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"Saying 'I notice you're a nerd' is like saying, 'Hey, I notice that you'd rather be intelligent than be stupid, that you'd rather be thoughtful than be vapid, that you believe that there are things that matter more than the arrest record of Lindsay Lohan. Why is that?' In fact, it seems to me that most contemporary insults are pretty lame. Even 'lame' is kind of lame. Saying 'You're lame' is like saying 'You walk with a limp.' Yeah, whatever, so does 50 Cent, and he's done all right for himself."— John Green

Showing posts with label genre: adventure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genre: adventure. Show all posts

10.17.2022

BLOG TOUR - PRINCE OF SONG & SEA BY LINSEY MILLER - YOUNG ADULT FICTION [REVIEW + GIVEAWAY]

 

I am very excited to be a part of the blog tour from Rockstar Book Tours for the start of this awesome series focusing on Disney Princes, Prince of Song & Sea by Linsey Miller.  Check out the excerpt below, and don't forget to enter the giveaway! 

Book Information



Title: Prince of Song & Sea (Princes #1)
Authors(s): Linsey Miller
Publication Date: October 4,
 2022
Edition: Hardcover, eBook, Audiobook; 352 pgs
Publisher: Disney Press
SourceRockstar Book Tours
PurchaseAmazon-Kindle-Audible-B&N-iBooks-BAM!-Kobo-
TBD-Bookshop.org
Disclaimer: I received a copy from the publisher as part of a blog tour in exchange for an honest review.  My thoughts and opinions are my own.  Please note the purchase links above are affiliate links.

Tour Schedule

Week One
10/1/2022 - The Reading Devil - Excerpt/IG Post

Week Two
10/2/2022 - Celia's Reads - Review/IG Post
10/3/2022 - a GREAT read - Review/IG Post
10/4/2022 - Kait Plus Books - Review/IG Post
10/5/2022 - @ReadsReaders - YouTube Review/IG Post/TikTok Post
10/6/2022 - Wanderingwitchreads - TikTok Review/IG Post
10/7/2022 - OddandBookish - Review/IG Post
10/8/2022 - @simplybeccamee - IG Review

Week Three
10/9/2022 - Nerdophiles - Review
10/10/2022 - YA Books Central - Excerpt/IG Post
10/11/2022 - A Bookish Dream - Review/IG Post
10/12/2022 - bookbriefs - Review/IG Post
10/13/2022 - onemused - IG Review
10/14/2022 - One More Exclamation - Review/IG Post
10/15/2022 - Ohyouread - IG Review

Week Four
10/16/2022 - pluvioreads - Review/TikTok Post
10/17/2022 - Eli to the nth - Review/IG Post
10/18/2022 - Eye-Rolling Demigod's Book Blog - Review/IG Post
10/19/2022 - @ReaderOfTheWrittenWord - IG Review
10/20/2022 - A Backwards Story - Review/IG Post
10/21/2022 - A Dream Within A Dream - Review/IG Post
10/22/2022 - booksaremagictoo - Review/IG Post

Week Five
10/23/2022 Novel Novice - IG Spotlight
10/24/2022 - Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers - Review/IG Post
10/25/2022 - @bookishreviews_byalison - IG Review
10/26/2022 - @jacleomik33 - IG Review
10/27/2022 - Nonbinary Knight Reads - Review/IG Post
10/28/2022 - @thebookishfoxwitch - IG Review
10/29/2022 - @drew_ambitious_reading - IG Review/TikTiok Review

Week Six
10/30/2022 - PopTheButterfly Reads - Review/IG Post
10/31/2022 - Books with Brandie Shanae - YouTube Review/IG Post


The Summary

For fans of Twisted Tales and Villains is a brand new YA series that retells the classic Disney stories you thought you knew from the Disney Princes' perspectives.

Before Prince Eric’s mother, the Queen of Vellona, went missing two years ago, she reminded him about the details of the deadly curse that has plagued his entire life. The curse? If he were to kiss someone other than his true love, he would die. With a neighboring kingdom looking for any excuse to invade their shores, and rumors of ghost pirates lurking the seas, Eric is desperate for any information that may help him break his enchantment and bring stability to Vellona. The answers he has been searching for come to him in the form of a letter left from his mother that reveals Eric must find his true love, the one with a voice pure of heart, or kill the sea witch responsible for cursing him in the first place.

Now Eric is on a quest to find the Isle of Serein, the witch's legendary home. But after he is rescued by a mysterious young woman with a mesmerizing singing voice, Eric’s heart becomes torn. Does he enter a battle he is almost certain he cannot win or chase a love that might not even exist? And when a shipwrecked young woman with flaming red hair and a smile that could calm the seven seas enters his life, Eric may discover that true love isn’t something that can be decided by magic.
My Review

Let's first start off by scrolling back to that cover.  God, it is beautiful.  Also, disclaimer time: Eric is my favorite Disney Prince, so I might have been a bit biased going into this book.  But luckily, Prince of Song & Sea by Linsey Miller hit the hype; a great expansion on the original The Little Mermaid, but from the point-of-view of Prince Eric.

Taking the original storyline, but expanding it, and showing the story from Eric's side of things brought a freshness to the series of events in the original.  Linsey Miller did an amazing job placing her mark on the work, and really fleshing out Eric's personality.  He isn't just a handsome hero, he has fears and dreams, and really gets to be his own person in this book.  I loved the addition of his friends, which Linsey used to highlight some diversity of the cast.  The push and pull that Eric faces being the Crowned Prince of his country while wanting to be free on the sea was really well-crafted.

There are some slight tweaks to the original story, such as how Eric was shipwrecked, but all the major plot points are there.  What I really loved is the time we also got to spend seeing him and Ariel get to know each other.  Linsey Miller did a great job making Eric a rounded and dynamic character.  He always, I felt, had a bigger role than many other Disney Princes, but still, we don't truly know him.  Prince of Song & Sea really allows layers to develop, which was great.

I am very happy with the first book in the Princes series; Linsey Miller is also writing another of the books in the series, this one about Prince Phillip.  That will definitely be an interesting one to read.  I adored Eric in The Little Mermaid, and this book made me fall even more in love.  Staying true to the original story, but creating its very own place, Prince of Song & Sea is a must-read for Disney, and non-Disney fans alike!

Final Rating



Excerpt

Overture

PAIN washed over Eric in waves, salt sticking to every scratch. Water lapped at his legs, and a  bone-deep cold shuddered down his spine. He tried to turn  his head and groaned. He couldn’t move. Why couldn’t  he move? 

The ship! He had been on the ship. A storm, worse  than any he had ever weathered, had swept over them  faster than lightning. They’d caught fire and crashed,  the powder kegs exploding, and he had been thrown into  the sea. Eric tried to call out and choked. Each breath  stung, the acrid taste of ash prickling across his tongue.  His chest ached. 

But all of it meant he was alive. He had survived. A soft hum broke through the pain. It started low  and sad, like far-off whale calls. Fingers stroked his face,  brushing salt and sand from his sore skin. The melody,  the tender touch, became a pinpoint of light in the dark,  and he struggled to hold on to it. The gentle voice grew  louder and stronger. Sunlight burned through his eye lids. Eric forced his eyes open and gasped. 

She was breathtaking, a backlit shadow glittering  with seawater. Her features were as distorted as her  words, but the hand against his cheek was so tender that  he knew she meant no harm. He reached for her, and she  eased him back into the sand. A warm, fluttering feeling  flowed over him. 

Safety, he thought. This was safety. 

She must have been strong to drag him from the  wreckage and kind, too, to risk her life for his. The sweet  lilt of her song filled his head. 

She and her voice were the only things between him  and death at sea. 

And they slipped through his fingers like sand.


1

Fathoms Above

THE SUN hung high and hot above the whitewashed, red-roofed homes nestled in the kingdom  of Vellona’s Cloud Break Bay. Warm winds whipped  through the cobblestone streets and canals, and voices  called out across the rippling waves. The soft notes of a  song, as cheerful as it was distant, drifted through the  piers. Eric turned his ear toward the tune and shuffled  his feet back in time with it. A sword sliced through the  air where he’d stood. 

“Too slow!” Eric shouted, sweeping one leg back and  bowing. 

The crowd hollered. The dock above them rattled,  salt peppering down like snow. Eric dunked his stinging hands into the low tide. Across from him, Gabriella,  his childhood friend and the only person who regularly  outmatched him, paced along the edges of the fighting  ring, and her gaze flicked from his hands to his face. She grinned, brown skin gleaming with sweat and seawater.  Seaweed clung to her sword. 

These weekly bouts had been small at first, an easy  way to help train folks who might otherwise never see a  sword. They had only started using live blades this week.  Eric had gathered his friends into the little nook on the  beach beneath the last dock and strung up an old canvas  sheet between the posts to hide them away from curious eyes. It hadn’t worked, and these last three months  had seen their numbers swell. This little fighting ring  beneath the docks was all Eric could do to make up for  the ever-present fear of pirates that infused Vellona these  days with more towns being raided and razed every week. 

“You’re too cocky,” Gabriella said and shoved her  damp sleeves up to her elbows. “If I were a pirate, you’d  be dead.” 

Gabriella was the only one here who’d lived through  a pirate raid. The sparring had been fun at first, but now  there was too sharp an edge to it.  

“If you were a pirate, we’d have bigger problems  than—” 

She struck out and nicked his arm. He reared back. “You always give in to the urge to chat,” said  Gabriella, lunging for him. “Real fights aren’t fairy tales.  No one will stop so you can monologue.”

“Then stop me.” He met her in the middle, both of  his knives blocking the thrust, and locked them together  at the center of the ring. “And don’t worry about my  breaking.” 

“Never.” She grinned. “Princeling.” 

Eric laughed. This was why he liked the morning  fights. These bouts were a good way to relax and find  out what people needed help with before heading to work.  Would these spars fix all of Vellona’s problems? Never.  Would they help a few survive? Maybe. Did they make  Eric feel like part of the crowd, just another soul living in  the bay instead of a prince always held at arm’s length?  Absolutely. 

“Every time you call me that,” he said, “I’ll hit  harder.” 

“I’m quivering,” she said, and fluttered her off hand  over her heart. “Come prove it.” 

Eric reversed his grip on his knives. He feinted  for her left, her sword scraping down his blades with a  teeth-shuddering grind. She kicked him back, and they  circled each other. He slashed at her, but she angled  away. The frantic rush of blood in Eric’s ears drowned  out their sloshing steps. 

“You going to hit me?” she asked. 

Eric thrust one blade at Gabriella, herding her right, and aimed a backhanded slash to where she’d have  to step. She pivoted and ducked, the knife catching only  her sleeve. The crowd roared. 

Someone behind Gabriella shouted, “Trounce him!” “His right side’s weaker!” yelled Vanni, Eric’s best  friend and, in this moment, worst enemy. 

Gabriella shifted to attack his right. Eric pretended  to stumble, windmilling his right arm back. She lunged,  and he swept his knife up. Their blades collided. 

His riposte sent her sword flying. It splashed behind  her, sinking beneath the murky tide. Eric rushed toward  her, expecting Gabriella to chase after her sword, but  she crouched down and met his charge. Her shoulder  slammed into his stomach and knocked the wind out of  him. His arms went limp, the edge of his knife bouncing uselessly off her collar. Gabriella’s hands grasped his  ankles. 

She tugged at his boots. Eric pressed his shaking  knife to her neck. She froze. 

“Well,” said Gabriella, her odd crouch muffling her  words against his wet shirt, “I’ve lost in more embarrassing ways.” 

Eric couldn’t recall any. The raid that had driven  Gabriella to move to the bay as a child had killed her  sister, Mila, and now Gabriella trained with her aunt almost every day. Once she’d gotten over Eric’s being  the prince, she had always had the decency to leave Eric  with far more bruises than his tutors did when sparring. No part of this loss was embarrassing. 

“If you insist,” he said, and cleared his throat, moving his knives away from her. 

“Princeling!” A pair of arms looped around Eric’s  neck and pulled him into a tight hug. “You lost me  supper, so I expect some compensation.” 

Vanni—far more interested in swords and sailing  than his baker of a father would have liked—clapped Eric  on the shoulder and spun him around. 

“Stop betting against me, then.” Eric bowed to him,  glaring the whole way down. “Keeping you and your ego  fed is my only goal in life.” 

“Obviously,” Vanni said, tossing his flaxen hair from  his face. He didn’t sweat in the stifling heat beneath the  docks so much as gleam, looking far more princely than  Eric ever did. “Who’s up next?” 

“You,” Gabriella said, and dragged him to the center of the crowd. “I want a real fight.” 

Vanni laughed, and Eric let out an uncomfortable chuckle. 

“Rude of you to say it wasn’t a real fight,” he  muttered, and Gabriella flinched.

Vanni and Gabriella didn’t bow to each other. Vanni  fought with a single sword, and Gabriella switched to a  dagger. He was limber enough to dodge her strikes, and  Eric had assumed she would be too exhausted to match  Vanni’s intensity given how she had lost. But each of her  strikes was as strong as the last, though, and Vanni was  gasping in the humid air after only three minutes. He  swung wide, and she dropped to one knee.  

Vanni smiled like he’d already won, but an uneasy  revelation wormed its way through Eric’s chest. Gabriella  wasn’t shaking or out of breath, and when Vanni lunged,  she plunged her off hand into the water. Quick as lightning, she yanked his foot out from under him. Vanni  collapsed with a splash. 

“You’ve got the balance of a fish on land,” said  Gabriella, holding up his leg like a trophy. 

The crowd applauded, and she dropped him. Vanni  coughed up mouthfuls of water and peeled seaweed  from his face. Gabriella handed Eric Vanni’s sword, and  Eric mumbled in response. All the joy of finally doing  something useful and fun with friends condensed onto a  single memory. 

Gabriella’s hands had been on Eric’s boots, and she  could have taken him down. Or up, as it was.

“Eric?” Vanni called, shaking out his sopping shirt  with a smile. “Your head’s in the clouds.” 
Eric forced himself to smile. 

“Bit overcast,” muttered Eric, “but I’m fine.” Vanni snorted and patted his shoulder. “Least you  won and won’t be wearing sand all day.” 

He shook some from his hair and onto Eric and  Gabriella. Eric jerked away. Gabriella shrugged. “I work outside,” she said, and checked the knot of  the kerchief covering her black curls. “You needed a bath  anyway.” 

“Gabriella,” Eric said, and leaned down slightly so  that Vanni wouldn’t hear. “You let me win.” Gabriella stilled. “I did.” 

“Why?” he asked. “Why let me win now?” 

“We’ve been using training swords for months, and  the sharp edges drew a crowd. It’s better if they don’t  see their prince flipped head over heels,” said Gabriella.  “Isn’t that what Grimsby is always going on about—the  crown is an idea, not only a person? Seeing you getting  dunked would be bad for morale.” 

“If Grim keeps giving you ideas like that, I’ll dunk  him,” Eric said. Of course, Eric’s status was seeping into  his one escape from the castle. 

The crowd milled around them, people kissing  cheeks and comparing bruises while they said goodbye.  Sparring was a fine way to pass the morning, but now  the day had begun and there was plenty of work to be  done in the bay. Vanni wrung out his shirt, muttering  under his breath. Eric slapped his shoulder. 

“You’re getting better,” said Eric. 

“Damper, more like.” Vanni shook out his hair. “I’m  going to be squishing about all day.” 

“You’re improving, though. You both are.” Gabriella  glanced up at Eric and grinned. “Do you know why I  always beat you?” 

“Because you’re better than me?” Eric asked, and  Vanni laughed. 

“You lean on your training too much. You never go  for a hit or kick when you start the fight with blades,”  she said and punched his arm. “You’ve got better form  with a sword and stick, and you can disarm me a dozen  times. If we were dueling, you’d beat me—I can’t fence  to save my life—but we’re not dueling. You fight in the  same order you run drills, and one day you’re going to  have to make the choice of what to do on your own. Get  dirty.” 

Eric bit back a grimace. He couldn’t choose anything.  That was the problem. Politics and circumstance within the last ten years had made sure that he had no choices  that wouldn’t lead either to a battle with the neighboring kingdom Sait, destruction at the sword points of the  pirates, or a civil war over his throne. One wrong move,  whether it was an impolite look or a strike back at the  wrong pirate ship, could get Vellona destroyed. 

Once most of the crowd had scattered, the trio  emerged from their makeshift meeting place, squinting in the bright morning light as they walked along  the beach. Cloud Break Bay was the largest city in the  small kingdom of Vellona, and the pale green waters  were as much a home to Eric as the castle tucked into the  cliffs. Masts listed across the harbor, their ships rolling  unevenly as cargo shifted. Summer rose in humid spirals  of steam from the decks, and voices called out across the  waves as people basked beneath the first warm, clear sky  in weeks. Vanni squinted up at the sun. 

“We went long today,” he said, and turned to Gabriella. “Won’t get you in trouble with your aunt, will it?” “No, we’re doing repairs this week before taking  off,” she said. “She doesn’t even really need me for those.” Carpentry was one of the few things she didn’t excel  at. Still a touch too young to take over her grandfather’s  fishing ship and too needed at home to take off and join  her aunt’s crew, she had spent more time at sea than Eric and dreamed of captaining her own merchant ship like her aunt. 

“I could help with repairs,” said Eric, eager to  stay with his friends. That way, he could be Eric, just  Eric, for a little while longer. “Does your aunt need the  extra hands?” 

“Not really,” Gabriella said, and made a face. “That  last storm did a number on the ship, and we’d be in the  way of the good shipwrights. Hopefully we’ll be able to  pay them. We’re getting wrecked by storms every time  we leave the docks.” 

“Those hurricanes aren’t normal,” said Vanni. “That  last one came out of nowhere.” 

“It’s magic. Got to be,” Gabriella said. 

Magic was uncommon but not unheard of. It was  limited to reclusive sorcerers and old tales swapped over  pints. Small magics, like tonics and whistling up a wind,  were alive and well, and Eric knew there were stories  about witches in the old days who could call down lightning or manipulate souls like puppets. Grimsby wouldn’t  hear of it, but Eric agreed with Gabriella. Sait, the large  kingdom to the north dead set on expanding, had almost  certainly found itself a witch. 

“Even your mother, bless her, would be struggling  these days.” Gabriella nudged Eric. “Especially with Sait in the mix. Can you prove it’s them organizing the  pirates?” 

The pirate attacks, suspiciously well organized and  as regular as the storms, had started up eight years ago  once Vellona’s money was nearly drained by the near constant squalls and droughts that had plagued the kingdom  for as long as Eric could remember. It was then that Sait,  with a navy as flush as its coffers, had started poking at  Vellona’s defenses. When Eric’s mother, Queen Eleanora,  had died in a shipwreck up north two years ago, Sait had  gotten bolder and Vellona had gotten desperate. Eric  had been left with a floundering kingdom and dozens of  others eager to take his throne. 

He shook his head. “Grimsby calls it a long game,  weakening us before striking, but accusing them out right would start a war we can’t afford.” 

Eric suspected that was exactly what they wanted— justification to conquer Vellona. 

“Is there not some rich old widow with a flair for  dramatics you could wed to get us out of this mess?”  Gabriella asked. 

Vellona had exhausted every avenue that led to  money save for one, and only Eric could take it. “Sadly, no,” he said, pulling his flute from his pocket.  He always had it on him. He played a quick tune, taking the moment to calm himself. The familiar motion of his  fingers eased his worries. 

“I thought Grimsby wanted you married before your birthday?” Vanni asked. He glanced around and  lowered his voice. “You’ll have to kiss them at the wedding, but how can you when—” 

Eric froze, song dying off, and Gabriella grabbed  Vanni by the collar. 

“Shut it!” she hissed. “Sait finds out about that, it’ll be the easiest assassination in the world.” 

A shock of panic shuddered through Eric. Here, on  the docks with people working around them, no one was  paying attention, but they had never discussed his secret  in public before. He pocketed his flute. “Grimsby wants  me to marry well and figure it out after. Personal feelings  cannot trump convenience and duty, he says, but I refuse  to hand over control of Vellona to someone I don’t trust.” 

Vanni and Gabriella shared a look. 

“Is Grimsby still angry about Glowerhaven?” asked  Vanni. 

“Incandescent,” Eric said. “The only reason he  didn’t force it was because she loathed me as much as I  loathed her.” 

She hated music and dogs, and he couldn’t stand the  scent of the paints she treasured. Looking at art? Fine. 

Living in a miasma of paint fumes and odd alchemical  mixtures? Not for him. 

Gabriella laughed. “Wasn’t your fault Max didn’t appreciate her trying to glaze him. When’s your next  marriage proposal?” 

His next proposal? Never again. His next entrapment? The lunch with— 

Eric’s blood rushed in his ears, drowning out  Gabriella and Vanni’s chatter, and he wiped suddenly  sweaty palms on his trousers. He took a deep breath. 

“Grimsby’s going to kill me.” Eric looked around,  trying to figure out what time it was, and groaned. It  had been ages since he had forgotten a meeting, and he  had no excuse today. “Lord Brackenridge arrived this  morning, and I’m supposed to have lunch with him and  his daughters.” 

Gabriella’s eyes widened. “Run.” 

“How do I look?” Eric asked. “I won’t have time to  bathe.” 

“Like you were running late because you were spar ring,” said Vanni. “It’s almost like—” 

“Don’t you say it,” muttered Gabriella. 

Vanni ignored her. “You’re cursed.” 

“I’m letting that one slide,” Eric shouted over his  shoulder as he started running. “You only get one.”

“A day?” 

“A lifetime!” 

“Ignore him,” said Gabriella over the sound of  Vanni’s laughter. “Enjoy your prince-ing.” 

Eric rarely did. He was always Prince Eric first, a citizen second, and—secretly, terribly, through no fault of his own—cursed third.


About the Author


About Linsey Miller:
Once upon a time, Linsey Miller studied biology in Arkansas. These days, she holds an MFA in fiction and can be found writing about science and magic anywhere there is coffee. She is the author of the Mask of Shadows duology, Belle Révolte, The Game, What We Devour, and the upcoming Disney Princes books for Eric and Phillip. Visit her at linseymiller.com.



Giveaway
1 winner will receive a finished copy of PRINCE OF SONG & SEA, US Only.

CLICK THE GRAPHIC


10.28.2021

BLOG TOUR - THE BEAR HOUSE BY MEAGHAN MCISAAC - MIDDLE GRADE FICTION [REVIEW + GIVEAWAY]



TitleThe Bear House (#1)
Authors(s): Meaghan McIsaac
Publication Date: October 5, 2021
Edition: Hardcover, eBook, Audiobook; 368 pgs
PublisherHoliday House
SourceRockstar Book Tours
PurchaseAmazon - Kindle - Audible - B&N - BAM! - iBooks - Kobo - TBD - Bookshop.org
Disclaimer: I received a copy from the publisher as part of a blog tour in exchange for an honest review. My thoughts and opinions are my own.  Please note the purchase links above are affiliate links.



Tour Schedule

Week One
10/18/2021 - Rockstar Book Tours - Kickoff Post
10/18/2021 - Log Cabin Library - Excerpt
10/19/2021 - BookHounds YA - Excerpt
10/19/2021 - Kait Plus Books - Excerpt
10/20/2021 - The Bookwyrm's Den - Excerpt
10/21/2021 - Jazzy Book Reviews - Excerpt
10/21/2021 - Two Chicks on Books - Excerpt
10/22/2021 - Jaime's World - Review
10/22/2021 - Books a Plenty Book Reviews - Review

Week Two
10/25/2021 - Lifestyle of Me - Review
10/25/2021 - Rajiv's Reviews - Review
10/26/2021 - The Momma Spot - Review
10/26/2021 - Little Red Reads - Review
10/27/2021 - Two Points of Interest - Review
10/27/2021 - Books and Zebras  - Review
10/28/2021 - Eli to the nth - Review
10/28/2021 - The Reading Wordsmith - Review
10/29/2021 - History from a Woman’s Perspective  - Review


The Summary

In a gritty medieval world where the ruling houses are based on the constellations, betrayal, intrigue, and a king's murder force the royal sisters of the Bear House on the run!

Moody Aster and her spoiled sister Ursula are the daughters of Jasper Lourdes, Major of Bears and lord of all the realm. Rivals, both girls dream of becoming the Bear queen someday, although neither really deserve to, having no particular talent in... well, anything.

But when their Uncle Bram murders their father in a bid for the crown, the girls are forced onto the run, along with lowly Dev the Bearkeeper and the Lourdes's half-grown grizzly Alcor, symbol of their house. As a bitter struggle for the throne consumes the kingdom in civil war, the sisters must rely on Dev, the bear cub, and each other to survive--and find wells of courage, cunning, and skill they never knew they had.

Reviews
"Weaves intrigue and adventure. . . . An epic, complex narrative."—Publishers Weekly
 
"The stellar worldbuilding is both expansive and accessible, and the action never falters. . . . Thrilling adventure set in an enchanting world makes this an easy pick for high fantasy fans."—Kirkus Reviews
My Review

The Bear House by Meaghan McIsaac was one of the best fantasies I have read this year!  I was immediately captivated by the story, and devoured the book in two days.  You find yourself in a lush, exciting, and harrowing adventure, one you never want to stop.  And while this book seems self-contained, which I miss in a lot of fantasies lately, it is actually book one of a series.  Which means I get to revisit this world and I am so excited about that!

This is some of the best worldbuilding I have gotten to read in a middle grade book.  The complexity and extent of the religious system/ruling system in this book is unique.  Based on constellations, this world is guided by the "On-High", the stars who are believed to have created High Beasts to protect and rule over the world, with the animals residing in separate kingdoms within the overall Highen.  The greatest of them all in the Bear Highen is the Hemoth Bear kingdom, or Tawnshire.  Within the Bear Highen are 7 other kingdoms: Whitlock (White Bear), Felisbrook (Lynx), Dracogart (Shadow Dragon), Twigate (Blue Giraffe), Roarque (Lion), and Hundford (Starhound).  But while these are all individual kingdoms, they are ruled by the Major, the one chosen by the Hemoth Bear to be its partner.  There is much more to it then this, but that is part of the enjoyment of the story. 

The pace of this book is non-stop; it takes a couple of chapters to start, but once it does, hold on.  The current Major's kingdom is under attack.  His daughters, Ursula and Aster, both possible heirs to the throne, are in danger, escaping out of Tawnshire with the Apprentice Keeper Dev and the Hemoth bear cub, Alcor--not such a little bear.  Being both spoiled brats, the journey to protect their lives and their kingdom forces the princesses to grow, both in their spirit and in their skills.  There is a lot of intrigue along with the adventure, making this a fun twisty book in some respects.  There are small times of rest, but the danger is never over, so constant situations arise that need to be dealt with, all pushing the story to the conclusion.  With the pacing, you, as the reader, are pushed along just as quickly as the kids, but it never seems forced.

With the action being non-stop, it is also brutal in many aspects.  This world is mediaeval in presentation, so with that comes some very harsh realities.  The phrase "fight for your life" applies here, with characters in the book being murdered.  Not graphically depicted, but not shied away from either.  Also, the imperfections and evil of humans are explored, teaching lessons about morality, without being obvious or preachy.

As the book progresses, you also get to meet two princes from other kingdoms and their perspectives on what is happening in the realm.  This goes back to the worldbuilding, making the reader understand that there is so much more to explore here, as each kingdom is different.  Also, there are other Highens out there in the greater world, which add another layer to the situation completely.  This also expands the possibility of further stories within the book series as a whole, which is very exciting.

Overall, this one is perfect for the young reader who wants to read high fantasy, but are perhaps a little too young for adult fiction.  However, this book is definitely on par with those adult series, and I believe would be of interest to adult readers as well.  Beautifully crafted, The Bear House by Meaghan McIsaac is a wonderful start to an exciting series I can't wait to read more in!

Final Rating



Excerpt


AT THE START OF ALL THINGS, THERE WERE ONLY THE STARS.

Many different stars— light upon light upon light— but alone, they were not enough. 

To cure their loneliness, their light combined, and of them were born the High Beasts, each belonging to their own quadrant of heaven. 

To the skies of the South were born the High Fly, the Glimmer Snake, and more. And the stars of the South became known as the Waters. 

To the skies of the East and West were born the Dust Ram, the White Bull, the Star Twins, the Prism Scorpion, and more. These traveled together, one after the other, a ring of High Beasts in a never- ending loop. 

These stars became the Ring. 

To the skies of the North were born the White Bear, the Shadow Dragon, the Starhound, and more. But of them all, the stars loved the firstborn Bear best. And so the northern stars became the stars of the Great Bear. 

When from the earth, Man emerged from the darkness, looking to the sky for guidance, the stars stretched out their light and sent these beasts to lead him, bringing them into the flesh. 

And Man worshipped the stars, and he worshipped the beasts, and the beasts were sacred to him. 

Thus, beneath the heavenly sea of the Waters, the Highen of the Waters was born. 

Beneath the Ring’s milky skies grew the Highen of the Ring. 

And beneath the crisp, dark skies of the Great Bear, the mighty Bear Highen began. 

— THE WRITINGS OF BERN, On the Founding of Highens: The Fore,  Star Writ 


PROLOGUE

THE Shadow Dragons were screaming. Their cries rose out of the dark, echoing over the peak of Mount Draccus. 

Men had come for their eggs. 

Quintin Wyvern crouched in the shadows of a rocky outcrop, watching the retrieval party approach the nests. The young prince had promised his father he would stay in the castle by his ailing mother’s bedside. An outbreak of firelung had taken hold of the Kingdom of Dracogart, and Mother was just one of many fighting to survive. But that night, when the dragons began wailing, Lady Wyvern had squeezed Quintin’s hand. 

“Go,” she told him, her breath ragged from the sickness. “Go and witness their sacrifice.” 

And so Quintin left her. He had followed hidden paths so as not to be seen, the mountain’s breath thick and fetid and burning his lungs. 

From his vantage point behind an outcrop of obsidian, Quintin saw the lights of the city of Dracogart below, saw the men in impressive armor walking up the main road, their horses sidestepping with nerves. 

The mother dragons hissed at their approach, plumes of smoke billowing from their gaping mouths in warning. Only three eggs had been laid that year, each one a precious gift from the stars. They would take a further two years to hatch. 

One of them would never get that chance. 

There was a chirrup at his back, and Quintin startled. He turned and saw a Shadow Dragon, a juvenile female, crouched on the stones above him. She blinked at him, her yellow eyes anxious. 

Umbra. 

Quintin pressed a finger to his lips and turned back to watch the soldiers. 

The mother dragons paced, encircling their nests. The light of the men’s torches danced and glinted off their dark, stony scales. 

Quintin knew they would not give up an egg without a fight. 

Shadow Dragons did not abide the laws of men. 

And yet the law demanded an egg all the same. Word had reached Dracogart a week ago from the Major: the Kingdom of the Shadow Dragon must surrender one egg. And that egg would pay for the firelung cure that could only be found in the land of their enemies, the Ring Highen. 

“We can’t!” his mother had said, fuming, when she had still been well enough to stand. “There has to be another way!” 

Chancellor Furia, King Wyvern’s most trusted advisor, had agreed— even though Furia and Queen Wyvern rarely agreed on anything. “Sire, it is too sinful even to think of.” 

The eggs of the Shadow Dragon were sacred. Blessings from the holy stars themselves. How could Dracogart allow anyone to take what had been given by the stars? 

“The Major was chosen to be Major because he is favored by the stars,” King Wyvern told them. “If the Major believes this is the way to save our people, then we must trust that he is right.” 

Save the people, yes . And more importantly now,  thought Quintin, save Mother.  Her condition was worsening by the hour. 

But still, he felt a nervousness in his gut. What if Father was wrong to allow this? 

Umbra chirruped again, as if she could read his thoughts. 

Quintin looked beyond Dracogart’s rocky valley, over which the mountain’s shadow fell— Father was out there, somewhere, hunting with his mount Draco, the largest dragon alive, the dragon- king of the Shadow Dragons. When the Major’s men had left the castle for the mountain path to retrieve the egg, Father had left with Draco— the king of dragons would be angry to hear his wives so distressed, he’d said. 

But Quintin knew the truth. Seeing the Major’s men take an egg from the Shadow Dragons’ nest was too painful for even his father to bear. 

There were shouts from the men in armor, and when Quintin looked, one had approached the edge of the nest. The man held a spear, its tip fitted with a fat, dripping hearth weasel— as if a treat would be enough to trade a dragon for her child. 

One of the mother dragons slunk toward him, a threatening hiss venting from her smoking maw. The fins at the edge of her jaw fluttered. She was eager to crunch bone.
 
“Courage, men!”  shouted someone. “Hold!”  cried another. And still more were roaring orders as the man in armor inched closer to the dragon. 

Quintin held his breath. The young soldier stepped across the line on the ground where the rock had been scorched by dragon breath— the threshold of the nest. 

“Too close,” Quintin whispered. 

The mother dragons reared up, all of them screaming in unison, black wings flapping. The foremost dragon lunged, her powerful jaws snapping with a thunderous clap just short of the young man’s belly. 

The dragons’ screams built on one another, the noise folding onto itself, lifting with a ferocious desperation. They were screaming for Draco. 

Draco, whose size and power would protect them all. 

Draco, their king. 

Quintin’s eyes burned with tears. Draco was with his father. 

Draco would not save them. 

And then a roar exploded from somewhere below the mountain. 

It was so loud and resonant, it was as if the earth itself had opened up. 

Draco? 

No. This roar was earthbound. Not of the sky. 

Quintin heard Umbra screech and skitter away, scurrying back to her family, back into a nest farther up the mountain. She was only a little dragon, after all, even if she was Draco’s daughter. 

The mother dragons’ mood shifted, their hissing and smoking replaced by a quiet, nervous chirping, tiny sparks spitting from the sides of their mouths. Quintin had never seen Shadow Dragons look like that— tails wrapped close to their sides, bellies pressed low to the ground, all huddled close together. They were frightened. Frightened of what was making its way up the mountain road. 

A bear. 

A bear unlike any Quintin had ever seen before. 

The hulking beast stood heads above the horses, her girth so wide it took up the entire path. Her long, grizzled fur looked like fire, a bright amber color that gleamed in the torchlight. Her jaws looked powerful enough to crush iron, her paws big enough to shake the earth. There was no mistaking it— a Hemoth Bear. 

She was Mizar. The mightiest creature in all of the Bear Highen.
 
And beside her stood a man, just as hulking and grizzled as she. 

The Bear Major himself: Jasper Lourdes. 

They approached the nest, the dragons clustered together in a quaking mass. Mizar the Hemoth chuffed and snorted, her massive footfalls causing the very earth to shake. 

Quintin watched as the Major placed a hand on the Hemoth’s flank and the bear stopped. The Major continued to approach and, without hesitation, stepped over the nest’s threshold. The dragons did not make a sound. He picked his way over rocks and boulders until he was standing above an egg, its black shell speckled with pinpricks of warm light. 

One of the mothers, the one who had snapped at the soldier, whined with alarm, and the Hemoth roared again, dislodging rock and stone from the mountainside and sending it tumbling down. 

Quintin threw his hands over his head to protect himself from the stony shower; dust powdered his shoulders. 

When the rumble faded to nothing, the dragons were silent again. 

Major Jasper Lourdes bent down to the egg and took it gently in his hands. 

Quintin longed to know how it felt. Warm, he imagined. Like the stones that lined the hearth fires in the castle. 

Finally, delicately, the High King of the Bear Highen fit the egg into the crook of his arm, as if cradling a baby, and bowed to the frightened flock of dragons. 

And just as suddenly as they’d arrived, the Major and the Hemoth left, disappearing down the mountain road with the Major’s soldiers following behind. 

Quintin was alone with the Shadow Dragons, trembling with his awe of the Hemoth Bear, and with fear and sadness for the egg the men had taken with them— the Shadow Dragon that would never be. 


About the Author


Meaghan McIsaac is the author of several books for young readers, including The Boys of Fire and Ash, which was shortlisted for the Manitoba Young Readers’ Choice Award; and Movers, which was a Shining Willow Finalist for the Saskatchewan Young Readers’ Choice Awards. Meaghan lives in Toronto, Ontario with her two dogs.


Giveaway
3 winners will receive a finished copy of THE BEAR HOUSE, US Only.

CLICK THE GRAPHIC

6.18.2021

BLOG TOUR - CURSE OF THE SPECTER QUEEN BY JENNY ELDER MOKE - YA FICTION [REVIEW + GIVEAWAY]



Title: Curse of the Specter Queen
Authors(s): Jenny Elder Moke
Publication Date: June 1, 2021
Edition: Hardcover, eBook, Audiobook; 352 pgs
Publisher: Disney-Hyperion
Source: Rockstar Book Tours
Buy: Amazon Kindle Audible
 - 
Bookshop.org - Barnes & Noble
Disclaimer: I received a copy from the publisher as part of a blog tour in exchange for an honest review. My thoughts and opinions are my own.







Tour Schedule

Week One
6/1/2021 - Fire and IceExcerpt
6/2/2021 - Lisa Loves LiteratureReview
6/3/2021 - YA Books CentralExcerpt
6/4/2021 - Jazzy Book ReviewsExcerpt
6/5/2021 - Rajiv's ReviewsReview

Week Two
6/6/2021 - The Reading WordsmithReview
6/7/2021 - Kait Plus BooksExcerpt
6/8/2021 - A Court of Coffee and BooksReview
6/9/2021 - The Bookwyrm's DenReview
6/10/2021 - Stuck in the StacksReview
6/11/2021 - Do You Dog-ear?Review
6/12/2021 - Christen KrummReview

Week Three
6/13/2021 - What A Nerd Girl SaysReview
6/14/2021 - Nay's Pink BookshelfReview
6/15/2021 - Thindbooks BlogReview
6/17/2021 - Emelie's BooksReview
6/18/2021 - Eli to the nthReview
6/19/2021 - @fictitious.foxReview

Week Four
6/20/2021 - Books Are Magic TooReview
6/21/2021 - Star-Crossed Book BlogReview
6/22/2021 - Book-KeepingReview
6/23/2021 - The Momma SpotReview
6/24/2021 - The Book ViewReview
6/25/2021 - MomfluensterReview
6/26/2021 - onemusedReview

Week Five
6/27/2021 - Book BriefsReview
6/28/2021 - Always MeReview
6/29/2021 - The Book Review Crew - Review
6/30/2021 - celiamcmahonreads - Review


The Summary

A female Indiana Jones meets Tomb Raider when Samantha Knox receives a mysterious field diary and finds herself thrust into a treacherous plot. After stealing a car and jumping on a train, chased by a group of dangerous pursuers, Sam finds out what’s so special about this book: it contains a cipher that leads to a cursed jade statue that could put an end to all mankind.

MAY THE HAZEL BRING YOU WISDOM AND THE ASPEN GUIDE AND PROTECT YOU...

Samantha Knox put away her childish fantasies of archaeological adventure the day her father didn't return home from the Great War, retreating to the safety of the antique bookshop where she works. But when a mysterious package arrives with a damaged diary inside, Sam's peaceful life is obliterated. Ruthless men intent on reclaiming the diary are after Sam, setting her and her best friend, along with her childhood crush, on a high-stakes adventure that lands them in the green hills outside Dublin, Ireland. Here they discover an ancient order with a dark purpose - to perform an occult ritual that will raise the Specter Queen, the Celtic goddess of vengeance and death, to bring about a war unlike any the world has ever seen. To stop them, Sam must solve a deviously complex cipher - one that will lead her on a treasure hunt to discover the ancient relic at the heart of the ritual: a bowl carved from the tree of life. Will she find the bowl and stop the curse of the Specter Queen, or will the ancient order bring about the end of the world?

Indiana Jones gets a refresh with this female-driven mystery adventure, set in the 1920s, full of ciphers, ancient relics, and heart-stopping action - the first in a brand-new series!


Advance praise for CURSE OF THE SPECTER QUEEN:
"Pure fun from start to finish. Curse of the Specter Queen is a delightful historical romp, riddled with cryptic puzzles, hints of romance, and an adventurous cast of characters. An ideal escape for fans of curses, magic, and mystery."—Stephanie Garber, #1 New York Times best-selling author of the Caravel series

“This lush, high-stakes, adventure tale has it all—a rollicking plot, a sweet slow burn of a romance, and a heroine on an epic journey filled with ciphers, curses, and twists that kept me guessing at every turn. A delightful read from start to finish, Curse of the Specter Queen is one of my new favorites.”—Alyson Noël, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Immortals 

“Apocalyptic curses, blood-chilling demons, and a centuries-old treasure hunt with a brilliant bookish heroine. Curse of the Spector Queen had me feverishly turning pages until I finally arrived at the epic conclusion.”—Livia Blackburne, New York Times best-selling author of Rosemarked and Midnight Thief

Excerpt

Chapter One

Sam let the first door chime go unanswered, occupied as she was with the stack of delicate books cradled in her arms. The second chime earned a grunt of displeasure from her as she scanned the shelves for the first edition of John Locke’s An Essay Concerning Human Understanding she had repaired last week. She spotted it, tucked safely between Kant and Machiavelli. The third chime rang so insistently that she tipped the book forward too hard and it dropped to the floor with an ominous crack.

“Oh dear,” she said, crouching down to retrieve the book. “Mr. Locke, I apologize. And I swear to you if it’s the butcher’s boys again, I will take the broad side of his cleaver to their rear ends myself.”

The spine appeared unmarred, which was more than Sam could say for her disposition as she stacked the book on top of the others and jostled to a standing position. She tottered to the front of the shop and set them down on the desk. In the window stood the rounded figure of Clement’s postman, his face pressed to the glass and obscuring the gold lettering across the door. She checked off each book on her inventory list, letting him freeze in the early January snows of rural Illinois, before crossing to the door and unlocking it. A blast of cold drove it open like an unwanted guest.

“Yes, Georgie, what is it you need?” she asked, shivering back from the chill.

“Got your mail,” Georgie huffed, bustling past her to drop his sack on the desk. He trod in drifts of snow across her pristine carpet and she swept the more offensive piles back out the door as she swung it shut.

“That’s why I had the package drop put in, Georgie,” Sam said.

“So you can leave them in a protected box without them getting soaked by the melting snow you’re tracking in.”

“It’s colder than a brass toilet seat in the arctic out there,” Georgie replied, leaning against his mailbag like he planned to stay. He peered into the stacks behind Sam. “It’s toasty in here, though. Must be nice for you, being tucked up in this place all day.”

“We keep the temperature stable for the books,” Sam said, her patient tone fraying at the edges. She had plenty to do before her long walk home in that same snow, and she couldn’t do it as long as Georgie was here chewing the cud. “Extreme heat and cold damage the leather. You said you had my mail?”

“Oh, sure.” Georgie ducked his head into the thick canvas sack. “Couple of these are too big, wouldn’t fit through the slot.”

Sam was sure his bell ringing had far more to do with the warm interior of the shop than with any oversize packages, but it was too late for that. Here he was already, invading her space and upending the careful equilibrium she maintained. He didn’t care that there was the rest of the inventory list to get to, plus the packages to prepare and send to Mr. Peltingham in London and Mr. Burnham in Oslo, never mind the repairs to the copy of Medieval Remedies for Cistercian Monks they had received at the shop last week. She didn’t have time for Georgie Heath and the trail of muddy snow he dragged everywhere.

He pulled a small collection of boxes from his sack—none of them, as Sam suspected, too large for the mail slot—with an exotic array of stamps across the front. Sam’s heart rate picked up when she spotted Mr. Studen’s scrawled handwriting. He always had the best finds in Paris. She grabbed her letter opener and sliced through the thick paper.

“Books,” Georgie said, in the same tone his father used when talking about the neighbor’s marauding hogs. “Always books, isn’t it?”

“Yes,” Sam said with a happy little sigh, extracting Mr. Studen’s letter along with his latest find. “We are a bookshop, Georgie.”

Oh, clever Mr. Studen. She smiled at the first few lines of introduction, a jumble of letters and pictographic marks. He’d sent her another cryptogram, with a small note dashed at the top that read I’m sure to stump you this time.

He wasn’t, but she appreciated the challenge.

Georgie gave a snort. “I don’t know what we need with a bookshop here in Clement, anyhow. We’ve already got a library.”

“A collection of old family bibles does not count as a library,” Sam said, reaching for a pencil and paper. It looked to be a straightforward monoalphabetic cipher despite the distraction of the pictographic marks, but she didn’t want to underestimate Mr. Studen so quickly.
Georgie shrugged. “I was happy enough to give that stuff up the second I walked out of Mrs. Iris’s schoolroom for good.”

“Madame Iris,” Sam corrected.

“Madame,” Georgie said in a gross mockery of the French madame’s accent. “Pa says a book is only good for propping open a door or knocking a fella out.”

“Well I would expect no less from the man who led a town-wide protest when Mr. Steeling hired a Frenchwoman to teach at the schoolhouse,” Sam murmured, making a list of the most frequent letter appearances and the most common letter groupings in the cipher. Georgie craned his neck around, squinting at Mr. Studen’s neat handwriting.

“What is that?” he asked. “Some kind of gibberish?”

“It’s a cipher,” Sam said. “A code. It’s meant to keep a message hidden.”

My Review

I love a great adventure book, and this one has many things I love: books, romance, and friendship.  A great combo when put together and led by a gutsy, sharp-witted, and resourceful heroine.  And Curse of the Specter Queen has it all in spades.

Sam, our heroine, is immediately likable, and the reader will want to go anywhere and everywhere with her. She uses her knowledge and her strength of character to lead her friends on a epic treasure hunt fraught with danger.  Joanna and Bennett are also great characters, bringing the humor and romance individually And what Jenny Elder Moke does so well with this gang of intrepid venturers is putting them in intense situations on their way to unravel the mystery set before them.

This mix of plot- and character-driven story pushes the reader to devour each chapter, especially with all the cliff-hangers.  I do love a good cliff-hanger.  And the world-building was fantastic.  There are puzzles to solve and magic to see all within the context of actual historic events.  The magic was a surprising touch, but done with a deft hand so it doesn't feel out of place within the more realistic scenes.

Overall, Curse of the Specter Queen is a high-speed puzzle of a book. An amazing start to a new series, Jenny Elder Moke delivers with her sophomore book, and I can't wait to read the next Samantha Knox story!


Final Rating


About the Author

Jenny Elder Moke writes young adult fiction in an attempt to recapture the shining infinity of youth. She worked for several years at an independent publisher in Austin, TX before realizing she would rather write the manuscripts than read them. She is a member of the Texas Writer’s League and has studied children’s writing with Liz Garton Scanlon. She was a finalist in the Austin Film Festival Fiction Podcast Competition in 2017 for her podcast script, Target. When she is not writing, she’s gathering story ideas from her daily adventures with her two irredeemable rapscallions and honing her ninja skills as a black belt in Tae Kwon Do. Jenny lives in Denver, CO with her husband and two children.



Giveaway
3 winners will receive a finished copy of CURSE OF THE SPECTER QUEEN, US Only.

CLICK THE GRAPHIC

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