Feature & Follow Friday #7

This is a blog hop, a way to find and follow new blogs,

hosted by Parajunkee and Alison Can Read.

You can follow me by using any one of the options over on the left sidebar.

 

Q: What book do you think would make a great Halloween movie? Please explain in graphic detail of goriness… 

The Fever series by Karen Marie Moning!  Mac killing the Unseelie, etc.  Plus, I just would really like to see this series as a movie(s)….as long as it was well done.  🙂

Panic Review

Image from Goodreads

Title:  Panic

Author:  Katie Hughart

Published:  2012 by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform

Genre:  Fiction, Suspense

 

Click here to buy Panic from Amazon.

 

 

I wasn’t sure if I wanted to write a review on this book or not.  I’m just wary about hurting people’s feelings.   Writing a bad review on a popular book with hundreds of reviews is much different than writing one on a book that’s out there with only a few reviews on Goodreads or Amazon.  I feel bad if I bring down the author’s rating, especially because I received this book for free from the author herself.  Also, to even write a book is a huge accomplishment in itself.  So Ms. Hughart, I hope this doesn’t hurt your feelings, and I applaud you for being able to write a book at all; it’s definitely something I would never be able to do.

I actually read this book back in July, and then I fell really ill for a few months.  So while I don’t remember every detail, I do remember some things.  I felt like there was a character or two in the story (the nurse being one) who had no place in it.  I feel like her character could totally be removed and not affect the story at all.  I don’t like when the point of view shifts, and I like it even less when a secondary character (nurse) pops up very late in the book with one.  It just takes me out of the story because by that point in the book, the reader already has a feel for the characters; so to jump into someone else’s head at that time in the story, just isn’t for me.

Also, I read the whole book and finished it.  This is a good thing; there have been some (few) where I just give up.  However, I feel like finishing it was also a bad thing; something horrific happens at the end with no closure at all.  The story just ends.  After reading the whole book, to get to an ending like that, sort of made me a wee bit upset.  I understand having cliffhangers, perhaps there was going to be a sequel?  But I always like the protagonist(s) to have at least some hope, you know?  Especially with an ending like this one.

That’s pretty much it, but like I have said before, even though I didn’t like it, doesn’t mean that you won’t.

 

Have a great weekend everyone.

 

My Rating:  1 ½  out of 5 stars

 

Happy reading!

 

~Pam

 

****(I was given this book for free from the author in exchange for an honest review.)****

 

Feature & Follow Friday #6

This is a blog hop, a way to find and follow new blogs,

hosted by Parajunkee and Alison Can Read.

You can follow me by using any one of the options over on the left sidebar.

Here is this week’s question:

What do you hope to accomplish with your blog? Is it to one day become an author yourself, just for fun, maybe get some online attention, or maybe something very different?

My blog is purely for fun, at the moment at least.  🙂

Guest Post: Liesel Hill

The One Element That Will Make Everyone Read Your Story

Why stories? Why characters and plot and conflict? Even before people could write, we were handing down stories through oral tradition. Today, the writing, reading, and watching of stories is a huge part of our lives and our world. Why is that?

One would think with all the conflict we face in our daily lives—from traffic jams and what to make for dinner, to work and relationship problems, to global conflicts—that we would be sick of the drama and just want to listen to Mozart all day long to soothe ourselves. Don’t get me wrong: I’m all about classical music, but most people who love reading and stories enough to follow book blogs simply crave drama, even in their spare time. And, truth be told, most people are that way, at least to some extent.

The question remains: why?

I’ll give you a few hints: The answer is something essential to our survival as a culture. As human beings, we thrive on it. As individuals, we latch onto it with unparalleled tenacity. It’s both noble and cliché. It’s what makes us get out of bed in the morning, pursue relationships, and set goals. On our worst days, it’s the one thing that can make us smile; the one thing that can bring us out of the darkest despair.

Have you guessed it yet? The answer is HOPE.

Think about it. If we don’t hope to live a good life, why work at all or try to make money? If we don’t hope for joy and love, what’s the point of cultivating any relationship, romantic or platonic? Heck, if we don’t hope for a good day, why get out of bed in the morning?  (I’m sure we’ve all had those times that we’d rather stay in bed and hide than face the day.) Hope propels us forward on every level and in every aspect of our lives.

What’s this got to do with a great story?

If you want people to read your story, you’ve got to give them the hope of satisfaction in ALL areas. (No pressure, right?)

With plot: You start your story one of two ways. A) with a negative world (poor Harry Potter has a sad, boring life where he lives with horrible, abusive people that make him sleep under the stairs) or B) with a pretty good world that is simply flawed, most likely because some negative force might come disrupt or destroy it (Frodo’s life in the Shire is happy and tranquil, but his world is flawed because a dark evil is brewing somewhere far away and that evil might destroy his beloved Shire).

By starting in one of these two ways, you’re making an unspoken pact with your readers about what is to come. They have a hope of satisfaction that things will get better.

For characters: we all know the best characters are dynamic, rather than static. This is (one of many) reasons why your characters must be flawed. They must have a personality flaw or a flawed belief system because the reader wants to see them change and grow. By showing a weak character at the beginning (a weak, submissive Harry or an oblivious, un-weathered Frodo) we make an unspoken pact with our readers that the characters will change and grow throughout the story. They hope for satisfaction on this count.

For setting: your setting should be intricately tied to your story. Especially in a fantasy world, or if you have some special setting that’s very different from what most of your readers see on a daily basis (Mt. Doom in the distance, perhaps?) you must deliver on this setting. Let the readers see it. Once you’ve mentioned a school of witchcraft and wizardry, it would be stupid to not let your characters explore it, right? So give them a promise of an awesome setting, which will play a major role in your story, and then deliver on it. They will have a hope for satisfaction.

By making promises about character, setting, and conflict, you are allowing your readers to hope for something. If you give them enough hope for satisfaction, they WILL continue reading.

The most dissatisfying stories out there are the ones that set up something major and then don’t deliver. I won’t name any names here but I’m sure we can all think of a few. Don’t do this!

Hope is what drives all aspects of a story because it’s also what drives us as human beings. Hope for a better world; hope for resolution; hope for a better person; hope for a happy ending; hope for satisfaction. If your story has this, the readers will return again and again.

~Liesel Hill

Liesel has her debut novel releasing soon!  Here is the cover and synopsis:

Synopsis: In a world where collective hives are enslaving the population and individuals have been hunted to the verge of extinction, Maggie Harper, an independent 21st Century woman, must find the strength to preserve the freedom of the future, but without the aid of her memories.
 
After experiencing a traumatic time loss, Maggie is plagued by a barrage of images she can’t explain. When she’s attacked by a creep with a spider’s web tattoo, she is saved by Marcus, a man she’s never met, but somehow remembers. He tells her that both he and her creepy attacker are from a future in which individuals are being murdered by collectives, and Marcus is part of the rebellion. The collectives have acquired time travel and they plan to enslave the human race throughout all of history. The flashes Maggie has been seeing are echoes of lost memories, and the information buried deep within them is instrumental in defeating the collective hives.
 
In order to preserve the individuality of mankind, Maggie must try to re-discover stolen memories, re-kindle friendships she has no recollection of, and wade through her feelings for the mysterious Marcus, all while dodging the tattooed assassins the collectives keep sending her way.
 
If Maggie can’t fill the holes in her memory and find the answers to stop the collectives, the world both in her time and in all ages past and future will be doomed to enslavement in the grey, mediocre collectives. As the danger swirls around her and the collectives close in, Maggie realizes she must make a choice: stand out or fade away…

 

Here’s where you can find Liesel:

 

In excitement for Iced

Image from Goodreads

 

In anticipation of Iced by Karen Marie Moning, coming out on October 30th, I’ve decided to reread the fever series.  I LOVE this series.  It’s one of my top two favorites.   Of course, I’ve already read the books multiple times before each new book was released, so I tend to skim to my favorite parts.  But I don’t think that’s cheating.  🙂  Right?

Is there a series that you absolutely love, and enjoy reading the previous books from when a new one comes out?

 

Happy October people!

~Pam