Welcome to the Community!

Hey!! Look who's scrolled down to check the welcome text. I'll give a short welcome to you guys, and a couple of 'thank you' s for whatever button you clicked to have ended up here in this little blog of mine. It's nothing professional, but it surely is special! Not for you maybe, but just for your information I've wasted precious time just to make the blog appear decent and pretty in my opinion - not to mention all of the posts you see here! So don't judge before you actually look into things!
I've added a couple of pages just to organize all the things I have in this blog so that you guys have a better time of searching things up rather than having every post of different topics all jumbled up in one single home page.
Yeah, I think I'm done with my welcome text. Without further ado, welcome to my little blog of thoughts.

*You really didn't need to finish everything to start reading stuff here, but I appreciate it if you have. :)

Sunday, November 15, 2015

The Siren - Rewritten!

Not that it wasn't good as it was already, The Siren was easily one of my favorite books of all time, but Kiera Cass still decided to spice things up a bit. And I'm more than excited to see how it goes!
The official word from Kiera herself:

You have been patiently waiting for something in a non-Selection world, and this is it! I got the opportunity to go back and rewrite my first book, The Siren. It follows Kahlen, a siren, as she lives life with her sisters in service to the Sea, singing ships into their doom and keeping her deadliness a secret. She's managing as well as can be expected for a girl who's forbidden to speak, sing, and laugh, until she meets Akinli, a boy connected to the Ocean in his own way. And then the life she could have now, be it brief and full of secrets, feels worth risking, even if it means giving up the future she's been working toward.

The Siren will be out January 26, 2016, and here is the new, beautiful cover art. Hope you enjoy!
Siren Cover

Friday, October 16, 2015

Magnus Chase and The Gods of Asgard

Who else is dying to see the release of Uncle Rick's new series? I'm sure a lot of you are. Which is why I have decided to become a saint and give you the link to the five-chapter excerpt of Magnus Chase and The Gods of Asgard: The Sword of Summer! (Phew, long title.)

But before that, let's spare a moment to admire the cover :)


Let's not put it off a second longer. The link to the excerpt you've been waiting for.... *drum roll*


!!!!!!

YAY 

Peace out.

Saturday, September 19, 2015

The Lunar Chronicles: Winter

I haven't had the time to write out an official review on The Lunar Chronicles books (I might have added some of my thoughts on GoodReads, so please check it out there), but I will tell you that this series is out of this world. Literally. It's like, on the moon, partially.

So without discussing the previous three books, I will announce the release date of the series' fourth and final book, and it is on...

The 10th of November this year!!!
YAY!!!!

And may I tell you just how gorgeous the cover is?

Why don't I just show you..


photo credits to www.usatoday.com

So brace yourselves for a thrilling ending to the series! I am completely sure that Marissa Meyer will not disappoint! (I think.)




Gabrielle Aplin's Sweet Nothing

Nothing is ever truly as sweet as listening to Gabrielle Aplin's beautiful voice. And her songwriting. Those lyrics are just... ><


Carrie Underwood's Smoke Break

The country singer has released yet another masterpiece!
May I present to you.... Smoke Break!

And some behind the scenes action...

Sneak Peek Into Queen of Shadows!

I know I posted a similar post just a few days ago, and now I'm posting another one? Wha..? You may wonder if I have already gone insane due to this book not already in my possession, and you may be close to the truth... but nah. This post is different, because instead of just three chapters, I present to you a FIVE-chapter extract from Queen of Shadows! Yay me!

I was supposed to post this several days ago. And now I'm too late. Or not. Like they say, "better late than never", right?

I know a lot of you may have already gotten the book, and could have possibly finished it already... But I am still posting this five-chapter excerpt link on here. For those who have yet to buy the lovely fourth book to the amazing Throne of Glass series by Sarah J. Maas... the link will be down below. It is in PDF form, so it would be so much easier to read in that form rather than copy and pasted in a blog post.

*drum roll*....

http://media.bloomsbury.com/rep/files/queen-of-shadows-extract.pdf


There you go! Read up to the fifth chapter, then suffer the agony of not being able to continue reading. MUAHAHA.

I know, I'm just nice that way.

And like always... a wallpaper to celebrate the release of this highly-anticipated fourth book of the Throne of Glass series:


photo credits to ayuceres.wix.com

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Sneak Peek: Queen of Shadows

I have decided to become an incredibly nice person today, and I will grace you with the first three beautiful chapters of Queen of Shadows! Although the book has been published yesterday in the US, these sneak peeks would prove absolutely breathtaking for those who have yet to purchase the fourth book to this amazing fantasy series. And according to some reviews I've read, Sarah J. Maas has done it again! The people have spoken, and the words have been anything but negative! And that just made me absolutely crazed to have not acquired the book yet. And I promise you I will, soon. Queen of Shadows would soon be in my possession. YESSS

I've wasted too many words, now I shall let you read the FIRST THREE CHAPTERS of the Queen of Shadows. Welcome back to the world of Aelin Ashryver Galathynius:

Chapter One
There was a thing waiting in the darkness.
It was ancient and cruel, and paced in the shadows, leashing his mind. It was not of his world, and it had been brought here to fill him with its primordial cold.
Some invisible barrier still separated them, but the wall crumbled a little more every time the thing stalked along its length, testing its strength.
He could not remember his name.
That was the first thing he’d forgotten when the darkness enveloped him weeks or months or eons ago. Then he’d forgotten the names of others who had meant so much to him. He could recall horror and despair—but only because of the solitary moment that kept interrupting the blackness like the steady beat of a drum: a few minutes of screaming and blood and frozen wind. There had been people he loved in that room of red marble and glass; the woman had lost her head—
“Lost,” as if the beheading were her fault.
A lovely woman with delicate hands like golden doves. It was not her fault, even if he could not remember her name. It was the fault of the man on the glass throne, who had ordered that guard’s sword to sever flesh and bone.
There was nothing in the darkness beyond the moment when that woman’s head thudded to the ground. There was nothing but that moment, again and again and again—and that thing pacing nearby, waiting for him to break, to yield, to let it in. A prince.
He could not remember if the thing was the prince, or if he himself had once been a prince. Not likely. A prince would not have allowed that woman’s head to be cut off. A prince would have stopped the blade. A prince would have saved her.
Yet he had not saved her, and he knew there was no one coming to save him.
There was still a real world beyond the shadows. He was forced to participate in it by the man who had ordered the slaughter of that lovely woman. And when he did, no one noticed he had become hardly more than a marionette, struggling to speak, to act outside the chains on his mind. He hated them for not noticing. That was one of the emotions he still knew.
I was not supposed to love you. The woman had said that—and then she died. She should not have loved him, and he should not have dared to love her. He deserved this darkness, and once the invisible boundary shattered and the waiting thing pounced, infiltrating and filling him … he’d have earned it.
So he remained bound in night, witnessing the scream and the blood and the impact of flesh on stone. He knew he should struggle, knew he had struggled in those final seconds before the collar of black stone had clamped around his neck.
But there was a thing waiting in the darkness, and he could not bring himself to fight it for much longer.



Chapter Two
Aelin Ashryver Galathynius, heir of fire, beloved of Mala Light-Bringer, and rightful Queen of Terrasen, leaned against the worn oak bar and listened carefully to the sounds of the pleasure hall, sorting through the cheers and moans and bawdy singing. Though it had chewed up and spat out several owners over the past few years, the subterranean warren of sin known as the Vaults remained the same: uncomfortably hot, reeking of stale ale and unwashed bodies, and packed to the rafters with lowlifes and career criminals.
More than a few young lords and merchant’s sons had swaggered down the steps into the Vaults and never returned to the surface. Sometimes it was because they flashed their gold and silver in front of the wrong person; sometimes it was because they were vain or drunk enough to think that they could jump into the fighting pits and walk out alive. Sometimes they mishandled one of the women for hire in the alcoves flanking the cavernous space and learned the hard way about which people the owners of the Vaults really valued.
Aelin sipped from the mug ale the sweating barkeep had slid her moments before. Watery and cheap, but at least it was cold. Floating above the tang of filthy bodies was the scent of garlic and roasting meat. Her stomach grumbled, but she wasn’t stupid enough to order food. One, the meat usually courtesy of rats in the alley a lever above; two, wealthier patrons usually found it laced with something that left them awakening in the aforementioned alley, purse empty. If they woke up at all.
Her clothes were dirty, but fine enough to mark her as a thief’s target. So she’d carefully examined her ale, sniffing and then sipping it before deeming it safe. She’d still have to find food at some point soon, but not until she learned what she needed to from the Vaults: what the hell had happen in Rifthold in the months she’d been gone.
And what client Arobynn Hamel wanted to see so badly that he was risking a meeting her—especially when brutal black-uniformed guards were roaming the city like packs of wolves.
She’d managed to slip past a patrol during the chaos of docking, but not before noting the onyx wyvern embroidered on their uniforms. Black on black—perhaps the King of Adarlan had grown tired of pretending he was anything but a menace; perhaps he’s issued a royal decree to abandon the traditional crimson and gold of his empire. Black for death; black for his two Wyrdkeys; black for the Valg demons he was now using to build himself an unstoppable army.
A shudder went down her spine, and she drained the rest of her ale. As she set down the mug, her auburn hair shifted and caught the light of the wrought-iron chandeliers.
She’d hurried from the docks to the riverside Shadow Market—where anyone could find anything they wanted, rare of contraband or commonplace—and purchased a brick of dye.

She’d paid the merchant an extra piece of silver to let her use the shop to dye her hair, still short enough to brush just below her collarbones. If those guards had been monitoring the docks and had somehow seen her, they would be looking for a golden-haired young woman. Everyone would be looking for a golden-haired woman, once word arrived in a few weeks that the King’s Champion had failed in her task to assassinate Wendlyn’s royal family and steal its naval defense plans.
She’d sent a warning to the King and Queen of Eyllwe months ago, and knew they’d take the proper precautions. But that still let one person at risk before she could fulfill the first steps of her plan—the same person who might be able to explain the new guards by the docks. And why the city was noticeably quieter, tenser. Hushed.
If she were to overhear anything regarding the Captain of the Guard and where he was safe, it would be here. It was only a matter of listening to the right conversation or sitting with the right card partners. What a fortunate coincidence, then, that she’d spotted Tern—one of Arobynn’s favored assassins—buying the latest dose of his preferred poison at Shadow Market.
She’d followed him here in time to spy several more of Arobynn’s assassins converging on the pleasure hall. They never did that—not unless their master was present. Usually only when Arobynn was taking a meeting with someone very, very important. Or dangerous.
After Tern and the others had slipped inside the Vaults, she’d waited on the street for a few minutes, lingering in the shadows to see whether Arobynn arrived, but no such luck. He must have already been within.
So she’d come in on the heels of a group of drunken merchants’ sons, spotted where Arobynn was holding court, and done her best to remain unnoticed and unremarkable while she lurked at the bar—and observed.
With her hood and dark clothes, she blended in well enough not to garner much attention. She supposed that if anyone was foolish enough to attempt to rob her, it made them fair game to be robbed right back. She was running low on money.
She sighed through her nose. If her people could only see her: Aelin of the Wildfire, assassin and pickpocket. Her parents and uncle were probably thrashing in their graves.
Still. Some things were worth it. Aelin crooked a gloved finger at the bald barkeep, signaling for another ale.
“I’d mind how much you drink, girl,” sneered a voice behind her.
She glanced sidelong at the average-sized man who had slipped up beside her at the bar. She would have known him for his ancient cutlass if she hadn’t recognized the disarmingly common face. The ruddy skin, the beady eyes and thick brows—all a bland mask to hide the hungry killer beneath.
Aelin braced her forearms on the bar, crossing one ankle over the other. “Hello, Tern.” Arobynn’s second in command—or he had been two years ago. A vicious, calculating little prick who had always been more than eager to do Arobynn’s dirty work. “I figured it was only a matter of time before one of Arobynn’s dogs sniffed me out.”
Tern leaned against the bar, flashing her too-bright smile. “If memory served, you were always his favorite bitch.”
She chuckled, facing him fully. They were nearly equal in height—and with his slim build, Tern had been unnervingly good at getting into even the most well-guarded places. The barkeep, spotting Tern, kept well away.
Tern inclined his hooded head over a shoulder, gesturing to the shadowy back of the carvnous space. “Last banquette against the wall. He’s finishing up with a client.”
She flicked her gaze in the direction Tern indicated. Both sides of the Vaults were lines with alcoves teeming with whores, barely curtained off from the crowds. She skipped over the writhing bodies, over the gaunt-faced, hollow-eyed women waiting to earn their keep in this festering shit-hole, over the people who monitored the proceedings from the nearest tables —guards and voyeurs and fleshmongers. But there, tucked into the wall adjacent to the alcoves, were several wooden booths.
Exactly the ones she’d been discreetly monitoring since her arrival.
And in the one farthest from the lights … a gleam of polished leather boots stretched out beneath the table. A second pair of boots, worn and muddy, were braced on the floor across from the first as if the client were ready to bolt. Or, if he were truly stupid, to fight.
He was stupid enough to have let his personal guard stay visible, a beacon alerting anyone who cared to notice that something rather important was happening in the last booth.
The client’s guard—a slender, hooded young woman armed to the teeth—was leaning against a wooden pillar nearby, her silky shoulder-length dark hair shining in the light as she carefully monitored the pleasure hall. Too stiff to be a casual patrol. No uniform, no house colors or sigils. Not surprising, given the client’s need for secrecy.
The client, probably though it was safer to meet here, when these sort of meetings were usually held at the Assassin’s Keep or one of the shadowy inns owned by Arobynn himself. He had no idea that Arobynn also partially owned the Vaults, and it would take only a nod from Aelin’s former master for the metal doors to lock —and the client and his guard to never walk out again.
It still left the question of why Arobynn had agreed to meet here.
And still left Aelin looking across the hall toward the man who had shattered her life so many ways.

Her stomach tightened, but she smiled at Tern. “I knew the lash wouldn’t stretch far.”
Aelin pushed off the bar, slipping through the crowd before the assassin could say anything else. She could feel Tern’s stare fixed right between her shoulder blades, and knew he was aching to plunge his cutlass there.
Without bothering to glance back, she gave him an obscene gesture over the shoulder.

His barked string of curses was better than the bawdy music being played across the room.

She noted each face she passed, each table of revelers and criminals and workers, as every step brought her closer to the man in the back. The client’s personal guard now watched her, a gloved hand slipping to the ordinary sword at her side.
Not your concern, but nice try. Aelin was half tempted to smirk at the woman. Might have done so, actually, if she wasn’t focused on the King of Assassins.
But she was ready—or as ready as she could ever be. She’d spent long enough planning.

Aelin had given herself a day at sea to rest and to miss Rowan. With the blood oath now eternally biding her to the Fae prince—and him to her—his absence was like a phantom limb. She still felt that way, even when she had so much to do, even though missing her carranamwas useless and he’d not doubt kick her ass for it.
The second day they’d been apart, she’d offered the ship’s captain a silver coin for a pen and a stack of paper. And after locking herself in her cramped stateroom, she’d begun writing.

There were two men in this city responsible for destroying her life and the people she’d loved. She would not leave Rifthold until she’d buried them both.
So she’d written page after page of notes and ideas, until she had a list of names and places and targets. She’d memorized every step and calculation, and then she’d burned the pages with the power smoldering in her veins, making sure every last scrap was nothing more than ash floating out of the porthole window and across the vast, night-darkened ocean.
Though she had braced herself, it had still been shock weeks later when the ship had passed some unseen marker just off the coast and her magic vanished. All that fire she’d spent so many months carefully mastering—gone as if it had never existed, not even an ember left flickering in her veins. A new sort of emptiness—different from the hollow Rowan’s absence left in her.
Stranded in her human skin, she’d curled up on her cot and recalled how to breathe, how to think, hot to move her damn body without the immortal grace she’d become so dependent on. She was a useless fool for letting not need the extra strength, speed, and agility of her Fae form to bring down her enemies.
The man responsible for that initial brutal training—the man who had been savior and tormentor, but never declared himself father or brother or lover—was now steps away, still speaking with his oh-so-important client.
Aelin pushed against the tension threatening to lock up her limbs and kept her movements feline-smooth as she closed the final twenty feet between them.
Until Arobynn’s client rose to his feet, snapping something at the King of Assassins, and stormed toward his guard.
Even with the hood, she knew the way he moved. She knew the shape of the chin poking from the shadows of the cowl, the way his left hand tended to brush against his scabbard.

But the sword with the sword with the eagle-shaped pommel was not hanging at his side.

And there was no black uniform—only brown, nondescript clothes, spotted with dirt and blood.

She grabbed an empty chair and pulled it up to a table of card players before the client had taken two steps. She slid into the seat and focused on breathing, on listening, even as the three people at the table frowned at her.
She didn’t care.
From the corner of her eye, she saw the guard jerk her chin toward her.
“Deal me in,” Aelin muttered to the man beside her. “Right now.”
“We’re in the middle of a game.”
“Next round, then,” she said, relaxing her posture and slumping her shoulders and Chaol Westfall cast his gaze in her direction.



Chapter 3
Chaol was Arobynn’s client.
Or he wanted something from her former master badly enough to risk meeting here. What had happened while she was away? What the hell had happened?
She watched the cards being slapped down on the ale-damp table, even as the captain’s attention fixed on her back. She wished she could see his face, see anything in the gloom underneath that hood. Despite the splattering of blood on his clothes, he moved as though no injuries plagued him.
Something that had been coiled tightly in her chest for months slowly loosened. Alive— but where had the blood come from?
He must have deemed her nonthreatening, because he merely motioned for his companion to go, and they both strolled toward the bar—no, toward the stairs beyond. He moved at a steady, casual pace, though the woman at his side was too tense to pass for unconcerned. Fortunately for them all, no one looked his way as he left, and the captain didn’t glance in her direction again.
She’d moved fast enough that he likely hadn’t been able to detect it was her. Good. Good, even if she would have known him moving or still, cloaked or bare.
There he went, up the stairs, not even glancing down, though his companion continued glancing down? Who the hell was that? There hadn’t been any female guards at the palace when she’d left, and she had been fairly certain the king had an absurd no-women rule.
Seeing Chaol changed nothing—not right now.

She curled her gloved hand into a fist, keenly aware of the bare finger on her right hand. It hadn’t felt naked until now.
A card landed before her. “Three silvers to join,” the bald, tattooed man besides her said as he dealt the cards, inclining his head towards the tidy pile of coins in the center.
Meeting with Arobynn—she’d never thought Chaol was stupid, but this … Aelin rose from the chair, cooling the wrath that had started to boil in her veins. “I’m dead broke,” she said. “Enjoy the game.”
The door atop the stone stairs was already shut, Chaol and his companion gone. She gave herself a second to wipe any expression beyond mild amusement off her face. Odds were, Arobynn had planned the whole thing to coincide with her arrival. He’d probably sent Tern to the Shadow Market just to catch her eye, to draw her here. Maybe he knew what the captain was up to, whose side the young lord was now on; maybe he’d just lured her here to worm his way into her mind, to shake her up a bit.
Getting answers from Arobynn would come at a price, but it was smarter than running after Chaol into the night, though the urge had her muscles locking up. Months—months and months since she’d seen him, since she’d left Adarlan, broken and hollow.
But no more.
Aelin swaggered the last few steps to the banquette and paused in front of it, crossing her arms as she beheld Arobynn Hamel, the King of the Assassins and her former master, smiling up at her.
Lounging in the shadows of the wooden banquette, a glass of wine before him, Arobynn looked exactly as he had the last time she’d seen him: fine-boned, aristo face, silky auburn hair that grazed his shoulders, and a deep-blue tunic of exquisite-make, unbuttoned with an assumed casualness at the top to reveal the toned chest beneath. No sign at all of a necklace or chain. His long, muscled arm was draped across the back of the bench, and his tanned, scar-flecked fingers drummed a beat in time with the hall music.
“Hello, darling,” he purred, his silver eyes bright, even in the dimness.
No weapons save for a beautiful rapier at his side, its ornate, twisting guards like a swirling wind bound in gold. The only overt sign of the wealth that rivaled the riches of kings and empresses.
Aelin slid onto the bench across from him, too aware of the wood, still warm from Chaol. Her own daggers pressed against her with every movement. Goldryn was a heavy weight at her side, the massive ruby in its hilt hidden by her dark cloak—the legendary blade utterly useless in such tight quarters. No doubt why he’d picked the booths for this meeting.
“You look more or less the same,” she said, leaning against the hard bench and tugging back her hood. “Rifthold continues to treat you well.”
It was true. In his late thirties, Arobynn remained handsome, and as calm and collected as he’d been at the Assassins’ Keep during the dark blur of days after Sam had died.
There were many, many debts to be paid for what happened back then.
Arobynn looked her up and down again—a slow, deliberate examination. “I think I preferred your natural hair color.”
“Precations,” she said, crossing her legs and looking him over just as slowly. No indication that he was wearing the Amulet of Orynth, the royal heirloom he’s stolen from her half-dead on the banks of the Florine. He’d allowed her to believe the amulet that secretly contained the third and final Wyrdkey had been lost to the river. For a thousand years, her ancestors had unwittingly worn the amulet, and it had made their kingdom—her kingdom—a powerhouse: prosperous and safe, ideal to which all courts in all lands were held. She’d never seen Arobynn wear any sort of chain around his neck. He probably had it squirreled away somewhere at the Keep. “I wouldn’t want to wind up back in Endovier.”
Those silver eyes sparkled. It was an effort to keep from reaching for a dagger and throwing it hard. But too much was dependent on him to kill him here and now. She’d had a long, long while to think this over—what she wanted to do, how she wanted to do it. Ending it here and now would be waste. Especially when he and Chaol were somehow tangled up.
Perhaps that was why he’d lured here here—so she would spy Chaol with him … and hesitate.
“Indeed,” Arobynn said, “I’d hate to see you back in Endovier, too. Though I will say these past two years have made you even more striking. Womanhood suits you.” He cocked his head, and she knew it was coming before he amended, “Or should I say queen-hood?”
It had been a decade since they’d spoken baldly of her heritage, or of the title he had helped her walk away from, had taught her to hate and fear. Sometimes he’d mentioned it in veiled terms, usually as a threat to keep her bound to him. But he had never once said her true name—not even when he’d found her on that icy riverbank and carried her into his house of killers.
“What makes you think I have any interest in that?” she said casually.
Arobynn shrugged his broad shoulders. “One can’t put much faith in gossip, but word arrived about a month ago from Wendlyn. It claimed that a certain lost queen put on a rather spectacular show for an invading legion from Adarlan. Actually, I believe the term our esteemed friends in the empire now like to use is ‘fire-breathing bitch-queen.’”
Honestly, she almost found it funny—flattering, even. She’d known word would spread about what she had done to General Narrok and the three other Valg princes squatting like toads inside human bodies. She just hadn’t realized everyone would learn of it so quickly. “People will believe anything they hear these days.”
“True,” Arobynn said. At the other end of the Vaults, a frenzied crowd roared at the fighters slugging it out in the pits. The King of the Assassins looked toward it, smiling faintly.
It had been almost two years since she’d stood in that crowd, watching Sam take on vastly inferior fighters, hustling to raise enough money to get them out of Rifthold, away from Arobynn. A few days later she’d wound up in a prison wagon bound for Endovier, but Sam …
She’d never discovered where they’d buried Sam after Rourke Farran—second in command to loan Jayne, the Crime Lord of Rifthold—had tortured and killed him. She’d killed Jayne herself, with a dagger hurled into his meaty face. And Farran … She’d later learned that Farran had been murdered by Arobynn’s own bodyguard, Wesley, as retribution for had been done to Sam. But that wasn’t her concern, even if Arobynn had killed Wesley to mend the bond between the Assassins’ Guild and the new Crime Lord. Another debt.
She could wait; she could be patient. She merely said, “So, you’re doing business here now? What happened to the Keep?”
“Some clients,” Arobynn purred, “prefer public meetings. The Keep can make people edgy.”
“Your client must be new to the game, if he didn’t insist on a private room.”
“He didn’t trust me that much, either. He thought the main floor would be safer.”
“He must not know the Vaults, then.” No, Chaol had never been here, as far as she knew. She’d usually avoided telling him about the time she’d spent here. Like she’d avoided telling him a good many things.
“Why don’t you ask me about him?”
She kept her face neutral, disinterested. “I don’t particularly care about your clients. Tell me or don’t.”
Arobynn shrugged again, a beautiful, casual gesture. A game, then. A bit of information to hold against her, to keep from her until it was useful. It didn’t matter if it was valuable information or not; it was the withholding, the power of it, that he loved.
Arobynn sighed. “There is so much I want to ask you—to know.”
“I’m surprised you’re admitting that you don’t already know everything.”
He rested his head against the back of the booth, his red hair gleaming like fresh blood. As an investor in and partial owner of the Vaults, she supposed he didn’t need to bother hiding his face here. No one—not even the King of Adarlan—would be stupid enough to go after him.
“Things have been wretched since you left,” Arobynn said quietly.
Left. As if she’d willingly gone to Endovier; as if he hadn’t been responsible for it; as if she had just been away on holiday. But she knew him too well. He was still feeling her out, despite having lured her here. Perfect.
He glanced at the thick scar across her palm—proof of the vow she’d made to Nehemia to free Eyllwe. Arobynn clicked his tongue. “It hurts my heart to see so many new scars on you.”
“I rather like them.” It was the truth.
Arobynn shifted in his seat—a deliberate movement, as all his movements were—and the light fell on a wicked scar stretching from his ear to his collarbone.
“I rather like that scar, too,” she said with a midnight smile. That explained why he’d left the tunic unbuttoned, then.
Arobynn waved a hand with fluid grace. “Courtesy of Wesley.”
A casual reminder of what he was capable of doing, what he could endure. Wesley had been one of the finest warriors she’d ever encountered. If he hadn’t survived the fight with Arobynn, few existed who would. “First Sam,” she said, “then me, then Wesley—what a tyrant you’ve become. Is there anyone at all left in the Keep besides darling Tern, or have you put down every person who displeased you?” She glanced at Tern, loitering at the bar, and then at the other two assassins seated at separate tables halfway across the room, trying to pretend they weren’t monitoring every movement she made. “At least Harding and Mullin are alive, too. But they’ve always been so good at kissing your ass that I have a hard time imagining you ever bringing yourself to kill them.”
A low laugh. “And here I was, thinking my men were doing a good job of keeping hidden in the crowd.” He sipped from his wine. “Perhaps you’ll come home and teach them a few things.”
Home. Another test, another game. “You know I’m always happy to teach your sycophants a lesson—but I have other lodgings prepared while I’m here.”
“And how long will you visit be, exactly?”
“As long as necessary.” To destroy him and get what she needed.
“Well, I’m glad to hear it,” he said, drinking again. No doubt from a bottle brought in just for him, as there was no way in the dark god’s burning realm that Arobynn would drink the watered-down rat’s blood they served at the bar. “You’ll have to be here for a few weeks, at least, given what happened.”
Ice coated her veins. She gave Arobynn a lazy grin, even as she began praying to Mala, to Deanna, the sister-goddesses who had watched over her for so many years.
“You do know what happened, don’t you?” he said, swirling the wine, in his glass.
Bastard—bastard for making her confirm she didn’t know. “Does this explain why the royal guard has such spectacular new uniforms?” Not Chaol or Dorian, not Chaol or Dorian, not Chaol or—
“Oh, no. Those men are merely a delightful new addition to our city. My acolytes have such fun tormenting them.” He clicked his tongue. “Though I’d bet good money that the king’s new guard was present the day it happened.”
She kept her hands from shaking, despite the panic devouring every last shred of her common sense.
“No one knows what, exactly, went on that day in the glass castle,” Arobynn began.
After all that she had endured, after what she had overcome in Wendlyn, to return to this … She wished Rowan were beside her, wished she could smell his pine-and-snow scent and know that no matter what news Arobynn bore, no matter how it shattered her, the Fae warrior would be there to help put the pieces back together.
But Rowan was across an ocean—and she prayed he’d never get within a hundred miles of Arobynn.
“Why don’t you get to the point,” she drawled. “I want to have a few hours of sleep tonight.” Not a lie. With every breath, exhaustion wrapped tighter around her bones.
“I would have thought,” Arobynn said, “given how close you two were and your abilities, that you’d somehow be able to sense it. Or at least hear of it, considering what he was accused of.”
The prick was enjoying every second of this. If Dorian was dead or hurt—
“Your cousin Aedion has been imprisoned for treason—for conspiring with the rebels here in Rifthold to depose the king and put you back on the throne.”
The world stopped.
Stopped, and started, then stopped again.
“But,” Arobynn went on, “it seems you had no idea about that little plot of his, which makes me wonder whether the king was merely looking for an excuse to lure a certain fire-breathing bitch-queen back to these shores. Aedion is to be executed in three days at the prince’s birthday party as the main entertainment. Practically screams trap, doesn’t it? I’d be a little more subtle if I’d planned it, but you can’t blame the king for sending a loud message.”
Aedion. She mastered swarm of thoughts that clouded her mind—batted it aside and focused on the assassin in front of her. He wouldn’t tell her about Aedion without a damn good reason.
“Why warn me at all?” she said. Aedion was captured by the king; Aedion was destined for the gallows—as trap for her. Every plan she had was ruined.
No—she could still see those plans through to the end, still do what she had to. But Aedion … Aedion had to come first. Even if he later hated her, even if he spat in her face and called her a traitor and a whore and a lying murderer. Even if he resented what she had done and become, she would save him.
“Consider the tip a favor,” Arobynn siad, rising from the bench. “A token of good faith.”

She’d bet there was —perhaps tied to a certain captain whose warmth lingered in the wooden bench beneath her.
She stood as well, sliding out of the booth. She knew that more spies than Arobynn’s lackeys monitored them—had seen her arrive, wait at the bar, and then head to this banquette. She wondered if her old master knew, too.
Arobynn only smiled at her, taller by a head. And when he reached out, she allowed him to brush his knuckles down her cheek. The calluses on is fingers said enough about how often he practiced. “I do not expect you to trust me; I do not expect you to love me.”
Only once, during those days of hell and heartbreak, had Arobynn ever said that he loved her in any capacity. She’d been about to leave with Sam, and he had come to her warehouse apartment, begging her to stay, claiming that he was angry with her for leaving and that everything he’d done, every twisted scheme, had been enacted out of spite for her moving out of the Keep. She’d never known in what way he’d meant those words—I love you—but she’s been inclined to consider them another lie in the days that followed, after Rourke Farran had drugged her and put his filthy hands all over her. After she’d rotten away in that dungeon.

Arobynn’s eyes softened. “I missed you.”
She stepped out of his reach. “Funny—I was in Rifthold this fall and winter, and you never tried to see me.”
“How could I dare? I thought you’d kill me on sight. But then I got word this evening that you had returned at last—and I hoped you might have changed your mind. You’ll forgive me if my methods of getting you here were … roundabout.”
Another move and countermove, to admit to the how but not to the real why. She said, “I have better things to do than care about whether you live or die.”
“Indeed. But you would care a great deal if your beloved Aedion died.” Her heartbeat thundered through her, and she braced herself. Arobynn continued, “My resources are yours. Aedion is in the royal dungeon, guarded day and night. Any help you need, any support—you know where to find me.”
“At what cost?”
Arobynn looked her over once more, and something low in her abdomen twisted at the gaze that was anything but of a brother or a father. “A favor—just one favor.” Warning bells pealed in her head. She’d be better off making a bargain with one of the Valg princes. “There are creatures lurking in my city,” he said. “Creatures who wear the bodies of men like clothing. I want to know what they are.”
Too many threads were now poised to tangle.
She said carefully, “What do you mean?”
“The king’s new guard has a few of them among its commanders. They’re rounding up people suspected of being sympathetic to magic—or those who once possessed it. Executions every day, at sunrise and sunset. These things seem to thrive on them. I’m surprised you didn’t notice them lurking about the docks.”
“They’re all monsters to me.” But Chaol hadn’t looked or felt like them. A small mercy.
He waited.
So did she.
She let herself break first. “Is this my favor, then? Telling you what I know?”

“Part of it.”
She snorted. “Two favors for the price of one? How typical.”
“Two sides of the same coin.”
She stared flatly at him, and then said, “Through years of stealing knowledge and some strange achaic power, the king has been able to stifle magic, while also summoning ancient demons to infiltrate human bodies for his growing army. He uses rings or collars of black stone to allow the demons to invade their hosts, and he’s been targeting former magic-wielders, as their gifts make it easier for the demons to latch on.” Truth, truth, truth, but not the whole truth. Not about the Wyrdmarks or Wyrdkeys—never to Arobynn. “When I was in the castle, I encountered some of the men he’d corrupted, men who fed off that power and became stronger. And when I was in Wendlyn, I faced one of his generals, who had been seized by a demon prince of unimaginable power.”
“Narrok,” Arobynn mused. If he was horrified, if he was shocked, his face revealed none of it.
She nodded. “They devour life. A prince like that can suck the soul right out of you, fee on you.” She swallowed, and real fear coated her tongue. “Do the men you’ve seen—these commanders—have collars or rings?” Chaol’s hands had been bare.
“Just rings,” Arobynn said. “Is there a difference?”
“I think only a collar can hold a prince; the rings are for lesser demons.”
“How do you kill them?”
“Fire,” she said. “I killed the princes with fire.”
“Ah. Not the usual sort, I take it.” She nodded. “And if they have a ring?”
“I’ve seen one of them killed with a sword through the heart.” Chaol had killed Cain that easily.
A small relief, but … “Beheading might work for the ones with collars.”
“And the people who used to own those bodies—they’re gone?”
Narrok’s pleading, relieved face flashed before her. “It would seem so.”
“I want you to capture one and bring it to the Keep.”
She started. “Absolutely not. And why?”
“Perhaps it will be able to tell me something useful.”
“Go capture it yourself,” she snapped. “Find me another favor to fulfill.”
“You’re the only one who has faced these things and lived.” There was nothing merciful in his gaze. “Capture one for me at your earliest convenience—and I’ll assist you with your cousin.”

To face one of the Valg, even a lesser Valg …

“Aedion comes first,” she said. “We rescue Aedion, and then I’ll risk my neck getting one of the demons for you.”
Gods help them all if Arobynn ever realized that he might control that demon with the amulet he had hidden away.
“Of course,” he said.
She knew it was foolish, but she couldn’t help the next question. “To what end?”
“This is my city,” he purred. “And I don’t particularly care for the direction in which it’s headed. It’s bad for my investments, and I’m sick of hearing the crows feasting day and night.”
Well, at least they agreed on something. “A businessman through and through, aren’t you?”
Arobynn continued to pin her with that lover’s gaze. “Nothing is without a price.” He brushed a kiss against her cheekbone, his lips soft and warm. She fought the shudder that trembled through her, and made herself lean into him as he brought his mouth against her ear and whispered, “Tell me what I must do to atone; tell me to crawl over hot coals, to sleep on a bed of nails, to carve up my flesh. Say the word, and it is done. But let me care for you as I once did, before … before that madness poisoned my heart. Punish me, torture me, wreck me, but let me help you. Do this small thing for me—and let me lay the world at your feet.”
Her throat went dry, and she pulled back far enough to look into that handsome, aristocratic face, the eyes shining with a grief and a predatory intent she could almost taste. If Arobynn knew about her history with Chaol, and had summoned the captain here … Had it been for information, to test her, or some grotesque way to assure himself of his dominance? “There is nothing—”
“No—not yet,” he said, stepping away. “Don’t say it yet. Sleep on it. Though, before you do—perhaps pay a visit to the southeastern section of the tunnels tonight. You might find the person you’re looking for.” She kept her face still—bored even—as she tucked away the information. Arobynn moved toward the crowded room, where his three assassins were alert and ready, and then looked back at her. “If you are allowed to change so greatly in two years, may I not be permitted to have changed as well?”
With that, he sauntered off between the tables. Tern, Harding, and Mullin fell into step behind him—and Tern glanced in her direction just once, to give her the exact same obscene gesture she’d give him earlier.
But Aelin stared only at the King of Assassins, at his elegant, powerful steps, at the warrior’s body disguised in nobleman’s clothes.
Liar. Trained, cunning liar.
There were too many eyes in the Vault for her to scrub at her cheek, where the phantom imprint of Arobynn’s lips still whispered, or at her ear, where his warm breath lingered.
Bastard. She glanced at the fighting pits across the hall, at the prostitutes clawing out a living, at the men who ran this place, who had profited for too long from so much blood and sorrow and pain. She could almost see Sam there—almost picture him fighting, young and strong and glorious.
There were many, many debts to be paid before she left Rifthold and took back her throne. Starting now. Fortunate that she was in a killing sort of mood.
It was only a matter of time before either Arobynn showed his hand or the King of Adarlan’s men found the trail she’d carefully laid from the docks. Someone would be coming of her—within moments, actually, if the shouts followed by utter silence behind the metal door atop the stairs were any indication. At least that much of her plan remained on course. She’d deal with Chaol later.
With a gloved hand, she plucked up one of the coppers Arobynn had left on the table. She stuck out her tongue at the brutish, unforgiving profile of the king stamped on one side, and then at the roaring wyvern gracing the other. The iron door at the top of the stairs groaned open, cool night air pouring in. Heads, Arobynn had betrayed her again. Tails, the king’s men.
With a half smile, she flipped the coin with her thumb.
The coin was still rotating when four men in black uniforms appeared atop the stone stairs, an assortment of vicious weapons strapped to their bodies. By the time the copper thudded on the table, the wyvern glinting in the dim light, Aelin Galathynius was ready for bloodshed.


*credits to: http://dorianxaelin.tumblr.com/post/118042806127/queen-of-shadows-preview

Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Why I Like Dystopian Worlds.

I am finally BACK!
After a lot of reading, chilling, and overall being a very unproductive couch potato, I have decided to finally come back to this lovely blog where all my thoughts jumble and create their own protective home. And where some people have decided to pop in and check out some of the things that I've written (which I'm incredibly grateful for, by the way).
But well...

Answering the question in the title of this post, I would like to first clarify that this post has nothing to do with anyone's questioning toward my taste of novels, but everything to do with me trying to justify to myself the reason I love reading dystopian.

If this were a school essay paper, I would've written something along the lines of wanting to read about the humans hopelessly trying to create a better world, but instead having to deal with the aftermaths of their actions trying to change the course of nature. And that the humans could never achieve anything with their own minds leading the way, and nothing humans ever do would be perfect, no matter how perfect the calculations and simulations allow them to hope. Only with the help of God would they ever be in capable hands.

And as much of that is true, it isn't exactly the first thing that comes to mind when I try to come up with reasons of why I am so thoroughly fascinated with reading about dystopian worlds. Below are the reasons that I do think of at a moment's notice:

1. Getting out of reality
Being transported into another world, going on exciting adventures, taking all the risks with the YOLO motto - it all seems wonderful, doesn't it? Sometimes we just need to take a break and hit the 'pause' button, and dive into a different world. Okay, maybe some of you are thinking, this could happen with any type of book, not just dystopian. And although that could be true, in the way that I see it, going into dystopian worlds is one of the two ways (another being the 'fantasy' genre) to actually temporarily forget reality and experience things you may never actually experience in real life. I have nothing against other genres, really, I read them too; it's just that in my way of looking at it: you wanna go, you gotta go all the way. That sounded a little freaky (?) Well that's just a way of saying that I seriously love going into books with spectacular world-building imageries, new concepts being introduced, etc. Instead of just getting a break, we also learn something new in the meantime. (I'm not sure if I'm putting this right; I'm still trying to get the hang of this whole writing thing - so bear with me.)


2. Be someone different
Well, this is almost like in the same package as my first reason, but I'd like to emphasize this. I think maybe some of you could relate to me. Sometimes, I feel that life is very boring. And most times that would not happen if we picked the right things to do and involve ourselves in. But from where I come from, my culture prohibits me from exploring much of the world around me. It limits freedom, independence, and living my teenage life to its full potential. It's not that there's anything wrong, or that I'm going to go on strike or anything. But I would just like to point out a little, that my life experiences so far are mostly limited to school grounds, cars, malls, and my house. Again, not that my parents limit my freedom or anything, it's just the way of life here. You don't really walk outside and interact much with the world. Want to go somewhere? Ring the driver and he'll take you there with a car. In a mood for some shopping? No street boutiques or stores, because everything is available at the mall! Which is why, sometimes, I envy the life of the people in developed countries, where they can enjoy the nature of their countries. Sure, here we mingle in beautiful buildings and skyscrapers, but not a lot of opportunity to explore the outdoors - with valid reasons, of course: polluted air, fear of kidnappers/robbers, etc. Sometimes I just need to read these books in order to know some of the things real life people do (the irony, no?).

Again, I will remind you that my writing could be a little senseless to some. And that is completely understandable; I'm not even sure if I understood myself up there. But some of those are just meaningless rants, ignore me if you want to. And do NOT mistake those rants to have come from a senseless babbling, poor little thing looking for attention. I am not.

Okay then, I'll kind of stop here, since I, maybe, could've just kind of went off topic over there. And I'll just let you guys think for yourselves why you like reading the genres that you read. Maybe you'll realise something that you've been feeling for a while but have just understood. :)

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Flashlight by Jessie J (Soundtrack of Pitch Perfect 2)

Hmm... The current hottest song? I'm gonna flash it in your eyes! (horrible pun, I know, sorry)
Enjoy the song, sing along, do whatever :)


Lyrics:

When tomorrow comes
I'll be on my own
Feeling frightened of
The things that I don't know
When tomorrow comes
Tomorrow comes
Tomorrow comes

And though the road is long
I look up to the sky
And In the dark I found, I stop and I won’t fly
And I sing along, I sing along, then I sing along

I got all I need when I got you and I
I look around me, and see sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight
You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Can’t stop my heart when you shinin’ in my eyes
I can’t lie, it’s a sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight
You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Cause you're my flash light
You're my flash light, you're my flash light

I see the shadows long beneath the mountain top
I'm not the afraid when the rain won't stop
Cause you light the way
You light the way, you light the way

I got all I need when I got you and I
I look around me, and see sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight
You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Can’t stop my heart when you shinin’ in my eyes
Can’t lie, it’s a sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight

You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Cause you're my flash light
You're my flash light light light, you're my flash light light light You're my flash light light light light light ohhh
I got all I need when I got you and I
I look around me, and see sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight
You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Can’t stop my heart when you shinin’ in my eyes (shinin in my eyes)
Can’t lie, it’s a sweet life
I'm stuck in the dark but you're my flashlight (you're my flashlight)
You're gettin’ me, gettin’ me through the night
Cause you're my flash light
You're my flash light, you're my flash light
You're my flash light light light
You're my flash light light light
You're my flashlight

Source: http://www.directlyrics.com/jessie-j-flashlight-lyrics.html

Want another version? Here's one done by Hailey Steinfeld!


Another version? The a cappella version by the Barden Bellas!


Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Lauren Kate News: New Book?

Hey there guys! So it seems like I received the news a little late. I checked Lauren Kate's blog yesterday, and guess what I found - she's releasing a new book! Yay!

Now. What is this book that's got some people so incredibly excited? You may have guessed it (or know it for a fact), it's a book from a Fallen character, wait for it...

Cameron Briel! Cam! The Bad Boy!

I'm not sure how you are responding to this, but personally, I would've been more excited (and fangirly) if it were from Daniel Grigori's POV. But alas, some dreams don't come true.
However, let's still appreciate the fact that at least a new Fallen-related book is being released. Or you might be excited already at the sound of Cam's name? Well, that's for you to decide, but here's the official Lauren Kate announcement!

Cam Confirmed: It’s happening…

I never stopped thinking about him.
I loved Cameron Briel from the moment Luce discovered him at Sword and Cross. I never doubted that Luce should end up with Daniel—in part because that left Cam for me, and for the many readers who fell for him as well.
Over the past few years, you have asked me: What happened to Cam?
A part of me must have always known I would return to my most enigmatic character. I think you knew it, too. This story is for you.
Unforgiven begins the moment Cam disappears from Rapture. It takes us deep into his heart. It reacquaints him with a love he has long been trying to forget.
Unforgiven is a rock and roll story, a second-chances story, the villain’s side of the story (the villain’s always the hero of another tale)—and above all, a testament to the powerful experiment of love.
I’m nearly finished writing it and can’t wait to share it with you. Stay tuned for details on the cover and release date.
In honor of this exciting announcement, check out this limited time buy-one-get-one steal at my store. And don’t forget to sign up to be a superfan!
Love,
Lauren
If you wanna check out the actual thing, here's the link: http://laurenkatebooks.net/?p=2832
Oh and, we'll just have to wait for the cover reveal of Unforgiven now!

I'll leave you with a beautiful Fallen quote:

"I'll always choose you." Yes that was the word. "Every single lifetime, I'll choose you. Just as you have always chosen me. Forever."


See ya in the next post!

Sunday, May 17, 2015

Book Talk: Rapture

I posted a book review on Goodreads, Yay! Either go check it out there if you prefer Goodreads, or continue reading below! I used gifs this time, yay me! (London Tipton, anyone?)

This book has got to have one of the most bittersweet endings I have ever read. And that makes my emotions contradict each other. (Lauren Kate, why u do this?!?!) I don't even know if I want to cry or to smile. I have a hundred reasons to say that the ending ruined Luce and Daniel's lives, but also a hundred more to say that it's the perfect conclusion to this beautiful series. I couldn't think of a better way to say goodbye to my one of my favourite fictional couples.



Now, time for some actual book talk.
“Mortality is the most romantic story ever told. Just one chance to do everything you should. Then, magically, you move on.”
When both of them chose to live mortal lives together, I was just like. WHAT.

Losing immortality and all those angel superpowers are only part of the reason why I was so against them choosing to live mortal lives. What about their memories together? All those times they've found each other again and again in each lifetime - gone. They're all the same old tale of them falling for each other, but they're also individual pieces of their love for each other. Their love never would've grown this strong without those memories. Remember how easily Luce was swayed when another guy came into view? Daniel never was. Because he had the memories. He remembered every single thing they did together. Every precious moment. But Luce? She only felt the attraction that was the 'curse' that was brought unto them when Daniel chose her instead of a side. It wasn't love. Love isn't just a feeling or emotion, but the desire to protect that person you love even when it means giving up your own life. And that isn't something you would feel for a stranger.

Luce got all of their memories back, she found out more about their love, and it was finally complete. But they chose to give it all up.



Although... considering the circumstances and the limited options that they have, I would have to agree that they made the best choice that was possible. At least they still get a chance to start anew and relive their love. The catch though: ONE life. ONE chance to find each other. If they don't meet, then that's that. They gave up everything for nothing. But oh Daniel...
"I'm afraid," she whispered.
"What did I tell you?"
She sifted through the million exchanges she and Daniel had ever shared-the good, the sad, the ugly. One rose above the clouds of her mind.
She was shaking. "That you will always find me."
"Yes. Always. No matter what."
"Daniel-"
"I can't wait to make you the love of my mortal life."
"But you won't know me. You won't remember. Everything will be different."
He wiped away her tear with his thumb. "And you think that will stop me?"
She closed her eyes. "I love you too much to say goodbye."
"It isn't goodbye." He gave her one last angelic kiss and embraced her so tightly she could hear his steady heartbeat, overlapping her own. "It's until we meet again.”
And then, there's the final sentence of the series. Final. Sentence. (in case you didn't get that the first time) It's so beautiful, and so sad.
“Luce and Daniel fell in love for the first- and the last- time”


If this isn't enough torture for you, I'll tell you that I legit cried for 2 days straight. With an additional of random teary moments whenever I remember Luce and Daniel out of the blue.

Lauren Kate, you destroy me.

But, exciting news is, the Fallen movie is going to come out very soon, and I can't wait to experience Fallen all over again! And I won't regret crying over it again and again. It's too beautiful.

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

The Selection Movie

What? That's right, you're not dreaming, Warner Bros has officially purchased the film rights to Kiera Cass' The Selection, and I'll leave the official article speak for itself:

Warner Bros has won film rights to Kiera Cass’ global bestseller The Selection, the first of a five-novel series, and has set Black List scribe Katie Lovejoy to adapt it. DiNovi Pictures’ Denise DiNovi and Alison Greenspan are producing with Pouya Shahbazian. Lovejoy’s script The Arsonist Love Story made the 2010 Black List.

The book has sold 3.5 million copies worldwide, and two other volumes have been published. HarperTeen just made a two-book deal to continue the series, which is published in 32 languages. Described as The Hunger Games without the bloodshed, it follows 35 underprivileged girls who are chosen to compete to live in a life of luxury. The protagonist, America Singer, is sweet on a young man from her district, but when she’s exposed to the opulence of a royal life, she’s conflicted, even though a rebel uprising threatens the pampered.
As for Lovejoy, she recently developed a pilot for NBC, with Universal Television, Eva Longoria, and John Glenn producing. She previously wrote pilots for NBC, Bravo, and ABC and worked on the staff of the NBC series Dracula. She is repped by CAA and Myman Greenspan. Cass is repped by Red Tree Literary and New Leaf Literary & Media. Andy Fischel and Julia Spiro are overseeing for Warner Bros.
(from: <http://deadline.com/2015/04/the-selection-keira-cass-katie-lovejoy-warner-bros-1201413855/>)
Now do you believe me?

The Selection Movie is finally happening! And I do hope that this one won't get cancelled like the last one. Yeah, the last one was a failed TV series pilot. Wait, make that two failed pilots. I think it's still available on Hulu or something, not sure, but you could try checking it out on YouTube too, I think. Although disappointed, I was pretty glad that the TV series didn't happen, because it was: HORRIBLE. 
Who would make Maxon sound like a rapist?! The Maxon in the pilot was everything the Maxon we know (and love) wasn't. 
Then the second pilot, with a different actress playing as America this time, didn't even have red hair. Like, what? The red hair was America. So no ginger, no America. 

Oh and, let me give you the failed pilot (clips of it, anyway):


There's also a leaked Selection script online, but it's too inappropriate to put up here, so, if you think you're mature enough to handle it, go ahead and search it up (?)

And that's that. Can't wait for the movie to finally come out!

The Heir Sneak Peek Review

I can't even. *takes a deep breath* Oh. My. Selection.

The Heir was released yesterday! EEEK! (I was literally shrieking and dancing around, go ask my sister) In the States. I'm not sure if it's already available where I live, but I'll go check out the bookstores just to be sure. And if you guys are as excited as I am, you probably have read the sneak peeks from www.unlocktheheir.com
You might know about it already, but if you didn't, be sure to go check it out, and get to read the first twelve chapters!

I have literally been waiting for this book to come out for a year now, right after I finished The One, or rather after they announced a fourth book was going to be released. And the fact that it is now here... YASSS!
I missed America and Maxon so, so, so, so, very much.
And when Eadlyn described how her dad was rubbing his temples and taking off his reading glasses, I was just like: Maxon... Time has gotten to him, poor Maxon.
And I was seriously waiting on my heels for her to mention something about her mom. America then came in, and I was just: This is like home.
I can't even describe how I feel about this book.
It's just like, I want to know how the story goes on, about America and Maxon, but I don't want to move on from them. Now the book's from Eadlyn's perspective, and I miss America's fiery words so much. Ugh.... and America and Maxon? They're just, I can't even. They're beautiful. And so in love. Especially when Eadlyn noticed how it seemed like in public, America's standing by Maxon and supporting him, but when they're not king and queen, just husband and wife, Maxon followed America around. And that is so cute. Seriously. I need more Maxerica. Is that even their ship name? Their names are too beautiful to be merged.

Now to Eadlyn. She's okay, and like, I get where she's coming from. Trained since the beginning to become the future queen and all that, I guess it should be in her right to be bratty, but her annoyingness just isn't as cute as America's was. Or am I biased right now? I don't even know. (OH and I forgot to mention about May! She's all grown up now by the way, and supermodel gorgeous, and a playgirl too.)

Back to the royal princess, if you guys have read the first twelve chapters, you'll see how her feelings change a lot. A little bipolar? I don't know how a person's perspective of someone could change so drastically in just a few minutes: completely hating them the before a "date", then completely swooning over them few seconds after. That is sick.
I don't know about you guys, but liking Eadlyn, for me, is gonna take a while.

Now I won't stop you guys from doing whatever research that you need to do on this new book, but seriously, go read it. Even if I didn't like the main character, I just had to know how America and Maxon are doing. Oh and, Eadlyn knows so little about her parents' love story, I had to fight off the urge to brag about what I know. I'm officially obsessed. But I'm not alone! So GO. NOW. Do whatever you can to support The Selection Series!

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

A new booktalk?

Hello fellow Internetians! Long time no (virtual) see!
I have been busy with plenty of schoolwork, and stuff. But this is not exactly a legit post, so. This is a kind-of announcement for a possible booktalk post next week, about... drum roll please... The Fifth Wave! And if you know about it, then you must know that I am severely outdated, because it was published in 2013, and I am reading it two whole years later. And I am embarrassed. Not embarrassed enough to post it online! (sorry.) So, I found out about this book while surfing (the net) and the movie news came out. And I was like, Aliens? Cool! Chloe Grace Moretz? Even cooler! 
That was how I came into the world Cassie, and Ben, and Evan.
News is, I am still halfway through the book. So, you would have to wait until I'm finished first, then I could post something about it. And all that's in my mind right now is, Is Evan gonna die? He's not gonna die, right? Oh please don't let him die! I was also incredibly tempted to search up spoilers. But no. I'm not going to that. I'm a very very good girl, and I do not spoil things for myself, (takes a deep breath), okay.
So if you're reading this, and you think The Fifth Wave sounds pretty cool from the little snippets of thought I put up there, go ahead and read it! Then, you could fangirl with me later on, on my next post. Or, wait for the review to come out, read the non-spoiler section, then go ahead and make your choice.
It's completely up to you.
Well, that's enough for now, I guess. Goodbye. See you. In the next post. :)

Monday, January 19, 2015

Beastly: Book Review


Beastly is a book written by author Alex Flinn. The story centres around a teenage boy in high school who had a perfect life: perfect looks, money, and popular. One thing he lacked was humility. He had everything and he knew it; but instead of using it for good, he made sure others’ lives were a living hell. And that was what led into his downfall. He humiliated a girl in his class who turned out to be a witch; and she cursed him, taking away his perfect looks - his perfect life. His entire life was stolen away with one curse. But like every other curse, this comes with a cure. If he could find a girl that would love him even with his deformity, the curse would be broken. But also like any other curse, this was near impossible. The first thing he thought of was his girlfriend. She would break the curse, right? Sadly, what they had together was nothing close to true love. Through this curse, golden boy Kyle realises just how none of his friends were real friends. Picking up the pieces of what he had left, he starts to realise other parts of life he had never noticed before in his “perfect” state. With a new girl in his life, one whom he would never pay attention to if he were Kyle Kingsbury, he finds just how much love could do - even more than breaking a curse.

This story is beautifully written. Starting out with an online conversation between fairytale characters put in the real world, this introduces the story taking place in an reality where magic secretly exists. Kyle Kingsbury was a figure everyone wanted to be, but secretly hates because of his personality. All he sees was everyone’s outer appearances. Because of his own “beauty”, he didn’t give anyone “ugly” a chance to get to know him, or vice versa. He was a character who thinks the world revolves around him, and he shouldn’t have to get to know anybody, everybody needs to know him. This is where the magic comes in. With the beauty he uses to put others down taken away, he could no longer face his previous life. He gets away from everything he’s ever known, to isolate himself until he breaks the curse, or time gets to him. With nearly no hope at all to break the curse, he starts realising beauty in other things he never would’ve paid attention to if the curse didn’t happen. His “beastliness” changed him from a cocky, self-centred person, into a rose-loving, smart, and considerate man. A reality where almost everyone judges everything by its cover, this story shows how there is beauty to everything, but only some people try to get to know it enough to see it. If people only catch a glance of something’s outer appearance, but it fails to impress them and they move on without “digging in deeper”, they would forever miss the goodness in it. And if people are too self-centred to even notice the people and things around them, they would never learn more than what they already know. Everything doesn’t revolve around you, it goes on even when you’re gone. But take how others’ feel about what you do into consideration, so that even when you’re not here anymore, the legacy you leave behind may succeed into people’s hearts.

*Yes, another repeated post, but no. This is a review, not a book talk. And yes, there's a difference. :)
But as a gift.. here's a wallpaper!


Waterfall: Book Review



Reading Waterfall is like going on an emotional roller coaster. You never know what Lauren Kate’s going to throw your way. The sequel to Teardrop, second and the final instalment in the Teardrop duology brings back the story of Eureka’s journey to Atlantis, and countless obstacles that Eureka and her family would encounter in order to prevent the rise of the sunken city. The overall plot of this story is amazing; Eureka having to save the world from the disaster her own tears had brought, and the existence of a forbidden love between Eureka and Ander. Ander, a Seedbearer, whose life purpose is solely to kill Tearline girls such as Eureka, makes the mistake of falling in love with her instead. And like almost every other romance tale, his love for her was reciprocated, with an almost-love at first sight. The mutual attraction between them develops into love in the first book, although at a very short span of time, a few encounters and a moment of truth. In Waterfall, this is seen to develop, although it lacked the chemistry that was implied in the first book. The love triangle that existed between Ander, Eureka, and her long-time best friend who was now lost to the Atlantean King, Brooks, was further expanded, but never really resolved even until the end - which was one of the lesser qualities of the book. Fallen, Lauren Kate’s previous best-selling series, had its main characters’ development progress throughout the entire five-book series, and that built a strong bond in the readers’ minds. Ander and Eureka needed more time to let their relationship build up, because their love seemed to be quite outrageous at times. Ander knew every single detail about Eureka’s life, so his love for her made sense; but when Eureka falls for him too without knowing more than two facts about him, that made the story a little off. 

Throughout the story, it could be seen that everything was progressing at an abrupt pace: new characters introduced, quite a few plot twists that included one which a problem was discovered and then resolved itself. Also, I noticed a plot hole that included a warning from Eureka’s late mother in Teardrop which sounded like it was something serious, but never relived itself in Waterfall.
What I could conclude from this is that this second book seemed like it wasn’t supposed to end here; it seemed like it was supposed to end after a third book or further. The last chapters of the book seemed like Lauren Kate was trying to wrap everything up when the publishing company called for the final draft. 


When I first read Teardrop, I was really excited for the story to progress into something more, something that was supposed to last long. And although more mysteries were unveiled, plot twists were made, all of them were crammed into one 300-paged book that is mind-boggling to the readers. I am sad to say how disappointed I am with Waterfall. After all, I am a big fan of the Fallen series and thought it was an awesome story with one of the most bittersweet conclusions ever. With Waterfall, it was just bitter. The ending could’ve been more meaningful, because although it was clear it ended, it just had another sense that it’s another cliffhanger, that made no sense at all. But even with all the problems I could list about this book, the original idea of this story is undoubtedly compelling. The new ideas the author had added to the story revived the ancient Atlantis myth and changed old perspectives. It had a great starting point, but ended in a way that was unsatisfying. So all I could say is: Lauren Kate, it could’ve been better. 

*Hey guys... Okay. I know, I've posted one book talk about Waterfall before, but here's another one. And it's a review! So, this is a school assignment, and I thought: why let this go to waste? And here's it is guys, hope you know what to expect from Lauren Kate's Waterfall!
Also, a Teardrop wallpaper!