BookChick.com Recommends Lauren Oliver’s “Before I Fall”

I can’t stop thinking about Lauren Oliver’s novel “Before I Fall.” I just finished reading it a few days ago and it’s the kind of story that stays with you for a long time. Maybe forever. It’s the kind of novel that changes you, maybe for a moment, maybe for a lifetime. Whether the change is small or large, it’s the kind of story that makes you want to be a better person, a kinder person, a better wife, a better mom, a better friend. It’s the kind of story that makes you want to inhale and breathe in all the goodness and wonder of life and savor every single second of being alive.

Because you never know how much time you really have. That’s what her novel is about — how we spend our time, the kind of people we want to be, and what really matters when all is said and done. “Before I Fall” is the story of Samantha Kingston, a senior in high school, who dies in a car crash at the end of the day on February 12th. Then she relives that same day seven times making different choices until she finally unravels the mystery of why she’s stuck in this time loop. She’s not likeable when the story starts, but over the course of those seven days she sheds her old self and steps into her new one.

And as she changes so do you. Because “Before I Fall” is that kind of novel. The kind that changes you.

Get out the tissues, because the tears will be pouring at the end. This is a gorgeous, uplifting story about the capacity to change, the connectedness of all people and the meaning of every action, big and little.

BookChick Recommends The Naughty List

You may never think about cheerleaders in the same way after reading Suzanne Young’s debut novel “The Naughty List.” She flips nearly every cheerleader stereotype on its head in her tale of a cheerleading-squad-turned-secret-society-to-catch-cheating-boyfriends. Rather than rely on the overdone image of a cheerleader as a ditsy blonde backbiter, Young paints a refreshing, nuanced and hilarious portrait of Tessa, the head cheerleader and head spy. Tessa takes cheering very seriously, but not because it’s a path to popularity. Because she truly believes in school spirit. And she believes in washing your mouth out with soap too. Rather than swear, she creates her own endearing four-letter phrases like “peanutbutter pickles” or “strawberry smoothies.” The story zips along at a quick pace with each chapter punctuated by a “cheater’s report” full of witty asides on the cheater’s behavior or tacky taste. But the complexity in this breezy tale comes in Tessa herself when she must confront what to do when she’s asked to investigate her own boyfriend’s possibly naughty ways. The Naughty List is a sparkling debut!

You MUST MUST MUST Read Courtney Summers’ “Some Girls Are”

Note: I first ran this review in September and am re-running it because this book releases today.

You think vampires that want to kill you in high school are scary? Or maybe werewolves who could rip your throat out?

They’re cotton candy compared to the high school in Courtney SummersSome Girls Are,” the January 2010 follow-up to her well-received debut “Cracked up to Be.”

No, there’s nothing like the high school hell she makes her characters endure in “Some Girls Are.”

Even standard high school misery, like clueless teachers, cliques and gym are kittens next to Hallowell High, where the Fearsome Fivesome roam the halls. This girl bully gang loves to hate — they devise cruel tricks and horribly mean pranks in a game of chess with other students as the pawns. Their targets have no recourse, nowhere to go. They become nothing when the quintet is through with them.

Regina Afton is part of this crew. Until she’s kicked out for something she didn’t do. Now, she can’t duck fast enough because they’re pulling out all the stops as the four remaining members seek to destroy her. She hides out in the storage room, in the washrooms, with the so-called “losers,” but even they don’t really want a mean girl hanging with them. Because, can a Grade-A Henchwoman really change her stripes?

That is exactly what Regina desperately wants to do in this story — put her past as a very bad girl behind her — only she has to battle the now Fearsome Foursome, their toady boyfriends who do their dirty work, and worst of all, her own self doubts about whether she can be brave enough. The one bright spot is a loner boy who comes to see the good that is still inside her.

“Some Girls Are” is about what it means to be good, what it means to be bad, what it means to change. It’s about how to stand up and how to forgive and, especially, what not to do. It’s about — like the “Kiterunner” — “how to be good again.”

If you’ve talked to me about books for more than two minutes, you’ve certainly heard me mention Courtney Summers and “Cracked up to Be.” It is one of my favorite books of all time and also inspired me to switch genres from women’s fiction to young adult. Naturally, I was nervous reading “Some Girls Are,” hoping it would stand up to its predecessor. I can’t believe I’m saying this but “Some Girls Are” is even better. I was gripped with fear, anticipation, and intense, white-knuckling nerves during the second half of this book, wondering how on earth Courtney would possibly pull of a satisfying ending after she’d tortured her characters.

I won’t spoil the ending, though. You will need to read to find out! The countdown begins to the book’s January release date!

BookChick Recommends BEAUTIFUL CREATURES

Take everything you think you know about supernatural romance and throw it out. Because BEAUTIFUL CREATURES by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl stands alone in the genre. Sure, supernatural romance is a red-hot category right now and readers seem to have an insatiable appetite for it. But BEAUTIFUL CREATURES is more than just the next contender. It is a wholly original story in its own right that is literary, gorgeous, inventive and turns convention on its head.

The novel tells the story of Ethan Wate, something of an outsider at his high school in Gatlin, South Carolina. Before Lena even arrives in town, he’s already falling for this new girl because she’s been appearing in his dreams, or rather his nightmares. The connection between them is electric, literally. But it’s also much deeper, rooted in shared loss, in shared identity, and quite simply in the time they spend together and even apart.

But the course of true love never did run smooth and Lena’s no ordinary girl. She’s a witch. And Ethan’s a mere mortal. And that may be what I love most about this book. Rather than the girl falling for the vampire, or the immortal, or the fallen angel, it’s the girl who has the powers.

Oh, and can I just say grab some palm fronds, because you’re going to need to fan yourself during the scenes when Ethan and Lena are alone together. They don’t do more than kiss, but the moments are luscious, especially when he tells her he is falling for her. It’s unlike any other confession of love you’ve ever read. Guaranteed.

Win a Copy of J.A. Yang’s “Exclusively Chloe”

I’m giving away another signed book! And this time it’s J.A. Yang’s delicious story “Exclusively Chloe” about an adopted kid of celebrities who just wants to be normal. To win this book, share FIVE words — no more, no less — in the comments below on what it means to be a normal kid. I’ll choose a winner by December 16!

Win a Signed Copy of Sarah Quigley’s TMI

I’ve got my hands on a signed copy of Sarah Quigley’s fun novel “TMI.” Want to win the copy for yourself or a friend? Then enter my contest here. Watch the video and enter in the comments! I’ll pick a winner by Thursday December 10.

BookChick.com Recommends SHARK GIRL

SHARK GIRL by Kelly Bingham is a fast and unusual read. It’s written in verse (a style I increasingly love because you can read it so quickly) and it’s told by a girl who loses her arm in a shark attack. It’s a heartfelt story about what it means to lose something precious. That’s obvious, right? I mean, we’re talking about an arm here! Somehow, the author manages to convey precisely how it would feel to live with only one arm, the likely awkwardness, the new skills that must be learned. Particularly poignant is the narrator’s relationship with her mother and her brother, who treats her the same and who eventually just says, “I don’t care how many limbs you have. You need to help me with chores.” (He doesn’t quite put it like that, but you get the idea.) Because what the narrator wants more than anything is to be treated as a person, not as a person missing an arm.

SHARK GIRL is probably won’t be the first book you think of to buy or read. But if you do either, you won’t regret it.

BookChick Recommends “Inexcusable” by Chris Lynch

Unreliable narrators are an interesting breed in fiction. The classic example of such a narrator is Holden Caulfield in “Catcher in the Rye.” Chris Lynch’s Keir in “Inexcusable” comes from the same mold. You’re not quite sure what to make of him at first, but steadily, bit by bit, you learn he might not be all he seems. But then again, he is who he purports to be because it’s in the telling of his stories — how he crippled a member of an opposing football team during a game, how he hazed other students — you learn he believes he is good, yet he is that guy. He is a high school football player who fancies himself a “lovable rogue.” But he’s more than that. He’s someone capable of violence. And in “Inexcusable” we see the story of a rape from the point of view of the rapist. Because ultimately that’s what the story is about — a searing portrait of how one young man does something inexcusable and rapes the girl he has an enormous crush on. The author doesn’t exonerate Keir, now does Keir exonerate himself. That, along with Lynch’s masterful look into the mind of a liar who wants to be good but can’t, is a fantastic read.

This was one of the first novels that hooked me into the young adult genre. Read it!

BookChick.com Recommends “Nice Girls Don’t Have Fangs”

Review by Diane at The Book Resort

And now may we present: the humorous vampire chick-lit subgenre? That’s what you’ll find in Molly Harper’s “Nice Girls Don’t Have Fangs.” And I say move over Charlaine Harris ’cause Molly Harper’s nipping at your heels.

I want to start out by saying I am not a vampire fiction groupie. I read what I love and usually love what I read. And, let’s be honest, the genre has become saturated with watered-down versions, blatant knock offs & snooze fests galore. Sadly, too many authors are chasing the elusive dream of recreating something that has garnered success for others instead of listening to their muse & creating their own literary blockbuster. That said, “Nice Girls Don’t Have Fangs” is a standout!

When Jane gets laid off from her librarian job, due to “budget cuts” she expects a bit of green in the form of a severance check. Wrong. Instead of a severance payment she gets a twenty-five dollar gift certificate to a bar. Yep, nothing like a little “courage” to get you through the hard times. So, when Jane heads home after drowning her sorrows in Electric Lemonades & meeting a tall, dark hottie…Her car dies in the middle of the night — basically keels over. What does Jane do? She starts to walk home but is mistaken for a deer. Did I mention it is the middle of the night? I won’t say anything more because I don’t want to spoil this book.

I will leave you with this thought: If Sookie Stackhouse had a cousin, it’d definitely be saucy Jane Jameson.

BookChick.com Recommends Lauren Baratz-Logsted’s “Crazy Beautiful”

Review by Diane at The Book Resort
A boy blows off his arms in an accidental explosion. A girl falls for him nonetheleless. A classic tale of beauty and the beast.
Lauren Baratz-Logsted’sCrazy Beautiful” is breathtakingly beautiful. I found myself aching at the raw emotion & losing myself in the sheer creative brilliance that is this book. I didn’t just read it; I devoured it! I even started to drag my feet as I was reaching the end. Why? Because Crazy Beautiful is so hypnotic, an unparalleled fairy tale, and I didn’t want it to end.
Baratz-Logsted’s interpretation of Beauty & the Beast is absolutely arresting. Told with a modern twist, Crazy Beautiful will have you believing anything & everything is possible thanks to the author’s striking & charismatic prose. The story is told in alternating point of views, which is not only refreshing but allows readers to experience the deeply intense emotions that cover Lucius & Aurora, the two main characters, like second skin.
Baratz-Logsted weaves an enthralling tale of fractured teens who are destined to be in a fast, emotional read that gives readers a unique take on a well-known tale.
I want a sequel!