Thursday, October 17, 2013

Pelican Bay by Jesse Giles Christiansen



Author: Jesse Giles Chirstiansen
Title: Pelican Bay
Publisher: Imajin Books

Realease Date: July 20, 2013
ISBN: 1927792126



NOTE: This eBook was gifted by the author for an honest review.

(I have to give a huge apology to author, Jesse G. Christiansen. He was so kind as to ask me to review his story, which I'm sure he worked diligently on, and I let him down. I never posted my review which was sitting in a sub-folder in my computer. And I'm so sorry for that. I truly believed I had posted my review over two months ago! Again, my apologies. But thank you for giving me the opportunity to share in Ethan's and the Captain's lives.)

What is the first thing you do when you see what looks like a cemetery at the bottom of the sea? Normally, a person would ask questions and more than likely just let it go. I mean, I'd be spooked if I saw an undersea burial site. Not Ethan! Ethan dives head first ignoring the captains warnings. That decision takes Ethan on a journey which he may regret. 

Living close by an island I'm surprised I've never read more "nautical themed" books. Actually, I don't think I've ever read one. However, I'm glad I started with this story. At first, the book starts off laying the ground work so it is a bit slow. But once you get past the backstory, the present tale begins and you become soaked up in Ethan's adventure to find out why a young boy is buried at the bottom of the sea. 

The female characters in this book are not very assertive or even formidable. They were always worried, scared, and distressed with any little bit of information they were presented with or situation that was thrown at them. I feel that the story would have survived without their presence because they were so delicate. 

The murder/mystery parts of the book were fantastic though! Christiansen's descriptions of the bay, the scent of the sea air, the library during the resolution of the story were spot on. I could envision the characters' features, their scent, the aroma of the dark island. 

This story was anything but cheerful. Christiansen flawlessly captured the dark and austere mood of the book. It was captured from the cover of the book to his detailed narration of a story that Ethan should not have explored. 

It's no surprise PELICAN BAY is on Amazon's Best Sellers list! I look forward to reading more stories by Mr. Christiansen in the future. 




Rated 5/5 Owls


Why do they torment us?


Author: Sarah Addison Allen
Title: Lost Lake
Series: Stand alone
Publisher: St. Martin's Press


Release Date: January 21, 2014

ISBN: 123001980X
Author's Site: sarahaddisonallen.com


NOTE: This is not a review. This is my spout.
UPDATE: New release date has been moved up to Tuesday, January 21, 2014 as of 10/29/13 via Amazon!!

Do you have a favorite author who's only penned a few books and when they finally have a new book to be release (three years later) you find yourself cyber stalking the internet on any information you can get? I'm sure I'm not the only one. And every time this happens, I instantly regret the actions I undertake the moment I've done them. Below are a few examples of foolishness in a step-by-step process:

First I get an automated email from my author informing me they are in the works of writing a new book. I instantly freak out. I don't even have a book title, much less a cover, and in most cases the absence of a release date. 

Then! I head on over to the author's official site, Goodreads page, Twitter, Facebook, and finally Pinterest (which usually doesn't give me anything). 

A few weeks later, when I've decided to give up and stop reading my Google Alerts (because it's all the same thing), I get another email from the publisher/editor/author that there is a new synopsis, a book trailer, a book cover (FINALLY!), and then they give it to you… an excerpt. 

Excerpts are a dirty thing to publish for readers. Especially fans of the author. Even more so when the publication date is months away. And this is where I hate myself. I READ IT. I get so immersed in those ten little pages of the story that when my page stops scrolling down so I can get my wordage fix, it's over. The characters are in book limbo, I can't read the rest of their story, their complications, that magic… 

That's when I promise myself that I will not do that again. I will not be drawn to the little blue link "read the excerpt here" ever again. 

Moral of the story? I keep lying to myself. And I'm sure you do as well. Because no matter how hard we try to stay unruffled when new information about our precious writer and their new book, we become weak little bookworms who are squished by their excerpt links, vague dates, and shortfalls of book art. We're just a bunch of literary junkies trying to get any sort of anticipated composition fix. 

I'm in this predicament at the moment. One of my absolute favorite writers, Sarah Addison Allen, has been in the process of writing a new book - LOST LAKE - after three years away kicking breast cancer in its metaphorical ass! I have to say that I'm very happy for her recover and continued remission. In the past year she has given us a little opening into her life window as to how she is doing and what is going on with her writing. Yesterday, a snippet of her latest book was posted on Goodreads. I opened the link immediately but then... I didn't read it. Not even the title of the chapter. I'm proud of myself for not falling into this trap. I don't have to read this excerpt to know  I'll love it. I know I will. I deeply enjoy all of her books. She has a mystical writing voice. Full of wonderment, enchantment, and warmth. 

I'm going to try and make it to February. Unless I happen to win an advanced copy! *wishful thinking*