Classics Retold: King Arthur

King Arthur

BOOM. LOOK AT THAT BADASS. Guys, I am beyond excited to be participating in the Classics Retold Project. A bunch of awesome ladies are hosting this event together so that between May 25th and the whole month of September, each participant will have a chance to choose and read one source classic from a LITERAL CRAP TON of classics in any genre: mythology, ancient tales, medieval legends (HOLLA! That’s where I’m at thanks to the awesome host of those tales, Alyssa from Books Take You Places), to American, Gothic, and British classics AND MORE. Because of the aforementioned crap ton of source material, each lovely hostess is in charge of a different group (details below). After the participant reads the original classic they’ve chosen, they need to find some retellings or other versions of the same tale to read/watch and then chat about it all. If you haven’t guessed from the title of this post, I’m hitching my cart to one of the most epic legends from the British Isles: KING EFFING ARTHUR.

King Arthur

Book cover for The Once and Future King by T.H. WhiteTHE ONCE AND FUTURE KING by T.H. White

I know that, technically, I should be reading Thomas Malory’s L’MORTE DE ARTHUR, but THE ONCE AND FUTURE KING is a classic in its own right, and so I’m going to stick with the book that isn’t likely to make me cross-eyed. I am DROOLING with excitement over this. I mean, IT’S KING ARTHUR. If you know me at all, you’ve probably seen me nerd out the BBC show, Merlin, before. That’s because I love this myth, and I am a perpetual sucker for anything Arthurian.

King Arthur

SO. MANY. BOOKS. Friends, there are so many King Arthur retellings/reworkings/reimaginings out there. I’m definitely going to try to read these books, but I’m still on the lookout for others. I’ve already read quite a few YA retellings so I’m looking for ones that are new to me. (Books I’ve already finished: Jane Yolen’s SWORD OF THE RIGHTFUL KING, Meg Cabot’s AVALON HIGH, and Jennifer Anne Kolger’s THE DEATH CATCHERS.)

Book cover for Song of the Sparrow by Lisa Ann SandellSONG OF THE SPARROW by Lisa Ann Sandell

I’ve actually owned this book for some time. I bought it not realizing it was a story in verse–not usually my jam. But I was attracted to it because it’s the story of Elaine of Ascolat, the daughter of one of King Arthur’s men, who befriends Arthur’s older sister, Morgan. Elaine is in love with Lancelot, a HUGE secret, and all the shenanigans are thrown into further turmoil when Guinevere arrives. I’m so glad to finally have some motivation to read this one.

Book cover for Over Sea, Under Stone by Susan CooperOVER SEA, UNDER STONE (The Dark Is Rising #1) by Susan Cooper

I’d never heard of Susan Cooper until just recently, and now I’m all over it. This series is about a family of kids in modern times who basically go after the holy grail and other Arthurian-ish things. Sounds SO GOOD.

Book cover for Winter of Magic's Return by Pamela F. ServiceWINTER OF MAGIC’S RETURN by Pamela F. Service

YO. This one sounds SO LEGIT. So, there’s been a nuclear holocaust, right? And Merlin is RESURRECTED and, believing that magic has returned as well, goes on a QUEST with two friends to find King Arthur. I MEAN…

Book cover for The Winter Prince by Elizabeth WeinTHE WINTER PRINCE by Elizabeth Wein

I had no idea until recently that CODE NAME VERITY wasn’t Elizabeth Wein’s first book. But it isn’t, because she’s written a series of Arthurian retellings focusing on Medraut, who I’m thinking is Mordred, the son of a British king named Artos, who I’m thinking is Arthur. Seriously, NOTHING about ANY of these books sounds less than AWESOME to me, so I’m looking forward to this one, too.

Also, TOTALLY WATCHING THIS:

The Sword in the Stone

I am SO. EFFING. EXCITED. If you want to participate in this most excellent event, check out the other hosts and their themes!!

Alyssa @ Books Take You Places: Ancient to Renaissance Classics

Brittany @ Book Addict’s Guide: Mythology Classics

Charlene @ Bookish Whimsy: 19th Century and Gothic Classics

Alison @ The Cheap Reader: Children’s Classics

Wendy @ Excellent Library: American & Miscellaneous Classics

Top Ten Tuesday (73)

Top Ten Tuesday Top Ten Books I Liked/Disliked More Than I Thought I Would

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. It’s awesome. Every Tuesday, the lovely folks over at The Broke and the Bookish post a top ten list topic so that book lovers like you and me can pour over our shelves and make our own lists. You can check out all the other Top Ten Tuesday’s on their site!

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Reading Recommendations: A Challenge, Week 1

Recommendations

Week 1: The Scorpio Races Audiobook & Under the Never Sky

Time for my first progress report, friends! I have to say, I’m really enjoying myself right now, and I’m LOVING these books!! I’m so glad that both my friends and this challenge lit a fire under my ass to get me to read them (or in the case of THE SCORPIO RACES audiobook, listen to them). Since I have no idea, really, what I’m doing, I decided that I would do weekly updates of the books I’m reading and maybe when I’m finished I’ll review them as well. Haven’t decided yet. I like this flying by the seat of my pants, friends! To the recommendations!

recommendations

I’m listening to the audiobook of this one–it’s the fourth time I’ve read this book, but my first trip down audiobook road and thanks to Asheley and Hannah, I am basically DYING. Steve West and Fiona Hardingham are brilliant as Sean and Puck, but it’s interesting: you’d think that experiencing the book this way would make Sean and Puck stand out to me even more, hearing their voices. But instead I find myself more affected by things that usually fly slightly under the radar of my adoration of Sean and Puck, namely the relationship between the Connolly siblings. I was always very strongly aware of the way Gabe made Puck feel, her frustration and sadness and stubbornness, but I’m feeling it HARDCORE while listening to the audio. GUYS. THIS IS THE BEST BOOK FOR REAL.

recommendations

WORD! Hannah is all up in this first check-in with the solid recs! Although, to be honest, SO many people I know have read and loved this book. But Hannah was the one who was like, “WHAT I CAN’T BE FRIENDS WITH YOU UNTIL YOU READ THIS.” I am completely engrossed in UNDER THE NEVER SKY right now. I feel like there are still lots of things about the world-building that I want to learn, but I barely notice them half the time because I’m so caught up in Perry and Aria. I love how I get all buzzy whenever they have a scene together and THEY HAVEN’T EVEN KISSED. Chemistry, friends. These two haz heaps of it. Almost finished with this one!

So that was my first week of my recommendation challenge!! HUZZAH! I’m so looking forward to diving back into these two books and reading all of the others, too! Thanks and big hugs, friends!

Book Review: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

Book cover for Code Name Verity by Elizabeth WeinTitle // Author: Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein (web | twitter)
Genre: Historical Fiction YA
Amazon | Goodreads
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Release date: May 15, 2012
Challenge: 2012 TBR Challenge
Source: Own It

Summary: Oct. 11th, 1943-A British spy plane crashes in Nazi-occupied France. Its pilot and passenger are best friends. One of the girls has a chance at survival. The other has lost the game before it’s barely begun.

When “Verity” is arrested by the Gestapo, she’s sure she doesn’t stand a chance. As a secret agent captured in enemy territory, she’s living a spy’s worst nightmare. Her Nazi interrogators give her a simple choice: reveal her mission or face a grisly execution.

As she intricately weaves her confession, Verity uncovers her past, how she became friends with the pilot Maddie, and why she left Maddie in the wrecked fuselage of their plane. On each new scrap of paper, Verity battles for her life, confronting her views on courage, failure and her desperate hope to make it home. But will trading her secrets be enough to save her from the enemy?

A Michael L. Printz Award Honor book that was called “a fiendishly-plotted mind game of a novel” in The New York Times, Code Name Verity is a visceral read of danger, resolve, and survival that shows just how far true friends will go to save each other.

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Top Ten Tuesday (72)

Top Ten Tuesday Top Ten Favorite Paperback Book Covers

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. It’s awesome. Every Tuesday, the lovely folks over at The Broke and the Bookish post a top ten list topic so that book lovers like you and me can pour over our shelves and make our own lists. You can check out all the other Top Ten Tuesday’s on their site!

 

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Book Review | Dark Triumph | Robin LaFevers

Book Review | Dark Triumph | Robin LaFeversDark Triumph by Robin LaFevers
Series: His Fair Assassin #2
Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt on April 2, 2013
Genres: Fantasy YA, Historical Fiction, Young Adult
Pages: 385
Format: Hardcover
Also in this series: Grave Mercy, Mortal Heart
Also by this author: Grave Mercy, Mortal Heart
Source: Bought it
AmazonBarnes & NobleGoodreads
five-stars

Sybella arrives at the convent’s doorstep half mad with grief and despair. Those that serve Death are only too happy to offer her refuge—but at a price. Naturally skilled in both the arts of death and seduction, the convent views Sybella as one of their most dangerous weapons. But those assassin’s skills are little comfort when the convent returns her to a life that nearly drove her mad. Her father’s rage and brutality are terrifying, and her brother’s love is equally monstrous. And while Sybella is a weapon of justice wrought by the god of Death himself, He must give her a reason to live. When she discovers an unexpected ally imprisoned in the dungeons, will a daughter of Death find something other than vengeance to live for? This heart-pounding sequel to Grave Mercy serves betrayal, treachery, and danger in equal measure, bringing readers back to fifteenth century Brittany and will keep them on the edge of their seats.

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Stacking the Shelves (20)

Stacking the Shelves

Week of April 12, 2013

I can’t even begin to tell you about the book binges I went on just in the last two days. SO many books out there! The good news is that, even though this week was crazy, last week–when I passed on Stacking the Shelves–was really light. I compensated!

So without further ado, here’s the awesome stuff I’ve picked up so far this month!

(P.S. I’m super busy AGAIN this weekend, and am on my way out the door kind of now-ish, so I apologize for the lack of linkage. I’ll update my post with the links later tomorrow when I get back home. WAH!! WHERE IS MY FREE TIME?!?)

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Reading Recommendations: A Challenge

book recommendationsIn Which I Challenge Myself to Leave My Reading Choices at the Mercy of Others

I’ve been thinking quite a lot lately, friends, about the books that people tell me I need to read. Those particularly egregious books I’ve missed that people think I would love, or the books that everyone else has read that I haven’t managed to work into my schedule yet. You know, the books that make people go, “AMY. WT ACTUAL F. WHY HAVEN’T YOU READ THIS YET, YOU SLACKER/DUMMY/PERSON WITH QUESTIONABLE PRIORITIES.” Since this seems to be happening more frequently lately, and since I just had TREMENDOUS success with a beyond solid recommendation to read Juliet Marillier’s DAUGHTER OF THE FOREST  (thanks, Alyssa and April!), I’m going to make reading books that are recommended to me officially A THING. That’s right folks: I’ve created a reading challenge for myself.

So what are the guidelines of this project that I’ve just created kind of on the spot? Basically, I’m going to give myself until the end of May to read the following books. I’m not going to make myself nuts by planning on reading 10 books because that’s not really possible in addition to the other books I need to read. Besides, I don’t think there are 10 books that fit my admittedly fluid idea of “books that are recommended to me.” I’m trying to pick books that people who know my tastes at least a little bit have said, “Amy, I think YOU would love this book.” That kind of thing. There might be a few more general recommendations of books that lots of people have loved, too, but I’m really interested in reading books suggested to me by people who’s opinions I trust. And so, THE LIST:

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Waiting on Wednesday (27): Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly feature hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine. I love it because it is basically a squee-fest where book lovers can choose one book that they are DYING to get their hands on. Check it out!

Fangirl

by Rainbow Rowell

book cover for fangirl by rainbow rowellAmazon | Goodreads

A coming-of-age tale of fan fiction, family and first love. 

Cath is a Simon Snow fan.

Okay, the whole world is a Simon Snow fan . . .

But for Cath, being a fan is her life — and she’s really good at it. She and her twin sister, Wren, ensconced themselves in the Simon Snow series when they were just kids; it’s what got them through their mother leaving.

Reading. Rereading. Hanging out in Simon Snow forums, writing Simon Snow fan fiction, dressing up like the characters for every movie premiere.

Cath’s sister has mostly grown away from fandom, but Cath can’t let go. She doesn’t want to.

Now that they’re going to college, Wren has told Cath she doesn’t want to be roommates. Cath is on her own, completely outside of her comfort zone. She’s got a surly roommate with a charming, always-around boyfriend, a fiction-writing professor who thinks fan fiction is the end of the civilized world, a handsome classmate who only wants to talk about words . . . And she can’t stop worrying about her dad, who’s loving and fragile and has never really been alone.

For Cath, the question is: Can she do this? Can she make it without Wren holding her hand? Is she ready to start living her own life? Writing her own stories?

Or will she just go on living inside somebody else’s fiction?

DO NOT TEASE ME with this fanfiction story, Rainbow Rowell. DO NOT. As a nerd, that angle appeals to me endlessly. But if ELEANOR & PARK is any indication, Rainbow Rowell knows how to pack an emotional punch, and look at all the goodies jammed into that synopsis: sisters, a mother leaving, not wanting to/being afraid to let go of childhood comforts, being in a new place, boys. But what strikes me the most is that little bit about Cath’s dad. I am an absolute sucker for dad stories. I can’t wait to see what other touching and lovely things Rainbow Rowell gets up to in FANGIRL.

(FANGIRL is coming out on September 10, 2013 from St. Martin’s Press)

Top Ten Tuesday (71)

Top Ten Tuesday Top Ten Books I Read Before I Started Blogging

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. It’s awesome. Every Tuesday, the lovely folks over at The Broke and the Bookish post a top ten list topic so that book lovers like you and me can pour over our shelves and make our own lists. You can check out all the other Top Ten Tuesday’s on their site!

I LOVE THIS TOPIC. I love it. I’ve been reading my whole life, and I’ve loved books long before I ever got it in my head that I could talk about the books I love on the internet for people to read, so to go back and think about the books I have read and loved is a nice trip down memory lane. But it also reminds me how much my reading habits have changed since I started blogging. I didn’t start reading YA until I went to library school in my late 20s, so most of my favorite books from the bulk of my life were adult books. Now that I’ve started blogging, I read almost exclusively YA—not that I mind—but thanks to my reading habit, I read quite a bit of adult stuff before I started my blog, too. So basically my list is a mish mash of stuff.

I did set some parameters for myself because “before I was a blogger” is a pretty long time, so I didn’t go back so far as my favorite books from when I was a kid because that’s a whole different list. This is basically a list of my favorite books that I chose and read for myself as an adult, and my favorite YA books I read during and just after I got my MLIS but before October 2011—my first month as a blogger. WHEW. I hope you’re not surprised that there are more than 10 books on here. [Read more…]