#52Booksin15: The Unimaginable by Dina Silver

Nothing like reading a book about a horrific travel experience while you’re in the country where the story is set, amirite?

That’s exactly what I unintentionally did with The Unimaginable by Dina SilverUnknown. I had downloaded the book as part of the Kindle First program because I liked the cover and description, I’m sure, but didn’t remember it. It was one of five books I had downloaded to my iPad Kindle app and since the internet was ABSOLUTELY AWFUL EVERYWHERE I WENT IN THAILAND SERIOUSLY HOW DID THE GIRL IN THE BOOK SEND EMAILS, I was limited in my reading choices.

Imagine my surprise when I got to the opening pages of The Unimagineable and the protagonist, Jessica Gregory, is moving from the central US to teach English in Phucket, Thailand. I was IN Thailand WITH English teachers! It was perfect!

But the following story, which I guess I could have inferred from the title, was anything but a casual travel experience. The story, which is based on this true story of a friend of the author’s family, follows the protagonist to Thailand, and then aboard a sailboat that is headed through treacherous waters around Somalia. The boat, Imagine, has a dreamy captain with a past, and a loveable and hilarious skipper who I think would be way more my type, but anyway…

The book was a quick read, and held my attention as the boat made its way across the world and then suffered “the unimaginable.” If you like adventure, wanderlust, action and a fair dose of romance, you will love The Unimagineable.

#52Booksin15: An Exclusive! ‘Finding Slope’ by Erin Brown

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I’ve been reading a lot of books to knock things off my #52Booksin15 list, and a lot to catch up. I saw on Facebook that a friend, Erin Brown, was doing a media tour for her newest book, and I couldn’t pass up the possible opportunity to be involved.

I’m so excited to be kicking off what is sure to be an awesome blog/media tour leading up to the release of “Finding Slope” on March 10. Brown is a native of Arkansas (and a fellow UA grad and KD) who currently lives in Singapore, and I had a blast reading this book and being a part of sharing it with others.

Brown’s first book, Taking Flight, which has a companion novel, Making Headlines, is worth a read in it’s own right, and starts off the story that we catch back up with in “Finding Slope.”

A brief recap:

Seventeen-year-olds Willa Thompson and Dan Martin are falling in love. But there’s one major problem: Willa lives in New York. Dan doesn’t.

Teens with divorced parents, Dan, a comic book nerd from Texas, and Willa, a sassy urbanite, have spent the last three years coordinating their monthly trips to visit the parent they don’t live with so that they can meet up during their layovers. As their junior year wraps up, Willa and Dan realize that their feelings for each other are more than friendly.

When they begin a long-distance relationship, Dan and Willa find out that there is more working against them than geography—both are serious students who aren’t applying to any of the same colleges. To make matters worse, Dan’s ruthless ex sees Willa as nothing more than a challenge to overcome, and Willa’s more-experienced-in-love best friend doesn’t trust Dan.

Spanning a year and told from Willa and Dan’s alternating perspectives, Taking Flight captures the many stresses of being a high school senior, and how very difficult—but also how very easy—love can be.

Not to ruin “Taking Flight” for you, but it kind of leaves the reader hanging. They’re in love, but they’re not together. But they’re still in love! Which brings us to “Finding Slope.”Finding Slope Cover

A spring break ski trip turns into the reunion Willa and Dan never saw coming.

After months of not talking, Willa and Dan run into each other at the last place they thought they would—a ski lodge in Colorado. Neither of them expected to see the other during spring break, and certainly never expected to meet their ex’s new college friends.

Dan sees this as his last opportunity to win Willa back and wants to make the most of the week together. He knows that they can make long distance work, and when he hears that they may both be in New York for the summer, he’s more determined than ever to convince the girl of his dreams that they should try to have a relationship again. Third time’s the charm, right?

But Willa isn’t sure if that’s for the best—they broke up for a reason, after all, and if they did get back together, the deck is stacked against them. They’re still going to different colleges, they’re still long distance, and they still have no idea how to make that work.

But then again, when Willa is honest with herself, she knows that she wants to spend time with Dan. That she wants to see where the week in Colorado may take them. That she wants them to end up together. She just isn’t sure how—or even if—that’s supposed to happen.

In this Taking Flight novella, set against the snowy, stunning backdrop of the Rocky Mountains, Willa and Dan have to face the truth about their relationship and decide if they want to run back up that slippery slope together, or go their separate ways.

Brown is also hosting a super fun giveaway! 

Here’s an exclusive excerpt from the book, which goes on sale Erin told me this was one of her favorite parts, so I’m so excited to share it with you!

After we’ve all eaten, we head back outside to the ski lift. I catch Sophie’s eye and she nods before looking at her friends, somehow communicating with them without saying anything.

And it works because when it’s time for us to break into groups for the lift, Willa and I are the odd ones out.

Which means I’m going to have an entire lift ride up the mountain with Willa.

“Hey,” she says.

“Hey back.”

“I guess my friends decided we need some alone time.”

“I guess they did.”

We scurry to scoot ourselves to the line as the chair lift comes up behind us, and we sit in it as it sweeps us up into the air. Willa seamlessly moves her ski poles into one hand as she lowers the metal bar over our laps.

“This used to terrify me,” she says.

“The chair lift?”

“Yeah,” she says. “I was so scared it was going to get stuck. Or that I’d fall off. Or that I wouldn’t lift the tips of my skis up far enough when I got to the top and I’d break my leg.”

“Does that happen?”

“I’ve never seen it happen. The first time I skied, I was five, and my dad told me that if I wasn’t paying attention and didn’t lift the tips, I’d break my leg. I used to have nightmares about it.”

The wind blows just then and the frigid mountain air makes Willa shiver. I automatically move to wrap my arm around her, but catch myself before I actually do it.

“It’s so gorgeous here,” she says, surveying the snow-covered trees and mountain peaks from our aerial vantage point.

“It really is,” I agree.

“Something about this place feels a little bit magic, you know?”

“I do know. I’m sitting in a chair lift with you. It has to be magic.”

Willa looks at me when I say that and we sit there for a long moment, eyes locked, not saying anything. I realize that I should kiss her. Right now. This is the perfect moment—we’re alone, we’re both feeling that magnetic pull toward each other, and I can see in her eyes that she wants me to kiss her. I start to make the move, scooting closer to her and beginning to lean down, but she shakes her head and says, “I don’t know if I can do this.”

“What can’t you do?”

“This,” she says, motioning between us. “I don’t know if I can do it again. The looking and the chemistry and the completing each other. If it’s magic and not reality, I can’t do it.”

“No, Willa, that’s not what I meant. I meant that it’s magic that we ran into each other here without planning it.”

“Oh,” she says, “Of course that’s what you meant. I’m sorry. God, I’m so sorry. Can we forget what I said?”

I want to tell her no, I can’t forget it, and that we clearly need to talk about whatever freak-out she just had, because that’s the conversation we need to have before this week is over. But then again, there isn’t a “we” right now. Not in that sense, at least.

“Sure,” I say. “Consider it forgotten.”

“Thanks,” she says, looking relieved.

I replay her words in my head and can’t help but say, “Did you say we complete each other?”

“Jesus H. God, this is the slowest chair lift ever.”

“You absolutely said that.”

“I might have,” she says, without looking at me.

© Erin Brown, Finding Slope: A Taking Flight Novella, On Sale March 10th

Purchase Finding Slope and  all of the Taking Flight novels at:

Amazon | Barnes & Noble | iBook Store | Smashwords

And if you’re interested, here are all the awesome bloggers coming up (great places to find more suggestions/reviews, if you’re into that sort of thing!):

March 6th:   Review at Book Angel Booktopia 
March 6th:   Review at Romance Obsessed Book Blog
March 9th:   Excerpt at Snoopy Doo’s Book Reviews
March 10th: Review at Fictitious Delicious 
March 10th: Review at Tumbleweed Reviews
March 11th: Playlist at Mademoiselle Le Sphinx
March 11th: Review at V’s Reads
March 12th: Review at Best Between the Lines
March 13th: Author Interview at The Girl Meets Books
March 13th: Review at Short and Sassy Book Blurbs
March 16th: Deleted Scene at Taking Care of the Goose

#52Booksin15: “Marvin’s Shining Star” by John and Payton Otto

Admittedly, I don’t read a lot of children’s books, mostly because I have no reason to be around either children or their reading materials. Through a random email about trending topics on Twitter, though, I found out about “Marvin’s Shining Star” by Dr. John Otto and his son Payton, and I knew it was a story I wanted to read.

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Dr. Otto is a veterinarian in Norman, Okla., and works frequently with the Friends for Folks program that helps inmates train service dogs that are then introduced into the community. It’s a story of redemption on both ends: Rescue dogs get to become something really great and offer their services to others, and inmates in the prisons where the programs are offered want to work harder so they can be the ones that get a chance to train the dogs.

Through the program, Dr. Otto met Marvin, and inmate who committed a crime when he was young and was set to stay in prison for the rest of his life. As the book jacket/Amazon profile says:

Life doesn’t guarantee a second chance, but in turning a rescue mutt into a world-class, search-and-rescue responder, Marvin, an inmate serving a life sentence in an Oklahoma prison, earned his — in the process he inspired other inmates to try and atone for their wrongs. Inspired by a heart-warming true story of a man, a dog, and the prison therapy dog program (originally started by Sister Pauline Quinn in Washington State) that has convinced more than one tough-on-crime advocate that rehabilitation is indeed possible, told by the veterinarian son and grandson of a former acting director of the FBI.

If you have any connection to social justice, those that are incarcerated, or want to make a difference in the lives of the children of the incarcerated, I can’t implore you enough to buy this book, donate this book and share it’s message. Education is incredibly important in breaking the cycle of incarceration in this country, and books like “Marvin’s Shining Star” are imperative in making that happen.

I love this book because it recognizes the inherent human dignity of every person, regardless of their choices. It shows that people (and pups) deserve a second chance, and given support, love and encouragement, they really can make a difference. Marvin certainly did, and will continue to make that difference through “Marvin’s Shining Star.”

I’ve read the book more than a dozen times, and still can’t get through it without crying at the end:

“As for Dr. Otto, whenever he sees the first star in the night sky, he always says a little prayer for his friend Marvin, and then he makes a wish…that all the Stars in the world might get a second chance, just like Marvin’s Shining Star.”

If you are interested in learning more about the awesome work Dr. Otto and the people at Friends for Folks do, you can check them out here.

You can donate to the program by purchasing the book, which in part goes to Friends for Folks, or by making a direct donation here.

Editor’s Note: I originally found out about this book and wrote about it for Linked Magazine, which I am the editor of. Read my original story about the origins of the book here.

#52Booksin15: “Y: The Last Man” by Brian K. Vaughn

Admittedly, one of the things I was most concerned about when trying to complete the entire list of books to read this year, graphic novels were one of my biggest fears.

Fear might not be the right word, though. Hesitation, I guess you could say. I’ve never really read comic books, and I was nervous about being able to finish a book once I started.51KQa0B4+DL._SY344_BO1,204,203,200_

All those fears were unfounded, at least with the TWO graphic novels I chose to read: “Y: The Last Man: Unmanned” by Brian K. Vaughn and “Persepolis” by Marjane Satrapi. I was so thankful that I have friends on Facebook that are more well-versed in these book that made these two EXCELLENT suggestions (Thanks, Kyle and Erin!)

“Y: The Last Man” tells the story of a world where suddenly, because of the birth of a clone, all the men on earth drop dead except for one (and his monkey). Little did I know, the book had many small ties to my own life: the main character’s girlfriend is an anthropologist in Austrailia, for example.

Here’s what Publisher’s Weekly had to say about the book:

Yorick Brown is an escape artist; has a fabulous girlfriend who’s traveling in Australia; and possesses a genetic make-up that’s allowed him to survive a plague that killed every male being on the planet except for him and his pet monkey. Yorick is the last man on earth, and in the resulting chaos, he must find a way to help save the human race. At least that’s what the (now all-female) government thinks. Yorick would prefer to find his girlfriend, but it’s hard to get a flight halfway around the world when almost all the pilots and mechanics are gone. Furthermore, the entire social fabric has gone to hell, with gun-wielding wives of Republican representatives insisting on getting their husbands’ seats and tribes of latter-day Amazons claiming males were meant to die. Meanwhile, who are the mysterious Israeli soldiers who seem so gratified by the situation, and why is Yorick’s sister so intent on joining the Amazons? With clean lines and muted colors, Guerra and Marz n invoke a frighteningly believable future; their vision of the surprise and horror to come is so beautifully ordinary, it’s entirely convincing-and addictive.

 

And in case you needed more reason to step out of your comfort zone and pick up a comic book, here are a few more endorsements:

“Funny and scary … an utterly believable critique of society. A+”—THE WASHINGTON POST

“The best graphic novel I’ve ever read.”—STEPHEN KING

“This year’s best movie is a comic book.”—“ALL THINGS CONSIDERED,” NPR

“A seriously funny, nuanced fable…. Grade A.”—ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

Y: THE LAST MAN, winner of three Eisner Awards and one of the most critically acclaimed, best-selling comic books series of the last decade, is that rare example of a page-turner that is at once humorous, socially relevant and endlessly surprising.

I will definitely be reading more graphic novels in the near future, and can’t wait to find out what happens to Yorick, the last man.