In case you missed my Tweet a while back, here’s the link to my interview on Beth Fehlbaum’s blog as part of her Saturday Shout-Out series.
Thanks, Beth, for letting me share more about why I do what I do on BooksYALove!
**kmm
In case you missed my Tweet a while back, here’s the link to my interview on Beth Fehlbaum’s blog as part of her Saturday Shout-Out series.
Thanks, Beth, for letting me share more about why I do what I do on BooksYALove!
**kmm
So, whose rules do I have to follow as I post book recommendations for y’all – the Library of Congress? the publishers? the authors?
Nope, the Federal Trade Commission! That’s right, the government agency that watches over advertisers so their promises don’t make you buy something bogus also has guidelines for social media so that consumers know when someone is Tweeting an advertisement or has been paid to review a product and so on.
There’s been some worry in the book blogging community about whether we’re notifying y’all properly as to how books land in our hands or if receiving free advance reader copies makes us unduly biased toward various titles.
And discussion goes round and round about what is the book blogger’s responsibility to the publisher or author who gave them the book…
Lately, I’ve seen reviewers splash an “FTC required disclaimer” on their book review (when there is no specific wording required by the FTC) or state that they received a book “in exchange for my fair and honest review” when most publishers don’t require that a review be written at all.
In fact, the graphic novel publisher First Second even blogged about that “in exchange” wording, saying that when they send out a book, they know that some folks will love it, some be on the fence, some even stop reading it because it’s not their thing, and that First Second would rather have a strong review (positive or negative) than one that says “this book is sort of okay.”
What does all this mean for BooksYALove readers?
While I’ve always noted whether I received the book I’m recommending from the publisher or have purchased it myself, I moved that disclaimer into the Book Info section so you know that before you read the full Book Talk which gives you the no-spoilers synopsis of the book. FTC guidelines satisfied, without bombarding you with lots of irrelevant text.
Of course, if I can’t give a book an A or B+ “grade” for its particular category (science fiction, adventure, etc.) and for fans of Young Adult books, then it never appears here at all. I don’t want you to waste your time or money on poorly written books when there are so many wonderful titles out there!
**kmm
World Wednesday takes us to the early days of Queen Elizabeth I’s court amid intrigue and international turmoil.
Her Majesty is protected quite visibly by her trusted royal guards and oh-so-secretly by 5 young maids-in-waiting chosen by her for their very special talents.
Read an excerpt here to meet Meg during her pickpocketing days with the theater troupe, before the Queen’s spymaster makes her an offer she cannot refuse.
Get this first book in the Maids of Honor series today at your local library or independent bookstore, and follow Meg’s journey from sticky-fingered orphan to secret-storing spy.
Jennifer says she’s working on Maid of Deception now, so we’ll read more about the lovely and cunning Beatrice next.
What royal secret would you most like to know?
**kmm
Book info: Maid of Secrets / Jennifer McGowan. Simon and Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2013. [author site] [publisher site] [book trailer] Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.
My book talk: Arrested by the Queen’s men for pickpocketing, Meg has a choice: die or become a spy! Queen Elizabeth’s most-special Maids of Honor must solve a murder before danger reaches Her Majesty – and must ignore love they can never have.
Her ear for dialogue and quick memorizing served Meg well as she traveled with the theater troupe. Now she’ll become a listener without seeming to listen, approaching her assigned target as a mere lady-in-waiting. But first she must learn a well-bred lady’s manners, plus spycraft skills like silent strangulation and reading.
The young ladies hand-picked as spies by the Queen herself have been training together for several months: Jane, a Welsh girl with masterful knife skills; Sophia, who has visions and reads portents; Beatrice, whose beauty bewitches any man to do her bidding; and Anna, who knows many languages. Meg is replacing Maria, who was brutally murdered because someone in Windsor Castle knew she was a spy.
Now the Spanish ambassador and his courtiers are arriving, and for all their elaborate speeches, they do not wish Her Majesty well. It’s up to Meg to hear their private conversations and report them back verbatim to Sir William – and to report treachery anywhere in the court directly to the Queen alone, at her express command.
Dancing and flirting, listening for conversations in Spanish and storing them perfectly in her memory, trying not to make an obvious social error in the palace (and to resist stealing anything), Meg is on edge during the ball and the days after. She finds handsome Rafe of the Spanish delegation distracting (he’s Beatrice’s assignment), then uncovers messages plotting to overthrow the Queen!
Can Meg and the Queen’s spymaster identify the traitor quickly and quietly?
Can she avoid Maria’s fate as she continues to listen in on Spanish courtiers?
Can she guard her own heart as Rafe begins to woo her?
In the earliest days of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, the safety of her royal person and the fate of the country may rest in the hands of these five Maids of Honor in Her Majesty’s secret service. (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com)

Whew! June just raced by, and we’re done with WordCount Blogathon for another year.
We had guest bloggers (hi, Alison!) and theme days for 5 favorites and haiku and word cloud (I skipped the video day; it just wasn’t working out).
I found lots of interesting blogs to follow and tried to be supportive for those whose subjects aren’t on my current interest radar.
And I can’t wait to do it again next year! If you’re a blogger or want to start blogging, mark your calendar for the May sign-up for next year’s Blogathon. The community of support is great, and we keep sustaining one another through the next 11 months of blogging (although not posting every single day, thank goodness!).
Since I was concentrating on the many NetGalley electronic-format ARCs with upcoming expiration dates during Blogathon, I only recommended 3 books with publication dates of 2012 or earlier for the ongoing TBR2012 Challenge this month:
Ghost Knight, by Cornelia Funke
Spy School, by Stuart Gibbs
Stealing Kevin’s Heart, by M. Scott Carter
So with my 46 TBR2012 titles read during the first five months of the year, that brings my total to 49, just under 2 “older” books a week recommended on BooksYALove… not too bad.
How’s your TBR shelf looking these days?
**kmm
This week’s free audiobooks from SYNC are deadly delights, as we hear tales of a grave-robber and a mad scientist…
Remember that although each download is only available from Thursday through Wednesday, you have free use of the audiobooks for as long as you keep them on your computer or electronic device
We have several more weeks of full-length audiobooks to look forward to this summer. Have you bookmarked the SYNC site yet? http://www.audiobooksync.com/
Rotters
By Daniel Kraus
Read by Kirby Heyborne
Published by Listening Library
Frankenstein
By Mary Shelley
Read by Jim Weiss
Published by Listening Library
Do you dare listen to these creepy tales before bedtime?
**kmm
“Which five historical figures would you invite to dinner?”
“Describe a time when you lied for a good reason.”
Ah, the dreaded essay-writing assignment in school or for a contest or for college admissions…
Thank goodness essays really don’t have to be five perfect paragraphs or written in third person or even written in words!
In this collection, 37 contemporary YA authors, from The Candymakers‘ Wendy Mass to The Apothecary‘s Maile Meloy, have tackled classic essay prompts and brought us a great assortment of personal, persuasive, and literary essays that will make you ponder, nod in appreciation, and shake your head in disbelief.
Read Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children author Ransom Riggs’ essay “Camp Dread or How to Survive a Shockingly Awful Summer” here as he answers the prompt “Describe a time you had to do something you really didn’t want to do.”
All the authors have waived their usual royalty payments for their work on this book, instead having the money sent to international education charity Free the Children.
Any other truly creative essays out there that we should be reading?
**kmm
Book info: Breakfast on Mars and 37 Other Delectable Essays / Rebecca Stern and Brad Wolfe, editors. Roaring Brook Press, 2013. [publisher site] [book FB page]
My book talk: Got the boring essay blues? Well, current authors of young adult and middle grade books take aim at humdrum school essays as the writers set essays free from traditional 5-paragraph format in response to a variety of common prompts in this new collection.
Read “Princess Leia is an Awesome Role Model” by Cecil Castellucci and see if she truly does “compare and contrast two characters from the same story” as per her assignment, then follow along as Ned Vizzini argues intelligently about “Why We Need Tails” as the best trait we could steal from animals.
Dip into an author’s personal history as Elizabeth Winthrop recounts “My Life Before Television” in a before and after essay and Laurel Snyder writes about “a time a friend helped” her with “A Good Lie.”
Chris Higgins argues with himself quite convincingly, writing both the title essay “Breakfast on Mars: Why We Should Colonize the Red Planet” as well as its rebuttal “Robots Only: Why We Shouldn’t Colonize Mars.”
For the essay prompt of “Take a belief that is widely accepted, and then debunk it” Scott Westerfeld gives us fair “Warning: This Essay Does Not Contain Pictures” in discussing why modern novels have no pictures as they did in Dickens’ day.
Nick Abadsiz remakes the classic “if you could change one moment in history” essay by drawing his responses as “Laika Endings” about the Russian cosmonaut dog.
Improve your own non-fiction writing range, get glimpses into the real lives and opinions of fiction authors, and learn some neat stuff along the way as you consider Breakfast on Mars. (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.
It’s Haiku Day for Blogathon2013!
(Coincidentally, it’s also the first day of TeachersWrite, an online summer camp where great kidlit authors are coaching teachers and librarians in their own writing, so they can better teach their students about writing, revising, and such. Yes, I’m doing it, too!)
Jane Reichold’s many articles on haiku include her overview of several techniques which can be used in crafting the just-right haiku.
So I wrote this haiku about BooksYALove:
Images, pages,
so many, varied and deep,
Stories yet to share.
**kmm
Family reunion time – can you keep up with the conversation about all-time favorite books?
It’s trivia night – are you ready?
Discussion of “best-ever” movies – got one to contribute?
With Daniel Harmon’s annotated, illustrated book filled with pop culture top ten lists, you can hold your own in the conversation, discover new (classic) films and music to enjoy, and yell at the book occasionally for leaving your favorite off a given list!
Read a sample chapter “Eat, Pray, Love, Spelunk: Tag Along on a Life-Changing Vacation” here, and look for this June 2013 release at your local library or favorite independent bookstore so you can top-ten your way to pop culture knowledge.
What top ten list would you create for the ultimate pop culture experience?
**kmm
Book info: Super Pop! Pop Culture Top Ten Lists to Help You Win at Trivia, Survive in the Wild, and Make It Through the Holidays / Daniel Harmon. Zest Books, 2013. [author info] [publisher site] [author video]
My book talk: Want to outwit death, watch the world unfold, visit magical fictional worlds, or find speeches worth heeding? Super Pop has top ten media lists for all these pop culture topics and dozens more.
From the serious to the sublimely silly, these “ten best” lists draw from the best (or worst) movies, video games, podcasts, books, television shows, and songs of the past several decades. What sets this apart from everyday top ten listings are the author’s thoughtful, funny, and often irreverent annotations explaining why each item made it onto a list.
Zest Books editor Harmon divides his annotated lists into five groups – Be More Interesting, Get Smart(er), Stop Doing It Wrong, Find Happiness, and Survive the Holidays – and includes resource material for further investigation, lots of quirky sketches (like the TV-headed Charlie Brown regarding his spindly Christmas tree), and a great index.
Whether it’s “pithy explanations of really complex things” or “smartest inanimate objects in the history of pop culture” readers will find intriguing lists of books, films, games, television shows, and music to increase their knowledge and appreciation of our shared modern-day culture – counted down from 10 to 1 in classic Top Ten fashion, of course. (One of 6,000 books recommended on www.abookandahug.com) Review copy and cover image courtesy of the publisher.
Hurry to download this week’s free audiobooks from SYNC by June 19th, and dive into two different worlds of magical visions.
Remember that although each week’s complete audiobooks are only available from Thursday through Wednesday, you have free use of them as long as you keep their Overdrive Media files on your computer or electronic device.
The Raven Boys
By Maggie Stiefvater
Read by Will Patton
Published by Scholastic Audiobooks

Bless Me, Ultima
By Rudolfo Anaya
Read by Robert Ramirez
Published by Recorded Books
This title is only available to listeners in the USA and Canada.
Will the power of magical visions solve problems in this world? Read and find out!
**kmm
Have you ever wondered how those book reviews get into your local paper, national television shows, and blogs before you can actually buy the book?
The answer is as simple as ARC – advance reader copies, also known as advance readers’ editions. proofs, “galleys” or F&Gs (for picture books). Whether print or digital, these ARCs are essentially final drafts of the book, so they include typographical errors which will be corrected before the book goes to print, often have placeholders for spot art or illustrations, and frequently include the initials TK to indicate information that’s “to come” in the published book (no one seems to know why this isn’t TC).
Reviewers know that these things will all get fixed before the public reads the book; we just skip around and over the glitches so we can read the story or text and be able to write our review/recommendation for the audience that we address. Publishers are hoping that our reviews will create enough “buzz” to spur sales of the book and make up for the high cost of print ARCs.
What happens to print ARCs after reviewers read them should be crystal-clear, as every ARC I’ve ever held says plainly “uncorrected proof – NOT FOR SALE” or some variation of those terms.
It infuriates me when anyone sells ARCs on eBay or anywhere else, as this (1) violates the terms that allowed that person to acquire the ARC, (2) takes revenue away from the authors and their publishers since the ARC buyer probably won’t purchase the finished book, and -worse- (3) puts an imperfect copy of the author’s work into a reader’s hands when that person is unlikely to realize what an ARC is and why it’s not “a real book.” I’m not alone in ranting about this – see Afewmorepages’ post here as she collects several blog posts about not selling ARCs.
Of course, that means I cannot donate print ARCs to Goodwill, Salvation Army, or other charitable group which sells items (reselling is still reselling), nor can they go into a library’s collection unless the ARC is purposely there for comparison with the finished book (maybe in a university library to support a publishing degree program?). As selective as I am in requesting ARCs which fit into BooksYALove’s stated goals – young adult books beyond bestsellers, especially by debut authors and smaller presses – I still have lots and lots of ARCs.
What to do with ARCs and still do the right thing? Simplest yet hardest thing to do is just “pulp” them by tearing apart and putting the ARC into the recycling bin (“but…” I sniffle, “it still is a book…”), just as I would any misprint paper.
Thankfully, some publishers have begun including this wording in their ARCs: “After the publication date of this book , please consider thoughtfully donating this ARC to a juvenile detention facilty, shelter or other youth program” – THAT is a win-win-win scenario! Kids who’d otherwise have no access at all to books can get books to keep; the books don’t wind up as landfill fodder; the authors’ works are enjoyed and read and re-read by their target audience.
So where are my ARCs going? For sure, the upcoming fall collection by HEB grocery stores for their Read 3 program, which I discovered at the Texas Library Association annual conference last year. I’m also checking with area agencies that serve at-risk youth. Everyone will win… and my bookshelves will be happy!
Where would you send ARCs in your area?
**kmm
Clipart image of woman reading newspaper (c)ClipartHeaven.com