Tag: Flux

Review: The Truth about You and Me by Amanda Grace.

Posted September 30, 2013 by Rowena in Reviews | 2 Comments

The Truth about You and Me - Amanda Grace
Rowena’s review of The Truth about You and Me by Amanda Grace.

Smart girls aren’t supposed to do stupid things.

Madelyn Hawkins is super smart. At sixteen, she’s so gifted that she can attend college through a special program at her high school. On her first day, she meets Bennett. He’s cute, funny, and kind. He understands Madelyn and what she’s endured – and missed out on – in order to excel academically and please her parents. Now, for the first time in her life, she’s falling in love.

There’s only one problem. Bennett is Madelyn’s college professor, and he thinks she’s eighteen – because she hasn’t told him the truth.

The story of their forbidden romance is told in letters that Madelyn writes to Bennett – both a heart-searing ode to their ill-fated love and an apology.

Every once in a while, I’ll get the urge to try a book out that I wouldn’t normally read to see if I’d like it.  This was one of those books and I’ve spent a few days trying to figure out what I thought of this book…and I still don’t really know.

This book follows Madelyn, a sixteen year old girl as she tries to explain her actions to the man she fell in love with, who was her teacher.  The entire story is written as a letter to Bennett, Madelyn’s college professor.

Madelyn is really smart.  Her high school has a college program where kids from their school can participate in the program and attend college courses during the day to earn college credits and finish high school, only to enter college as a junior.  That’s how Madelyn meets Bennett.  Bennett is her biology professor and he’s ten years older than her.  He doesn’t know that he’s ten years older than her so when she starts seeing Bennett around town and strikes up a friendship that turns into something more, he’s trying to do the right thing and stay away because he’s her professor.  He has no idea that he should stay away from her because she’s minor.  But Madelyn does.  She knew all along how old she was and what they were doing could get Bennett in trouble but she does it anyway because she’s got some big time feelings for him.

And here’s what I don’t understand.  When you’ve got minors in your class, aren’t professors supposed to be made aware of that?  When students are part of a high school program, aren’t the teachers and administrators of the college supposed to know?  I can’t believe that Bennett was a professor and didn’t know that he had minors in his class.

And another thing that I don’t understand is how girls can think that they’re in love with a guy that is so much older than them and think that the relationship can survive lies that can land the guy in jail.  If you love someone, why in the world would you risk their job and their future jobs by getting them in trouble for cavorting with minors?  It never fails to amaze me at how selfish these young girls are…that they think only of the lust coursing through their veins and not the consequences of their actions.

It was hard to get through this book.  I spent most of the book wanting to choke Madelyn out and even in the end when she’s trying to “save” Bennett from jail, I couldn’t like her.  I didn’t think that she was a bad person but she was a selfish person and even though she learned her lesson, she still wasn’t a character that I could say that I liked.  But I did like the way that this book ended.  It ended the way that it was supposed to end and even though I didn’t love this book, I didn’t hate it either.

Grade: 2.75 out of 5

This book is available from Flux.  You can purchase it here or here in e-format.  This book was provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


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Review: Narc by Crissa-Jean Chappell

Posted August 9, 2012 by Rowena in Reviews | 7 Comments

Review: Narc by Crissa-Jean ChappellReviewer: Rowena
Narc by Crissa-Jean Chappell
Publisher: Flux
Publication Date: August 8th 2012
Genres: Young Adult
Pages: 275
Add It: Goodreads
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Ripped Bodice | Google Play Books
two-stars

“You’re going to hate me forever when you learn my secret.”

When his little sister is caught with a bag of weed, seventeen-year-old Aaron Foster takes the fall. To keep the cops from tearing his family apart, Aaron agrees to go undercover and help bust the dealer who’s funneling drugs into his Miami high school. But making friends with the school’s biggest players isn’t easy for a waste-case loner from the wrong part of town.

Stuck between the cops on one hand and a crazy party scene on the other, Aaron befriends Morgan Baskin—a cute but troubled rich girl who might be his link to the supplier. But just when he realizes he’s falling for Morgan, the unbearable weight of his lies threatens to crush them both.

When his little sister is caught with a bag of weed, seventeen-year-old Aaron Foster takes the fall. To keep the cops from tearing his family apart, Aaron agrees to go undercover and help bust the dealer who’s funneling drugs into his Miami high school. But making friends with the school’s biggest players isn’t easy for a waste-case loner from the wrong part of town.

Stuck between the cops on one hand and a crazy party scene on the other, Aaron befriends Morgan Baskin—a cute but troubled rich girl who might be his link to the supplier. But just when he realizes he’s falling for Morgan, the unbearable weight of his lies threatens to crush them both.

I was really looking forward to reading this book because the premise sounded really good and well, this book didn’t quite live up to my expectations. You see, I couldn’t really connect with Aaron as a protagonist and that is where a lot of the problems that I had with the book stem from. If I can come to care about the main character then I’ll finish the book and even like it but with Aaron, I just couldn’t get there in the caring department.

This book starts off with Aaron getting pulled over by the cops with his little sister. The cop finds some weed in the car and before Aaron knows what’s what, he’s going undercover…as a narc. The writing style in this book was very confusing at first. I mean, we’re getting things from Aaron’s perspective and it was really hard to follow at times and so for me, it was a whole lot easier to put the book down and then come back to it to try again.

And that was the thing with this book, it was much too easy for me to put this book down and concentrate on something else. I couldn’t relate to Aaron and his thought processes drove me crazy and it didn’t get any better when the end was near. By then, I was surprised that it was already here but a little relieved that the end was in sight. I can honestly say that this book wasn’t for me. I wanted so much to like this book but it was too hard for me to finish. I mean, Aaron goes undercover at school, trying to get in good with students that he thought were dealing drugs. Trying to get invited to parties so that he can scope out the scene. He hated what he was doing but he had to do it, to stay out of trouble. He meets a girl and knows that when she finds out that he’s a narc, she’s going to hate him forever and even though I got the feeling that I should have felt bad for Aaron, I just, didn’t.

Going into this story, I had high expectations but the story just wasn’t for me. I wanted so much to like the story and the characters but I never really warmed up to any of them. Ahhh well.

…and that’s your scoop!

This book is available from Flux.
Buy the book: B&N|Amazon|Book Depository
Book cover and blurb credit: http://barnesandnoble.com

two-stars


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Review: Pieces of Us by Margie Gelbwasser

Posted March 8, 2012 by Rowena in Reviews | 2 Comments


Rowena’s review of Pieces of Us by Margie Gelbwasser.

Main Character: Alex, Kyle, Katie and Julie
Love Interest: Julie, Katie, Alex and Kyle (haha, not really but just read the book to find out who the love interests are)
Series: None
Author: Facebook|Twitter|Goodreads

Two families. Four teens.
A summer full of secrets.

Every summer, hidden away in a lakeside community in upstate New York, four teens leave behind their old identities…and escape from their everyday lives.

Yet back in Philadelphia during the school year, Alex cannot suppress his anger at his father (who killed himself), his mother (whom he blames for it), and the girls who give it up too easily. His younger brother, Kyle, is angry too—at his abusive brother, and at their mother who doesn’t seem to care. Meanwhile, in suburban New Jersey, Katie plays the role of Miss Perfect while trying to forget the nightmare that changed her life. But Julie, her younger sister, sees Katie only as everything she’s not. And their mother will never let Julie forget it.

Up at the lake, they can be anything, anyone. Free. But then Katie’s secret gets out, forcing each of them to face reality—before it tears them to pieces.

This book follows two sets of siblings as they all harp on about how shitty their lives are. Alex and Kyle are brothers who has a Dad who killed himself right after he found out that their Mom was cheating on him. Alex is pissed at the Dad for killing himself and pissed at the Mom for giving him reason to kill himself. Kyle is pissed off at Alex because Alex is such a douche and doesn’t understand that Kyle isn’t like him, doesn’t want to be like him. Katie and Julie are sisters who have a really shitty Mom. Julie is the younger sister who hates living in Katie’s shadow and Katie, well Katie is the one with the real problems.

Throughout the entire freaking book, I hated Julie. I wanted her to walk in front of a moving car and not wake up, that’s how much I hated her. She was such a jealous little shit and she thought the worst of Katie throughout the entire freaking book. Even when she was being nice to Katie, she wasn’t really being nice. She was such a little shithead and I wanted to pull her damn hair and smack her again and again and then she sees Derek in the hall and after she says what she says to him, I wanted to punch her in her face and then run her over in my car, my damn self.

There is so much bad in this book that it was hard to get through. When I say bad, I’m not saying bad writing or bad dialogue or anything like that. I’m talking about bad things that happen. There are secrets that each character keeps from the others, there are bad situations that keep popping up no matter how much the character doesn’t want it to, bad words that are spewed back and forth between characters and through it all, my heart hurt for only two of the characters.

Alex is a selfish prick and Julie is a selfish little whore. If there was anyone in this story that needed someone to selflessly be there for them, it was Kyle and it was Katie. There was nothing that Alex could have done to save him in my eyes. There was no redeeming him after the shit he did in this book and the more that I read about him, the more I hated him. I hated the way he thought, the way that he hurt everyone around him, including Katie and Kyle. I just flat out, hated his guts.

This isn’t a fluffy, contemporary read with loads of laughs. This is a book that really guts you. It hurts your heart and you get all frustrated but you can’t stop reading. It’s also one of those books that stays with you after you’ve read it. It stays and your hurt continues to hurt long after you’ve finished the book. It’s one of those books that makes you think and it makes you want to help something and that’s why I’m giving this book a C. I grade books that I review for this blog on my enjoyment of this book. I can’t say that I enjoyed this book but I can say that this book made me sit up and think. It made me take a step back and wonder about snap judgements that I’ve made in the past and it made me realize that I’ve been guilty of this from time to time but it’s also made me want to change that. This book isn’t an enjoyable book but it’s still good and I’m glad that I read it.

My favorite part of this book is the end. There’s a wealth of hope in those last couple of chapters and I was glad for it. There’s so much ugly in this book (both in thought and deeds) but the wealth of hope at the end makes the reading experience a little better and I’m glad.

..and that’s your scoop!

This book is available from Flux.
Buy the book: B&N|Amazon
Book cover and blurb credit: http://barnesandnoble.com


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Review: Playing Hurt by Holly Schindler.

Posted February 9, 2012 by Rowena in Reviews | 5 Comments


Rowena’s review of Playing Hurt by Holly Schindler.

Main Character: Chelsea Keyes
Love Interest: Clint Morgan
Series: None
Author: Facebook|Twitter|Goodreads

Star basketball player Chelsea “Nitro” Keyes had the promise of a full ride to college—and everyone’s admiration in her hometown. But everything changed senior year, when she took a horrible fall during a game. Now a metal plate holds her together and she feels like a stranger in her own family.

As a graduation present, Chelsea’s dad springs for a three-week summer “boot camp” program at a northern Minnesota lake resort. There, she’s immediately drawn to her trainer, Clint, a nineteen-year-old ex-hockey player who’s haunted by his own traumatic past. As they grow close, Chelsea is torn between her feelings for Clint and her loyalty to her devoted boyfriend back home. Will an unexpected romance just end up causing Chelsea and Clint more pain—or finally heal their heartbreak?

I’ve been wanting to read this book for what seems like forever, since long before the book came out but I haven’t been able to get around to it before now. Ames read and reviewed this book already, you can read her review here and after I read her review, I just knew that I was going to like it.

And I did.

This book follows Chelsea Keyes, star basketball player who’s college plans are nixed when she gets injured during a game. As a graduating gift, her Dad buys her three week vacation to a lake town in Minnesota. He also signs her up for a three week boot camp with Clint Morgan and these days, Chelsea isn’t looking forward to much. Clint Morgan is back for the summer to work at the lake resort where he’s worked at for a long time. He’s a changed man these days because he hasn’t gotten over his ex-girlfriend Rosie. His friends are at a loss as to how to help him and he seems to work too much to keep from falling into a depressed funk.

When Chelsea shows up in Minnesota, his first client for his boot camp, things change. For Chelsea. For Clint. For everyone, really. You see, Chelsea has a boyfriend who’s been totally supportive of her injury and she loves him but her reaction to this new guy is something she wasn’t expecting but not exactly something she can run away from. Clint hasn’t been able to date anyone since Rosie because he’s not over her and he’s not over what happened. He’s being pursued by Kendra, a girl that he practically grew up with but he’s not even a little bit interested in her. Nobody is more surprised than he is at his growing attraction to the girl with the broken hip.

I need to stop reading these kinds of stories because as much as I say I hate infidelity, I keep reading stories about it and loving the heck out of them. Holly Schindler is another author (in a long list of authors) who haas made a liar out of me. I really adored the relationship that blossomed between Clint and Chelsea. They’re both complex characters that are going through complex problems and I found myself unwilling to put this book down. I had to know what was going to happen next.

Schindler did a fabulous job of telling Clint and Chelsea’s story. I was right there with the both of them, in their heads and hurting for them, wanting better for them and fighting the attraction to each other with them. I loved that they were both fumbling through their own lives with their own problems and were able to help each other over the course of Chelsea’s vacation there.

I will say that this book is for a more mature YA audience as there are some pretty steamy scenes in this one but I adored it. My one gripe with this book and it’s not really with the book but with Chelsea. I thought she took way too long to figure out what she was going to do with both guys. All the while that Brandon was pissed off at Chelsea for what she was doing, I was right there with him. Not really pissed off but disappointed but even as I was disappointed, I couldn’t help but want her with Clint. I just wish it wasn’t at the expense of Gabe. Gabe was good to her and didn’t deserve all the cheating business and this is where I was torn because even though I was totally Team Clint, I was disappointed in the way that Chelsea went about that whole thing.

Still, this was a fabulously written story that will keep you turning the pages and sighing all over the hot dang place. It was entertaining, the characters were real and their stories were captivating and I’m definitely going to be reading more by this author. I definitely recommend this book to lovers of contemporary YA stories but there’s steamy love scenes in this book so beware.

..and that’s your scoop!

This book is available from Flux.
Buy the book: B&N|Amazon|Book Depository
Book cover and blurb credit: http://barnesandnoble.com


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Guest Review: Playing Hurt by Holly Schindler

Posted November 23, 2011 by Ames in Reviews | 4 Comments


Main Character
: Chelsea Keyes
Love Interest: Clint Morgan
Series: n/a
Author: Website|Facebook|Twitter|Goodreads

Star basketball player Chelsea “Nitro” Keyes had the promise of a full ride to college-and everyone’s admiration in her hometown. But everything changed senior year, when she took a horrible fall during a game. Now a metal plate holds her together and she feels like a stranger in her own family.As a graduation present, Chelsea’s dad springs for a three-week summer “boot camp” program at a northern Minnesota lake resort. There, she’s immediately drawn to her trainer, Clint, a nineteen-year-old ex-hockey player who’s haunted by his own traumatic past. As they grow close, Chelsea is torn between her feelings for Clint and her loyalty to her devoted boyfriend back home. Will an unexpected romance just end up causing Chelsea and Clint more pain-or finally heal their heartbreak?

I haven’t come across too many contemporary YAs where the heroine is a sports player, so I was waiting eagerly for the library to get their copy. I’m so glad I read it, it was good.

Chelsea Keyes was the star basketball player in her hometown. She had a bright future with plans to attend college on a sports scholarship. She’s going places…or she was, until she fell during a game and broke her hip. Now everything is changed. She’s no longer comfortable in her own body, her relationship with her dad is beyond strained. She still has her amazing boyfriend who stuck with her through everything. But she can’t get over what could have been.

Clint Morgan is an ex-hockey player with a broken heart. He goes to college and works, but doesn’t have much of a life beyond that. He went into a funk when he lost someone close to him tragically. His friends despair of his workaholic ways when he comes up with his latest scheme, a boot camp to get people into shape. Can a girl with a broken hip mend a broken heart?

This book. OMG. Layers and layers and angst and lust and yeah, definitely a book for a more mature audience. But so good!

At the heart of it all is Chelsea and Clint, two very wounded individuals who have these hard, brittle exteriors that no one has been able to crack. When they first meet, they are definitely not what the other expected. And that’s the first crack, I think. Then when Clint tries to push Chelsea to pick up a basketball, her shell cracks a little bit more.

“Show me what you’ve got,” Clint says, casually swinging his arms and clapping his hands once in front of his hips.Doesn’t the moron know that just touching the ball has caused the worst kind of ache to thunder through me? That it’s like touching the warm skin of a man I love while he shakes his head, telling me no? That’s what it’s like for me to hold this basketball. It’s like looking into the eyes of the man I love, who suddenly refused to love me back. You can’t have me.

Then Chelsea pushes back, unknowingly, because Clint is attracted to her. And he hasn’t opened himself up to anyone in a long time. But his growing attraction to Chelsea threatens his sense of self and his flinty exterior cracks a bit more.

Now, I’m going to tell you straight out – Chelsea is on her family’s annual summer vacation when she meets Clint. So her boyfriend who stuck with her through everything is waiting for her back at home. And this is something that Clint and Chelsea both have to come to terms with. I relished the developing relationship between Chelsea and Clint though. If infidelity is a big no-no for you, then steer clear of this book. But if you don’t mind when teenagers make mistakes and learn from them, then things aren’t as bleak as they sound then, are they?

Also enjoyable was the broken relationship between Chelsea and her father. His hopes broke just as much as her hip did. She was his star. Chelsea feels like he’s mad at her for what happened. She couldn’t be more wrong. I liked seeing how they finally came back to understanding each other.

Playing Hurt is not your typical YA romance. I highly recommend it. B+

Buy the book: B&N|Amazon|Book Depository|Kobo
Book cover and blurb credit: http://barnesandnoble.com

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