Tick-Tock…Buy The Wanderers on Smashwords NOW!

Wanderers 8 - Small CopyWhen The Wanderers came out last November, I wanted to make sure it was available in as many formats as possible.  After a little over six months (and with most ebook sales coming from Amazon), I’ve decided to enroll The Wanderers in the Kindle Select program.  The cool thing is that it will let me spread The Wanderers to a few more places, and to offer discounts or special days where the ebook is free!

The catch?  I have to pull the ebook from other sites, making it exclusive to Kindle.  So if you have any non-Kindle ereader and you’ve been procrastinating about getting a copy, NOW is the time to buy!  I’ll be pulling the ebook from the other sites on June 15th, so you have two weeks.

And to show I do still love you non-Kindle users 🙂 I’m offering a discount!  For the next two weeks, you can buy The Wanderers for $1.99 on Smashwords, one-third off the usual price.  Choose the format you want (Nook included) and enter the code XD94V at check-out!

Saturday Snapshot: Author Event

I had a fun event in my writing career recently…you may have heard 🙂 that I published a Young Adult fantasy novel.  I have a friend who’s a school librarian, and a few weeks ago she invited me to come to her school for an author event, speaking to the fourth and fifth grade classes.

This was slightly nerve-wracking, but they were a friendly audience!  I spoke a little about writing, read one of my favorite scenes from The Wanderers, and asked for questions.  And fortunately there were a lot of questions!  Many of them were along the lines of “where do you get your ideas,” which I hear is the number one question authors are asked…

I wish I had a photo from the event–but what I do have is a photo of the stack of books the kids ordered.  And that looks pretty cool too!

Wanderers Stack (1)Did any writers ever come to your (or your kids’) schools?  Who would you like to see for an author event?  When I was a kid, I would have been utterly over the moon to have Tamora Pierce come speak (still would be!)

Visit West Metro Mommy for more Saturday Snapshot posts!

Covers, and Taking Matters Into My Own Hands

A few weeks ago I posted about covers for Thoughtful Thursday.  I mentioned that I sometimes feel strongly enough against a cover to re-cover a book with my own design.  I thought it would be fun to share a few of the books I’ve done that to.  Original covers on the left, my re-imagined version on the right and links, of course, go to reviews.

A Fighting Man of Mars by Edgar Rice Burroughs

   Fighting Man of Mars (2)

It’s possible I am particularly picky about this one, because it’s my favorite Burroughs book, and one of my top five favorite books ever.  But it does seem to suffer from a profusion of bad covers.  And it makes me so sad that the one really amazing heroine in all of Burroughs’ books has not made it on to a cover!  The bizarre judo-move on my copy…I don’t know!  So I did a variation of one of the few covers I do like.

Hamlet by William Shakespeare

  Hamlet

This edition has great footnotes (I always recommend Folger for that) but…is it just me, or does this appear to be Ophelia post-drowning?  So creepy!  I bought this for a Shakespeare class where we also watched Branagh’s Hamlet, so I took that as my inspiration, and made a cover with Kenneth Branagh and Blenheim Palace, which he used for Elsinore Castle.

The Ordinary Princess by M. M. Kaye

   Ordinary Princess 2

This lovely, charming book has lovely, charming illustrations, and this cover is not one of them.  Done by a different artist, it doesn’t in any way match the illustrations inside, or accurately depict the title character.  So I kept it simple and borrowed an alternate cover.

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum

Wizard of Oz   Wizard of Oz 2

This may sound odd, but I deliberately went searching for an un-illustrated version of the first Oz book.  You see, all of Baum’s Oz titles were illustrated by John R. Neill–except for the first book.  That was illustrated by W. W. Denslow, and when Neill came in he had a completely different concept for the characters…so even though the original illustrations are, well, original, they feel wrong to me.  I found a copy with no illustrations, and a cover that didn’t come from Neill or Denslow–and then pulled a few of Neill’s illustrations from other books to make my own.

The Blue Castle by L. M. Montgomery

  Blue Castle (2)

Another all-time favorite book, giving me high standards…and while Valancy’s early-book dowdiness is part of the story, there’s no excuse for whatever it is Barney is wearing.  Besides being out of character, it puts him in the wrong era.  So I found a copy of the original cover instead, to set against a blue background.

Re-coversI can’t be the only one with strong feelings on covers–have you ever really hated a cover?

The Ozma Trilogy

You may remember I was reading my way through L. Frank Baum’s Oz series, reviewing in batches along the way.  You may remember, but I forgot for a few months that I never reviewed the last three!  So today I’m finally returning back to Oz to wrap that up…

I had to think quite a bit to find a common thread between the final three, and finally realized that the connection was Ozma—though not in quite the same way for each. (You would think Ozma of Oz would be part my Ozma Trilogy, but that’s really a Dorothy and the Nome King adventure.)  These three all have Ozma as a driving force of the story, in one way or another…

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The Lost Princess of Oz has one of the most effective plots for putting something genuine at stake. Ozma has been kidnapped, the same day that many of the most powerful magical objects in Oz have gone missing. Handicapped though they are by their lack of tools, the characters set out in search of their beloved princess. Meanwhile in a far-corner of Oz, Cayke the Cookie Cook has been robbed of her diamond-encrusted dishpan, and sets off with the Frogman in search of it. Naturally all the events eventually tie together…

I’m inclined to think that Baum noticed his characters were growing too powerful (see the conclusion of Rinkitink in Oz), and in this book he takes steps to give them genuine obstacles. As a result, we get a true crisis, with real danger and a villain who could inflict actual harm. It never gets very dark—this is Oz after all—but a plot is more exciting when the characters have something to lose.

The Frogman is also a particularly interesting new character. He’s been ruling the Yips, who believe him to be wonderfully wise. He realizes all the time, however, that his wisdom is just an act.  This becomes a problem for him when he accidentally swims in the Truth Pond, forcing him to always tell the truth in the future. Though it’s treated fairly lightly, it creates an unusually complex problem for the world of Oz.

Ozma’s search party encounters some marvelously whimsical cities along the way, and finally encounters a villain with some real menace to him. This book also features one of the largest roles for Toto, who is here worrying about his missing growl, and wondering if it was stolen with everything else.

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The Magic of Oz ostensibly centers on a search for birthday gifts for Ozma (earning it its spot in my Ozma Trilogy), but swiftly develops into more dramatic crises. Trot and Cap’n Bill’s search for a gift causes them to be trapped on a magic island, slowly shrinking away to nothing. Meanwhile the deposed Nome King is back to stir up trouble, joining forces with Kiki Aru, a Munchkin boy who stumbled on the ability to transform himself and others into creatures of his choice. They attempt to rally the animals to attack the Emerald City, and inflict transformations on many characters.

I enjoyed the return of an old villain with new power, and the Nome King’s attempt to conquer Oz this time is far more interesting than his previous one (where he pretty much gathered an army and marched). I always enjoy Trot and Cap’n Bill, and I think it may be because they actually worry. Dorothy is downright Pollyanna-like in her good cheer, while Trot gets into real danger at times and knows it, giving the reader a reason to care.

This installment also offers one of my favorite pieces of whimsical Baum magic, in the form of the magic flower, which is constantly in bloom in an ever-varying succession of different kinds of flowers.

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The final book in the series, Glinda of Oz, finally gives a starring role to a significant character usually on the sidelines. Not, as you might expect, Glinda—but rather, Ozma. She’s played an important role in other books, but this one gets her out of her palace and into the active role of heroine.

Ozma and Dorothy go to visit Glinda, and in her magical record book they read about a war happening in a far-off corner of Oz, between the Flatheads and the Skeezers.  As ruler of Oz, Ozma decides it is her duty to make sure all the people of Oz are happy, and therefore she must set off to stop this war. That’s all well and good, though I’m at a bit of a loss to understand why she has to go alone, with only Dorothy to accompany her! (Plot reasons, no doubt.)  The girls first visit the mountain of the Flatheads (who have flat heads, and carry their brains in jars—really!) and then go on to the island city of the Skeezers. When the city’s ruler submerges the island, Dorothy and Ozma are trapped within, and the rest of their friends, led by Glinda, must come to the rescue.

This book gives us more of Baum’s wild and whimsical cities. I suspect that Oz is sparsely populated in sections solely so that he could keep having the characters run across new, strange communities! Between the weirdness of the Flatheads and the fairy tale-like nature of three enchanted fish in the Skeezers’ lake, we get some of Baum’s magic at its most entertaining.

The book also succeeds where others have faltered (I don’t quite like to say “failed”) by giving the characters real dangers. Ozma and Dorothy aren’t likely to die, but they are very seriously inconvenienced by the submerged city, and there’s at least a hint of real danger from the Flatheads too.

If this book falters anywhere, it’s in Ozma herself. She’s so very well-meaning, but there’s still something problematic about her rulership of Oz. The Flatheads and the Skeezers have never heard of her, yet she insists on her right to rule them—insists it sweetly, of course. Baum has unfortunately set Ozma up as a hereditary dictator, as far as I can tell. Because she’s so kind and sweet and concerned for her people, it all works out…but I can’t help being bothered all the same!

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Sometimes when it’s been a very long time since I read something, I reach the point where I feel like I can’t really have an opinion on it anymore.  I don’t remember it well enough, or I don’t know how present-day-me’s opinion would compare with long-ago-me’s opinion. I had reached that point with Oz, so I’m glad to have gone through the entire series, so that I can comment on them again!

The 14 books unquestionably vary in quality, and even the best aren’t without flaws (which my younger self probably didn’t notice). But—with that said—these are still, by and large, delightfully whimsical classic fantasy. Baum’s strength is in weird and wonderful magical creatures, and some of his creations stayed with me through all those years I wasn’t reading the books.

Apart from the later books including characters introduced earlier, these books are largely self-contained. They’re fun to read in order, but once you’ve read the first three (which introduce most of the major characters) you could pretty easily get away with jumping around. Just in case you want my opinion on the matter, here’s my ranking of the books by quality… (with series order after the title)

  1. Ozma of Oz (3)
  2. Scarecrow of Oz (9)
  3. Rinkitink in Oz (10)
  4. The Land of Oz (2)
  5. The Magic of Oz (13)
  6. The Lost Princess of Oz (11)
  7. The Wizard of Oz (1)
  8. Tik-Tok of Oz (8)
  9. Patchwork Girl of Oz (7)
  10. Glinda of Oz (14)
  11. The Tin Woodman of Oz (12)
  12. Dorothy and the Wizard in Oz (4)
  13. The Road to Oz (5)
  14. The Emerald City of Oz (6)

This is, of course, highly subjective…so if you’ve read any of the series, I’d love to hear your favorites too!

Down Time’s Rabbit Hole

I find time travel stories deeply intriguing–and Alice in Time by Penelope Bush promised an especially intriguing trip into the past.  Since the travel is facilitated by a magical merry-go-round, it’s solidly fantasy and suitable for Once Upon a Time.

Fourteen-year-old Alice hates her life–loudly and constantly.  She’s convinced that all her problems started from the birth of her younger brother, her mother’s post natal depression and her parents’ divorce soon after.  A spin on a merry-go-round sends her back seven years to just a few days before her brother was born.  She inhabits her younger body, while keeping her older memories.  Freaked out at first, Alice soon decides that this is her chance to change everything, saving her parents’ marriage and inflicting revenge on the girl who will bully her through middle school.

I was fascinated by the idea of going back into one’s own past, with the opportunity to relive life differently.  Doesn’t it make you think about what you’d do if you could go back into your own past?

Alice has definite plans, and one of the best parts of the book is Alice’s growing understanding of what really happened the first time around when she was seven.  As an older (and not emotionally-involved) reader, I saw very quickly what the real problems were in Alice’s family.  Within the first few chapters (pre-time travel), Alice’s father holds the reception for his second wedding at a pub, next to a bookie’s office, which probably tells you quite a lot too.

Even though I figured things out before Alice did, I believed in her blindness, and didn’t mind waiting for her evolving understanding.  There were also some nuances in her friendships that were, if not surprising exactly, interesting to watch unfold.

One of my favorite parts was watching how teenage Alice dealt with being seven again.  There were good things, like the closeness with her mother, and bad things, like the lack of freedom and control.  One of the sweetest parts of the book is when Alice gets to spend some time with her grandmother, who had died when Alice was eight.

I have to warn you that this book started a little slow for me–it’s a fast read overall, at a little over 200 pages, but it’s about 80 pages before Alice goes back in time, and I was starting to get impatient by that point.  It picked up a lot once the time travel came in, and became a very good read about family, friends and growing up…by being younger!

Author’s Site: http://www.penelopebush.com/

Other reviews:
Charlotte’s Library
Ms. Yingling Reads
Anyone else?

Buy it here: Alice in Time