Tuesday, 20 November 2018
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.
To play along just do the following:
Five Feet Apart by Rachael Lippincott with Mikki Daughtry and Tobias Iaconis.
This book is out today and I predict that it’ll increase the national sales of tissues by a sizable amount. If not today then at the very latest when the movie comes to theatres at the end of March next year. At least in the US (and Lebanon, apparently?), international dates are still pending. Anyway, because of reasons (don’t you love those), I’ve had the extreme privilege to have my heart broken by this book already. And yes, that’s an intentional almost quote of another successful book with a hugely successful movie.
Every once in a while, there comes a book across my table that has a storyline that sounds wildly familiar in a genre you think you’ve seen everything in. Especially, if there was a book that first blew everything out of the water and then spawned quite a few other also not unsuccessful follow-ups. I’m talking, of course, about The Fault in Our Stars and Everything, Everything. Among others. So this could have been just another book about sick kids falling in love in the face of adversity. And that is exactly what this is but I wager to say that it is not, in fact, just another book like those … and several years trailing the others at that, but more a worthy addition to the genre while also expanding it by another factor: an illness that is not so much in the public eye although it’s not at all uncommon, not quite as dramatic because it’s a creeping one, and as of right now devastatingly incurable and utterly terminal – Cystic Fibrosis.
This condition is best understood by those who suffer from it, but in a cruel twist, two people diagnosed with CF aren’t allowed within six feet of each other for fear of cross-infection. So why is this book called Five Feet Apart if the golden rule is six feet apart at all times? Well, when you are forced to keep your distance even though that person across the distance is obviously your other half, stealing back one foot to feel closer to each other, more connected, can be the most daring and also romantic thing you could possibly do.
I am by no means saying that this story is better than those that came before … but I say its intensity is definitely up there with them. If you think that a love story with no touching allowed sounds about as appealing as fish bellies up in an abandoned putrid tank I’ll dare you to read this and come to talk to me again after. In addition to that, there is such a well of other topics woven into the narration that it creates a really dense mesh of story that will carry the heavy plot. Because of course, it is tragic, gut-wrenching, tear-jerking, and heart-shattering. But it is also hopeful, thought-provoking, insightful, and romantic. And because it is fictional, it is allowed to break the rules and be unrealistic in some aspects while also being true to the general topic. The book is not calling on patients to do away with their safety regimen any more than The Fault in Our Stars advocated for smoking when you already have cancer. And if this book and movie help bring more awareness to CF and its medical research than that is more than many other books can lay claim to.
Read the book before you see the movie but feel free to watch the trailer here. It certainly doesn’t hurt that the cast seems to be hitting all the sweet spots … although I’m still trying to figure out who this Meredith person in the cast list is because there definitely isn’t a Meredith in the book and I can’t imagine that Claire Forlani is some throwaway bit-part. I’m mentioning this because the book is based on the script (as opposed to a movie adapted from a book where everything is more or less fair game) so it seems a little weird to have apparently other people in the movie than in the book. But then again, maybe the name was changed or the cast list is not yet correct. What’s in a name, right?
Which book with a seemingly worn out plot has recently captured your interest? Share your thoughts and teasers in the comments!
To play along just do the following:
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Five Feet Apart by Rachael Lippincott with Mikki Daughtry and Tobias Iaconis.
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Five Feet Apart – Simon & Schuster BFYR |
The only thing worse than not being able to be with her or be around her would be living in a world that she didn’t exist in at all. Especially if it’s my fault.
— Chapter 14
She’d make a wish and she’d never, ever tell me what it was. She used to joke that if she said it out loud, it would never come true.
— Chapter 19
This book is out today and I predict that it’ll increase the national sales of tissues by a sizable amount. If not today then at the very latest when the movie comes to theatres at the end of March next year. At least in the US (and Lebanon, apparently?), international dates are still pending. Anyway, because of reasons (don’t you love those), I’ve had the extreme privilege to have my heart broken by this book already. And yes, that’s an intentional almost quote of another successful book with a hugely successful movie.
Every once in a while, there comes a book across my table that has a storyline that sounds wildly familiar in a genre you think you’ve seen everything in. Especially, if there was a book that first blew everything out of the water and then spawned quite a few other also not unsuccessful follow-ups. I’m talking, of course, about The Fault in Our Stars and Everything, Everything. Among others. So this could have been just another book about sick kids falling in love in the face of adversity. And that is exactly what this is but I wager to say that it is not, in fact, just another book like those … and several years trailing the others at that, but more a worthy addition to the genre while also expanding it by another factor: an illness that is not so much in the public eye although it’s not at all uncommon, not quite as dramatic because it’s a creeping one, and as of right now devastatingly incurable and utterly terminal – Cystic Fibrosis.
This condition is best understood by those who suffer from it, but in a cruel twist, two people diagnosed with CF aren’t allowed within six feet of each other for fear of cross-infection. So why is this book called Five Feet Apart if the golden rule is six feet apart at all times? Well, when you are forced to keep your distance even though that person across the distance is obviously your other half, stealing back one foot to feel closer to each other, more connected, can be the most daring and also romantic thing you could possibly do.
I am by no means saying that this story is better than those that came before … but I say its intensity is definitely up there with them. If you think that a love story with no touching allowed sounds about as appealing as fish bellies up in an abandoned putrid tank I’ll dare you to read this and come to talk to me again after. In addition to that, there is such a well of other topics woven into the narration that it creates a really dense mesh of story that will carry the heavy plot. Because of course, it is tragic, gut-wrenching, tear-jerking, and heart-shattering. But it is also hopeful, thought-provoking, insightful, and romantic. And because it is fictional, it is allowed to break the rules and be unrealistic in some aspects while also being true to the general topic. The book is not calling on patients to do away with their safety regimen any more than The Fault in Our Stars advocated for smoking when you already have cancer. And if this book and movie help bring more awareness to CF and its medical research than that is more than many other books can lay claim to.
Read the book before you see the movie but feel free to watch the trailer here. It certainly doesn’t hurt that the cast seems to be hitting all the sweet spots … although I’m still trying to figure out who this Meredith person in the cast list is because there definitely isn’t a Meredith in the book and I can’t imagine that Claire Forlani is some throwaway bit-part. I’m mentioning this because the book is based on the script (as opposed to a movie adapted from a book where everything is more or less fair game) so it seems a little weird to have apparently other people in the movie than in the book. But then again, maybe the name was changed or the cast list is not yet correct. What’s in a name, right?
Which book with a seemingly worn out plot has recently captured your interest? Share your thoughts and teasers in the comments!
Tuesday, 13 November 2018
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.
To play along just do the following:
A Reaper at the Gates by Sabaa Tahir.
There were way too many amazing, insightful, funny, heart-wrenching, wonderful quotes to choose from in this book. Sabaa Tahir writes with an immediacy and emotional impact that always stay with me even after I’ve finished the story. In preparation for this one, I listened to the previous two books because of all the details I was sure I’d forgotten. It had been two years after all. As a result, I now have very distinct voices in my head (apart from the usual other voices) depending on whoever’s point of view it is.
Third books can be the saving grace or downfall of a series, no matter if they’re the final book or not. The second book had set a fairly high mark to aim for and this one quite confidently reaches it. I felt there were a few minor lengths that keep me from giving out the highest of praises but it’s really more of a cosmetic blemish. Two of the three perspectives were just so damn strong and driven that I felt the third was a little flagging … but seriously that’s complaining about a wisp of cloud in an otherwise blue sky.
The end fairly thoroughly wrecked me. Not in a hit you with a hammer way but more with the momentum of a mudslide that builds up over time and when you realise what’s happening you’re about to be buried by tons of (emotional) rock. I know that the hero’s journey includes a moment where all hope is lost and a steep price has to be paid and so on. But do the prices have to be like this? At least please tell me that the next book will be out in a year. All this emotional trauma baggage is really hard to keep track of and drag around.
Bonus quote:
Do you have audiobooks that influence how you read certain books now? I also have this with Harry Potter, which will forever sound like Stephen Fry in my head. Share your thoughts and teasers in the Comments!
To play along just do the following:
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
A Reaper at the Gates by Sabaa Tahir.
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A Reaper at the Gates – Razorbill |
Hope is stronger than fear. It is stronger than hate.
— Chapter 16
Everyone believes that nothing concerns them until the monsters are knocking on their doors!
— Chapter 29
There were way too many amazing, insightful, funny, heart-wrenching, wonderful quotes to choose from in this book. Sabaa Tahir writes with an immediacy and emotional impact that always stay with me even after I’ve finished the story. In preparation for this one, I listened to the previous two books because of all the details I was sure I’d forgotten. It had been two years after all. As a result, I now have very distinct voices in my head (apart from the usual other voices) depending on whoever’s point of view it is.
Third books can be the saving grace or downfall of a series, no matter if they’re the final book or not. The second book had set a fairly high mark to aim for and this one quite confidently reaches it. I felt there were a few minor lengths that keep me from giving out the highest of praises but it’s really more of a cosmetic blemish. Two of the three perspectives were just so damn strong and driven that I felt the third was a little flagging … but seriously that’s complaining about a wisp of cloud in an otherwise blue sky.
The end fairly thoroughly wrecked me. Not in a hit you with a hammer way but more with the momentum of a mudslide that builds up over time and when you realise what’s happening you’re about to be buried by tons of (emotional) rock. I know that the hero’s journey includes a moment where all hope is lost and a steep price has to be paid and so on. But do the prices have to be like this? At least please tell me that the next book will be out in a year. All this emotional trauma baggage is really hard to keep track of and drag around.
Bonus quote:
Curse this world for what it does to the mothers, for what it does to the daughters. Curse it for making us strong through loss and pain, our hearts torn from our chests again and again. Curse it for forcing us to endure.
— Chapter 57
Do you have audiobooks that influence how you read certain books now? I also have this with Harry Potter, which will forever sound like Stephen Fry in my head. Share your thoughts and teasers in the Comments!
Tuesday, 6 November 2018
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.
To play along just do the following:
Broken Things by Lauren Oliver.
Children’s fantasy can be overboarding and children can be cruel. Even and especially in combination and to each other. When all evidence seems more than clear it is no wonder when the murder of young Summer is put on her two best friends Mia and Bryn. The only reason they’re not convicted is an error in procedure. But everyone is convinced they know how it happened. Bryn has even checked into a psych-ward and Mia has closed herself away from most of the world. Only – they really didn’t do it. And now, five years later, the truth finally wants out.
So far, I have known Lauren Oliver for her post-apocalyptic and yet deeply romantic writing. But wow can this woman write dark and twisty thrills (with also a side note of love, but it’s really just a trace). There is so much going on besides the murder investigation and possible danger to the main characters. There are questions of identity and family and not least of all of friendship. On first glance, you wonder how three girls that are so different could ever be best friends. Where is the line between a bossy friend and a manipulative aggressor? Toxic friendship is definitely something that can and should be addressed in more contexts.
I immediately fell for this book, its rich narration and well-developed characters. The twists and turn felt very thoughtfully planned and executed. I want to say more about the twist but that would definitely be spoilery so I’ll close this with a very blunt recommendation for everyone who likes reads with depth and a certain thrill factor.
Do you have an author switch genres with such an ease that you happily follow them across books? Share your thoughts and teasers in the comments!
To play along just do the following:
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Broken Things by Lauren Oliver.
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Broken Things – HarperCollins |
That’s the story the way everyone tells it, at least, a story repeated so many times, accepted by so many people, it has become fact.
— Page 5
It started snowing. Flurries at first. But soon fat flakes were coming down, as if the whole sky was chipping away slowly, and I was freezing, and I’d had enough.
— Page 242
Children’s fantasy can be overboarding and children can be cruel. Even and especially in combination and to each other. When all evidence seems more than clear it is no wonder when the murder of young Summer is put on her two best friends Mia and Bryn. The only reason they’re not convicted is an error in procedure. But everyone is convinced they know how it happened. Bryn has even checked into a psych-ward and Mia has closed herself away from most of the world. Only – they really didn’t do it. And now, five years later, the truth finally wants out.
So far, I have known Lauren Oliver for her post-apocalyptic and yet deeply romantic writing. But wow can this woman write dark and twisty thrills (with also a side note of love, but it’s really just a trace). There is so much going on besides the murder investigation and possible danger to the main characters. There are questions of identity and family and not least of all of friendship. On first glance, you wonder how three girls that are so different could ever be best friends. Where is the line between a bossy friend and a manipulative aggressor? Toxic friendship is definitely something that can and should be addressed in more contexts.
I immediately fell for this book, its rich narration and well-developed characters. The twists and turn felt very thoughtfully planned and executed. I want to say more about the twist but that would definitely be spoilery so I’ll close this with a very blunt recommendation for everyone who likes reads with depth and a certain thrill factor.
Do you have an author switch genres with such an ease that you happily follow them across books? Share your thoughts and teasers in the comments!
Tuesday, 30 October 2018
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.
To play along just do the following:
The Golden Tower by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare.
Here we are again at the end of another series. I marked this one as to be read in 2013 together with the whole series. Since then, I have become much more selective about marking down books in a series … if only for the simple reason that a whole series, especially of four books or more, is taking up quite a bit of real estate on Mt. TBR and I have to be realistic that even after cleaning out there are still titles on there that I’ll probably never get to. So whatever goes on there now has undergone some more vetting.
Keeping in mind that this series is aimed at a much younger audience than the books these two great storytellers usually write I was still somewhat saddened by the discovery that even though this is the big finale the page count was on the rather slim side. And yet the plot managed to be overall well-paced and tied up quite neatly at the end. Well, for most parts, I still have some questions about what is going to happen next and about that thing that happened near the end and how that will work out and … I might not actually be done with this series at all but it seems the plot that set out to achieve certain things over the course of five books is finished. For now. Maybe there will be a second cycle? That would actually fit in quite neatly. Time allowing and all, because I definitely wouldn’t want writing time taking away from the other series … just saying that there might be some potential for those unresolved issues. If you want to read it that way. Any other way this is a very satisfying final book in a very well-conceived middle-grade series.
How do you decide which books you add to your reading lists? Are you picky or does everything go on there? And how do you keep it organised? Share your methods and teasers in the comments!
To play along just do the following:
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
The Golden Tower by Holly Black and Cassandra Clare.
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The Golden Tower – Scholastic Press |
Back then he’d been worried about eyeless fish and getting lost in the tunnels. Now, those worries seemed to belong to a different. person.
— Chapter 4
“For every time I didn’t trust him. We have to trust the people we love.”
— Chapter 15
Here we are again at the end of another series. I marked this one as to be read in 2013 together with the whole series. Since then, I have become much more selective about marking down books in a series … if only for the simple reason that a whole series, especially of four books or more, is taking up quite a bit of real estate on Mt. TBR and I have to be realistic that even after cleaning out there are still titles on there that I’ll probably never get to. So whatever goes on there now has undergone some more vetting.
Keeping in mind that this series is aimed at a much younger audience than the books these two great storytellers usually write I was still somewhat saddened by the discovery that even though this is the big finale the page count was on the rather slim side. And yet the plot managed to be overall well-paced and tied up quite neatly at the end. Well, for most parts, I still have some questions about what is going to happen next and about that thing that happened near the end and how that will work out and … I might not actually be done with this series at all but it seems the plot that set out to achieve certain things over the course of five books is finished. For now. Maybe there will be a second cycle? That would actually fit in quite neatly. Time allowing and all, because I definitely wouldn’t want writing time taking away from the other series … just saying that there might be some potential for those unresolved issues. If you want to read it that way. Any other way this is a very satisfying final book in a very well-conceived middle-grade series.
How do you decide which books you add to your reading lists? Are you picky or does everything go on there? And how do you keep it organised? Share your methods and teasers in the comments!
Tuesday, 16 October 2018
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly bookish meme, hosted by Ambrosia of The Purple Booker.
To play along just do the following:
Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire.
A very dear friend kept pestering me to finally get around to reading this book. And sometimes pestering works! She also warned me that this would be on the short side and that I’d wish there was more. Which also turned out to be true. That, however, doesn’t mean that pestering will work every time.
This story cleverly plays on children’s habit of inhabiting worlds other than their own and actually expands it into a method that those children indeed go missing into those worlds through doors only they can find. Or rather the doors find them and reach out across dimensions and space to have a child that fits there perfectly, better than in its native dimension. That is until that other world perhaps decides that the fit isn’t quite as perfect and delivers the child back. Maybe with only a little time passed, maybe with a lot of time passed but definitely forever altered. And because such an alteration is often difficult there is a system in place where these children can go to either cope or move on … or try to find a way back.
The premise alone is very intriguing. Add to that a crime aspect of suddenly occurring murders after a new arrival and no one eager to trust the other while forced to somehow work together to survive and you have a thoroughly entertaining read. I obviously wish that there was more – and luckily there are more stories set in this universe. But I doubt that the crew will come together like this again. I would definitely like seeing them maybe visit each others’ worlds or maybe see them together after some time apart … which would also totally destroy their idea of a happy end so maybe not.
Which book have you discovered because of a friend? Share your finds and teasers in the comments!
To play along just do the following:
- Grab your current read
- Open to a random page
- Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
- BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! (make sure that what you share doesn’t give too much away! You don’t want to ruin the book for others!)
- Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your teasers!
Every Heart a Doorway by Seanan McGuire.
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Every Heart a Doorway – Tor |
“You had milk, I had science,” said Jack. “It’s amazing how much of culinary achievement can be summarized by that sentence. Cheese making, for example. The perfect intersection of milk, science, and foolish disregard for the laws of nature.”
— Chapter 7
“I am a genius of infinite potential and highly limited patience. People shouldn’t try me so.”
— Chapter 7
A very dear friend kept pestering me to finally get around to reading this book. And sometimes pestering works! She also warned me that this would be on the short side and that I’d wish there was more. Which also turned out to be true. That, however, doesn’t mean that pestering will work every time.
This story cleverly plays on children’s habit of inhabiting worlds other than their own and actually expands it into a method that those children indeed go missing into those worlds through doors only they can find. Or rather the doors find them and reach out across dimensions and space to have a child that fits there perfectly, better than in its native dimension. That is until that other world perhaps decides that the fit isn’t quite as perfect and delivers the child back. Maybe with only a little time passed, maybe with a lot of time passed but definitely forever altered. And because such an alteration is often difficult there is a system in place where these children can go to either cope or move on … or try to find a way back.
The premise alone is very intriguing. Add to that a crime aspect of suddenly occurring murders after a new arrival and no one eager to trust the other while forced to somehow work together to survive and you have a thoroughly entertaining read. I obviously wish that there was more – and luckily there are more stories set in this universe. But I doubt that the crew will come together like this again. I would definitely like seeing them maybe visit each others’ worlds or maybe see them together after some time apart … which would also totally destroy their idea of a happy end so maybe not.
Which book have you discovered because of a friend? Share your finds and teasers in the comments!
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