yesterday was the release day for the redesigned edition of succubus blues by Richelle mead. new cover, compact size, lower price.
and ofcourse same book, for those who might think it's something else!
for those who didn't buy it yet, or knows someone that would like it as a gift, it's your chance. (:
succubus blues
Thursday, August 5, 2010 Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 12:00 AM | Labels: News, Richelle Mead, succubus bluesPlaying favorites with vampires and their authors
Wednesday, August 4, 2010 Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 11:42 PM | Labels: Fantasy, News, vote and support, votesThere is another voting thingie going on.
and it's for vampire novels, and their authors , so if you wish to vote for your fav, just go here.
Richelle Mead is the one with most votes (until now)- (the author of vampire academy series, and few more)
my vote was for her as well. (:


Someone Will Be with You Shortly: Notes from a Perfectly Imperfect Life
Tuesday, August 3, 2010 Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:50 PM | Labels: discriptions, Lisa Kogan, summaries
Someone Will Be with You Shortly: Notes from a Perfectly Imperfect Life
By Lisa Kogan
208 pages; HarperStudio
Fans of Lisa Kogan's column in this very magazine will revel in the characteristic deadpan wit on display in her first book, Someone Will Be with You Shortly. Like the bit of banter you don't think of until ten minutes after the dinner party has broken up, Kogan's riffs on motherhood, politics, relationships, and life itself are what we wish we'd said, only sharper and funnier. ("Johannes and I are not married in the eyes of the law," she writes about her daughter's father, who lives in Switzerland, "[but] we have privately vowed to irritate each other for as long as we both shall live.") This is good stuff. And believe us: We're not just saying that because her office is down the hall.
The Summer We Read Gatsby
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:49 PM | Labels: Danielle Ganek, discriptions, summaries, The summer we read gatsbyBy Danielle Ganek
304 pages; Viking
A sophisticated comedy of manners about a wealthy family torn apart and brought together by the contents of a will. A bit over-the-top and rarified—as befits both the title reference and the author's history. Ganek wrote about the chi-chi New York arts scene in Lulu Meets God and Doubts Him. — Sara Nelson
Father of the Rain
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:49 PM | Labels: discriptions, Father of the rain, Lily king, summariesBy Lily King
384 pages; Atlantic
Early in Father of the Rain, 11-year-old Daley experiences a moment she'll treasure for decades: "My father grinning his biggest grin and looking at me like he loves me, truly loves me...." Never mind that he's high on martinis and the thrill of pulling a stunt that humiliates his wife and insults her dinner guests. Lily King's luminous novel centers on a child's blinding hunger for a parent's affection. King makes this well-worn theme seem fresh with her vividly drawn characters—especially Daley's father, Gardiner, a narcissistic alcoholic with an ugly temper and a magnetic charm—and a clear eye for the details of their singularly messed-up relationships. Set in the affluent East Coast seaside town where Gardiner was raised, in a world of Wasp privilege he takes for granted, the novel covers three decades starting in the mid-'70s. Daley's mother leaves Gardiner, but Daley can't give up hoping he'll change. "You want the daddy you never got," her boyfriend says. Obvious? Maybe to us. The uplifting ending comes as Daley finally sees for herself what's been clear all along. — Karen Holt
A Mango shaped space
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:48 PM | Labels: A mango shaped space, discriptions, Fiction, summaries, Wendy Massby Wendy Mass.
hirteen-year-old Mia Winchell appears to be a typical eighth grader. But Mia is keeping a secret from everyone who knows her: sounds, numbers and words appear in color for her. Mia has synesthesia, the mingling of perceptions whereby a person can see sounds, smell colors, or taste shapes. A Mango-Shaped Space is a poignant, coming-of-age novel spiced with wit and humor that chronicles Mia’s developing appreciation of her gift and the part it plays in her life.
Lolita
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:48 PM | Labels: Classics, discriptions, Lolita, summaries, Vladimir Nabokovby Vladimir Nabokov
His powerful sentences of lust, but more interesting is the inescapable lust the reader is subjected to — turning us into Humbertish perverts.
Waiting for Godot
The particular sadness of lemon cake
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:40 PM | Labels: Aimee Bender, discriptions, summaries, The particular sadness of lemon cakeThe Particular Sadnes
s of Lemon Cake
By Aimee Bender
304 pages
At age 8, Rose Edelstein discovers she can taste feelings in food—lonely pie, adulterous roast beef, resentment soup—whatever angst or elation the cook might have experienced while preparing the meal. Weird for any kid, yes. But when a family like the Edelsteins is serving up its own wacky stew of alienation and contradiction—from the taciturn father, who "always seemed a little like a guest," to the misanthropic brother, a physics prodigy with KEEP OUT posted (in 17 languages) on his bedroom door—having the ability to sense the dissonance between emotion and behavior can be especially painful. It's no wonder Rose's insights and subsequent psychic ramblings land her in the ER. Thankfully, George Malcolm, an adorable science whiz, comes to the rescue, simply by believing her. Voracious for human connection, Rose comes of age while unraveling family secrets as strangely lucid as they are nightmarish. At its core, Aimee Bender's novel The Particular Sadness of Lemon Cake encourages us all to make the most of our unique gifts while still finding a way to live in the so-called real world. — Kristy Davis
kisses from hell
Posted by Darcy ivashkova at 5:28 PM | Labels: discriptions, Fantasy, News, Richelle Mead, summaries
Truly, Madly, Undead-ly
This irresistible collection features stories of love amid vampires by five of today's hottest authors—Kristin Cast (Tempted), Richelle Mead (Vampire Academy), Alyson NoËl (Evermore), Kelley Armstrong (The Summoning), and Francesca Lia Block (Pretty Dead).
From a fugitive vampire forced to trust a boy who might work for the group bent on destroying her to the legendary romance of two immortals whose love compels them to risk everything, this heart-pounding collection brings new meaning to the words "love you forever." Whether you're into romances that are dark and moody or light and fun, these stories will quench that insatiable thirst for enchanting tales of the beautiful undead.
About the Author
Kristin Cast is a New York Times and USA Today bestselling author who teams with her mother to write the House of Night YA series. She has stand-alone stories in several anthologies as well as editorial credits. Currently Kristin attends college in Oklahoma, where she is focusing on attaining her dream of opening a no-kill dog rescue shelter in midtown Tulsa.
Product Details
* Reading level: Young Adult
* Paperback: 272 pages
* Publisher: HarperTeen (August 24, 2010)
* Language: English
* ISBN-10: 0061956961
* ISBN-13: 978-0061956966
* Product Dimensions: 8 x 5.3 x 0.6 inches
* Shipping Weight: 7 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
* Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #62,083 in Books (See Top 100 in Books) 





















