On the Radar

On the Smugglers’ Radar

On The Smugglers’ Radar” is a new feature for books that have caught our eye: books we have heard of via other bloggers, directly from publishers, and/or from our regular incursions into the Amazon jungle. Thus, the Smugglers’ Radar was born. Because we want far more books than we can possibly buy or review (what else is new?), we thought we would make the Smugglers’ Radar into a weekly feature – so YOU can tell us which books you have on your radar as well!

On Ana’s Radar:

AEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE, John Green’s new book has an offical cover!!! DFTBA everybody!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Another cover for another book I am REALLY forward to: Carolyn Crane’s last book in her The Disillusionists Trilogy…

In an attempt to put her unhappy past behind her, Justine Jones throws herself into nursing school and planning her wedding to Otto Sanchez, the man of her dreams. But something is off. Random details aren’tadding up…and is it her imagination, or are her friends and fiancé keeping secrets from her? And what’s with this strange sense of unease, and her odd new headaches?

Justine tries to stay upbeat as Midcity cowers under martial law, sleepwalking cannibals, and a mysterious rash of paranormal copycat violence, but her search for answers leads her into the most dangerous mindgame yet.

With the help of unlikely allies, including her paranoid dad and best frenemy Simon, Justine fights her ultimate foe…and unravels the most startling mystery of all.

Another book I am really looking forward to is Code Name: Verity. I’ve heard really good things about it and I am a sucker for stories about women during World War II:

Code Name Verity, which will publish in Spring 2012,is the story of two young women from totally different backgrounds who are thrown together during World War II.

Only in wartime could a stalwart lass from Manchester rub shoulders with a Scottish aristocrat, one an Air Transport Auxiliary pilot, the other a wireless operator with the WAAF. Yet whenever their paths cross, they complement each other perfectly and before long become devoted friends.

But then a vital mission goes wrong, and one of the friends has to bail out of a faulty plane over France. Almost immediately she is arrested by the Gestapo, and it seems her mission may be over before it’s even begun. The story begins in “Verity’s” own words, as she writes her account for her captors…

Elizabeth Wein is a member of the Ninety-Nines, the International Organization of Women Pilots. She was awarded the Scottish Aero Club’s Watson Cup for best student pilot in 2003 and it was her love of flying that partly inspired the idea for Code Name Verity.

I am reading Anna Dressed in Blood VERY SOON and I am already loving the cover of its sequel:

AAAAND yet another sequel by another author whose books I enjoy reading very much – plus I enjoy Historical fiction:

It’s a long way from Baltimore to Oklahoma Territory. But Zora Stewart will go any distance to put the tragic events of her sixteenth summer behind her. So this city girl heads to the tiny frontier town of West Glory to help her young widowed aunt keep her homestead going.

When another Baltimorean shows up in West Glory, Zora couldn’t be more surprised. Theo de la Croix made the long trip out west hoping to court Zora, whom he has long admired from afar.

But Zora has developed an attraction to a rather less respectable fellow: Emerson Birch, a rough-mannered young “sooner” whose fertile land is coveted.

As Zora begins to suspect that there may be more than luck behind Emerson’s good land, she discovers an extraordinary, astonishing power of her own: the ability to sense water under the parched earth. When her aunt hires her out as a “springsweet” to advise other settlers where to dig their wells, Zora feels the burden of holding the key to something so essential to survival in this unforgiving land.

Even more, she finds herself longing for love the way the prairie thirsts for water. Maybe, in the wildness of the territories, Zora can finally move beyond simply surviving and start living.

On Thea’s Radar:

I saw this one somewhere in the mess that is my google reader (and it sounds wonderful):

Midnight: a mist-haunted wood with a bad reputation. A sweet sixteen party, and 13 year old Nell is trying to keep her sister, spoilt birthday-girl Gwen, out of trouble. No chance. Trouble finds Gwen and drags her through the mist. Only Nell guesses who’s behind the kidnap – the boy she hoped was her friend, the cute but mysterious Evan River.

All those fairy stories Nell’s grandmother told her about girls being stolen by fairy folk are true. The Elven are beautiful as starlight, fierce as wolves, and cold as ice. And they want their world back. The fight has been raging for centuries. Nell’s grandmother should know, she’s a Watcher, the ones responsible for imprisoning the Elven in isolated iron-bound camps in Siberia. Only Evan, his fanatical older brother Fen, and a handful of Elven children are still free.

Fen, hellbent on revenge, keeps Gwen in their wolf-guarded stronghold deep in the mist. The price for her safe return? The release of all the Elven – but the Watchers will never agree. Only Nell can save Gwen.

Time is twisted through the mist: if Nell stops longer than a night and day, a hundred years will hit her as soon as she returns and she’ll be old and withered before she’s even lived. The clock is ticking.

I saw a sampler of this book at comic con last weekend and now desperately want it.

The first in a futuristic thriller series featuring a society where youth is coveted at an impossible price, and one girl’s ability to bring it all crumbling down.

I can’t remember if I’ve posted about these before, but I love that Simon and Schuster is repackaging Robin Wasserman’s Skinned trilogy with the following covers and titles (much preferred to the original cover art):

Which reminds me, I have been meaning to finish this series and have been woefully behind on accomplishing that…

Another not so great underwater cover, but the synopsis sounds good:

Calder White lives in the cold, clear waters of Lake Superior, the only brother in a family of murderous mermaids. To survive, Calder and his sisters prey on humans, killing them to absorb their energy. But this summer the underwater clan targets Jason Hancock out of pure revenge. They blame Hancock for their mother’s death and have been waiting a long time for him to return to his family’s homestead on the lake. Hancock has a fear of water, so to lure him in, Calder sets out to seduce Hancock’s daughter, Lily. Easy enough—especially as Calder has lots of practice using his irresistible good looks and charm on unsuspecting girls. Only this time Calder screws everything up: he falls for Lily—just as Lily starts to suspect that there’s more to the monsters-in-the-lake legends than she ever imagined. And just as his sisters are losing patience with him.

And then there’s this next title which I picked up from Lenore’s post-Frankfurt update (sounds fantastic!!):

A YA thriller that features a 17 year old girl who mysteriously comes back to life after dying in a car crash. She sets out to avenge her father’s murder, solve the case he was working on, and stop the rapidly approaching apocalypse. And unravel the mystery of the boy responsible for bringing her back to life.


And then another YA paranormal type title, but with a zombie twist so…I’m in:

The day I turned 16, my boyfriend-to-be died. I brought him back to life. Then things got a little weird…

Molly Bartolucci wants to blend in, date hottie Rick and keep her zombie-raising abilities on the down-low. Then the god Anubis chooses her to become a reaper—and she accidentally undoes the work of another reaper, Rath.

Within days, she’s shipped off to the Nekyia Academy, an elite school that trains the best necromancers in the world. And her personal reaping tutor? Rath. Who seems to hate her guts.

Rath will be watching closely to be sure she completes her first assignment-reaping Rick, the boy who should have died. The boy she still wants to be with.

To make matters worse, students at the academy start turning up catatonic, and accusations fly—against Molly. The only way out of this mess? To go through hell. Literally.

And finally, the sequel to Lost Voices (which I loved):

After parting ways with her troubled mermaid tribe, Luce just wants to live peacefully on her own. But her tranquility doesn’t last long: she receives news that the tribe is on the verge of collapse and desperately needs her leadership. Anais, their cruel queen, wants Luce dead. Dorian, the boy Luce broke mermaid law to save, is determined to make her pay for her part in the murder of his family. And while the mermaids cling to the idea that humans never suspect their existence, there are suddenly ominous signs to the contrary.

But when Luce and Dorian meet, they start to wonder if love can overpower the hatred they know they should feel for each other. Luce’s new friendship with an ancient renegade mermaid gives her hope that her kind might someday change their murderous ways. But how can Luce fulfill her rightful role as queen of the mermaids without sacrificing her forbidden romance with Dorian?

Full of miraculous reunions and heart-pounding rescues, this haunting second installment in the Lost Voices Trilogy finds Luce eager to attempt reconciliation with humans—as long as war doesn’t break out first.

And that’s it from us! What books do you have on YOUR radar?

10 Comments

  • Allison
    October 22, 2011 at 12:25 am

    I really love Mist’s cover! I also love the new Fault in Our Stars cover – very iconic.

    Also, I need to get Mind Games…I’ve been meaning to start Crane’s trilogy for ages now.

  • Chachic
    October 22, 2011 at 3:22 am

    I’m really excited for Code Name Verity too! I love Elizabeth Wein’s Aksum books so she’s an auto-buy author for me. Ana, you should probably read those books because of her characters, Telemakos, has been dubbed Gen-in-Africa by some Sounisians (I actually can’t remember if I started it or someone else did). 🙂

  • Ana
    October 22, 2011 at 4:32 am

    @ Allison: I LOVE Crane’s books, highly recommend it. Hope you enjoy them as well. : D

    @Chachic: Convinced. Just bought the first book in the series. :mrgreen:

  • Alexa @ Alexa Loves Books
    October 22, 2011 at 7:05 am

    These titles all look awesome! I’m gonna have to update my TBR list now 😉

  • Heather @ THe Flyleaf Review
    October 22, 2011 at 1:06 pm

    How cool are the covers on those three books by Robin Wasserman?! Hope it starts a trend, I’d love to see more book trilogies with covers like that! And The Fault in Our Stars has been on my radar for a while too, though I know practically nothing about it. Who cares, it’s JOHN GREEN:)

  • Estara
    October 22, 2011 at 2:04 pm

    As I keep repeating whenever I mention Code Name: Verity – BRING TISSUES!!! Elizabeth E. Wein is known for the trials and tribulations she puts her protagonists through (whether that is Medraut (Mordred), his half-sister Goewin (full daughter of King Artus) or Telemakos (Medraut’s son and half-Ethiopian aristocrat).

    This has no Arthurian or fantastic roots, but flying and World War II and female friendship. I firmly believe it would make an incredibly film. And I’m not just saying that because I got to read it early ^^ – to check for Nazi mistakes. 😯

    I feel fairly confident in predicting that you’ll enjoy it ^^.

  • Estara
    October 22, 2011 at 2:10 pm

    Hah, Chachic ^^ *waves* Good work!

    @Ana:

    Well, the chronological first part of the series is The Winter Prince and has no Telemakos in it. Only when the action shifts to Ethiopia do we meet him (in the second book) – and after that he’s the protagonist of the series.

  • S.S. White (Calico Reaction)
    October 22, 2011 at 7:46 pm

    The Wasserman covers ARE quite gorgeous. I do worry, however, that the new titles will confuse fans into thinking they’re brand-new books, you know?

    Still, gorgeous!

  • Tori
    October 23, 2011 at 7:44 am

    I echo Estara’s warning about reading Code Name Verity with a box of tissues. It’s fantastic, in the sort of way where you’ve been put through an emotional ringer.

    Yes, Telemakos isn’t in The Winter Prince but it introduces Medraut and Goewin, and Lleu is in it, and I <3 Lleu. You should start with it, even though Telemakos doesn't take over as the protagonist until the third book.

  • Nimue
    October 23, 2011 at 12:07 pm

    Love this post. So many great books.
    New additions to my 2012 wishlist. I’m quite interested in Code Name Verity, Springsweet and I just got the Skinned trilogy. I have no clue how I could have missed this series before.

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