On the Same Page | Landline | Rainbow Rowell

on the same page

Landline • Rainbow Rowell

We were all so stoked to read LANDLINE, friends, that we bumped it up in our monthly schedule when all three of us managed to snag advanced copies. Because RAINBOW. And because reading any of her books, whether they are geared towards young adults or full grown-ups, always have an impact on all three of us.

Book cover Landline Rainbow RowellLANDLINE is about a relationship that is struggling. Rainbow tells amazing stories about relationships, and the one between Georgie McCool (I KNOWWW) and her husband, Neal, is fraying. Georgie writes for a TV comedy and Neal is a stay-at-home dad to their two girls. When Georgie and her long-time friend and writing partner get news of a potential big break right before Christmas, Georgie and Neal’s relationship goes from “just ok” to “MAYDAY! MAYDAY!” Neal heads off with the girls to Nebraska as the family planned, and Georgie stays behind in LA to work on her TV show. Except when she starts spending time in her old bedroom at her mom’s house, she finds an old rotary phone in her closet and uses it to call Neal’s parents’ house to talk to her husband. And THAT’S when things get INTERESTING.

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On the Same Page | The Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls | Claire Legrand

on the same pageThe Cavendish Home for Boys and Girls • Claire Legrand

In celebration of our everlasting love of middle grade, as well as the Kids Author Carnival we’ll all be volunteering at this Book Expo weekend, our May book was one I’ve been looking forward to for a while: THE CAVENDISH HOME FOR BOYS AND GIRLS by Claire Legrand. I’m always up for some MG goodness, especially when it involves one of my very favorite things to read about: friendship. Particularly between a boy and a girl. My OTP of this would obviously be Harry and Hermione (forget that nonsense that JK was spouting a while ago). I always love reading about this, and it always makes me so happy when the friendship is unencumbered by romance, and I thought that Victoria and Lawrence from THE CAVENDISH HOME FOR BOYS AND GIRLS wound up having a pretty strong friendship, even if it didn’t seem to start out that way.

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On the Same Page | Fairytales for Wilde Girls | Allyse Near

on the same pageFairytales for Wilde Girls by Allyse Near

On the Same Page is going international with April, friends. There are few things we enjoy more than fairy tales, so when we all saw FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS, a debut from Aussie author Allyse Near, we all pretty much died and decided right away that we needed to read it together.

It’s hard to describe this book, really. Which is awesome. It’s magical realism and its got fairy tales and ghosts (or ARE they???), and family drama, and friendship, and romance. So lots of stuff. And it’s written beautifully. But one of the things that struck me about FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS was the way Allyse Near’s writing was so visual. Everything about Isola Wilde and her beautifully bananas life is so vivid, so once I decided to do a Pinterest board for this month’s post, I was stoked. I spent hours looking for pins and pictures that reminded me of this book, and I could keep on looking. (I probably will.)

So without further ado, I’m going to highlight a few of my favorite pins and then you can go check out my whole board!

fairytales for wilde girlsThis poem by Edgar Allen Poe actually, for all its darkness, the source of a pretty sweet little thing in FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS. Edgar, the boy across the street, calls Isola Annabel Lee after they meet and she learns his name is Edgar. It’s one of those intimate nicknames that comes from people sharing a joke that only they know. They were kind of understated but still kind of intense. 

Christobelle is Isola’s fourth brother-prince. (Yes, she calls all of her brother-princes “brothers” even though only three of the seven are male.) The brother-princes are, with one exception, Isola’s ghost friends (we’ll call them ghosts because I don’t know of another way to think of them that would make sense to people who haven’t read this book yet) that only she can see. They are her protectors and loved ones who are sometimes fantastical creatures–like Christobelle, the murderous mermaid, or Rosekin, the little pink pixie. The story of why Isola calls them brother-princes was pretty enchanting, even if it was a little confusing at first that she called them all “brothers.”

I tried to look for pictures of some of the main characters from FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS, but the only person who I could do any justice at all was James, the second brother-prince, and the only one who is an actual living, breathing human being. He has a very complicated relationship with Isola. He’s kind of a surf bum who maybe, possibly wants to be more than a brother of any kind to Isola. He’s the only person who knows about Isola’s quirks–aka, the fact that she basically has imaginary friends–but he doesn’t deal with it very well. ANYWHO, getting back on track here, this is the best picture I could find of Isola. No, you can’t see her face. But I found that it was her kind of outrageously weird appearance that stuck with me, mostly because she OWNED it. I couldn’t imagine her wearing tame clothing or having just one color hair.

fairytales for wilde girlsIsola’s bedroom is the scene of so much action, and I just about died when I found this pin because there’s so much about it that reminds me of Isola’s room. First of all, it has a window. Very important. Second of all–and it’s the part that kills me the most–is the writing on the wall behind the bed. Isola describes the wall behind her bed as being so covered over with poems and quotes and words and thoughts that she’s written there over the years that it looks like grafitti. Plus the lights…it makes the room look magical and that’s an important vibe from the book.

RUSLANA. Guys, Ruslana is a Fury and is also the third brother-prince. (I’m not going to highlight them all here, though.) There are so many pins of badass female warriors that reminded me of Ruslana, but this is one of my favorites.

So basically the story of FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS centers around Isola, a young girl who has these imaginary/ghost/friends. She lives on the outskirts of a this magical, kind of weird place called Viven’s Wood. It’s a literal wood. She traverses it daily, until one day she discovers a birdcage hanging from one of the trees with a dead girl’s corpse in it. From that moment on, the woods become less welcoming and more foreboding, and the dead girl begins to haunt Isola and her brother-princes. The culmination of this girl and the cage is pretty great, and sad, but this birdcage reminded me of the one Isola finds the girl’s body in.

Vivien’s Wood. It’s hard to tell if this place is really magical or if it’s just the way Isola sees it, but it’s as much a character in this book as the actual characters.

fairytales for wilde girlsSo there’s actually a really cool story within FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS that involves unicorns and it’s sad and lovely and vengeful and bloody and I just loved the effing crap out of it. Seriously, the fairy tales from Isola’s book are excellent.

Fairytales for Wilde Girls All of Isola’s easy, confident weirdness comes from her near obsession with the fairy tales in this book. It was a gift to her from her mother, who is unwell and barely leaves the house. Isola’s relationship with her dad is frosty, and he ignores Isola’s mom outright. But Isola finds comfort in the wild, weird, dark fairy tales of Lileo Pardieu. This stories set the tone for Isola’s life, and for FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS.

But these pins aren’t all, friends!! Go check out the rest of my board! And let me tell you: I’ll be hunting for pins that remind me of this book from here on out.

Follow Amy’s board Fairy Tales For Wilde Girls on Pinterest.

Don’t forget to check out Brittany and Alyssa’s posts for FAIRYTALES FOR WILDE GIRLS by Allyse Near!!

On the Same Page | The Lies of Locke Lamora | Scott Lynch

on the same page

The Lies of Locke Lamora by Scott Lynch

I can’t believe it’s already time to dish about On the Same Page’s THIRD BOOK!!! Time is flying because we’re having so much fun. And let me tell you, reading THE LIES OF LOCKE LAMORA, the first book in Scott Lynch’s Gentleman Bastards series, was TREMENDOUS fun. When Alyssa, Brittany, and I scheduled out our books for the year, all of our choices were mutual, except the ones in March, September, and December: Our birthday months! We each got to pick the books we read as a birthday present of sorts, and Miss Brittany made an excellent choice. THE LIES OF LOCKE LAMORA was 100% good times.

I’ve been meaning to read this series for ages, so I was excited to finally have a reason to dive in. It has so many things that I always love, most notably the fact that it’s a fantasy. Scott Lynch’s world-building is top-notch. There are different kingdoms and realms, all with their own clearly defined cultures and histories; there’s a new and interesting calendar that these worlds follow; a fleshed-out religion; and Camorr, where Locke and his other Gentleman Bastards live and operate, is so lively and described in such great detail that it’s difficult to struggle picturing it in your mind. I could talk about a number of things this month relating to THE LIES OF LOCKE LAMORA, but I’m going to focus on one element in particular that I always love in any book, and that defines a large part of the action and characters here: THIEVES. OMG. LOVE THEM.

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On the Same Page | Vicious | V.E. Schwab

on the same pageVicious by V.E. Schwab

It’s time to talk about our second book, friends! And let me tell you something: It was a REALLY good one that featured a truckload of issues and topics for thought. VICIOUS is billed as superhero fiction, and sure that makes sense, but it’s easy to see while reading that these ExtraOrdinary folks, aka EOs, are not your typical Supermans or Magnetos.

However, quite like most superhero/villain canon, VICIOUS is rooted strongly in relationships: good ones, bad ones, seemingly insignificant ones that transform lives and people. In lieu of talking about the hero aspect of VICIOUS–which Brittany and Alyssa are doing differently and awesomely on their sites–I’m going to break VICIOUS down for you relationship by relationship (leaving out some of the REALLY small ones, unfortunately). So let’s get into it!

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On the Same Page: Days of Blood and Starlight

OtSPcirclebannerHUZZAH!! It’s finally here! Friends, Alyssa from Books Take You Places, Brittany from The Book Addict’s Guide, and I have been waiting to start this new feature and share it with you all! In case you can’t tell from the button over there, it’s called On the Same Page and it’s pretty fun (for us, and hopefully you, too!).

So, some quick background: The three of us were reading books together all the time, so we decided to make it a THING where we read one book together a month and then put together a post each about that book. It’s been in the works for months, honestly. But the most fun part of On the Same Page is that we’re not necessarily going to be doing a traditional review–although we certainly might. We’re going to try and change it up and post different things to talk about each book we read. I’m SOO excited about this, I can’t even tell you. So without further ado, WELCOME! Our first book is…

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