Posted by bkristin on Apr 10th, 2012 in interviews | 1 comment
Last week I reviewed The Between by LJ Cohen and as a follow up here is a short interview with her that she kindly did with me. If you want to know more about LJ or her books, visit her website at http://www.ljcohen.net/ How did you get your ideas for The Between- are you a fan of faeries in general? The initial idea for THE BETWEEN emerged from two sources: the first, was a short story I wrote for a writing workshop about a woman who had been a witness to a crime involving a Faerie in the human world, was called to a Fae trial and ended up in the Faerie witness protection program. Now the novel has...
Posted by bkristin on Apr 4th, 2012 in reviews | 0 comments
Review: The Between by LJ Cohen Lydia finds out that she is a faerie – and a powerful one at that. Now both Oberon and Titania are trying to get her to join their side. While it would be easy to assume light is the good guys and shadow are the bad guys, things are always more complicated in faerie. Luckily for Lydia, although she doesn’t understand how to control her power, some things come naturally. This book had a good pace to it. The beginning quickly grabbed your attention. Lydia was being chased and a creeper (Clive- who turns out to not really be a creeper) is following her. You...
Posted by bkristin on Mar 26th, 2012 in interviews | 1 comment
Last week I reviewed The Brightest Kind of Darkness by P.T. Michelle and as a follow up here is a short interview with her that she kindly did with me. If you want to know more about P.T. or her books, visit her website at http://www.ptmichelle.com/. How does writing YA fiction compared to what you normally write? YA fiction has a very broad range. I LOVE that freedom. 🙂 Would you want to be able to dream your next day like Nara? I don’t think I’d want to dream my whole next day. I like to live life in the moment, not know about stuff ahead of time, especially if it turns out to be...
Posted by bkristin on Mar 9th, 2012 in reviews | 1 comment
Review: Eon and Eona by Alison Goodman The twelve-year-old boy Eon has one goal- become the next Dragoneye apprentice. He doesn’t let the fact that he is crippled mare his determination, nor the fact that he is actually a girl acting as a boy trying to get into a profession girls are not allowed to do. When the time comes, she finds that her hidden identity may be the key. A continuation of the story Eon, we finally find Eona embracing the fact that she along with her dragon are both female and the necessary piece to end the pain of the dragons. Completely new plot helps drive the story (as does...
Posted by bkristin on Mar 8th, 2012 in interviews | 0 comments
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