Category: Uncategorized
The Best and Worst of December 2014
As is my tradition, I’m posting my monthly stats analysis early so that tomorrow I can do my full-year analysis. This December was down from last December, with only 5,025 views total, including 3,066 unique visitors. Seeing as my posting was erratic yet again, this isn’t really much of a surprise. I’m happy that I actually did this well. December is always a hectic month and in two out of three years it has been worse than the previous months because everyone wants to spend time off the internet and with their families and/or friends.
So what were the best posts this month?
1. Why Girls Hate Game of Thrones—A Rebuttal
2. How to Read 100 Pages in an Hour
3. The Hunger Games and Ancient Rome
4. Best Seller by Martha Reynolds
5. The Outsiders by S. E. Hinton
As usual, nothing new this month. Two reviews, three of my most popular articles all make up my top 5 this month and pretty much every month. I’m hoping to write more articles in the new year so hopefully I’ll break the streak of the same posts always making the top 5. We’ll see. My Forgotten Figures articles don’t seem to be doing as well as I’d hoped. But maybe they’ll catch on.
What were the worst posts this month, then?
1. The Commander’s Desire by Jeanette Green
2. Genghis: Bones of the Hills by Conn Iggulden
3. The Last Days by Scott Westerfeld
4. What do you think makes a good book?
5. The Sorceress by Michael Scott
I think this is the first time a couple of posts have appeared twice on the worst list: The Last Days by Scott Westerfeld and The Sorceress by Michael Scott. They’re not really popular books that people are searching out because they’re a couple of years old. Still, this is the first time in a long time we’ve had a repeat offender despite the relative popularity of both authors.
Well, that was my December, folks. Stay tuned in tomorrow for how my entire year went. But in the meantime, how was your December? If you blog, do you notice a traffic dip in December as well or is it just me? What was your best month in 2014?
The 2014 Annual WordPress Report
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2014 annual report for this blog.
Here’s an excerpt:
The Louvre Museum has 8.5 million visitors per year. This blog was viewed about 96,000 times in 2014. If it were an exhibit at the Louvre Museum, it would take about 4 days for that many people to see it.
The Mad Reviewer’s 2014 Holiday Book Buying Guide (Part One)
Yes, it’s that time of year again: time to recommend books that I loved. Particularly new books that I just read this year. In this Part One I’ll be recommending fantasy, science fiction and speculative fiction. And then in Part Two I’ll be recommending the remaining major genres: historical fiction, romance and just a miscellaneous category. All links go to my actual reviews of the books where you can find links to Amazon, Barnes & Noble and sometimes Goodreads in the newer reviews. Enjoy!
FANTASY FICTION
When the blog tour for this book went around, I almost didn’t join up because I thought it sounded stupid. But I would have lost out if I hadn’t because Aranya is one of the most unique, well-written and diverse fantasy worlds that I’ve ever encountered. It has dragons, shapeshifters, people of many different cultures, vivid characters, beautiful writing and a believable fantasy world all jammed into one action-packed story. I fell in love with it from the first page and I just cannot recommend it enough. Everyone needs to buy this book.
2. Goddess Born by Kari Edgren
I picked this one up because the head of one of the blog tour companies I’m affiliated with absolutely gushed about it. We generally have the same taste in books so I couldn’t pass it over. Like with Aranya, I’m glad I didn’t. Selah, the main character, is just one of those characters you’ll never really forget and Henry is also very unique. Putting them together into what’s not necessarily the best situation where both of them face rape and possibly death if they separate makes for a lot of tension, but it also gives them common ground. They start to trust each other, become friends and eventually it turns into love but Selah is keeping a secret that could break them apart.
3. The Devil’s Concubine by Jill Braden
I recommended this one last year as well and I really just can’t recommend it enough. Jill Braden has created a diverse fantasy world in The Devil’s Concubine and her main character QuiTai is perhaps one of the best female characters I’ve ever seen in fiction. She’s almost always one step ahead of her enemies but sometimes things don’t go exactly the way she wants to. She’s ruthless and beautiful but also caring and gentle, paying for the schooling of Ponongese children in Thampurian schools and fighting for Ponong’s independence (in subtle ways, mind) from their Thampurian masters.
4. Prophecy of the Most Beautiful by Diantha Jones
This is another return recommendation and Prophecy of the Most Beautiful certainly deserves it. Diantha Jones has created a vivid fantasy world of gods and goddesses based on Greek mythology…and it’s a world that’s in great danger as the main character Chloe becomes the Pythia of prophecy. Will the world as the gods know it end? Or will Chloe lose everything she holds dear? You’ll be on the edge of your seat for this first installment in the Oracle of Delphi series!
5. A Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin
If you’ve ever thought about reading the books the famous TV series is based on, you really should just read it. It’s an interesting take on a quasi-Medieval fantasy world that’s not all roses and rainbows. George R. R. Martin glamorizes nothing about the period and even goes to great lengths to show how horrible it is but at the same time, creates some great characters. He writes some of the best female leads in fiction and there is a reason that the book series was adapted into a television series: it’s just that good.
SCIENCE FICTION
Ooh, a science fiction book aimed at teens that contains actual science! It’s a shocker, I know, but I was actually fairly impressed with the first installment in the Partials Sequence. You’ve got believable characters, more plot twists than you can count and an interesting post-apocalyptic world where not everything is as it seems. With lots of moral ambiguity and just a little romance, you really can’t go wrong with Partials. I guess in hindsight I should have seen the main plot twist but it’s really how that particular plot twist came about that’s more interesting to readers than the nature of said twist.
This is not a new book at all, but I just can’t recommend it enough. It’s a new take on zombies, one where two man-made viruses designed to help man combine to create—you guessed it—zombies. Only this isn’t your typical zombie novel; it’s more of a political thriller that happens to have zombies because Feed takes place 26 years after the event called The Rising. How has humanity changed because of zombies being a constant threat, a threat that can arise every time someone dies? And what happens when some people decide they know better than everyone else and try to mold the world to fit their ideal? Find out in Mira Grant’s amazing novel!
3. Captivate by Vanessa Garden
Captivate was one of the biggest surprises of the year for me because (and I’m not sure why I thought this) I thought this would be a book about mermaids. That’s not quite the case, although mermaids certainly were the inspiration for the whole underwater city. Captivate does in fact have a love triangle, but it’s much, much more realistic than so many out there in YA fiction. It’s actually kind of natural but in the end Miranda makes a choice, something that also rarely happens in just the first book of a YA series or trilogy. So if you’re looking for YA with some romance, but want something a little less stereotypical, Vanessa Garden’s debut is for you.
Spark is book one in the Feyguard series, a spin-off series to the main Feyland trilogy Anthea Sharp wrote. It can be read as a stand-alone novel, though, and that’s in part because it is very well written. Spark herself is a pretty awesome main character as the premier gamer in the world as well as a member of the Feyguard, sworn to protect mortals from slipping into the world of the Fae through the Feyland game. This isn’t the most science-intensive science fiction, but the incredible technology of Anthea Sharp’s future world is enough to even make a non-gamer like me drool.
Within YA, Crewel and the sequel Altered stand alone in their uniqueness. The plot isn’t necessarily entirely unique, but Gennifer Albin hits upon such an unique idea that it’s disorientating at first. A world where fates are spun like thread seems more fantasy than science fiction, but there is an actual scientific explanation. It also makes you really ponder the idea of free will vs. controlling factors (be they a deity or really terrifying science). And if you’re like me and hate YA characters that can’t seem to keep their mouths shut ever, you’ll love Adelice. She can actually control her emotions and knows when and when not to say certain things. What novel idea!
SPECULATIVE FICTION
1. The Color of Rain by Cori McCarthy
This is the kind of gift you’d really only give to your closest friend because (and I don’t say this lightly) there’s a ridiculous amount of trigger warning content within. There’s rape, physical violence and some pretty awful decisions that the main character Rain has to make, all in the name of a possible cure for her little brother’s terminal illness. It’s a dark story, but also one of beauty, forgiveness and redemption. Trust me when I say that it’s not for the faint of heart, but that it is an excellent book.
2. Cameron’s Law by Mia Darien
This is sort of urban fantasy/speculative fiction. What would happen if humans found out about supernatural creatures like vampires, werewolves and shapeshifters? If your answer was “kill them”, you’d probably be right. And then what if in that world, supernatural creatures then obtained the same rights as humans? Well, that’s the world Sadie Stanton lives in, where her boyfriend Cameron was murdered for being a supernatural creature and where she fought to push through legislation declaring personhood for all supernatural beings. One year after, things are heating up in the town of Adelheid as murders seemingly perpetuated by vampires and werewolves keep cropping up. Will Sadie be able to get to the bottom of things?
I read this one last year, but it’s really stuck with me and that’s in part because of the main character Catrina. The Genesis is set in a futuristic world where a corporation keeps kidnapping and killing vampires in the search for the key to their immortality. Catrina becomes a vampire in this rather dark world but instead of going into complete denial about being a vampire like so many other narrators, she tries to learn everything she can about it. Shocking, I know. The only thing that’s a little annoying in this book (to me anyway) is that we don’t really know much about Catrina. However, this book is only the first in a series so I guess we’ll learn a lot more about her in the future.
4. Prince of Thorns by Mark Lawrence
I recommended this one last year and I’m going to recommend it again. Prince of Thorns is a dark fantasy/science fiction novel that takes place in a post-apocalyptic world that is very clearly our own. (Jorg reading old Latin philosophy in original Latin being the first clue.) Our main character Jorg is ruthless, utterly vile and will stop at nothing to become Emperor. And he’s only 14 years old! Normally a character like Jorg would repulse me but he is very compelling and when you learn his backstory bit by bit, it’s no wonder that he’s so horrible. But he’s also brilliant and strategically minded, meaning that the whole book is a fast-paced and interesting read.
5. The Immortal Rules by Julie Kagawa
In a world where vampires rule and humans are their slaves, one teenage girl named Allison Sekemoto is scrounging on the edges of society to survive. Rather than submitting to the vampires’ bloodletting twice a month she decides to run to the outskirts of the city and scavenge for food. Only, her life gets turned upside down when she is attacked by feral vampires and is saved by a regular vampire who then turns her so she can survive. She has to figure out not only how to survive as a vampire but how to reconcile her bloodlust with her code of ethics that’s strictly against killing for blood. Julie Kagawa is one of those writers that gets better with time and by the end of this trilogy, you’ll look at vampires just a little differently.
If you don’t see your favourite genre here, stay tuned this week for part two, which will contain my historical fiction, romance and miscellaneous genre recommendations. Did you see any new books that you might check out? Or are some of your favourites already on here?
The Best and Worst of November 2014
November went by in a blur for me, to be honest. Between not having internet for half of it and not having water for the past day and a half currently, I’m really quite sick of rural life. Still, it makes me appreciate all the more the fact I’m moving to a real-life city in the summer. So overall, not a bad month but not a great month.
In November, despite spotty posting, I managed to get 6,022 views including a total of 3,875 unique views. That’s fewer views than October, but I can’t really complain because of the aforementioned spotty posting. Hopefully the internet I pay through the nose for will be slightly more consistent in the future.
So what were my best posts this month?
1. Why Girls Hate Game of Thrones—A Rebuttal
2. How to Read 100 Pages in an Hour
3. The Hunger Games and Ancient Rome
4. Best Seller by Martha Reynolds
5. The Mad Reviewer is Open to Review Requests (Temporarily)
That’s actually a pretty respectable list, with two new posts finally making it. My review of Best Seller by Martha Reynolds is still going very strong and I’m glad that the author is still promoting it. It makes me far more likely to review books by authors in the future when they promote the heck out of my reviews, even mediocre ones. As for the last item on my list, I’m quite happy with the response I’ve had to my call for submissions. I’ve got 14 locked in right now and I’ve reviewed four of them; so far, so good.
And what were the worst posts this month?
1. A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness
2. Anastasia: The Last Grand Duchess by Carolyn Meyer
5. “Game of Thrones man hatred” and More Weird Search Terms
The only surprise there is that one of my weird search term posts finally made the list of the worst in terms of views. That’s shocking, actually. As for the rest, I can’t really complain. They’re either old articles or announcements or books that aren’t necessarily the most popular at the moment. Next month that list will totally change, just like every other list of the worst articles/reviews.
Well, that was how my November went. How was yours? Did you watch that heartbreaking mid-season finale of The Walking Dead last night?
Discussion: NetGalley
For those of you that don’t know, NetGalley is a site where publishers and authors put ebooks (usually ARCs, but they don’t have to be) to be requested by reviewers. Us reviewers fill out a profile containing our blogging information like our statistics and what we review and then we request these books. Sometimes you get accepted, sometimes you don’t. Since I hit 1,000 followers I don’t usually get turned down, but then again I’m very picky about what I request and I read their criteria for reviewers.
I’ve always found NetGalley’s user interface clean, simple and easy to use. Edelweiss was an absolute nightmare when I tried to sign up after using NetGalley for so long. Seriously people, how do you use that site with tiny writing, no logical order and pretty much zero instructions? Unless they’ve vastly improved it, I doubt I will ever use my Edelweiss profile. NetGalley is enough for me at this point.
But what I want to know now is this: If you’re a reviewer, do you use NetGalley? What are your experiences like on there? If you don’t use NetGalley, why not?
And, if you’re an author or a publishing professional, are your books on NetGalley? Why or why not? If so, what are your experiences on it like?