Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sci-fi. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Blog Tour: Blight




Hello all! We are happy to bring you another wonderful book to showcase! Be sure to add them to Goodreads, and let us know what you think!


Blight by Alexandra Duncan

Published: August 1st, 2017
Format: Hardcover & Ebook, 400 pages
Publisher: Greenwillow Books
Find it:  Amazon, Barnes&Noble, iBooks, TBD, Goodreads

Summary:

When an agribusiness facility producing genetically engineered food releases a deadly toxin into the environment, seventeen-year-old Tempest Torres races to deliver the cure before time runs out.

From the author of the acclaimed American Booksellers Association’s Indies Introduce pick Salvage, which was called “Brilliant, feminist science fiction” by Stephanie Perkins, the internationally bestselling author of Anna and the French Kiss. This stand-alone action-adventure story is perfect for fans of Oryx and Crake and The House of the Scorpion.

Seventeen-year-old Tempest Torres has lived on the AgraStar farm north of Atlanta, Georgia, since she was found outside its gates at the age of five. Now she’s part of the security force guarding the fence and watching for scavengers—people who would rather steal genetically engineered food from the Company than work for it. When a group of such rebels accidentally sets off an explosion in the research compound, it releases into the air a blight that kills every living thing in its path—including humans. With blight-resistant seeds in her pocket, Tempest teams up with a scavenger boy named Alder and runs for help. But when they finally arrive at AgraStar headquarters, they discover that there’s an even bigger plot behind the blight—and it’s up to them to stop it from happening again.

Inspired by current environmental issues, specifically the genetic adjustment of seeds to resist blight and the risks of not allowing natural seed diversity, this is an action-adventure story that is Margaret Atwood’s Oryx and Crake meets Nancy Farmer’s House of the Scorpion.

About Alexandra Duncan

Alexandra Duncan is a writer and librarian. Her first novel, Salvage, was published April 1, 2014, by Greenwillow Books. Her short fiction has appeared in several Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy anthologies and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. She loves anything that gets her hands dirty – pie-baking, leatherworking, gardening, drawing, and rolling sushi. She lives with her husband and two monstrous, furry cats in the mountains of Western North Carolina.


You can visit her online at:

Q & A with Alexandra, who is crazy smart and wonderful!


When writing this book, were there any books/authors/stories that inspired you?
This is going to sound silly, but part of the inspiration for the main character Tempest was She-Ra (Yes, the Princess of Power. He-Man’s sister. From the ‘80s cartoon.) I was obsessed with She-Ra when I was a kid, largely because of her back story. She had been captured as a baby and raised by the Evil Horde, so when He-Man first meets her, she’s a warrior fighting on the side of evil. She has a redemption story arc that I found really compelling as a five and six year-old (Yes, I was a strange child.), and ever since then, I’ve been drawn to that same sort of arc.

What do you want people to take away from the book? In this year, 50, 100?

I hope people will take away the importance of diversity, both in people and in our food supply. Diversity is how we survive as a species. I know some people are going to read this and think it’s a polemic against genetically modified foods (aka GMOs), but the GMO issue is a complicated one. Personally, I’m fine eating some corn that’s been crossed with fish DNA if that’s going to help end world hunger. What we have to be careful about is monoculture in our crops, which makes them more easily wiped out by disease, and control of our food supply falling into the hands of a select few people or companies, which is something we’re starting to see. In 50 and 100 years, I hope people are laughing about how paranoid I was to write this book, not calling it prophetic. 

Why did you choose your main character to be a teen and not an adult?

In general, teens are more open-minded and idealistic than adults. At that age, you’re more willing to question and reevaluate the world around you, rather than accepting it as it is, but on the flip side, teenagerhood is also a time when you can find yourself tricked or manipulated by people with more life experience or a rigid worldview. I felt Tempest would be more compelling as a teenager than as an adult because of that tension between the pressure to conform and the spirit of skepticism that is a part of so many people’s lives at that age.

What inspired the highly scientific background of your novel?

I’m a nerd. I’ve been following the development of agricultural technology since I was in high school, and some of the things people have created sound straight out of a science fiction novel. Take terminator seeds, which were thankfully never put into production, or herbicide sprays that interact with weeds on a genetic level. As I was writing Blight, I also began hearing about CRISPR, a gene-editing technology that would allow scientists to change the genetic code of a person or animal after they were born, rather than in the embryonic stage. It’s something that could have life-saving applications, such as eradicating degenerative diseases like Parkinson’s, but could also be used for more morally questionable ends, such as making sure a baby had blue eyes and blonde hair. In the world of Blight, technologies like these have run wild, with no one keeping them in check.

What were the challenges in writing a strong female character in such a novel? Would this have been different if set in a non-dystopia world?

In some ways, writing a strong female character is easier in a dystopia than it is in the real world. The evils in a dystopia are usually more clear or heightened than in real life, because the writer is trying to highlight a particular issue or injustice. For example, if the dystopian world has a rule that all girls must be married by their sixteenth birthday, it’s easier to point to that as wrong than it is to recognize all the subtle ways sexism and rape culture affect girls that same age in our own culture. When we’re reading about a strong female character in our own world, we bring all of our unconscious biases and beliefs to our reading of her. It’s easier to label her a bitch or unlikeable. If, on the other hand, we remove her from our own context and put her in one without the same cultural expectations as our own, it’s easier for us to support the idea of her breaking with tradition and to see her as strong. *Word from Mari: PREACH IT GURL!!*



These are the prints that you can win!


Be sure to check out the rest of the tour!

Tour Schedule:
Week One:
7/24/2017- Savings in Seconds- Review
7/26/2017- Wandering Bark Books- Excerpt
7/27/2017- A Dream Within A Dream- Review
7/28/2017- Two Chicks on Books- Interview

Week Two:
7/31/2017- Buried Under Books- Review
8/1/2017- The Bewitched Reader - Guest Post
8/2/2017- Here's to Happy Endings- Review
8/3/2017- Kati's Bookaholic Rambling Reviews- Excerpt 
8/4/2017- YABooksCentral- Review

We hope you enjoy the book! 
Your Friends,
The Autumn Bookshelf

Thursday, December 8, 2016

Blog Tour: S.H.A.Y.




Hello again, it's yet another addition to the blog tours here at the Autumn Bookshelf! Let us know what you think about the book in the comments!

S.H.A.Y. (Almost #1) 
by Christina Leigh Pritchard
Genre: NA Scifi/Suspense 
Release Date: August 16th 2016 
Limitless Publishing 

Summary from Goodreads: 

Experiment 318: Gone Rogue

Shay is scientific experiment #318. 
Science may have created her, but she refuses to allow it to blind her to the difference between right and wrong...

Synthetic Hominid Assumed Youth (S.H.A.Y.) is eighteen years old, which means she has completed Phase One: Developmental. Shay no longer requires the assistance of her Optional Human Parent, Darla, who has guided her in the process of discovering her morality. Shay loves her easy, charming life aboard the marine research facility and doesn’t want it to change. 

Phase Two: Experimental. All S.H.A.Y. ages 18-20 will experience loss...Darla shouldn’t have to die because ofan experiment. The thought of losing the only parent she’s ever known is too much. Determined to make sure the scientists at the facility don’t get their way, Shay entraps Darla in a transport device to escape across the Miami Border. There, on the mainland, law enforcement will keep her human parent safe.   


Escape Mission: Failed...

Shay crashes into one of the Lone Keys off the coast of Florida, abandoned to all humanity, except for the stranger who drags her ashore. Shay must get Darla to safety or she will die of radiation poisoning trapped inside the Freeze Portal, but Shay can’t do it alone.  

The boy who found her,an Ersatz Reproduction Intelligence Clone (E.R.I.C.), is her only hope. He has adaptation skills she needs to complete her mission. Eric was created by the same scientists who want to kill Darla, though. She tries to keep their interaction strictly business, but it’s hard to hate him. He’s flirty, charming and not to mention devastatingly handsome.  

Shay must put her trust in Eric’s hands if she wants to save Darla from her fate. It may be worth her heart, but will it be worth her life?

Add to Goodreads

About the Author:


Christina Leigh Pritchard was born and raised in South Florida. Her first stories were written at the age of nine in spiral notebooks and in the various diaries she kept. Since she's upgraded to a computer, she's completed over fifty books, including her ALMOST Series, signed with Limitless Publishing. Christina Leigh Pritchard is still going strong with many more to come! Her genre's include science fiction, dark fantasy, young adult, drama, suspense, historical romance, multicultural, comedy, poetry and many more. 


Author Links: Website│GoodreadsTwitterFacebook 

Blog Tour Organized by: YA Bound Book Tours


Hope you enjoy the book!
Your Friends,

The Autumn Bookshelf

Friday, November 4, 2016

Book Review: Paper Girls

 Paper Girls by Brian K. Vaughan, Cliff Chiang, Matthew Wilson

Released: April 5th, 2016
Read: October 2016
Publisher: Image Comics
Format: Paperback, 144 pages
Series: Paper Girls (#1-5)

Description from GoodReads: In the early hours after Halloween of 1988, four 12-year-old newspaper delivery girls uncover the most important story of all time. Suburban drama and otherworldly mysteries collide in this smash-hit series about nostalgia, first jobs, and the last days of childhood.

Review: I had just gotten off a Stranger Things high when we hit up a bookstore and I found this beautiful gem. So imagine my surprise when the book is pretty much Stranger Things with an all-girl cast.
   Of course, the story is different. It's clever and weird and feels like something out of a dark episode of Doctor Who. Needless to say, I loved it. It's hard to love characters from comics unless the comic is 400-500 pages long, but this book successfully had me hoping these rough-and-tumble girls would save the day. Not to mention these girls are the coolest 12 year olds ever. (Except the smoking. Smoking doesn't make you cool.)
   It's even harder to make a group of tween girls the main characters in a YA/adult comic. Again, this book succeeded while still keeping a sense of youth and not just adults in tiny child bodies. That was a weird image. I'm sorry.

Quotable Quotes:
“I'm not going to stand here and be eaten by some bitch's dinosaur. I am finally doing something with my life.”
 “I hated being twelve. Back in '65, I just wanted to grow up fast so everything would finally be good, you know? But truth is, life was actually way better back then. Turns out, the older you get... the more everything just turns to shit.”

Rating: 9/10

Read if You Liked: Stranger Things, Doctor Who, (a grown up sorta version of) Babysitters Club, I don't think I've read another book like this

Optimistically yours, Ola <3

Friday, February 5, 2016

Book Review: H.E.A.R.



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H.E.A.R by Robin Epstein


Release Date: December 29th, 2015
Read: January 2016
Publisher: Soho Teen
Format: Paperback ARC, 272 pages 

Description from Goodreads:
Expelled from high school months shy of graduation—her acceptance to Columbia revoked due to vigilante justice gone awry—Kassandra Black is sent to work in her great-uncle Brian’s lab at Henley University. She’s helping with his HEAR (Henley Engineering Anomalies Research) program, and hopefully getting him to put in a good word for her to attend Henley instead. She’s got to go somewhere, after all.But as she gets to know the other HEAR students, it becomes clear that she overlooked the “Anomalies” part of their acronym—these kids are here to help Brian run experiments that gauge ESP capacity. They’ve each been selected and recruited, including, to her astonishment, Kass herself. But ESP? She doesn’t buy any of it. And even if it were real, she definitely isn’t psychic.Yet with each new test, she finds herself more frightened. Kass really can communicate telepathically; she can even glimpse the future. When one of her fellow HEAR students is murdered, Kass must try to forget everything she knows about herself and her family and learn to trust those who share her remarkable gift.


Review:
What really got me into this book was the main character. Kassandra is strong, and doesn't care what anyone thinks of her. I loved the growth of her powers, and it feels realistic (well as realistic as supernatural powers can be!). I loved that she did what she wanted, when she wanted, and said what she wanted. She is the type of girl everyone wants to know, and everyone wants to be. This book was a refreshing break from the normal dystopian/supernatural genre. It wasn't just about saving the world. It had a deeper story line and plot to it. I really liked getting to know the other recruits of the program. It was almost like X-Men or something. It even had the history to it, about shady ex-colleagues and an untrustworthy government agency. Everyone's power was unique to them, and their character development was interesting, and never dull. Of course the romance between two of the characters (won't say which ones, spoilers!) is a great addition to the story, and adds depth to the characters involved. One of the best parts of the story was the twist at the end. It came out of nowhere, and finished the story perfectly! I can't wait to get my hands on book number two!

Favorite Quote: "Keep my mind open. Keep an open mind. How hard could it be?" -H.E.A.R. by Robin Epstein

Rating: 8/10 Stars

Recommended for people who enjoy: scifi, adventure, romance, strong female leads

Happy Reading,
Mari  

Monday, September 7, 2015

Book Review: The 5th Wave

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Taken from Goodreads


The 5th Wave by Rick Yancy


Release Date: May 7th, 2013
Read: June, 2013
Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
Format: Hardcover, 457 pages

Description from Goodreads:
After the 1st wave, only darkness remains. After the 2nd, only the lucky escape. And after the 3rd, only the unlucky survive. After the 4th wave, only one rule applies: trust no one.
Now, it’s the dawn of the 5th wave, and on a lonely stretch of highway, Cassie runs from Them. The beings who only look human, who roam the countryside killing anyone they see. Who have scattered Earth’s last survivors. To stay alone is to stay alive, Cassie believes, until she meets Evan Walker.
Beguiling and mysterious, Evan Walker may be Cassie’s only hope for rescuing her brother—or even saving herself. But Cassie must choose: between trust and despair, between defiance and surrender, between life and death. To give up or to get up.

Review: This book intrigued me from the very first page. For a long time I searched for a fresh take on the whole dystopian genre. This book is pretty much it. It's a little slower to start, and it really takes time with the character building and the backstory of the whole tragedy is very interesting.
Cassie is an interesting heroine, and she is very headstrong. However, I felt that her relationship with Evan was a little cheesy and predictable. The moment that he appeared on the page, I knew right where his story was going. Even with that fact, I bought the book (I read it from the library) and have read it multiple times. It's a fun ride, and is great to pass the time.

Favorite Quotes:   “But if I'm it, the last of my kind, the last page of human history, like hell I'm going to let the story end this way. I may be the last one, but I am the one still standing. I am the one turning to face the faceless hunter in the woods on an abandoned highway. I am the one not running but facing. Because if I am the last one, then I am humanity. And if this is humanity's last war, then I am the battlefield.” 
― Rick Yancey, The 5th Wave

Rating: 3/5 Stars

Recommended for people who like: thrillers, romance, YA, sci-fi, survival stories, dystopian

Happy Reading,
Mari