Friday, August 1, 2014

ARC Review + Giveaway: The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone - Adele Griffin

The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone
Adele Griffin 
Series: N/A
Genre: Young Adult, Contemporary
Release Date: August 12, 2014
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Word Rating: Beyond brilliant
Goodreads | Amazon | Book Depository

*Thanks to Soho Teen for the ARC!*

After BEA this year, I found that I had a copy of The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone. To be completely honest, I don't know how I got it - I don't remember picking it up and I don't remember ever seeing it until I was home going through the books.

When I started The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone, I wasn't sure what to make of it. I mostly decided to read it because I thought the cover was really cool (Shout out to the cover design team because it's even better once you understand the meaning behind it!), so I had no idea what to expect when reading it. What I got was not something I would have ever expected.

The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone is about Addison Stone, an artist who fell to her death on July 28, 2013, but almost none of the book is in Addison's point of view. The story is actually told through quotes from interviews Adele Griffin had with people who knew Addison, whether very well, like family, or not as well, like journalists who wrote articles about her.

So you're probably wondering what's up with these interviews - I was too when I started reading. The most incredible thing about The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone is that while the book is fiction, it reads so much like non-fiction. It's actually kind of scary how real the story feels. There was actually a point when I genuinely thought this was a biography about a young artist, but then I remembered the whole "A Novel" thing on the cover and I was even more awestruck by how incredible the story is. Adele Griffin covers all the details - from author's notes about interviewing different people and getting statements, to the mention of lawyers and rights to articles - to make this novel feel as much like a biography as possible. There were even photographs of Addison and her friends and pictures of her artwork.

Within the pages of this fictional work, Adele Griffin has created so many incredibly real characters, all with voices of their own. There are so many different points of view in this story and all of their different experiences and emotions regarding Addison were beautifully captured. All of the characters felt somewhat responsible for Addison's fate and it was so beautiful, and tragic, to know that the circumstance of the story was that she was already dead.

I'm seriously in awe over how Griffin was not only able to capture Addison's mind - her art, insecurities, opinions, habits, manic episodes, and hysteria - but she was able to capture Addison's mind through the eyes of so many different people. No one in the story saw Addison exactly the same, allowing her to mesmerize the reader. Addison's character really does leap off the page - Adele Griffin brilliantly captured the feeling of a girl on the edge, the art scene and subculture, and New York City high life. Addison's mind is so complex and Griffin builds it up little by little through second hand experiences. The whole time I read the book I couldn't help wishing I could have more of Addison's point of view, but at the same time, I know it would have taken away from the magic and brilliance of this story. I really do wish Addison was real and alive though - while I'm no fine artist like Addison, I do some art and design work and I found Addison to be truly inspiring.

I cannot even explain to you the effect this book had on me. I actually found myself obsessing over Addison, wishing I could read all of the interviews mentioned in the story and just see everything related to her being. I was so skeptical when I started reading this book, thinking I wouldn't enjoy it and it wouldn't be for me, but now that feels strange to me because of the enormous effect it had on me. I cannot stress enough how much I recommend this. The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone is absolutely, incredibly brilliant and it's my favorite book I've read this year (so far).

- Kiersten

Giveaway

I wasn't the only one who got an ARC of The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone at BEA, so we'll be giving away one of our extra ARCs!

To enter, just fill out the Rafflecopter below. The giveaway is open US only, unless you are willing to pay the shipping, and is open through August 21st. The winner will be selected shortly after and will have 48 hours to respond before a new winner is selected. ENTER THIS GIVEAWAY. THIS BOOK IS AMAZING. I'm sorry, I just have so much love for this book. Good luck! :)

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Wednesday, July 30, 2014

Waiting on Wednesday: Furthermore - Tahereh Mafi

Waiting on Wednesday is a weekly event hosted by Breaking the Spine that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.

This week I'm waiting on Furthermore by Tahereh Mafi

Furthermore 
Tahereh Mafi
Series:  Furthermore, #1
Release Date: Unknown
Publisher: Dutton Children's Books
Waited on by: Noor
Goodreads

Julie Strauss-Gabel at Dutton Children's Books has acquired two novels byTahereh Mafi, author of the Shatter Me series. The first book, Furthermore, marks the author's middle-grade debut; it tells the story of two unique worlds and their unlikely champion: 12-year-old Alice Alexis Queensmeadow. When Alice's father disappeared from Ferenwood he took nothing but a ruler with him, and after almost six years, she embarks on a journey to find him. A publication date has not yet been set; Jodi Reamer of Writers House negotiated the deal for world English rights. 


As many of you might know, Tahereh Mafi is the author of the Shatter Me series, which I have waiting to be read somewhere in my bookshelves. I follow her on Twitter and not only does she sound like a fantastic person, but I have heard great things about her writing and can't wait to delve into something by her. Even though it's aimed for younger readers than me, I'm still really excited for Furthermore, especially because I know I won't really have a chance to delve into Shatter Me for a while so if it comes out before then, I can get a taste of her writing in a lighter read, and if I do get around to it, I can be even more excited to read her work. Although not much about the book or the plot is known -- she only released this information just over a week ago -- from what we do know, it looks very interesting. Also, her name is a shoutout to Alexander McQueen which is pretty rad. I can't wait until this book, seeing authors expand beyond their huge series is one of my favorite things so I'm very excited!


- Noor

What are YOU waiting on?
Let us know in the comments!

Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Review: The Lightning Thief Musical - Theatreworks USA

The Lightning Thief
Theatreworks USA
Based on: The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan
Genre: Musical, Action, Comedy
Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Word Rating: So perfect
Website

I first found out about Theatreworks USA's adaptation of The Lightning Thief around May through a Syracuse Drama page since not one but TWO Syracuse University alumni are in the show! Orange Mafia forever!!! Anyway, as soon as I heard about it, I knew I had to go - there was absolutely no doubt in my mind. A Percy Jackson musical?! I was sold. And so I waited several months until I finally got to see the show last Thursday!


Theatreworks USA's production of The Lightning Thief is part of their Free Summer Theatre campaign, designed to allow children to experience theatre for free! The way it works is that the general public can go to the theatre before the show to get free tickets. It's as simple as that! (For more ticketing information, check out the website link above.) Since tickets are distributed starting an hour before the first show, I went to the theater about two hours before the show. The venue, Lucille Lortel Theatre, is conveniently located a block away from the Christopher St PATH station in Downtown New York City and it was super easy to get to. I also had absolutely no problem getting tickets (I was first in line) and I even got front row tickets!


After anxiously awaiting the start of the show, I was pleasantly surprised by the pre-show announcement. At most theaters, there is an announcement prior to the start of the show asking that guests silence their cell phones, refrain from photography, etc. Imagine my surprise when I got an announcement from none other than Mr. D warning the audience that monsters are attracted to cell phones and noisy children. At that moment, I knew the show would absolutely capture the spirit of the book.

After that, I continued to have so much fun watching the show. There are six actors in the show who take on all the different roles and you could tell that they were all having a great time as well. It's such a fun, high energy show from the opening song all the way to the closing. I couldn't help laughing non-stop because it was so funny! The feeling of the show actually reminded me a bit of A Very Potter Musical.

I'm going to apologize in advance for the next part of my review because as a Theatre Design major, I couldn't help but include my thoughts on the design.

The set of the musical was pretty minimalistic but the way it transformed throughout the show was really cool. The main part of the set is a few columns in the back with scaffolding, designed to look like the museum that Percy visits in the beginning of the book. The scaffolding was really cool because it had a bunch of notches for the actors to climb up and down, and it was also low enough that they could easily jump down. I also really enjoyed the way the props were done! My favorite aspect was the way they made the water shoot out when Percy used his powers. While one might think it would have been something literal like a water gun, it was much more genius than that!

The costumes were great as well! I thought the costume designer did a great job with implying the mystical characters in a way that was quick for the actors to change into. For example, Mrs. Dodds was easily transformed into a fury by pulling her sweater over her head to reveal a scary face on the inside and the other actors bringing her wings. Some other great costumes were Grover as a satyr with fuzzy legs, Chiron as a centaur with a cool tail and built out foam leg muscles, and, my favorite, the Oracle!

In addition to the set scaffolding having notches for the actors to climb on, it also had strips of light down the front. The way the strips lit up added a very mystical feeling to many of the scenes. I also really liked the way small, portable lights were used to create other aspects on stage, such as motorcycle lights.

Overall, everything about the show was incredible! While the movie adaptation strayed a lot from the book, I felt the musical was as true to the book as an hour long musical could be. There were a bunch of kids at the show and they all loved it - even my mother, who has never read the books and has only ever seen the movie, loved it! I highly recommend seeing this show if you live close enough to New York City. Don't miss out! Go see it before it closes on August 22nd (Full schedule here). Otherwise, check out information on how to get The Lightning Thief National Tour to come to your area here!


- Kiersten

What book would you love to see as a musical?
Let us know in the comments!

Monday, July 28, 2014

Triple ARC Review: Storm Siren - Mary Weber

Storm Siren
Mary Weber
Series: Storm Siren #1
Genre: High Fantasy, Young Adult
Release Date: August 19, 2014
Rating: 4.25 out of 5 Stars
Word Rating: A-
Goodreads | Amazon | Book Depository

Read this now.

Holy crap
.

It's rare that I am so moved by a book of this genre, where the tropes and tricks are so well documented that it's become a chore to read the jacket covers. But Mary Weber, Unicorn Slayer, you have done me in with realistic and heart-wresting characters, your winding, well-orchestrated plot, punctual development, fantastic tension and suspension . . . Storm Siren is just textbook good. Since, as usual with good books, there's too much to talk about, I'll focus on a couple of things. Let's go.

Much of this, I think, has to do with the main character, Nym, our eyes and ears in the world of Faelen. Nym, at first, is shown to be effortlessly snarky, entirely contrarian, and with steel skin and an iron soul. This isn't entirely relateable for a first person POV novel, and relateability is usually the most effective way to bind a reader to wanting more. But Weber holds our attention -- with Nym's dark life as a slave girl (who shouldn't actually exist) sold fourteen times in a kingdom that's on the brink of destruction -- just long enough to reveal Nym's massive heart.

There's a scene early on in the novels where Nym, who is used to killing others with her powers, is carving a bird onto her left arm right after her owner has another ownership circle branded into her right arm.
"For a shame-filled moment, I wish [the bird] would free itself and carry me from what I am. But it doesn't. It just bleeds." (Weber, 71)
Nym is seriously damaged. She's even killed her parents with her powers. This type of character is usually not the protag in a High Fantasy and I like it, I like that instead of glimpses of shame and flickers of a fractured soul, there is an in-depth narrative about this type of suffering which has become a staple (come on, tell me who doesn't like a broken Will Herondale or, hell, Batman?).

Honestly there's a hell of a lot to say about Nym, especially on her development, and especially all of her scenes with Eogan, the first person she noticed caring about her, but in terms of characters, Nym is nearly overshadowed by the rest of the cast.

Breck, for example, is comedy gold in a world of Nym's haughty, dry wit. As funny as she is blind. And gods, I can hear her accent through the text. Weber's greatest gift probably lies herein, in the strength and depth of her secondary characters. Breck, who is overconfident and bold yet a servant girl, who eats as if she is going to starve and thinks the world of her brother. There's just so much to her, and Eogan, and Colin, etc. etc. etc.

At first the plot is a bit elusive, and it takes a bit of time for Eagon and Adora to sort Nym out and for the threat of Born (the nation currently attacking Faelen) to be a more immediate threat, but once things get going they do not stop.

The social issues like serfdom, racism, militarism, etc. are integrated quite nicely and with a contrarian and angsty protag, the issues are fleshed out just enough to make a point but without going full-rant. For example:
"I clench my teeth. She beat Breck without any idea whether I'd followed the rules or not." (180).
This book is just so damn good.

I have a couple of small gripes are with the philosophical bits where Nym's consolation is that she was Created for a Purpose with her great gift when she's already been consoled and begun the healing process with Eogan and Colin. That weird kind of false reconciliation (she still has to deal with the fact that now this Creator psychologically wrecked her for 17 years) was unnecessary in the face of the deep connections she was forming. The almost Game of Thrones level destruction of my emotional state around the last couple of chapters really makes those one or two moments forgettable.

Anyhow, this book is a refreshing must for any fantasy lover.

- Marlon

Noor's Review
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Word Rating: Enticing 

It's been a while since I've picked up a fantasy novel like this and before I started reading, I definitely had some reservations. A lot of times, authors will throw the world in the reader's face all at once like a tidal wave, or other times set up the story with pages and pages of background information before getting to anything interesting. I didn't know if this would read like one of those not-so-well put together fantasy novels that I personally suffer through. I'm very pleased to say that Storm Siren definitely lived up to its potential as a novel and Mary Weber has won me over onto this series and is definitely an author I'll be keeping tabs on in the future.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book right from the get-go. Nym, our protagonist, is our first-person narrator and I absolutely love the way the story is told through her eyes. Even in the beginning, we can see that she is tough as nails and I really enjoyed seeing her get fleshed out as she continued to face her trials and meet certain people along the way. We can see her soften up in some places, while we understand why her heart is hardening in others. You know when you have clay and at first the block is hard and firm and you pull and squeeze it until it starts to give and become more pliable? Well, Nym started out harsh and rough and as once event after another unfolded, she began to adapt and change and you really see it come out in her personal growth. She was just a really well-written character who I found myself increasingly wanting to know more about as the novel progressed.

I also loved the way Nym's emotions were so raw and powerful, and it really helped set the scene for so many parts of the book. Take this part in the very beginning when she uses her abilities for the first time in the book:
"The familiar crackle rips along my veins, and then the pain pierces through as my muscles stiffen and coil inside me like the air above. Igniting. My body, both master and slave to the elements. And I don't know how to breathe, how to stop it, how to be anything but this thing fracturing the sky."
There's much more surrounding the scene but this was really one of my favorite parts and it was only 12 pages in so I knew I was in for a good book. For a protagonist who speaks so straightforwardly, Nym has so much force behind her words. I can feel all the power and intensity rushing out of her and I can tell that she is a character who experiences things very strongly and her writing made it so all those emotions hit you full blast in the face as you're reading so you can feel them too.

Speaking of which, this book was very well written, which was also a huge factor in why I loved it so much. Mary Weber has some serious writing skills and she put them to good use. The way she describes things really hooked me onto this book because she isn't overly descriptive but in a few, direct statements manages to capture the essence of everything she is trying to describe, which I think is amazing. Every statement has purpose and carries such a heavy weight and it's really hard not to fall in love with her writing when she phases things so well.

Every character in this book, even the bad ones, were exceptionally well-developed and really helped drive the story. Everything was integrated in such interesting ways and I really can't wait for the next book in the series because that ending definitely left me wanting much more!

- Noor

Amrutha's Review
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Word Rating: Genuinely phenomenal 

I am so SO glad I got this book at BEA 2014 and even more glad I kept reading read this book: and the reason I'm so happy is that I usually ignore my instincts about books. I am usually able to tell whether I'd like a book between the blurb and first couple chapters, but I continue reading regardless of how I feel about it. It is times like these that make me so glad I kept going with this book, even though it isn't really my style or genre (LOL edit: just read Noor's and Marlon's reviews, I'm glad we all have the same thoughts on this).

Let us talk about Nym, our protagonist. She is so hardcore - she's in the category of "teens with superpowers" as so many other YA protagonists are. However this book is filled with so many plot twists that it isn't the typical easy-to-predict-"wowza"-"I got superpowers" novel. Nym as a narrator is so descriptive and impassioned that Weber made it incredibly easy to see the world through her eyes. Also she's pretty sassy, which I love (who doesn't like a little bit of sass in their protagonists, especially in the 17 year olds girls who aren't even supposed to be alive).

The writing in this book was just straight up fantastic. The way Weber expresses Nym's voice, with all of the emotion that every 17 year old often feels like they are feeling, but placing it in a realm that is expertly built (seriously, there was just the right amount of description for building Faelen), makes the book so fascinating to me. The plot was not only fantastic, but the side description is really what made the book (this sounds a little strange coming from me, because I usually don't like patches of description, but this was done so well that I have to praise it).

Unlike Noor, I didn't love the opening of the book: it was a little dry. Do not let that stop you from reading this, because as soon as a real threat approaches Faelen, the plot picks up so quickly (but quickly in the way that makes you want to glue the book to your hands so you never have to put it down, not in the "this moves so fast that the characters aren't even developing" kind of way.

Also: Colin and Breck - even though these two are just supporting characters, they are so well constructed. Like Marlon mentioned, Breck's snark with Nym's PoV really come together to lighten the story with some humor. Even the tiniest details of this book were sorted out by Weber: she wasn't one of those authors who concentrates mainly on establishing a realm or on a budding romance or on the growth of the main character. Rather, she works with all of these aspects, and it really provides for an awesome book (cannot wait for the next one!).

This is yet another note to self never to judge a book by the blurb or first few chapters or the genres I have pigeonholed it into. This was absolutely fantastic and I can't wait for Weber's next book!

- Amrutha

Have you ever had to keep a huge secret?
Let us know in the comments!

Saturday, July 26, 2014

Stuffed Animal Saturday [14]

Stuffed Animal Saturday is a meme that we post here at We Live and Breathe Books to showcase the book we're currently reading with one of our favorite stuffed animals and discuss our stuffed animal's opinion (well, it's really our opinion, but that's besides the point). We hope you enjoy our quirky feature as much as we enjoy writing it!

Over the past few days, Boo, Buddy, and I read A Little Something Different by Sally Hall!

So Far: Boo, Buddy, and I have actually already finished A Little Something Different! We all thought it was really adorable and unique because the way the story is told. We don't want to go into all the details since I'll be reviewing it soon but it's the story of Gabe and Lea falling in love and all the people around them who want them to get together!

A Sneak Peek: Some of Boo and Buddy's favorite narrations from the book are the ones from the Bench and the Squirrel!'s points of view. They had trouble deciding which one they wanted me to include, but they decided to share the first of Squirrel!'s entries in the book. Since this is coming from an ARC, the passage may not be exactly like this in the finished version.
I notice the girl eating peanuts. I love nuts.
     Nuts, nuts, nuts.
     Acorns!
     I hop across the grass, trying to be as cute as possible, hoping that maybe if I'm lucky she'll drop one. And her loss will be my gain.
     She sees me and smiles.
     I'm in! Hooray!
     She purposefully drops a peanut on the ground and I eat it up.
     Then she drops one on the bench next to her.
     Is this a trap?
     I take my time eating the first one, watching her, trying to see if she has a net or a cage or a brown bag that she's going to capture me with.
     I decide it's all clear, so I hop up on the bench.
     She watches two boys walking away across the lawn.
     "Do you think they're brothers?" she asks. " They have the same eyes, and maybe the same nose; it's hard to see from here."
     I sit up straight. She's talking to me. No one ever talks to me. Oh, how I wish I knew human and could answer her.
     Instead I nibble on my peanut.
Boo and Buddy hope you enjoyed this passage as much as they did! Look out for my review of A Little Something Different in the next few weeks!

- Kiersten

Are you and your stuffed animal reading anything interesting? 
Let us know in your own Stuffed Animal Saturday!