Tagged: new york
It’s Official: The Mad Reviewer is Attending BEA 2015!
I’m so excited that I feel like bouncing up and down like I’m three years old once again. I’ve managed to put away enough money that I can say with 95% certainty that I will be attending Book Expo America in New York in May 2015! I’m planning on attending the Bloggers Conference for the first day and then meandering around the convention for the second and third days. There will be meet-ups (hopefully) with any of you that want to meet in the flesh and I’ll also be taking a little time to actually experience New York. I desperately want to go to the Metropolitan Museum of Art and watch either (or both) tapings for Last Week Tonight and The Daily Show.
Are any of you guys attending BEA 2015? If not, would you ever attend a convention like that? Why or why not?
Blogging Goals: Attend Book Expo America
Many, many people have asked me where I’m taking this blog. What are my goals for its future? Do I foresee a time where I’ll have to stop blogging? (Let’s hope not!) What direction do I want to take The Mad Reviewer? Is my goal to monetize my blog?
To tell you the truth, I don’t know the answer to any of those questions at the moment. Right now I just want to talk about books like I always have while building up a following of awesome readers. So far, so good. It’s basically what every other book blogger wants.
But lately I’ve been thinking about book blogging conferences and book fairs. Particularly Book Expo America (BEA), which has a book blogger’s conference in conjunction with the regular show. From what I’ve seen of other blogs it seems like a great place to go: you get some free books, listen to interesting talks from industry professionals and network with other bloggers. So yes, as a dedicated book blogger I obviously want to go. The only question is when.
Looking at my financial situation right now, going in 2014 is out of the question, unfortunately. 2015? Maybe then, but certainly not next year. Right now it’s really only the financial part that’s holding me back. Travelling alone to somewhere like New York is a little intimidating I’ll admit, but it’s not like I haven’t travelled alone before. Just never that far. I may splurge and buy a bunch of business cards for my blog beforehand, but that’s something to worry about in the future when I actually have a permanent logo and more followers.
So yeah, attending Book Expo America is currently my only book blogging goal. If you’re a blogger or an author, would you want to attend something like BEA? Have you already attended it? What was it like?
Piece of My Heart by Lynn Maddalena Menna
(Cover picture courtesy of NetGalley.)
Still in high school, Marisol Reyes gets the chance of a lifetime to be a real singer, and she leaps at it. After all, this is the dream she held on to, all the days and nights she spent growing up on means streets of East Harlem. Marisol never gave in–no matter what her boyfriend or her best friend had to say. Who cares if only one in a hundred pretty, talented girls make it? She will be the one. In her rush to fame, Marisol tramples on the heart of her loyal best friend, and Julian, the boy she loves. But will it be worth it?
One night at a private gig in the Hamptons, the little Latino girl with the big voice from East Harlem gets a severe reality check. A famous rapper who claims to be interested in her talents turns out to be interested in something else, threatening not only Marisol’s dreams but her body and soul. Will the realities of the gritty New York music scene put out the stars in Marisol’s eyes forever?
[Full disclosure: I received an ARC ebook through NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.]
I have some mixed feelings about this book. On one hand, the premise is amazing and the descriptions Lynn Maddalena Menna writes are beautiful. On the other hand, the writing felt rushed as Marisol just all of a sudden got discovered and there were times I wanted to slap her for being so cocky.
Marisol is not a perfect character and I can usually deal with that just fine. She’s gorgeous? Okay, fine. She’s a good singer? That’s okay too. But does she have to be perfect at almost everything? All of a sudden, out of absolutely nowhere she writes her own song or inadvertently avoids a disastrous situation by nothing but pure chance (AKA author intervention). Marisol can be a bit shallow at times, but it seems like it’s a product of how she was brought up as well as confidence about her talent. However, it can get tiresome when she constantly fights with her friends over putting her career first. And by the end, it does seem like she’s learned her lesson but it was definitely a painful process and overall she doesn’t feel more mature.
The plot was amazingly fast paced, which I loved. What I didn’t like was how Menna transitioned from scene to scene. Whenever the characters had to travel, it was like they’d magically pop there without any clues for the reader to understand they’d hopped on a train or walked. They were just suddenly at their destination. Or, when it seemed like things were slowing down, some new drama would just pop up out of nowhere that was not really relevant to the plot. Despite this, I’m actually quite fond of her writing style overall. Aside from scene transitions, the amount of description and dialogue was balanced perfectly and the plot did move along quite nicely.
There were some unexpected plot twists and there were some important messages about self-esteem and how sick the entertainment industry can be, but on the whole Piece of My Heart was okay. It isn’t great, but neither is it bad; it falls somewhere in the middle. Despite some hiccups, it’s a strangely addictive story, possibly because of the premise and how it was generally executed well. What I’m trying to say is that it’s light reading for the most part: it’s really good until you think deeply about it. And for some people, that’s perfectly fine. I just think Lynn Maddalena Menna missed an opportunity to really send out a great message to readers. Still, there is so much potential here that yes, I will be checking out her future books. I’m sure she is one of those writers that will improve with more experience.
I give this book 3/5 stars.
City of Ashes by Cassandra Clare
(Cover picture courtesy of Gripped Into Books.)
A murderer is loose in New York City…
…and the victims are Downworlder children. Clary Fray and her fellow Shadowhunters have a strong suspicion that Valentine, Clary’s father, may be behind the killings. But if he is the murderer, what’s his true motive? To make matters worse, the second of the Mortal Instruments, the Soul-Sword, has been stolen, and the mysterious Inquisitor ahs arrived to investigate, with his eyes vigilantly targeted on Clary’s brother, Jace.
Clary will need to face some terrifying demons and even more terrifying family decisions. No one said that the life of a Shadowhunter would be easy.
It’s rare that the second book in a series or trilogy is better than the first book (see Catching Fire), but Cassandra Clare has managed to pull it off. City of Ashes has twice the suspense, romance and surprises of City of Bones.
It has many of the clichés of the first novel, but these are given some interesting spins that kept me on the edge of my seat (especially in Chapter 9: And Death Shall Have No Dominion) up until the very end. City of Ashes may be my favourite book in The Mortal Instruments trilogy, but it does have its flaws. Clary could still be substituted for any YA protagonist and Jace is still the stereotypical super hot but icy love interest. The only redeeming thing is that we get to see many other characters’ points of view, which gives them a bit more depth than in the first book.
We see a bit more of Valentine, which I really like. Many of the villains in YA fiction are neglected and end up having what I like to call Dr. No Syndrome: they’re just evil with no explanation or the explanation is really unbelievable. No one really thinks of themselves as a villain in real life, so why should it be any different in fiction? Valentine really thinks he’s doing the right thing and the perverted logic he uses makes it sound like he is the true hero, even if his actions do not match up. I think many YA authors would do well to study Cassandra Clare’s enigmatic villain.
I give this book 4/5 stars.