Sunday, August 15, 2010


The Expressologist by Kristina Springer
What’s your drink of choice? Is it a small pumpkin spice latte? Then you’re lots of fun and a bit sassy. Or a medium americano? You prefer simplicity in life. Or perhaps it’s a small decaf soy sugar-free hazelnut caffe latte? Some might call you a yuppie. Seventeen-year-old barista Jane Turner has this theory that you can tell a lot about a person by their regular coffee drink. She scribbles it all down in a notebook and calls it Espressology. So it’s not a totally crazy idea when Jane starts hooking up some of her friends based on their coffee orders. Like her best friend, Em, a medium hot chocolate, and Cam, a toffee nut latte. But when her boss, Derek, gets wind of Jane’s Espressology, he makes it an in-store holiday promotion, promising customers their perfect matches for the price of their favorite coffee. Things are going better than Derek could ever have hoped, so why is Jane so freaked out? Does it have anything to do with Em dating Cam? She’s the one who set them up She should be happy for them, right?

Good, quick read if you're like me and love coffee drinks and silly YA romance novels with plot twists you can see miles off, which, let's be honest, I completely do. This was a cute, little love story set up around matchmaking through coffee orders. There was nothing here I disliked. It took me about three hours to read the whole book while working.

Eyes Like Stars & Perchance to Dream by Lisa Mantchev


Eyes Like Stars and Perchance to Dream by Lisa Mantchev

I can't tell you how much I love these two books. They're probably by and far the ones I enjoyed the most in the past two months. Some people apparently have issues following certain parts of the story, or trying to understand the setting, but I didn't encounter those issues. The world building is gorgeous. If you've ever been interested in theatre or part of a play, you'll be in love.

I could make a gushing post about this trilogy (The 3rd book comes out next year) but I'll leave you all with both summaries instead. They say it better than I can.


Eyes Like Stars:
All her world’s a stage

Enter Stage Right

Beatrice Shakespeare Smith (Bertie): Our heroine.

Nate: A dashing pirate who will do anything to protect Bertie.

Cobweb, Moth, Mustardseed, and Peaseblossom: Four tiny, mischievous fairies, and Bertie’s loyal sidekicks.

Ariel: A seductive air spirit. Disaster follows in his wake, but Bertie simply cannot resist him.

Welcome to the Théâtre Illuminata, where the characters of every play ever written can be found behind the curtain. The actors are bound to the Théâtre by The Book, an ancient and magical tome of scripts. Bertie is not one of the actors, but they are her family. And she is about to lose them all because The Book has been threatened, and along with it the Théâtre. It’s the only home Bertie has ever known, and she has to find a way to save it. But first, there’s the small problem of two handsome men, both vying for her attention. The course of true love never did run smooth. . . .

Perchance to Dream:
Act Two, Scene One

Growing up in the enchanted Thèâtre Illuminata, Beatrice Shakespeare Smith learned everything about every play ever written. She knew the Players and their parts, but she didn’t know that she, too, had magic. Now, she is the Mistress of Revels, the Teller of Tales, and determined to follow her stars. She is ready for the outside world.

Enter BERTIE AND COMPANY

But the outside world soon proves more topsy-turvy than any stage production. Bertie can make things happen by writing them, but outside the protective walls of the Thèâtre, nothing goes as planned. And her magic cannot help her make a decision between—

Nate: Her suave and swashbuckling pirate, now in mortal peril.

Ariel: A brooding, yet seductive, air spirit whose true motives remain unclear.

When Nate is kidnapped and taken prisoner by the Sea Goddess, only Bertie can free him. She and her fairy sidekicks embark on a journey aboard the Thèâtre’s caravan, using Bertie’s word magic to guide them. Along the way, they collect a sneak-thief, who has in his possession something most valuable, and meet The Mysterious Stranger, Bertie’s father—and the creator of the scrimshaw medallion. Bertie’s dreams are haunted by Nate, whose love for Bertie is keeping him alive, but in the daytime, it’s Ariel who is tantalizingly close, and the one she is falling for. Who does Bertie love the most? And will her magic be powerful enough to save her once she enters the Sea Goddess’s lair?

Saturday, August 7, 2010

A Brief History of Montmaray by Michelle Cooper

Finished another book yesterday which I quite enjoyed.


A Brief History of Montmaray by Michelle Cooper

“There’s a fine line between gossip and history, when one is talking about kings.”

Sophie Fitzosborne lives in a crumbling castle in the tiny island kingdom of Montmaray with her eccentric and impoverished royal family. When she receives a journal for her sixteenth birthday, Sophie decides to chronicle day-to-day life on the island. But this is 1936, and the news that trickles in from the mainland reveals a world on the brink of war. The politics of Europe seem far away from their remote island—until two German officers land a boat on Montmaray. And then suddenly politics become very personal indeed.

A Brief History of Montmaray is a heart-stopping tale of loyalty, love, and loss, and of fighting to hold on to home when the world is exploding all around you.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Liar by Justine Larbalestier


Liar by Justine Larbalestier
Micah will freely admit that she’s a compulsive liar, but that may be the one honest thing she’ll ever tell you. Over the years she’s duped her classmates, her teachers, and even her parents, and she’s always managed to stay one step ahead of her lies. That is, until her boyfriend dies under brutal circumstances and her dishonesty begins to catch up with her. But is it possible to tell the truth when lying comes as naturally as breathing? Taking readers deep into the psyche of a young woman who will say just about anything to convince them—and herself—that she’s finally come clean, Liar is a bone-chilling thriller that will have readers see-sawing between truths and lies right up to the end. Honestly.

I didn't like this book half as much as I wanted to. It wasn't poorly written or really that confusing, I just walked away feeling very 'meh' about the whole story. I wanted to like Micah, or feel bad for her and I could never quite do it. I couldn't quite make the connection and with the plot frequently changing on the whim's of an unreliable narrator the ending didn't leave me feeling like this was a novel I'd want to read again any time soon.

I had this issue with How to Ditch Your Fairy as well.

EDIT 3/22/2011: Am rereading it now. It's much easier to digest and get into on the second read-through.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

The Piano Teacher by Janice Y. K. Lee


The Piano Teacher by Janice Y. K. Lee
In the sweeping tradition of The English Patient, Janice Y.K. Lee's debut novel is a tale of love and betrayal set in war-torn Hong Kong. In 1942, Englishman Will Truesdale falls headlong into a passionate relationship with Trudy Liang, a beautiful Eurasian socialite. But their affair is soon threatened by the invasion of the Japanese as World War II overwhelms their part of the world. Ten years later, Claire Pendleton comes to Hong Kong to work as a piano teacher and also begins a fateful affair. As the threads of this spellbinding novel intertwine, impossible choices emerge-between love and safety, courage and survival, the present, and above all, the past.

I picked this up at one of the newspaper stands in the Philadelphia airport to read on my flight home and I could have made a better selection, but I could have made a worse one. Definitely not something I'm going to run around singing the praises of, but it wasn't completely awful either. Overall, I liked the way the book jumped back and forth in time and the way all the characters connected, but that was about it.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

Blackout by Connie Willis


Blackout by Connie Willis

Oxford in 2060 is a chaotic place. Scores of time-traveling historians are being sent into the past, to destinations including the American Civil War and the attack on the World Trade Center. Michael Davies is prepping to go to Pearl Harbor. Merope Ward is coping with a bunch of bratty 1940 evacuees and trying to talk her thesis adviser, Mr. Dunworthy, into letting her go to VE Day. Polly Churchill’s next assignment will be as a shopgirl in the middle of London’s Blitz. And seventeen-year-old Colin Templer, who has a major crush on Polly, is determined to go to the Crusades so that he can “catch up” to her in age.

But now the time-travel lab is suddenly canceling assignments for no apparent reason and switching around everyone’s schedules. And when Michael, Merope, and Polly finally get to World War II, things just get worse. For there they face air raids, blackouts, unexploded bombs, dive-bombing Stukas, rationing, shrapnel, V-1s, and two of the most incorrigible children in all of history—to say nothing of a growing feeling that not only their assignments but the war and history itself are spiraling out of control. Because suddenly the once-reliable mechanisms of time travel are showing significant glitches, and our heroes are beginning to question their most firmly held belief: that no historian can possibly change the past.

From the people sheltering in the tube stations of London to the retired sailors who set off across the Channel to rescue the stranded British Army from Dunkirk, from shopgirls to ambulance drivers, from spies to hospital nurses to Shakespearean actors, Blackout reveals a side of World War II seldom seen before: a dangerous, desperate world in which there are no civilians and in which everybody—from the Queen down to the lowliest barmaid—is determined to do their bit to help a beleaguered nation survive.

The novel ends on a major cliff-hanger, the sort that makes every self-respecting reader go ksjadlkasjdlkasjda CLIFF HANGER WHYYYYYYYYY!!!! And I had that same visceral reaction to this book. It was a GORGEOUS novel. I was sucked right into it. You can't not love the characters and the amount of love and detail that went into getting this novel as historically accurate as a novel about time travel can be was possibly the best part.

But that cliff-hanger! It should be noted that this novel does have a sequel that is supposed to be out this fall and when it does come out I will be reading it. But until then, this novel made me indescribably grumpy at the very end and that's not the sort of reaction you want to be left with.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Magic Under Glass by Jaclyn Dolamore


Magic Under Glass by Jaclyn Dolamore

Nimira is a foreign music-hall girl forced to dance for mere pennies. When wealthy sorcerer Hollin Parry hires her to sing with a piano-playing automaton, Nimira believes it is the start of a new and better life. In Parry's world, however, buried secrets are beginning to stir. Unsettling below-stairs rumors swirl about ghosts, a madwoman roaming the halls, and Parry's involvement with a league of sorcerers who torture fairies for sport. Then Nimira discovers the spirit of a fairy gentleman named Erris is trapped inside the clockwork automaton, waiting for someone to break his curse. The two fall into a love that seems hopeless, and breaking the curse becomes a race against time, as not just their love, but the fate of the entire magical world may be in peril.

ADORED THIS. I ADORED ALL OF THIS. The plot, the characters, Nimira, oh my goodness, Nimira, you are my favorite fictional heroine this year, the setting felt like turn of the century London set ever so slightly outside of reality and the gritty darkness that haunted this novel fit the plot and tragic situations that emerged therein so well.

If I had one complaint, it's that it wasn't a longer novel. Dolamore only gave us a small taste of this world and it leaves me begging for more.

Friday, May 21, 2010

The Demon's Covenant by Sarah Rees Brennan


The Demon's Covenant by Sarah Rees Brennan

Mae Crawford’s always thought of herself as in control, but in the last few weeks her life has changed. Her younger brother, Jamie, suddenly has magical powers, and she’s even more unsettled when she realizes that Gerald, the new leader of the Obsidian Circle, is trying to persuade Jamie to join the magicians. Even worse… Jamie hasn’t told Mae a thing about any of it. Mae turns to brothers Nick and Alan to help her rescue Jamie, but they are in danger from Gerald themselves because he wants to steal Nick's powers. Will Mae be able to find a way to save everyone she cares about from the power-hungry magician's carefully laid trap?

This book shot The Demon's Lexicon out of the water. I enjoyed the first book in Brennan's trilogy, but I adored The Demon's Covenant. All the world building that happened in the first novel was expanded upon and enhanced by an additional set of character's to learn to love. Mae's POV was pitch perfect for this novel and, for me, much easier to read and more engaging than Nick's POV was in the first.

If I had a choice, I would read this entire trilogy in Mae's POV as it is becoming more and more clear that Mae is the focus of the overall plot. Mae is the one who forces the changes and is the catalyst and it is Mae who all the central characters rally around, whenever a major event is about to happen in the book.

And as Mae becomes more likable, Nick and Alan become less so and Jamie becomes more of a fourth wheel than he was before. I'm hoping this is all rectified with the last book, The Demon's Surrender, because I so badly want to love all the character's not just one or two per book.

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Alcestis by Katharine Beutner


Alcestis by Katharine Beutner

In Greek myth, Alcestis is known as the ideal good wife; she loved her husband so much that she died to save his life and was sent to the underworld in his place. In this poetic and vividly-imagined debut, Katharine Beutner gives voice to the woman behind the ideal, bringing to life the world of Mycenaean Greece, a world peopled by capricious gods, where royal women are confined to the palace grounds and passed as possessions from father to husband.

Alcestis tells of a childhood spent with her sisters in the bedchamber where her mother died giving birth to her and of her marriage at the age of fifteen to Admetus, the young king of Pherae, a man she barely knows, who is kind but whose heart belongs to a god. She also tells the part of the story that's never been told: What happened to Alcestis in the three days she spent in the underworld before being rescued by Heracles? In the realm of the dead, Alcestis falls in love with the goddess Persephone and discovers the true horror and beauty of death.

Alcestis is first and foremost a story about a woman stuck in a time that is much too narrow for her. She's far too big and intelligent for the life she was born to, and that makes her an interesting character immediately. She knows what she wants and she goes about practical ways to get it, facing heartache and even death to get what she needs.

The end of this novel left me spellbound. It went far beyond the original myth and made it that much better. Beutner writes the world of Ancient Greece as if she lived there, everything is vivid and real. What helped was knowing how many details were historically accurate in and amongst the mythology. All the tiny facts of daily life were so intricately wound through the prose and gave the reader a true sense of time.

I would recommend this novel to anyone who enjoys historical fiction, Greek mythology, or stories about women taking charge of their own lives against all odds.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Guardian of the Dead by Karen Healey


Guardian of the Dead by Karen Healey

I opened my mouth, just as he added, "And your eyes are opening." Seventeen-year-old Ellie Spencer is just like any other teenager at her boarding school. She hangs out with her best friend Kevin, she obsesses over Mark, a cute and mysterious bad boy, and her biggest worry is her paper deadline. But then everything changes. The news headlines are all abuzz about a local string of serial killings that all share the same morbid trademark: the victims were discovered with their eyes missing. Then a beautiful yet eerie woman enters Ellie's circle of friends and develops an unhealthy fascination with Kevin, and a crazed old man grabs Ellie in a public square and shoves a tattered Bible into her hands, exclaiming, "You need it. It will save your soul." Soon, Ellie finds herself plunged into a haunting world of vengeful fairies, Maori mythology, romance, betrayal, and an epic battle for immortality.

I need to read this a second time in order to give it a proper review, but it was enjoyable enough that I finished it all in one day of travel.

Thursday, April 15, 2010

Journey from the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran by Roya Hakakian


Journey from the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in Revolutionary Iran by Roya Hakakian

“We stormed every classroom, inscribed our slogans on the blackboard . . . Never had mayhem brought more peace. All our lives we had been taught the virtues of behaving, and now we were discovering the importance of misbehaving. Too much fear had tainted our days. Too many afternoons had passed in silence, listening to a fanatic’s diatribes. We were rebelling because we were not evil, we had not sinned, and we knew nothing of the apocalypse. . . . This was 1979, the year that showed us we could make our own destinies. We were rebelling because rebelling was all we could do to quell the rage in our teenage veins. Together as girls we found the courage we had been told was not in us.”

This book wasn't required reading for school, but it was heavily suggested reading. The author, Roya Hakakian, was a speaker at my college this year and she came with some heavy hitting messages. I have to admit before this I knew NOTHING about Iran. Before last summer I knew next to nothing about Iran except where it was located geographically. This was one of those memoirs that you read and are left shaken and grateful for having found it in the first place.

Monday, March 22, 2010

The Oh So Ordinary Introduction Post

Welcome to Imagination Is! In this blog you will find my reviews written for young adult and juvenile fiction.

A little about myself:

My name is Heather and I'm a secondary education major with my eyes and heart set on becoming a youth librarian. I'm currently a college senior, nearing graduation with an accelerated velocity. When I find free time, and I am very good at finding free time, I read fiction. I get particular pleasure out of historical, paranormal, fantasty and dystopian tales, and, of course, the good recommendation.

Saturday, March 20, 2010

Hero by Perry Moore


Hero by Perry Moore

The last thing in the world Thom Creed wants is to add to his father's pain, so he keeps secrets. Like that he has special powers. And that he's been asked to join the League, the very organization of superheroes that spurned his dad. But the most painful secret of all is one Thom can barely face himself: he's gay.

But becoming a member of the League opens up a new world to Thom. There, he connects with a misfit group of aspiring heroes, including Scarlett, who can control fire but not her anger; Typhoid Larry, who can make anyone sick with his touch; and Ruth, a wise old broad who can see the future. Like Thom, these heroes have things to hide; but they will have to learn to trust one another when they uncover a deadly conspiracy within the League.

To survive, Thom will face challenges he never imagined. To find happiness, he'll have to come to terms with his father's past and discover the kind of hero he really wants to be.

This is one of those novels where you spend half the story wanting to snuggle and smack the main character. Luckily for Thom you spend most of it wanting to snuggle him and pushing him toward his crush and wishing them the best. This was another one of those books I bought one day and had it done by the next night and the fact that Disney was one of the publishers makes me laugh SO HARD.