Showing posts with label Heather Demetrios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heather Demetrios. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

Waiting On Wednesday .... Bad Romance


Waiting On Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by Jill at Breaking The Spine that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.

My pick this week is Bad Romance by Heather Demetrios


Here is the Goodreads synopsis 
Grace wants out. Out of her house, where her stepfather wields fear like a weapon and her mother makes her scrub imaginary dirt off the floors. Out of her California town, too small to contain her big city dreams. Out of her life, and into the role of Parisian artist, New York director—anything but scared and alone.

Enter Gavin: charming, talented, adored. Controlling. Dangerous. When Grace and Gavin fall in love, Grace is sure it's too good to be true. She has no idea their relationship will become a prison she's unable to escape. 

Deeply affecting and unflinchingly honest, this is a story about spiraling into darkness—and emerging into the light again.
Abusive relationship books have to be done right in order for me to want to read them. Romanticizing the behaviour does not send the right message, and I find a lot of books tend to do that.

I, however, trust Heather Demetrios to write about this particular subject with the proper care and attention it deserves. I am hopeful that this book is going to be a contrast to the many that have come out where the love interest is actually abusive but is presented as a romantic option for the heroine of the novel. I also think this will be much more hopeful and inspiring than it appears at first glance. It'll be about the light that comes after the dark and I anticipate Heather will do justice to that element as well.

I anticipate that this will be a great summer read as it comes out in June, and I cannot wait to get my hands on it!

Expected release date - June 13, 2017

Thursday, December 3, 2015

Blood Passage Cover Reveal - Blogger Caravan Exclusive



I am so excited to share the new covers for Heather Demtrois' Dark Caravan Cycle series on the blog today. The new redesign is fantastic and compliments the series perfectly.

First we'll reveal the redesigned Exquisite Captive cover, which will be available in stores February 1st!


The bold, gold cover is eye catching and it certainly fits the story. Be sure to check it out if you haven't already gotten yourself a copy of this wonderful book.

You can add it on Goodreads and learn more about it on Heather's website. She has a playlist and links to her Pinterest boards for the series on there as well.

The second book, Blood Passage, is released March 1st, and here is the official synopsis....
A jinni who’s lost everything.

A master with nothing to lose.

A revolutionary with everything to gain.

When Nalia arrives in Morocco to fulfill Malek’s third and final wish she’s not expecting it to be easy. Especially because Malek isn’t the only one after Solomon’s sigil, an ancient magical ring that gives its wearer the power to control the entire jinn race. Nalia has also promised to take Raif, leader of the jinn revolution, to its remote location. Though Nalia is free of the bottle and shackles that once bound her to Malek as his slave, she’s in more danger than ever before and no closer to rescuing her imprisoned brother.

Meanwhile, Malek’s past returns with a vengeance and his well-manicured faade crumbles as he confronts the darkness within himself, and Raif must decide what’s more important: his love for Nalia, or his devotion to the cause of Arjinnan freedom.

Set upon by powerful forces that threaten to break her, Nalia encounters unexpected allies and discovers that her survival depends on the very things she thought made her weak. From the souks of Marrakech to the dunes of the Sahara, The Arabian Nights come to life in this harrowing second installment of the Dark Caravan Cycle.
Amazing right?! This series is really intriguing and all well plotted. I am eager to see what Heather does next with her world, and the characters who inhabit it.

And here is the newly redesigned cover Blood Passage.......


The red is striking and I am eager to see how the image might relate to the story within. It will look fantastic with the new Exquisite Captive cover on bookshelves.

You can add Blood Passage to Goodreads, and it is available for pre-order from all retails now.


Lastly, Heather has provided a Blood Passage teaser for you to read! Only read if you've already finished Exquisite Captive due to potential spoilers. It will certainly make you want to read more immediately.

BLOOD PASSAGE TEASER!

1
Raif wondered how many times you could cheat death before it wizened up.
Any minute now, he expected to hear the harsh cry of an Ifrit soldier cutting through the laughter, singing, and buoyant voices that filled the Djemaa-el-Fna, Marrakech’s main square. He gripped Nalia’s hand as he scoured the crowded expanse for the crimson glow of Ifrit eyes. He was taking the name of the square seriously: Assembly of the Dead. Malek had told them how, not so long ago, the square had been used for public executions.  As soon as Raif had stepped out of the taxi that had brought them into town from the airport, he’d felt the malicious presence of the jinn who hunted them. Ifrit chiaan made the air heavy, covering the energy of the bustling North African city like lava. Hot and destructive, their magic would incinerate everything if it could.
“I thought you said you knew where this place was,” Raif said.
Malek shot him an annoyed look. “I said my driver knew where it was. Usually when I come to Marrakech I don’t have jinn babysitters who think it’s a good idea to throw my cell phone out of a moving plane.
Raif forced himself to keep his temper in check. It would only give Malek more excuses to point out Raif’s comparative youth. He’d had enough of the pardjinn’s snide commentary on the plane. All that mattered was that Raif got Solomon’s sigil before Malek did. Otherwise, Nalia’s former master would have a ring that would allow him to control every jinni on Earth—including Nalia, Raif, and Zanari.
“Don’t be so dramatic, Malek,” Nalia said. “The plane was still on the runway and we couldn’t risk anyone being able to track us.”
“I hardly think the Ifrit know how to use advanced GPS technology,” Malek snapped.
“Wanna keep it down, pardjinn?” Zanari said. “I was hoping to avoid capture until we at least got some dinner.”
Malek ignored her, pushing through the throng of people that crowded the square.
“This place is nothing like your angel city,” Raif said to Nalia.
Morocco wasn’t just a different country—it felt like an entirely new realm. And yet it was full of wishmaker humans and dirt in the sky and iron that made him sick.
“Los Angeles,” she corrected, smiling. “I prefer Morocco. It’s more like home.”  
“We’ll be in Arjinna soon,” he said, squeezing her hand. First the ring, then home. The words had become a prayer, a mantra, a shot in the dark.
Nalia tightened her hold on his hand. “I hope so.”
The square was all shadows and smoke, the inky night kept at bay with small lanterns set on the cobblestones. Smoke from hundreds of food stalls filled the night air, mixing with the incessant beat from the drum circles that lay scattered around the Djemaa el-Fna. Storytellers cast spells and magicians passed around hats after each trick, hoping for a few dirhams for their trouble. The souks bordered the northeast end of the square, a huge swath of labyrinthine alleyways filled with shops selling everything from love potions to rusted scimitars. Most of the Djemaa’s perimeter was taken up by restaurants where diners lounged at tables laden with tagines and pots of sweet Moroccan mint tea.
Raif’s stomach growled at the scent of lamb and spices that wafted over from a nearby table under one of the food tents in the center of the square. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d eaten. Dinner didn’t sound like such a bad idea, but he wanted it in the privacy of the riad, where he could finally relax. He was still drained from the unbinding ceremony he’d performed to free Nalia from her bottle, less than twenty-four hours before. Being in those horrible human planes hadn’t helped much, either. It was unnatural, spending so many hours in the sky.
“Nalia, does that street look familiar?” Malek asked. He pointed to an alleyway leading away from the Djemaa.
“I’m afraid I can’t help you, Malek,” she said, her voice cold. “The only time you brought me here, I was in a bottle around your neck.”
“Nice, sister,” Zanari said. She gave Nalia an appreciative nod and Malek cursed under his breath in Arabic.
Raif fell back as Nalia and Malek continued to bicker about which direction the guesthouse was in. “Anything?” Raif asked Zanari.
She shook her head. “A lot of Ifrit are searching for Nalia, my voiqhif told me that much. But nobody knows where she is yet.”
Having a sister with the ability to psychically view any place or person in the realms was incredibly useful…when it was accurate, anyway.
“Do they know what she looks like?” Raif asked.
“They know about the birthmark,” Zanari said. “That’s all I can see.”
Nalia had already made sure to glamour her eyes, turning them Shaitan gold instead of the tell-tale Ghan Aisouri violet that would get them all killed. Likewise, the tattoos snaking over her hands and arms had been covered, although those would not have been so out of place in Marrakech. Already, several women had called out to her and Zanari from behind the veils covering their faces, waving around cards with henna designs that looked very much like the tattoos hiding under Nalia’s glamour. But the birthmark on her cheek was something she wouldn’t disguise; it wasn’t the best time, Nalia reasoned, to offend the gods by covering up a sign of their favor.
Raif frowned. “I’ll feel a lot better once we stop moving.”  
“No chance of that anytime soon,” Zanari said, with a nod at Malek.
The pardjinn had promised that the riad he was taking them to was safe: a discreet hotel with only eight rooms, hidden in the folds of the medina’s confusion of narrow alleyways and streets. The ancient sector of Marrakech was the perfect hiding place for them, but what made it ideal was also the thing that was keeping them from finding their way around it themselves. They’d only been in the square for fifteen minutes, but that was long enough to be ambushed by the enemy.
“I can tell you this much,” Zanari continued. “Calar wants Nalia to disappear. I don’t think we should expect an all-out battle. She’ll want to do this quietly.”
The Ifrit empress had her very best killers scouring Earth. But after killing Haran, Nalia had proven that highly skilled assassins—even ghouls with dark powers—weren’t enough to take down the last of the royal Ghan Aisouri.  
“This place is crawling with Ifrit,” Raif said.
Zanari nodded. “Can’t see any, though.”
“Probably disguised. But if we feel them, they feel us.”
Raif’s eyes swept the crowded square. Nobody seemed to be paying Nalia any attention, but it would only take one mistake to alert the Ifrit.  
As Malek turned to say something to her, Nalia’s headscarf slipped down. His hand reached out to adjust it. In seconds, he’d secured the scarf so that it twisted around Nalia’s neck and head like the Moroccan women in the square.
“He’s a man of many talents, isn’t he?” Zanari said wryly.
“Half the time, I don’t even think Malek’s touching her on purpose,” Raif said. “He’s just so used to doing what he wants with her.”
It bothered him that sometimes Nalia didn’t seem to notice Malek’s closeness. The way they moved in tandem, how she always came when he called: he wondered how long it would take for her to realize she wasn’t Malek’s slave anymore.
Raif quickened his steps and threaded his fingers through Nalia’s, rubbing his thumb against the scar around her wrist, where Malek’s shackles had once been. She raised her other hand to the headscarf, self-conscious.
“I look silly, don’t I?” she asked.
It was a lucky thing the women in this part of the world wore such clothing—it allowed Nalia to hide the identifying birthmark on her cheek that had helped Haran find her. The ghoul had killed six jinn before he got to Nalia, including her best friend, Leilan. He’d nearly killed Nalia herself.
Raif shook his head. “Not silly at all. Beautiful as always.” He leaned in to kiss her, but Malek’s voice stopped him.
“PDA isn’t approved of in Morocco,” he said. “You kiss her out here and you’ll attract way more attention than you want.”
“PDA?” Raif asked.
Nalia shot Malek a glare. “Human thing,” she said, turning back to Raif. Later, she mouthed with a tiny, secretive smile. His breath caught a little as he thought of the room they’d share, just the two of them.
Raif pulled his eyes away from her mouth and cleared his throat. He had to stay focused. “No luck?” he asked, nodding at the street Malek was dragging them toward.
Nalia shook her head. “I don’t know what’s safer: staying in the square or walking through the medina. At least here it’s open. Gods, why did the sigil have to be in the Crossroads?”
To jinn, Morocco was known as The Crossroads, the country on Earth with the highest concentration of jinn and the location of the portal between the human realm and Arjinna. Full of refugees, slaves on the dark caravan, and expatriates, the city was a hub of jinn activity. Raif knew it would be difficult to blend in with the human population. He was too recognizable as the face of the Arjinnan revolution and no doubt word had gotten out that the Ifrit had increased their efforts to capture him. The sooner they got out of here, the better.
“This would be a good time to say, once again, what a terrible idea it was to take all my guns from me,” Malek said.
Nalia had emptied the plane of Malek’s firearms by throwing them onto the tarmac before taking off from Los Angeles—a  necessary precaution after Malek hypersuaded Zanari, controlling his sister’s mind so that she put a gun to her own head. Raif wasn’t sure what had kept Malek from killing Zanari that night; he’d just seen Raif kiss Nalia and help free her from the bottle—to say Malek was enraged would be an understatement. Emerald chiaan sparked at Raif’s fingertips and he closed his fists over it, staunching the flow of magic. There’d be time enough to make the pardjinn’s life miserable.   
“Malek, I trust you about as much as the Ifrit looking for me,” Nalia said. “And I certainly would never arm one of them.”
Malek placed his hand against his heart. “You wound me.”
Nalia ignored him, pulling Raif toward the circle nearest them that had formed around a band of musicians. Drums and tambourines accompanied the high lilt of an old man dressed in a traditional kaftan, a robe of homespun cloth with a pointed hood that lay flat against his back. The music made Raif think of campfires in open fields, women dancing barefoot in rich Arjinnan soil, and the feel of his tavrai around him. A pang of homesickness hit Raif as the words of the song became clear to him: so long, so long have I journeyed. He glanced at Nalia and saw his longing reflected in her own eyes. Gods willing, they’d be there soon, restoring their ravaged homeland together.
“If we had my cell, we’d be there by now,” Malek muttered to Nalia as he stared at the map in his hand for the hundredth time.
“You control the CEOs of every Fortune 500 company,” Nalia said, her eyes never leaving the weathered faces of the musicians. “I’m sure you can manage to read a map.”
“I haven’t had to read a map in seventy-five years,” Malek said. Though Malek didn’t look much older than Raif, he’d been alive for over a century. Being half-jinn, Nalia’s former master aged incredibly slowly, much like his full-jinn counterparts.
Malek crumpled the map and threw it to the ground. Raif closed his eyes and took a breath. He wished he could discipline Malek like he would a tavrai: extra guard duty or a few rounds in the training ring with his most brutal fighters. But Raif wasn’t in the Forest of Sighs and Malek certainly wasn’t under his command.
“Nalia, you know Earth better than I do—what are our options?” he asked, drawing her away from Malek and Zanari.  
“Get out of the Djemaa right away, for one. I can feel the Ifrit, but I can’t—” Nalia stiffened. “There,” she whispered.
She inclined her head slightly to the left and Raif’s eyes slid to where an Ifrit soldier was making his way through the crowd. He was dressed in a kaftan, the hood up, but even from here Raif could see the glow of the jinni’s scarlet eyes. Raif turned away—he’d be recognized in an instant.
“Is it just the one?” he asked.
“I think so,” she said. Nalia pretended to drop something and when she stood, Raif noticed the glint of her jade dagger in her hand.
“I’ll try to be quick, but be ready, just in case,” she said.
There was no question who would fight—Nalia was four times stronger than he was, the only surviving member of a royal knighthood, with access to all the elements instead of just one, like most jinn. It wasn’t time to be proud. Raif caught Zanari’s eye and she nodded. She’d seen the Ifrit, too.
Just as the Ifrit neared them, his eyes narrowing as he took in Nalia’s face, Zanari bolted toward Nalia. “There you are!” she said loudly.
Nalia turned, startled. Zanari wrapped her arms around her and pressed her lips to Nalia’s. Raif’s eyes widened. He hadn’t been expecting that, but then, neither had the Ifrit. The jinni stopped just a foot away, confused.
Zanari pulled away. “I thought I’d lost you,” she said, her voice soft and seductive. She’d turned more than a few heads, but all that mattered was those precious seconds that distracted the Ifrit.
Nalia swallowed. “N-no. I’m…here.” She smiled and dipped her head toward Zanari, whispering something in her ear.
His sister laughed, but from where Raif was standing, he saw her flex her fingers, ready to use her chiaan. Nalia dove to her left, the jade dagger winking as it sliced into the Ifrit’s skin. One cut of the charmed blade and he was paralyzed. The humans nearby screamed.  Zanari manifested a shadowy barrier around them to put some distance between the humans and the body on the ground.
“So much for flying under the radar,” Malek said.
“You need to get us out of here,” Raif ordered. “I don’t care how, but make it happen pardjinn.” He rushed over to where Nalia kneeled over the Ifrit. The jinni’s eyes were wide with terror.
She held the blade over the Ifrit’s chest, her face pale. Raif took the knife out of her hand and drove it into the jinni’s heart, pulled the blade out, then wiped the blood on his pants’ leg before giving it back to her.
“Let’s go,” Raif said. He pulled Nalia up with him.
“They’re coming.” Zanari was clutching at her head. “They don’t know it’s us, but they know something happened here.”
They raced toward the dark, serpentine streets of the medina. Malek grabbed a Moroccan man who stood on the fringes of a circle surrounding a cobra who swayed back and forth to his charmer’s hypnotic tune.
“I’ll give you five hundred dirhams to take me to Riad Melhoun,” he said in rapid-fire Arabic.
“Eight hundred,” the man responded, his eyes no doubt taking in the cut of Malek’s wool coat and the expensive watch on his wrist.
Malek glared. “Seven hundred. That’s too damn much and you know it.”
“This isn’t exactly the time to be bargaining, Malek,” Nalia growled.
Yalla,” the man said, waving his hand with weary resignation. Let’s go.
Raif grabbed Malek’s arm. “Why didn’t we do this from the start?”
“I hate being cheated,” was Malek’s reply. He shrugged off Raif’s hand and followed the guide.
“Humans,” Raif muttered.

They plunged into the medina as the square behind them filled with the sound of police sirens.

Thursday, June 4, 2015

The Lexie Project Cover Reveal



You may have seen the announcement from Heather Demetrios that she is writing a 'sequel' of sorts to this amazing novel that a few of you may have read (or a lot of you!)...


People have been asking, and Heather has listened. This time Lexie is taking center stage and telling her story in her own way!
Lexie Baker is ready for her close up and nobody’s gonna get in her freaking way.

Nearly a year after graduating high school and taking a hiatus from her family’s reality TV show, "Baker's Dozen," Lexie is in Los Angeles, on a mission to take Hollywood by storm. From red carpet premiers to helping her YouTube star roommate film weird videos, Lex fits right in with the droves of girls just as hungry as she is for some screen time. When Jax Wilson, a young, hot producer, offers to launch The Lexie Project, a reality show that will chronicle Lex’s adventures trying to make it as an actress in LA, she jumps at the chance. It isn’t an Oscar-winning role, but it’s a start.

Then she meets Liam, a film student who brings books to parties and is one of her twin brother’s closest friends. When it becomes clear that her brother, Benny, has a serious drinking problem that's causing his life to spiral out of control, Lexie relies on Liam to help protect her brother from the media…and himself. But spending time with Liam soon makes Lexie question if the life of a starlet is really what she wants. And if it is, how far will she go to get it?

The City of Angels soon becomes Hell on Earth and Lexie realizes that everyone—even Liam—has something they’re hiding. It’s time to find a new role to play–not the one she was cast in at birth.

This companion novel to Something Real features several major characters from the novel. Perfect for fans of The Lizzie Bennet Diaries, Lexie's novelized memoir is a multiplatform storytelling experience told in real time that reaches readers through social media, including weekly chapter installments on Wattpad. Daily updates on Lexie’s social media accounts will give readers the chance to interact directly with Lexie and have opportunities to influence the course of the story.
Lexie will be telling her story through various social media accounts, and can be exclusively read on Wattpad starting on MONDAY! A chapter will be released each week along with the other goodies Heather and Lexie have in store.

First up, here is Lexie herself. You'll be seeing her in Youtube videos, on her Twitter and her blog (just to name a few).


Now, you might be interested in knowing how you can actually follow Lexie's story! Here is what you need to do in order to make sure you don't miss anything.


Be sure to follow Lexie on all her social media platforms for all the fun! She'll be updating on all of them!


And now here is the official cover for The Lexie Project (which I think is AMAZING!)


So fun, right? And it matches what I would expect from a cover for a book about Lexie. You can add The Lexie Project to your Goodreads, as well.

Be sure to follow Heather on Twitter, and visit her blog for more information!
When she’s not traipsing around the world or spending time in imaginary places, Heather Demetrios lives with her husband in New York City. Originally from Los Angeles, she now calls the East Coast home. Heather has an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is a recipient of the PEN New England Susan P. Bloom Discovery Award for her debut novel, Something Real. Her other novels include Exquisite Captive, the first in the Dark Caravan Cycle fantasy series, I’ll Meet You There and the multiplatform serial novel, The Lexie Project. She is the founder of Live Your What, an organization dedicated to fostering passion in people of all ages and creating writing opportunities for underserved youth. Find out more about Heather and her books at www.heatherdemetrios.com, or come hang out with her on Twitter (@HDemetrios) and any number of social media sites.   

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Heather Demetrios Annoucement


Did you fall in love with Heather Demetrios' novel Something Real? Did you immediately wish for a sequel or companion novel? Well.... you're getting your wish. A companion novel from the point of view of Lexie is in the works and in true Lexie fashion she's telling her story HER way.

Lexie's story will be told via various social networks, and via various media types. Here is the official press release with all the details you'll need to know in order to be following the story.
YA AUTHOR HEATHER DEMETRIOS ANNOUNCES SEQUEL TO SOMETHING REAL

Brooklyn, New York (April 27, 2015)—Heather Demetrios announced today that she is writing a sequel to her critically acclaimed debut novel, Something Real.

The Lexie Project is a multi-media, multi-platform storytelling experience, a novelized memoir that reaches readers through social media, including Wattpad and Tumblr. Demetrios will be writing the story in serialized form with weekly installments, at no cost to the reader. Daily updates on Lexie’s social media accounts will give readers the chance to interact directly with Lexie, as well as provide readers with opportunities to influence the course of the story.

Said Demetrios, “YA readers are passionate fans and their deep investment in the stories they love is something I took into consideration when I set out to work on the sequel. Lexie’s story is about a reality TV star who’s now trying to make it in Hollywood. As such, I want to give my readers a fresh, modern way of entering into into her story—this is how Lexie would tell it. Fan interaction and crowd sourcing allows the YA fandom to be part of the creation of the story and I’m excited to see where it will take us.”

The first installment of The Lexie Project comes out on Wattpad on June 8, 2015. Lexie is already active on her social media accounts. Readers can find out more on www.heatherdemetrios.com/books/lexie_project
Heather also revealed the cover for The Lexie Project which I think fits perfectly.

Cover art by Meaghan Isaacs


Fun right? To get more details, and to read a forward to The Lexie Project from Chloe, head on over to Heather's website.

Be sure to follow Heather's Wattpad, Lexie's Twitter, Tumblr and Pinterest as well as the Youtube channel (soon to launch) so that you do not miss one single part of this story.

You can add it to your Goodreads to be read shelf now, and join in me in the wait until June 8th for the first instalment!

Heather and Lexie
About Heather Demetrios

When she’s not traipsing around the world or spending time in imaginary places, Heather Demetrios lives with her husband in New York City. Originally from Los Angeles, she now calls the East Coast home. Heather has an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts and is a recipient of the PEN New England Susan P. Bloom Discovery Award for her debut novel, Something Real. Her other novels include Exquisite Captive, the first in the Dark Caravan Cycle fantasy series, and I’ll Meet You There. She is the founder of Live Your What, an organization dedicated to fostering passion in people of all ages and creating writing opportunities for underserved youth. Find out more about Heather and her books at www.heatherdemetrios.com or come hang out with her on Twitter (@HDemetrios) and any number of social media sites.

Tuesday, February 3, 2015

I'll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios



I'll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios
Release Date - February 3, 2015
Publisher Website - Raincoast/Macmillan
Publisher Social Media - Twitter
Pages -  400 pages
My Rating - 5/5
**received in exchange for an honest review**

Here is the Goodreads synopsis

If seventeen-year-old Skylar Evans were a typical Creek View girl, her future would involve a double-wide trailer, a baby on her hip, and the graveyard shift at Taco Bell. But after graduation, the only thing standing between straightedge Skylar and art school are three minimum-wage months of summer. Skylar can taste the freedom—that is, until her mother loses her job and everything starts coming apart. Torn between her dreams and the people she loves, Skylar realizes everything she’s ever worked for is on the line.

Nineteen-year-old Josh Mitchell had a different ticket out of Creek View: the Marines. But after his leg is blown off in Afghanistan, he returns home, a shell of the cocksure boy he used to be. What brings Skylar and Josh together is working at the Paradise—a quirky motel off California’s dusty Highway 99. Despite their differences, their shared isolation turns into an unexpected friendship and soon, something deeper. 
A broken girl. An even more broken boy. A summer that changes everything. I'll Meet You There is the story of losing yourself, finding your way, and the people who help you along that long winding path back.

Skylar is filled with wanting. She wants to get out of Creek View. She wants her life to be different. She wants one more day with the father she lost. This novel feels like it cannot hold the depths of how much she aches with want. Anyone who has lived in a small town knows this feeling Skylar has had. The itch to run away as fast as you can, while seemingly frozen in place. Skylar is someone who is trying to find where she belongs and who she is, after many years of taking care of those around her instead of herself.

Heather Demetrios writes Josh's story with a grace, and sensitivity. You can feel how much this story meant to her. You can tell how much research went into this character. She wanted to get it exactly right. Josh feels incredibly authentic, and I think that is the highest compliment I can bestow. She captures the jarring experience of trying to belong in both worlds when you don't feel part of either. Josh's struggle with post traumatic stress, easing back into 'normal' life and the ache of missing the friends he left behind feels both crushing and honest.

Heather ends her acknowledgements with the following:
Finally, to the Joshes out there: I wish you sleep without nightmares, laughter every day, cold beer on warm summer nights and love - so much love.
This perfectly captures the heart and soul of this novel. She's written a love letter to small towns, war veterans and their families, and girls like Skylar who are just always wishing for more. She does it with beautiful, touching prose and crafts a love story in the midst of this already captivating story. It's the perfect mix for a YA novel, and she pulls it together masterfully.

Josh and Skylar together are like fireworks. The chemistry is instant. They have an ease and banter that Heather weaves into the smallest exchanges. This is a novel where I feel we got to see the characters fall in love. We weren't just told that they love each other. We got to experience it along with them. We got to see the messy, happy, hopeful, crushing moments. In the end you feel like you've taken this journey with them and the ending feels earned as a result. This novel is filled with tender and romantic moments that will leave you swooning. It's release date is perfect as it'll pair wonderfully with Valentine's Day. The light and dark aspects of their journey are balanced and you get a sense that any struggle is worth what these characters are building between them.

Heather has this ability to make characters that could easily be nothing be cliches into fully developed, well written characters. The secondary characters are brilliant examples of this. Skylar's two best friends, the motherly owner of the motel Skylar and Josh work at, and the various family members we meet are captured with such affection. You have no choice but to love them in return. These characters flaws only make them that much more convincing and true.

A novel that will leave fans of Heather's previous books spellbound, but it's also one that will win her plenty of new fans as well. A novel from the heart that is truly touching, and warm. A novel about what it means to be broken, and the strength it takes to put yourself back together, even when you cannot do it alone.

Friday, January 23, 2015

I'll Meet You There Pre-Order Campaign



Pre-order exclusive are always fun. It makes you feel like an insider when you receive your exclusive pre-order perk.

Heather Demetrois, being the romantic that she is, has come up with an AMAZING pre-order campaign for her new buzzy novel, I'll Meet You There. You may have already heard bloggers gushing over how wonderful this title is on Twitter. It already has a TON of fans and as the release date draws closer the buzz is only increasing.

I hear there is a pretty swoon worthy Marine in this novel. He's the type of character that is destined to become a favourite book boyfriend and appear on a ton of end of the year lists. Putting this together with her romantic side, Heather is offering up a special letter from Josh for Valentine's Day. Her novel is released just before Valentine's Day and this pre-order campaign ties in to the romance of the novel.

You can read more about the pre-order and why Heather is offering it up on her website.

Now you might be curious how you secure this awesome letter. It's super simple. You pre-order the novel, and email Heather at heatherdemetrios@gmail.com. All you need to provide is a copy of the pre-order receipt and a USA address to have the letter shipped to (international pre-orders can have the letter EMAILED to them if you wish to take part).

You can pre-order from the following links....


I cannot think of a better way for a YA book lover to celebrate Valentine's Day than with a letter from a swoon worthy book boyfriend! You can find out more about I'll Meet You There by checking out Goodreads.

What guy from a book (YA or otherwise) do you wish you could get a love letter from for Valentine's Day? Let me know in the comments! 

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Exquisite Captive by Heather Demetrios



Exquisite Captive by Heather Demetrios
Release Date - October 7, 2014
Publisher Website - Harper Collins
Publisher Social Media - Twitter/Facebook/SavvyReader/Frenzy
Pages -  480 pages
My Rating - 5/5
**received in exchange for an honest review from the publisher**

Here is the Goodreads synopsis
Forced to obey her master.
Compelled to help her enemy.
Determined to free herself.

Nalia is a jinni of tremendous ancient power, the only survivor of a coup that killed nearly everyone she loved. Stuffed into a bottle and sold by a slave trader, she’s now in hiding on the dark caravan, the lucrative jinni slave trade between Arjinna and Earth, where jinn are forced to grant wishes and obey their human masters’ every command. She’d give almost anything to be free of the golden shackles that bind her to Malek, her handsome, cruel master, and his lavish Hollywood lifestyle.

Enter Raif, the enigmatic leader of Arjinna’s revolution and Nalia’s sworn enemy. He promises to free Nalia from her master so that she can return to her ravaged homeland and free her imprisoned brother—all for an unbearably high price. Nalia’s not sure she can trust him, but Raif’s her only hope of escape. With her enemies on the hunt, Earth has become more perilous than ever for Nalia. There’s just one catch: for Raif’s unbinding magic to work, Nalia must gain possession of her bottle…and convince the dangerously persuasive Malek that she truly loves him. Battling a dark past and harboring a terrible secret, Nalia soon realizes her freedom may come at a price too terrible to pay: but how far is she willing to go for it?

Inspired by Arabian Nights, EXQUISITE CAPTIVE brings to life a deliciously seductive world where a wish can be a curse and shadows are sometimes safer than the light.
Jinni (or genie) inspired novels have always been something that fascinated me. They are typically hit or miss for me in terms of enjoyment. Exquisite Captive has a fantastic balance of everything I wanted, and has the added bonus of Heather Demetrios' engaging writing style. In other words, this was a definite hit for me.

The element that will grab you right from the beginning is the world building. It's obviously something that Heather took her time with and plotted out. Everything from the backstory of the main character, to the political elements, to the underground culture the jinni of the dark caravan enjoy. It meshed our world with this magical world that Nalia and the rest of the jinni inhabit effortlessly. It pops off the pages in a way that really worked, and allowed me to envision this world Heather created.

Nalia is neither strong nor weak. She's neither passive or aggressive. She's a survivor. She strives, and stumbles, but tries again. She uses things to her advantage where she can. She has a vicious side, and isn't afraid to lash out when an opportunity arises. She knows when to fight and when to concede. Freedom, and it's cost plague Nalia's thoughts and actions. Her longing for freedom is completely consuming. It is an ache that you can feel through the pages. She is desperate for it as if it were air. She's a character I grew to really like, and felt I could understand her motivations and actions.

Heather's jinni are powerful. They are capable of granting your deepest wish, or your greatest nightmare. To have this immense power and be shackled is a theme that ties into every aspect of the novel. The characters never forget it and neither do the readers. It's easy to see the toll slavery would take on someone, and what it would do to their spirit. This not so hidden inspiration is threaded throughout the novel, and is one of it's most thought provoking aspects. You can see the influence the all too real slave trade had on creating the Dark Caravan. Heather skillfully, and wisely, lets the novel speak for itself. This is not a novel that is trying to preach it's message at you, but rather one that wants the reader to think after the final page has been turned. Knowledge is a powerful tool, and that is what this novel hopes to accomplish in igniting the desire to search out more knowledge about the real slave trade.

This novel sports a rather polarizing love triangle. I anticipate many will have strong feelings when it comes to it, and their preference of suitor.  This one one of those cases where I didn't mind the love triangle in the slightest. Malek, a guy who shouldn't even be a contender, and Raif whose intentions towards Nalia are not always clear both offer something different for Nalia. I, personally, think it's rather obvious where Nalia's heart is leading her. Part of what I liked was that the romance felt secondary, even though the novel is filled with some pretty seductively sexy moments. They seemed to be an extension of the larger storyline, rather than the storyline itself.

Malek, Nalia's master is an infuriatingly complex character. The relationship he has with Nalia is complicated. You want to hate him, but there are moments when you see who he could be. Heather balances the cruel reality that he is, in essence, keeping her captive, with the hint of potential for something to develop between them. It flirts right along the edge of Stockholm Syndrome, and I found her pull towards him believable. I was apprehensive how he could be part of the 'triangle' but the way Heather weaves it together works. Nalia never forgets who Malek is, and that he's cost her freedom, regardless of what else might be going on.

Raif is a bit of a mystery. We slowly get to know him, and our perception is molded by how Nalia perceives him. His motivation for doing things are not always apparent. As the leader of the revolution, Nalia struggles with trusting him, and knowing if his intentions are motivated by wanting her to help or simply wanting her. They have a spark, and an immediate pull that is undeniable. This dynamic creates some deliciously sexy moments between them that sizzle.

Exquisite Captive has it all - romance, action, stunning world building, a tightly spun plot, and the potential for much more to come. It also packs a pretty powerful message within it's pages. Those looking for the next series to obsess over will want to check this one out, and join me in the agonizing wait for the sequel.

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