Monday

Manic Monday Recaps

Oh lord, is it me, or isn't the year flying by? I mean we're almost done with March - scary. So hope y'all had a great weekend. Mine was not so great... my house is riddled with germs and if it's not me that's sick, it's the kids... the hubs never gets sick - he has super antibodies... I hate him. So this weekend was spent basically at home. I think I left the house only once and it was to take my daughter to the doctor. We've been in recuperation mode all weekend. So I didn't get as much reading as I would have liked done, but nonetheless, I was able to get some done.

As for what's on my counter this week... I got a ton of books last week for review but was too lazy to take a picture yesterday. Maybe I'll redo the post later tonight with pics.

Here's what I plan on reading this week:


** Talk about a dark week, huh?**

Last week I read the following:
- Pleasure of a Dark Prince - Kresley Cole
- Fade - Lisa McMann
- Dark Lover - J.R. Ward
- The Dead-Tossed Waves by Carrie Ryan

I reviewed the following:
- Raven Stole the Moon by Garth Stein [review/giveaway]
- The Strain by Guillermo Del Toro & Chuck Hogan [review]

Hope you all have a great week and read all that your little hearts desire. Toodles.

Saturday

Friday

Check it

Now tell me that this isn't a just buy-me-because-I'm-beautiful cover. le sigh... I must have this. Absolutely swoon worthy, don't ya think?

The Strain by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan

They have always been here. Vampires. In secret and in darkness. Waiting. Now their time has come. In one week, Manhattan will be gone. In one month, the country. In two months—the world.

A Boeing 777 arrives at JFK and is on its way across the tarmac, when it suddenly stops dead. All window shades are pulled down. All lights are out. All communication channels have gone quiet. Crews on the ground are lost for answers, but an alert goes out to the CDC. Dr. Eph Goodweather, head of their Canary project, a rapid-response team that investigates biological threats, gets the call and boards the plane. What he finds makes his blood run cold.

In a pawnshop in Spanish Harlem, a former professor and survivor of the Holocaust named Abraham Setrakian knows something is happening. And he knows the time has come, that a war is brewing . . .

So begins a battle of mammoth proportions as the vampiric virus that has infected New York begins to spill out into the streets. Eph, who is joined by Setrakian and a motley crew of fighters, must now find a way to stop the contagion and save his city—a city that includes his wife and son—before it is too late. [via GoodReads]

The Strain was not really what I expected. I don't mean that in a bad way, it was just unexpected to find more of a thriller than a horror story. It's difficult to explain, since some reviewers are saying horror while others are saying thriller. It was a little bit of both I would say. There was a time or two where I actually had to stop reading because I was terrified, but that wasn't the feeling I had the whole story. Instead, it was more of an edge of your seat thriller.. where you read and read just to see what's going to happen next.

The story opens with a young boy being told a story by his grandmother in order to get him to eat his meal. This story is one of a man named Sardu and what became of him, a young prince, who became a monster that lurks in the dark, waiting and biding his time to lure you, with his telltale sign, the sound of his cane (pick-pick-pick). From there you jump and are on the tarmac at JFK (present day) where Eph and his team are trying to determine what happened to the "dead" plane and its passengers. This definitely sets the mood for the remainder of the book and it is one that definitely had me on edge.

Here are the main things I enjoyed about this book:
Vampires. Yes, I truly did enjoy the idea of a pandemic where humans become vampires. Zombie lovers can definitely appreciate this story as it did have a zombie movie feel to it. There are many characters in this story and, at first, it was a little difficult to decipher who was who, but my confusion didn't last long and I think the authors did a fantastic job of getting you acquainted with each character before too much jumping around happened. For example, the chapters are short and mostly relate to one particular character at a time - whether it be Eph and/or his partner Nora, and their scientific/medical findings, Abraham Setrakian and his lifelong fight against Sardu, the four survivors from the flight, their families, neighbors, and so on. In the end, I found this helpful and I think the main thing that avoided too much confusion. I liked the science aspect of the story as well. I feel that for the first book in a trilogy it gives you enough details about what is going on in the human body after infection to where you really have a grasp of what it means. I found this scientific aspect of the story to be well done - they didn't use big words (at least, not all the time), almost told in layman's terms. Not overly complicated or intricate. I really appreciated that and I found it all to be quite interesting and imaginative. The vampires were monsters - they definitely weren't the type you'd say "bite me" to or much less want to date. They were definitely the scary, run-for-your-life variety, that if you thought twice, you were a goner. It was gory, but not overly gross or anything like that... with a few decapitations and whatnot.

I just had some issues with the story:
For starters, I found it over-descriptive at times. I mean there is only so much you can say about a dark basement without getting too wordy. There were also a few chapters that I just couldn't figure out what the purpose of them was... for instance, the eclipse. There were about two chapters depicting an eclipse which happens in the first half of the book - which to be quite honest, there was no purpose to. It did nothing to move the story along, maybe it was just to build up the creep factor... not sure, I just didn't get it. The science, although interesting, took up a lot of the earlier chapters, so it did take a while before the you-know-what to hit the ceiling and the action to really start, so I'd have to say that it wasn't 'till midway through the book that I "really" got into it. And, one last thing that I found distracting, was that more than once, I noticed that the characters would do something or grab an object and then there would be a pause and a definition of what they were doing or what the object was. It would made me lose my focus and thus take away from the gripping feel of the story.

With all that said, I truly became fascinated with this book. In the end, the story captured me, I even found it credible in a Hollywood movie sort of a way. I found myself contemplating what would happen if something of this nature where to happen... I've always felt that I'd be the one to trip and fall and get eaten by the monster. It was creepy, scary and you have this sense of impending doom from the start, that makes it quite the delicious read. This is the ultimate fight between good and evil - and I for one am glad that I got a front seat to the action. This is the first of the trilogy that will be written by Del Toro and Hogan. With the next title coming out later this year and the conclusion scheduled for 2011. For fans of vampires (and I'm not talking the hott ones), science-fiction and just an all out blood-sucking, head-chopping adventure, this is one that will be a great addition to your collection.

Thursday

Raven Stole the Moon by Garth Stein

Two years ago, Jenna Rosen’s son, Bobby, drowned while on vacation in Alaska. To her dismay, his body was never found and she had to return home with her loss and grief. While Robert, Jenna's husband has gotten over his grief, Jenna has found nothing that can help her get over or forget the loss of her son, putting strain on their marriage and making them act more like strangers than a husband and wife.

One night Jenna just can't take it anymore and decides she needs to leave, while in the middle of one of Robert's business parties, she just gets in the car and drives off. She eventually finds herself in Wrangell, Alaska, where her Native American grandmother lived - and just a few miles away from where Bobby drowned. There Jenna meets a shaman who tells her of the legends of the Tlingits and their beliefs as to a person's soul.

As a big fan of Garth Stein and, of course, Enzo's, when I was contacted to review Raven Stole the Moon, I was like.... "ooh, ooh, me!" And although it seems this is one of Mr. Stein's previous works (maybe even his first), I was surprised by how much I actually enjoyed this story. It is definitely nothing like The Art of Racing in the Rain, this is more of a thriller, and at more than one point, it even felt creepy along the lines of a horror story. As a mother, you can't help but to feel Jenna's pain. The overwhelming loss of a child - trying anything and everything to overcome that grief and to eventually find a path to healing... it really is heartbreaking. This is her journey to not only save herself but also to save her son's soul.

I really found it interesting to read of the Kushtakas (a/k/a shape-shifting soul stealers). I liked the mystery and even the fright that came with their myths and legends. Mr. Stein really has a way with words. I love the voice that he uses to narrate his stories. It was the same way with The Art of Racing in the Rain. I don't know if I can explain it right, but it's soft and soothing... even though there was a time or two where my hairs were standing on end... I found his writing calming.

This is a heartwrenching story about grief, loss and healing that it is expertly intertwined with Native American folklore making it a fascinating read. I truly enjoyed it and would definitely recommend it.

This book was provided for review Terra Communications.

GIVEAWAY: I have 1 copy up for grabs - thanks to the lovely Sarah at Terra Communications.

As always, leave a comment for one entry. If you'd like extra entries just say so in your comment or separate comments (extra entries for followers, Twitter, sidebars, Facebook, etc.) ; and for putting my spiffy little button on your blog. Make sure to leave an e-mail address, especially if you are leaving a comment under Anonymous.

Rules: This contest is open to U.S. & Canada residents only. Winners will be drawn Saturday, March 27.

Wednesday

a bit under the weather

[via Flicker]

How's it going lovelies? Sorry I've been lost for almost a week now - I've been sick with a cold, making plans for a Disney cruise in May and (hrmph) working. So needless to say, I've had to put blogging, reading and surfing the net (my fave things to do) on hold for a bit.

Luckily for me, my boss has left on vacay for the rest of the week and I finally have some time for catching up. I promise to have a couple of reviews up within the next day or so as well as post giveaway winners, new giveaways, etc.

Hope you are all doing well.

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