I've gone and done it. I've scheduled a chat. I haven't done one of these since The Ballad of Jimothy Redwing first came out, and I'd actually forgotten about that one when I signed up for this one. This is a Coffee Time Romance & More event to be held on their Erotic E-loop Yahoo Group. So if you haven't joined that group yet, now's the time to do it!
What: Caffeinated Fantasy, Chat with Maia Strong
Where: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/karendevinkaren/
When: Friday 25 February 10am - 12noon PST (1 - 3pm EST.)
Why: Because it's fun to socialize! And because I'm going to be giving away three fabulous coffee mugs, each of which has one of my beautiful book covers on it. How cool is that? Plus, I'll have a new book to plug and maybe by then I'll have a release date. Who knows? We'll find out together. :-)
I look forward to seeing you there. We'll chat. We'll drink coffee. We'll have fun!
28 January 2011
25 January 2011
Book BIN Tuesday!
I'm totally stealing Kate Davies's shtick by using her Book B(uy) I(t) N(ow) Tuesday, but I think she'll forgive me. See, my friend Boyd Morrison's book The Ark comes out in mass market paperback today and I'm super excited to get a copy. (Love the guy, but I just couldn't afford the hardcover price, you know? And I can say that here because I told him the same thing. LOL)
Here's the blurb from Barnes & Noble
.com:
When brilliant archaeologist Dilara Kenner is contacted by Sam Watson, an old family friend who says that he has crucial information about her missing father, Dilara abandons her Peruvian dig and rushes to Los Angeles to meet him. But at the airport, Sam speaks instead of Noah’s Ark—the artifact her father had long been searching for—and the possible death of billions. Before Sam can explain, he collapses. With his dying breath, he urges Dilara to find Tyler Locke—a man she’s never heard of.
Two days later Dilara manages to track down former combat engineer Tyler Locke on an oil rig off Newfoundland. Her helicopter transport goes down well short of the oil rig’s landing pad and Dilara and those aboard nearly drown. No sooner is Dilara safely on the rig than she convinces Tyler the crash was no accident. Tyler agrees to help her uncover the secret behind Noah's Ark and, more important, her father's disappearance.
As the picture begins to come into focus, they realize they have just seven days to find the Ark before its secret is used to wipe out civilization once again.
Tell me that doesn't sound like an awesome ride! Woo-hoo! So why don't you all pop out to your local bookstore and Buy It Now? I know I'm going to!
Here's the blurb from Barnes & Noble
.com:When brilliant archaeologist Dilara Kenner is contacted by Sam Watson, an old family friend who says that he has crucial information about her missing father, Dilara abandons her Peruvian dig and rushes to Los Angeles to meet him. But at the airport, Sam speaks instead of Noah’s Ark—the artifact her father had long been searching for—and the possible death of billions. Before Sam can explain, he collapses. With his dying breath, he urges Dilara to find Tyler Locke—a man she’s never heard of.
Two days later Dilara manages to track down former combat engineer Tyler Locke on an oil rig off Newfoundland. Her helicopter transport goes down well short of the oil rig’s landing pad and Dilara and those aboard nearly drown. No sooner is Dilara safely on the rig than she convinces Tyler the crash was no accident. Tyler agrees to help her uncover the secret behind Noah's Ark and, more important, her father's disappearance.
As the picture begins to come into focus, they realize they have just seven days to find the Ark before its secret is used to wipe out civilization once again.
Tell me that doesn't sound like an awesome ride! Woo-hoo! So why don't you all pop out to your local bookstore and Buy It Now? I know I'm going to!
21 January 2011
Udates to MaiaStrong.com
I just updated some links over on my website's Bookshelf. Samhain Publishing has been doing a huge amount of shifting about and redesigning, and now that they seem to be all settled in, I've updated the links for The Ballad of Jimothy Redwing (ebook and print) and the follow-up freebie, Wand'ring Home. Everything else should still link up just fine, but if you find otherwise, do let me know.
14 January 2011
Newbery Winners - YoRY Part 3
I mentioned Newbery books in my last Year of Reading Youthfully post. Two of the five in The Dark is Rising Sequence are Newbery Winners. Other winners that I read over the past year are: Whittington by Alan Armstrong; The Tale of Despereaux by Kate DiCamillo; and When You Reach Me by Rebecca Stead, which was the 2010 Newbery Mystery winner. These are all more Middle Readers than Young Adult, IMO, but that's irrelevant. They're all excellent reads. More on ...Despereaux when I talk about fairy tales in a later post.
Here's what the Newbery Site lists as #1 on its criteria for determining awards:
"1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children published by an American publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the book considered except that it be original work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished."
You might notice that they use "distinguished" twice. They're not being sloppy or redundant. Pulitzer prize-winning novels can be awful to read, wonderful to read, or anywhere in between. Newberys, in my extensive experience, are always wonderful to read. This group or committee or whoever they are know what they're doing. You pick up Newbery book and you will never be disappointed. You'll like some more than others, of course, but none of them will suck.
We had a program at my elementary school where you could read a Newbery book and then discuss it with the school librarian. He'd take notes in purple pen and you'd get a star or something for every Newbery book you read. Maybe there was some special award every ten books or something. I don't remember. Clearly that wasn't the big motivation for me. I just loved reading.
Whittington and ...Despereaux are both centered around animals, and in both cases those animals not only interact with humans, but talk to them as equally sentient beings. It surprised me a little in Whittington when the farm animals began working to help one of the children learn to read because the book didn't start out with the premise that the cross-species communication included humans. But it flowed so naturally within the story that I got over my surprise immediately. ...Despereaux, on the other hand, says straight away that it is a fairy tale, so the whole mouse-human conversations were to be expected. What I love in both of these books is that everyone has something to learn from someone else. Whether it's animals learning from other animals, humans learning from animals, animals learning from humans, or humans learning from humans. No one is infallible and no one is perfect. There are prejudices and nobility to be found whatever the species. I love that. In real life, humans can't figure that lesson out amongst themselves, and yet here are humans and animals alike all learning it.
When You Reach Me isn't a fairy tale and it doesn't have talking animals. I'm not sure that I would call it a mystery, as Newbery does. More likely I'd dub it sci-fi, although it does present a fascinating puzzle for the heroine to solve, so I suppose calling it a mystery is fair. It has it all, really. From time-travel theory to very real, non-theoretical relationships among kids stuck between being children and being young adults. Our main kid-cast are all about 13 years old, including the narrator, Miranda. (Do we all remember what a challenge that time was in our lives? I do. It didn't suck, but it sure as hell wasn't easy, either.) It was the accuracy and honesty of this book that struck me hardest. So much of the scenario is outside of my personal experience (I didn't grow up in New York with a single mom who was auditioning for $20,000 Pyramid.), but the universality of the relationships amongst the kids and between the kids and adults... That stuff I connected with immediately. It didn't hurt that Miranda frequently mentions "her book". The book she always brings to school for silent reading. That book, too, is a Newbery winner. And it has not only time travel but space travel, too. The heroine of it is also about 13 years old. Her name is Meg. Have you guessed it? It's A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle. Oddly enough, I didn't reread that book this past year. I may have to remedy that.
Here's what the Newbery Site lists as #1 on its criteria for determining awards:
"1. The Medal shall be awarded annually to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children published by an American publisher in the United States in English during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the book considered except that it be original work. Honor books may be named. These shall be books that are also truly distinguished."
You might notice that they use "distinguished" twice. They're not being sloppy or redundant. Pulitzer prize-winning novels can be awful to read, wonderful to read, or anywhere in between. Newberys, in my extensive experience, are always wonderful to read. This group or committee or whoever they are know what they're doing. You pick up Newbery book and you will never be disappointed. You'll like some more than others, of course, but none of them will suck.
We had a program at my elementary school where you could read a Newbery book and then discuss it with the school librarian. He'd take notes in purple pen and you'd get a star or something for every Newbery book you read. Maybe there was some special award every ten books or something. I don't remember. Clearly that wasn't the big motivation for me. I just loved reading.
Whittington and ...Despereaux are both centered around animals, and in both cases those animals not only interact with humans, but talk to them as equally sentient beings. It surprised me a little in Whittington when the farm animals began working to help one of the children learn to read because the book didn't start out with the premise that the cross-species communication included humans. But it flowed so naturally within the story that I got over my surprise immediately. ...Despereaux, on the other hand, says straight away that it is a fairy tale, so the whole mouse-human conversations were to be expected. What I love in both of these books is that everyone has something to learn from someone else. Whether it's animals learning from other animals, humans learning from animals, animals learning from humans, or humans learning from humans. No one is infallible and no one is perfect. There are prejudices and nobility to be found whatever the species. I love that. In real life, humans can't figure that lesson out amongst themselves, and yet here are humans and animals alike all learning it.
When You Reach Me isn't a fairy tale and it doesn't have talking animals. I'm not sure that I would call it a mystery, as Newbery does. More likely I'd dub it sci-fi, although it does present a fascinating puzzle for the heroine to solve, so I suppose calling it a mystery is fair. It has it all, really. From time-travel theory to very real, non-theoretical relationships among kids stuck between being children and being young adults. Our main kid-cast are all about 13 years old, including the narrator, Miranda. (Do we all remember what a challenge that time was in our lives? I do. It didn't suck, but it sure as hell wasn't easy, either.) It was the accuracy and honesty of this book that struck me hardest. So much of the scenario is outside of my personal experience (I didn't grow up in New York with a single mom who was auditioning for $20,000 Pyramid.), but the universality of the relationships amongst the kids and between the kids and adults... That stuff I connected with immediately. It didn't hurt that Miranda frequently mentions "her book". The book she always brings to school for silent reading. That book, too, is a Newbery winner. And it has not only time travel but space travel, too. The heroine of it is also about 13 years old. Her name is Meg. Have you guessed it? It's A Wrinkle in Time by Madeleine L'Engle. Oddly enough, I didn't reread that book this past year. I may have to remedy that.
11 January 2011
Guest Post at Donuts & Desires
Hey there! I answered some fun questions for Giselle Renarde's blog, Donuts and Desires, back in October, and then totally forgot about it until she emailed to say my answers were up. Go check it out, and check out the rest of her blog, too, because it's cool. :-)
Quick Six TNG with Maia Strong
Quick Six TNG with Maia Strong
20 December 2010
When the Dark comes rising... YoRY Part 2
I told you how I began rereading The Dark is Rising Sequence about a year ago. Well, with Solstice (and the setting for book two) nearly upon us, I figured I'd expound a bit more. Not that I sat down and read all five books in a row; I read other stuff in between and didn't finish rereading book five, Silver on the Tree, until August or so. But let's stick to Susan Cooper for the moment. Two of the five books in the sequence are Newbery Award winners, which says a great deal about their quality. And that's not my opinion, that's fact. You don't win a Newbery without damned good reason, and The Dark is Rising (book 2) and The Grey King (book 4) have damned good reason. If you don't know what a Newbery Award is, well, I'm very sorry to hear it. Click this link to be taken to ALA's page of Newbery goodness. You might find you've read something on the list and didn't even realize it. I mean, it has been awarded since 1922, so chances are good. I read two other winners over the course of this year, including last year's mystery category winner, but I'll get to those another day.
I'm still pondering on the brilliance of Susan Cooper's YA twist on King Arthur's story. Although, that's not really accurate on my part. It's not about Arthur, per se, but about the mythology, truth, and artifacts related to Britain's greatest king. (Yes, I believe he was real. And I believe that, barring intervention from Doctor Who and his TARDIS, we'll never know how much of the story that's been passed is fact and how much fiction. Except Lancelot. He's pure French fiction.) It's the consequences of Arthur's actions in his own time, and how they affect things and, more importantly, people in the present day of the books that are the action of the story. More than even that, it's about the greatest and last battle of the Light against the Dark. Great battles have been fought over the millennia, but this one is for all the marbles, as the saying goes. There are difficult choices facing the adults and even more facing the children who are our heroes throughout the sequence. Children and adults alike are fallible and human; even those who are more than human make mistakes and must face the consequences. I think this has to have had a profound influence on me as a kid that persists to this day: I don't believe in easy wins for fictional characters. If there is no sacrifice, it cheapens the gains. You know what I mean? I'm all for a happily ever after (HEA), but I don't want it to be too easy and I don't want it to be a guarantee. And, really, I don't have to have an HEA as long as the ending is the right one for the story. Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, for example, is a book with hard choices and sacrifices, and while it doesn't exactly have a happy ending, it has the right ending. I love that book. I should reread it more often. It's not like it takes very long.
Do you prefer your books to have a guaranteed HEA, or are you content with the right ending, whether it's happy or not?
I'm still pondering on the brilliance of Susan Cooper's YA twist on King Arthur's story. Although, that's not really accurate on my part. It's not about Arthur, per se, but about the mythology, truth, and artifacts related to Britain's greatest king. (Yes, I believe he was real. And I believe that, barring intervention from Doctor Who and his TARDIS, we'll never know how much of the story that's been passed is fact and how much fiction. Except Lancelot. He's pure French fiction.) It's the consequences of Arthur's actions in his own time, and how they affect things and, more importantly, people in the present day of the books that are the action of the story. More than even that, it's about the greatest and last battle of the Light against the Dark. Great battles have been fought over the millennia, but this one is for all the marbles, as the saying goes. There are difficult choices facing the adults and even more facing the children who are our heroes throughout the sequence. Children and adults alike are fallible and human; even those who are more than human make mistakes and must face the consequences. I think this has to have had a profound influence on me as a kid that persists to this day: I don't believe in easy wins for fictional characters. If there is no sacrifice, it cheapens the gains. You know what I mean? I'm all for a happily ever after (HEA), but I don't want it to be too easy and I don't want it to be a guarantee. And, really, I don't have to have an HEA as long as the ending is the right one for the story. Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt, for example, is a book with hard choices and sacrifices, and while it doesn't exactly have a happy ending, it has the right ending. I love that book. I should reread it more often. It's not like it takes very long.
Do you prefer your books to have a guaranteed HEA, or are you content with the right ending, whether it's happy or not?
15 December 2010
2010 - My Year of Reading Youthfully, Part 1
About this time last year, I began to reread one of my all-time favourite book series, or, more accurately in this case, my favourite book sequence. And if that doesn't give it away, I will: Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising Sequence. Don't ask me why it's a "sequence" and not a "series"; I do not know. Nor do I care. The point is, these are some of the best books ever written, and the fact that they are YA books makes that all the more impressive. Okay. So. My point? My point:
I began with the first book, Over Sea, Under Stone, shortly before Winter Solstice so that when the Solstice arrived I could be on Book 2, The Dark is Rising, which takes place over about one week starting on Solstice Eve. And thus began my Year of Reading Youthfully. I was burnt out on "grown-up" books. They were too long, the print too small, too poorly written, too depressing, and basically just too damned tedious. YA, on the other hand, offered solace. They are generally quick reads (I did not reread the Harry Potter series this year.), with relatively large print, heavy but not too heavy subject matter, and always well-written (I chose well.) It helps that I'm in a book club specifically for YA literature. I don't feel I need an excuse to read kids' books, but some adults can be, shall we say, shy about their chosen reading material, and so the book club was an excuse for them to read YA books.
For those of you who haven't read The Dark is Rising Sequence... What is wrong with you!? Okay, okay. Just kidding. ... Sort of. It's a fantastical retelling of Arthurian legend that ranges across the English and Welsh countrysides. From the Holy Grail to Arthur's Seat, three ordinary kids and two quite extraordinary ones must battle the Dark, on the side of the Light, to do nothing less than save the world from eternal evil. ... Yes. These are kids' books, and they are brilliant. I first read them in elementary school, and have reread them several times over the years. They never lose anything in the retelling, and indeed, gain much as I get older and my life experience changes. These books taught me that there is always something worth fighting for, and you have to fight for it when you recognize it, even though, win or lose, that fight will come with a price.
TheLostLand.com - Official Susan Cooper Website that I discovered just this minute. (Hey, gimme a break! The first time I read any of her books, there was no internet, so why would I go looking for this until I wanted to share with you?)
I'll be posting more in the weeks to come about the other YA books I've read over the past year. Check back and see what I think about NZ kids' lit, YA GLBTQ, and old-fashioned modern-written fairy tales!
Got a favourite kids' or YA book you would recommend? Let me know!
I began with the first book, Over Sea, Under Stone, shortly before Winter Solstice so that when the Solstice arrived I could be on Book 2, The Dark is Rising, which takes place over about one week starting on Solstice Eve. And thus began my Year of Reading Youthfully. I was burnt out on "grown-up" books. They were too long, the print too small, too poorly written, too depressing, and basically just too damned tedious. YA, on the other hand, offered solace. They are generally quick reads (I did not reread the Harry Potter series this year.), with relatively large print, heavy but not too heavy subject matter, and always well-written (I chose well.) It helps that I'm in a book club specifically for YA literature. I don't feel I need an excuse to read kids' books, but some adults can be, shall we say, shy about their chosen reading material, and so the book club was an excuse for them to read YA books.
For those of you who haven't read The Dark is Rising Sequence... What is wrong with you!? Okay, okay. Just kidding. ... Sort of. It's a fantastical retelling of Arthurian legend that ranges across the English and Welsh countrysides. From the Holy Grail to Arthur's Seat, three ordinary kids and two quite extraordinary ones must battle the Dark, on the side of the Light, to do nothing less than save the world from eternal evil. ... Yes. These are kids' books, and they are brilliant. I first read them in elementary school, and have reread them several times over the years. They never lose anything in the retelling, and indeed, gain much as I get older and my life experience changes. These books taught me that there is always something worth fighting for, and you have to fight for it when you recognize it, even though, win or lose, that fight will come with a price.
TheLostLand.com - Official Susan Cooper Website that I discovered just this minute. (Hey, gimme a break! The first time I read any of her books, there was no internet, so why would I go looking for this until I wanted to share with you?)
I'll be posting more in the weeks to come about the other YA books I've read over the past year. Check back and see what I think about NZ kids' lit, YA GLBTQ, and old-fashioned modern-written fairy tales!
Got a favourite kids' or YA book you would recommend? Let me know!
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