Showing posts with label Paula Weston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paula Weston. Show all posts

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Day 21 of 31 books in 31 days- Paula Weston Book Giveaway & qualify to win a kindle

Welcome to the 21st day of 31 books in 31 days, where you win prizes for reading.

Recap of Rules

Everyday that you participate in the giveaway of the day, you are eligible to win a brand new kindle.

How to participate
  a) Subscribe via email, so you can get the author & prize of the day sent directly to your email.
  b) Like the author of the day on facebook
  c) Follow the author on Twitter
  d) Read any of the author's books
  e) Answer the occasional quiz on author's interview
  f) Scroll to the bottom of each interview and enter the raffle (you'll have to unlock the raffle with your email first)

That's it- then enter the kindle giveaway!

All giveaways will be sent out by the 7th day in April. Good Luck.

Today's featured author is Australian writing sensation Paula Weston. She is the author of our featured book, Shadows. Paula has written a book on angels, that will make you rethink angels. Shadows is the start of a series that you should not miss.

Featured book

   
                                                    The Tukish Cover is so Awesome
 It's almost a year since Gaby Winters watched her twin brother die. In the sunshine of a new town her body has healed, but her grief is raw and constant. It doesn't help that every night in her dreams she fights and kills hell-beasts. And then Rafa comes to town. Not only does he look exactly like the guy who's been appearing in Gaby's dreams, he tells her things about her brother and her life that cannot be true, things that are dangerous. Who is Rafa? Who are the Rephaim? And who is Gaby? The truth lies in the shadows of her nightmares.                                          

                                                   Interview with Paula Weston
                                   

1) Firstly, I must take the moment to gush and tell you that I love your series. It reminds me why I fell in love with reading. So I must ask you, what role does reading play in your life? How often do you get to curl up with a good book?

Thank you so much! I love to hear that readers are connecting with the series. 

Reading plays a huge role in my life. I've been a life-long reader and always have a book on the

go at any given time. I feel a bit adrift if I don't. Mostly I read hard copy novels (which I buy or

borrow from the library), but I always have a good selection of ebooks on my kindle and iPad,

just so I can never get caught short. You never when the chance might arise to sneak in some

reading!

My schedule is pretty full most days, between by day job and my own writing, but I can usually

squeeze in some reading either in my lunch break or before bed (or both, if I'm reading a

particularly addictive novel!), and always on the weekend. It's my favourite way to relax.


2) I read that you have been an avid reader since you were a child. What are your 3 favorite 

young adult books of all time? Who was your favorite character? Why?

When I was a teenager, we didn't have such a clearly defined 'type' of book as YA, so I just read

whatever came my way. In my teens I read an enormous number of Stephen King horror novels

and David Eddings’ fantasy series. I also loved J.R.R Tolkein, and Louisa May Alcott’s Little

Women.

Most of my favourite YA books are actually ones I’ve read more recently, and my three all-time

faves are:

- On The Jellicoe Road by Melina Marchetta

- The Scorpio Races by Maggie Stiefvater

- Friday Brown by Vikki Wakefield

(I’m also still a huge fan of the Harry Potter series, which defies categorisation).

As a teenager, my favourite character was Jim Craig from The Man from Snowy River by Elyne

Mitchell. I was totally obsessed with this book. It was the novelisation of my favourite film at the

time, which was loosely based on a famous Australian poem. Jim is an eighteen-year-old

horseman from the Snowy Mountains who has to prove himself a man before he can return to

his home. He’s thrown together with the spoilt daughter of a wealthy cattleman whose prize

colt has run off and joined the brumby mob. There’s romance, action, adventure and stunning

Australian settings. Jim was my first serious book crush because he was tough and impulsive, but

also sweet and gentle. And he loved his horse.

3) Is there a book you wish you wrote? What is it and why?

I'll answer this in terms of three writers I greatly admire and the books that totally blew me

away (sorry, I can't restrict my answer just one):

- Maggie Stiefvater: The Scorpio Races

This is one of the most beautifully realised, atmospheric and tense stories I’ve ever read. It’s a

master class in creating a sense of place and populating it with perfectly drawn characters facing

impossible choices. It’s a love story, and not just one between a boy and girl, but between a girl

and her horse, a girl and the wild island she lives on, and a boy and his man-eating water horse.

- Melina Marchetta: Finnikin of the Rock/Froi of the Exiles/Charyn of Quintana (Lumatere

Chronicles)

I just love Melina Marchetta’s writing, whether it’s her contemporary YA or this exceptional YA

fantasy series. In this trilogy, she delivers meticulous plotting and world building, layered

characters, plenty of tension, action and humour, and profound insights into the human capacity

for love, forgiveness and hope. I cared deeply for so many characters in this series – fretted for

them even – that I still carry them with me.

- The Book Thief - Markus Zusak

This is an incredibly moving and beautifully written story, which I read within a year of its release

and am currently re-reading (I still haven’t seen the film). Zusak’s writing is so evocative and rich,

and infused with wit, warmth and empathy. It’s a unique story, made even more unique by the

fact it’s narrated by Death. Reading it a second time around I’m remembering why it moved me

so much the first time. A must read.

4)  What prompted you to write a story about angels?  Why did this theme speak to you?

I honestly didn’t set out to write a story about angels and demons. I’d had an idea for a while

(while working on other writing projects) that wouldn’t go away. It involved a guy and girl who

were attracted to each other and who had a complicated history that only he remembered. I

knew they were part of a broader conflict and that they had ended up on different sides. I also

knew there were paranormal elements to how she’d lost her memory.

When I started fleshing out their story and their world, I came across the Book of Enoch, a

2,000-year-old text that recounts the fall of the angel Semyaza and his two hundred of his fellow

angel warriors. The idea of those fallen angels and their lack of self control sparked a rush of

ideas.

For me, the real fascination wasn’t in why Semyaza and the others fell in the first place, but

what the consequences would be for their offspring – particularly if something happened to the

fallen angels to take them out of the picture. I wanted to put their half-angel offspring in a very

modern setting, having already been alive for almost a century and a half, still dealing with the

consequences of their father’s actions.

On one level, the Rephaim series is about Gaby and Rafa’s complicated relationship and the

mystery of what Gaby and her brother, Jude, did a year ago. And on a broader level, it’s about

how the Rephaim see themselves in the world – and the tension created when they disagree on

what their role should be.

Writing this story also gave me the opportunity to explore themes that have always fascinated

me, about identity and responsibility.

5) What can you tell potential readers about the series? What makes it stand out from the other Young adult books on the shelf?

The Rephaim series is contemporary character-driven fantasy that’s equal parts mystery, action

and romance. It’s written first person, present tense and told totally from Gaby’s perspective,

which means readers make discoveries along with Gaby.

As a writer, I enjoy exploring the complexity of relationships between all of my characters – the

things that draw them close and the things that push them apart – as much as I enjoy writing

fight scenes, so there’s a good mix of both throughout the four books.

As for points of difference...the things readers talk about the most are the setting (much of it in

a coastal Australian town), the ages of the characters (older teens/early twenties…although the

Rephaim are actually much older than that), and the slightly different take on fallen angel

mythology.


 Other Books by Paula Weston
 
  a Rafflecopter giveaway

Monday, March 9, 2015

Day 9 of 31 books in 31 day- Jadie Jones book giveaway & Kindle

Welcome to the 9th day of 31 books in 31 days, where you win prizes for reading.

Recap of Rules

Everyday that you participate in the giveaway of the day, you are eligible to win a brand new kindle.

How to participate
  a) Subscribe via email, so you can get the author & prize of the day sent directly to your email.
  b) Like the author of the day on facebook
  c) Follow the author on Twitter
  d) Read any of the author's books
  e) Answer the occasional quiz on author's interview
  f) Scroll to the bottom of each interview and enter the raffle (you'll have to unlock the raffle with your email first)

That's it- then enter the kindle giveaway!

All giveaways will be sent out by the 7th day in April. Good Luck.



Today's author of the day is Jadie Jones, author of the moonlit series and our featured book of the day, Moonlit (Moonlit Trilogy Book 1). Moonlit is a fast paced story that will keep you wanting more.


Eighteen-year-old Tanzy Hightower knows horses, has grown up with

them  on Wildwood Farm. She also knows not to venture beyond the trees that line the pasture.

Things happen out there that can’t be explained. Or undone. Worse, no one but she and

the horses can see what lurks in the shadows of the woods.

When a moonlit ride turns into a terrifying chase, Tanzy is left to question everything,

from the freak accident that killed her father to the very blood in her veins. Broken and

confused, she turns to Lucas, a scarred, beautiful stranger, and to Vanessa, a charming

new friend who has everything Tanzy doesn’t.

But why do they seem to know more about her than she knows herself?


                                                  Interview with Jadie Jones
                                       

1)       I read in an interview that reading has always been a means of escape for you.  As a 

child, what book was your favorite? Why was that your favorite book adventure?

The Black Stallion by Walter Farley was my first book obsession. Main character Alec Ramsay’s

world changes twice: once when he and a wild horse survive a shipwreck, and then again when

he brings the horse home. Even though it was fiction, his story was proof to me that any second

of my life can take me somewhere completely unexpected.

 2)       Why do you write children’s books? What interests you about the genre?

The Moonlit trilogy is considered upper-end YA because of the darker aspects of some of the

things the characters experience, but I have found that younger people understand and process

darker topics with more empathy and objectivity than adults. This observation is something that

draws me to the genre, because we can challenge young minds to look at the world in a bigger

way, and often they exceed our expectations for what they’re capable of comprehending.



3)       How has reading touched and affected different aspects of your life? How has it 

affected your writing?

Books have always been company for me when I feel alone or like I don’t fit in my environment.

Writing has given me a similar place to go when I need to find a place where I am comfortable

being myself. I have strange taste in books, and I have found I’m not always a fan of the best-

selling, mainstream work because it doesn’t captivate me the way that a more off-beat, craft-

driven voice will. This makes my writing different because I have to hook myself before I can

hook a reader. Acknowledging this has been so liberating. I write what I write, how I write, and

that’s okay with me.



4)       If you could be one character from a Young adult Series who would you be? Why?

Ready for a throwback? I would be Trixie Beldon from the Trixie Beldon mystery series. She’s

brave, independent, impulsive, and strong. She confronts what she thinks isn’t right, she takes

care of those she cares about, and she lives next door to a horse farm. Sounds pretty perfect.



5)       What was the last book you read that really made you think or made an impact on 

your life? How did it affect you and why?

I recently read “Thirteen Reasons Why” by Jay Asher. His exploration of the impact seemingly

small moments can have on a person’s psyche floored me. As each reason is revealed, I sank into

the main character’s emotional state and fell head first into her despair. We can affect someone’s

sense of self-worth with just a few vicious words or a disrespectful touch. It is easy to tell a

teenager to ignore bullying or to tell an authority figure, but the wounds inside are hard to define,

harder to reach, and harder still to heal. “Thirteen Reasons Why” gave me permission to take my

gloves off when it comes to writing books about teen characters, and was a great example of how

to do it with integrity and authenticity.





6)       Tell us a little about your series. What makes Moonlit different from other YA 

books? 

About the series: Tanzy Hightower was the sole witness to her father’s accidental death three

years prior, the cause of which she still can’t explain. Through blood magic and a water witch,

she travels back in time to witness her first life in order to understand why her father’s death was

a thousand years in the making. As the series progresses, she realizes there are many other girls

just like her, and discovers their larger purpose.

I enjoy exploring the flaws and dark places in “good” characters, and the tender places in my

villains. In this series, no character is wholly good or wholly bad, and the deeper the journey

goes, the grayer the boundary becomes.



7)       If Moonlit was made into a movie, who would you want to play Tanzy? Why?

First, if Moonlit was ever made into a movie – even if a low budget indie flick – I would

completely freak out. There are so many visual elements I would love to see come to life through

film. I remember when I saw the Lord of the Rings and thought: it’s like they pulled pictures

directly out of my brain… how did they do that? I would love to see how someone else processes

my story. As far as casting, I have strong ideas for other cast members, but I haven’t seen Tanzy

yet, which I think is fitting. I think it would be awesome for the actress playing Tanzy to be a

relative unknown. As far as looks go, a young Mila Kunis is what I have in mind. Taylor Swift

would be a spot-on Vanessa, who is Tanzy’s wealthy, more-than-a-little-shady new friend.

Other Books by Jadie Jones






Rafflecopter giveaway

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Shimmer review

I might never read again, because of this book. It truly broke the mold, for amazing. You know when a book is so good, you want to crawl in it and live there. This is that book. It has everything you'll ever want. It has been weeks and I still can't stop gushing about the shear awesomeness of it all.


I had hoped I could calm down and write a decent review without jumping up and down and peeing my pants. Clearly, not gonna happen.

So Shimmer,



'

Is the third book in the rephaim series. When reading it I though it wasgoing to be the last in the series. As I neared the end, it becam clear that unless Paula Weston had a Harry Potter wand
                                           
there was no way she was wrapping up the story by the end of the book. The last page, Paula introduces an unforgettable cliff hanger that is going to make me fly to Australia to get my hands on the last book. I'm not kidding.

I realize, I just gave a review without giving a review. Let me quickly recap. the series is about a backpacker named gabe who's brother died in a horrible accident the yearbefore. She is trying to pull herself back together, but she is haunted of dreams of devil's, hellions and a sexy demon fighter.When she writes her story down and wins a contest she is beyond thrilled, but she quickly realizes she has revealed herself to a world that she doesn't know anything about, and soon there will be hell to pay. 

I love the whole premise of the series. The only problem is the book might have ruined reading for me. It is so good, I'm not sure if there is anyting better. If you haven't tried this book you have too. This is one of the few series that I wish I had written. Happy reading.