate him, but he also has Raisa, who couldn’t hate him if she tried (which she does). I LOVE HIM. A bad boy of the most excellent nature.