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

Libba Bray seems to be a hit (Going Bovine) or miss (Beauty Queens) for me, but I really like the sound of her upcoming book ( I wonder if this is really the final cover – the book is not out till November!)

A supernatural series set in Manhattan during the 1920s that follows a teen heroine reminiscent of two of the era’s most famous literary women—Zelda Fitzgerald and Dorothy Parker. The story will be a wild new ride full of dames and dapper dons, jazz babies and Prohibition-defying parties, conspiracy and prophecy—and all manner of things that go bump in the neon-drenched night.


Blackbird comes out in April from Angry Robot and I just love the cover and the sound of it so much! I really want to read this.

Miriam Black knows when you will die. She’s foreseen hundreds of car crashes, heart attacks, strokes, and suicides.

But when Miriam hitches a ride with Louis Darling and shakes his hand, she sees that in thirty days Louis will be murdered while he calls her name. Louis will die because he met her, and she will be the next victim.

No matter what she does she can’t save Louis. But if she wants to stay alive, she’ll have to try.

I read my first Graham Joyce novel last year (The Silent Land) and truly enjoyed it. I think his next offering sounds pretty cool too.

It is Christmas afternoon and Peter Martin gets an unexpected phonecall from his parents, asking him to come round. It pulls him away from his wife and children and into a bewildering mystery.

He arrives at his parents house and discovers that they have a visitor. His sister Tara. Not so unusual you might think, this is Christmas after all, a time when families get together. But twenty years ago Tara took a walk into the woods and never came back and as the years have gone by with no word from her the family have, unspoken, assumed that she was dead. Now she’s back, tired, dirty, dishevelled, but happy and full of stories about twenty years spent travelling the world, an epic odyssey taken on a whim.

But her stories don’t quite hang together and once she has cleaned herself up and got some sleep it becomes apparent that the intervening years have been very kind to Tara. She really does look no different from the young women who walked out the door twenty years ago. Peter’s parents are just delighted to have their little girl back, but Peter and his best friend Richie, Tara’s one time boyfriend, are not so sure. Tara seems happy enough but there is something about her. A haunted, otherworldly quality. Some would say it’s as if she’s off with the fairies. And as the months go by Peter begins to suspect that the woods around their homes are not finished with Tara and his family…

I came across On the Day I Died on NetGalley and requested it as soon as I read the blurb: ghost stories told by the ghost, set in a cemetery and with each story taking place in a different time period in Chicago. Sounds great, right?

The phenomenally versatile, award-winning author, Candace Fleming, gives teen and older tween readers ten ghost stories sure to send chills up their spines. Set in White Cemetery, an actual graveyard outside Chicago, each story takes place during a different time period from the 1860’s to the present, and ends with the narrator’s death. Some teens die heroically, others ironically, but all due to supernatural causes. Readers will meet walking corpses and witness demonic posession, all against the backdrop of Chicago’s rich history—the Great Depression, the World’s Fair, Al Capone and his fellow gangsters.

I bumped into Echo on GoodReads and I think the cover LOOKS AWESOME.

Energy-hungry mages travel toward Vallara from every corner of the continent. Fueled by the two suns, each mage holds the power of the elements: air, earth, fire, metal, water, and ether. They harness the elements to draw energy from the most readily available resource. Humans.

Ashara can’t shake her guilt over her brother’s death at the hands of a mage. So when her other sibling wakes up bleeding after violent nightmares—nightmares about Ashara’s fiery death—she is determined to protect her. She seeks help from Loken, a young man who is duty bound to protect their homeland.

Loken is consumed with tracking the the mages moving steadily toward them across the continent. He and Ashara bond over a common goal: to stop the mages from destroying their home.

But Loken suspects the future of their homeland may depend on Ashara’s death.

Holy moses, check out this tagline: “What if being a librarian was the most dangerous job in the world? ”

SOLD!

Worldsoul, a great city that forms a nexus point between Earth and the many dimensions known as the Liminality, is a place where old stories gather, where forgotten legends come to fade and die—or to flourish and rise again. Until recently, Worldsoul has been governed by the Skein, but they have gone missing and no one knows why. The city is also being attacked with lethal flower-bombs from unknown enemy. Mercy Fane and her fellow Librarians are doing their best to maintain the Library, but…things…keep breaking out of ancient texts and legends and escaping into the city. Mercy must pursue one such dangerous creature. She turns to Shadow, an alchemist, for aid, but Shadow—inadvertently possessed by an ifrit—has a perilous quest of her own to undertake.

On Thea’s Radar

SO MANY PRETTIES. I want many of the books on Ana’s list. Ahem. Ok down to business!

First up, a YA novel that is positioned as The X-Files meets 24. I am intrigued. Even though the cover has the decidedly Heroes-esque tagline, “Stop the countdown. Save the world.” I much prefer the UK cover to the US one…

24 meets the X Files in the biggest teen blockbuster of the summer…

STOP THE COUNTDOWN. SAVE THE WORLD…

Leaving the beach, seventeen-year-old Janelle Tenner is hit head on by a pickup truck.

And killed.

Then Ben Michaels, resident stoner, is leaning over her. And even though it isn’t possible, she knows Ben somehow brought her back to life…

Meanwhile, Janelle’s father, a special agent for the FBI, starts working on a case that seems strangely connected to Ben. Digging in his files, Janelle finds a mysterious device – one that seems to be counting down to something that will happen in 23 days and 10 hours time.

That something? It might just be the end of the world. And if Janelle wants to stop it, she’s going to need to uncover Ben’s secrets – and keep from falling in love with him in the process…

This book looks SO ridiculously cheesey it’s awesome, I really, really want it. Look at that glorious cover! THE TAG LINE! (Also, Dark Tower III’s Charlie the Choo-Choo/Blaine, anyone?!)

Imagine there was a supernatural chiller that Hammer Films never made. A grand epic produced at the studio’s peak, which played like a cross between the Dracula and Frankenstein films and Dr Terror’s House Of Horrors…

Four passengers meet on a train journey through Eastern Europe during the First World War, and face a mystery that must be solved if they are to survive. As the ‘Arkangel’ races through the war-torn countryside, they must find out:

What is in the casket that everyone is so afraid of?

What is the tragic secret of the veiled Red Countess who travels with them?

Why is their fellow passenger the army brigadier so feared by his own men?

And what exactly is the devilish secret of the Arkangel itself?

Bizarre creatures, satanic rites, terrified passengers and the romance of travelling by train, all in a classically styled horror novel.

THE TWELVE HAS A COVER. THE TWELVE HAS A COVER. AAAAAAAAAAAAAA!

The epic story of THE PASSAGE continues

At the end of THE PASSAGE, the great viral plague had left a small group of survivors clinging to life amidst a world transformed into a nightmare. In the second volume of this epic trilogy, this same group of survivors, led by the mysterious, charismatic Amy, go on the attack, leading an insurrection against the virals: the first offensives of the Second Viral War.

To do this, they must infiltrate a dozen hives, each presided over by one of the original Twelve. Their secret weapon: Alicia, transformed at the end of book one into a half human, half viral – but whose side, in the end, is she really on?

I love the cover of this book, and the premise (steampunkish/Victorian era novel, in which people take refuge in a reinforced coal mine to avoid the apocalyptic effects of a comet on a collision course with the earth) sounds slightly familiar but completely intriguing. YES.

Wren MacAvoy works as a coal miner for a domed city that was constructed in the mid-nineteenth century to protect the royal blood line of England when astronomers spotted a comet on a collision course with Earth. Humanity would be saved by the most groundbreaking technology of the time. But after nearly 200 years of life beneath the dome, society has become complacent, and the coal is running out. Plus, there are those who wonder, is there life outside the dome, or is the world still consumed by fire? When one of Wren’s friends escapes the confines of the dome, he is burned alive and put on display as a warning to those seeking to disrupt the dome’s way of life. But Alex’s final words are haunting. “The sky is blue.”

What happens next is a whirlwind of adventure, romance, conspiracy and the struggle to stay alive in a world where nothing is as it seems. Wren unwittingly becomes a catalyst for a revolution that destroys the dome, and the only way to survive might be to embrace what the entire society has feared their entire existence.

I love that this new Urban Fantasy series has a night shift nurse as its protagonist – FINALLY! A competent, educated, hard-working UF heroine! Love the title, and even though I’m a bit burned out with traditional UF, but I think I’ll give this one a try.

Welcome to the secret wing of County Hospital—where vampires get transfusions, werewolves have silver allergies, and one nurse is in way over her head…

Nursing school prepared Edie Spence for a lot of things. Burn victims? No problem. Severed limbs? Piece of cake. Vampires? No way in hell. But as the newest nurse on Y4, the secret ward hidden in the bowels of County Hospital, Edie has her hands full with every paranormal patient you can imagine—from vamps and were-things to zombies and beyond…

NIGHTSHIFTED

Edie’s just trying to learn the ropes so she can get through her latest shift unscathed. But when a vampire servant turns to dust under her watch, all hell breaks loose. Now she’s haunted by the man’s dying words—Save Anna—and before she knows it, she’s on a mission to rescue some poor girl from the undead. Which involves crashing a vampire den, falling for a zombie, and fighting for her soul.

Grey’s Anatomy was never like this…

Hate this cover, but the synopsis sounds intriguing. The horror tropes of amnesiac protagonists in a “perfect” town always wins me over.

What if you forgot your identity and had to rely on other people to tell you who you were?

And what if to discover your true self, you first had to unravel a mystery so big and terrifying you were not sure you’d survive solving it?

When Marshall and Elyse wake up in each other’s arms with zero memory of how they got there or who they are, it’s the start of a long journey through their separate pasts and shared future.

Terrified by their amnesia, the two make a pact to work together to find the answers that could jog their missing memories. As they piece together clues, they discover they’re in the idyllic mountain resort town of Summer Falls, where everyone seems mysteriously happy, but as Marshall and Elyse quickly learn, darkness lurks beneath the town’s perfect facade. Not only is the town haunted by sinister ghosts, but none of its living inhabitants retain bad memories of anything—not the death of Marshall’s mom, not the hidden shame in Elyse’s family, not even the day-to-day anguish of high school.

Lonely in this world of happy zombies, Marsh and Elyse fall into an intense relationship…but the secrets they uncover could be the death of this growing love—and the death of everyone, and everything, they love in Summer Falls.

New Garth Nix book about an intergalactic empire space prince on a secret mission. SOLD.

You’d think being a privileged Prince in a vast intergalactic Empire would be about as good as it gets. But it isn’t as great as it sounds. For one thing, Princes are always in danger. Their greatest threat? Other Princes. Khemri discovers that the moment he is proclaimed a Prince.

He also discovers mysteries within the hidden workings of the Empire. Dispatched on a secret mission, Khemri comes across the ruins of a space battle. In the midst of it all he meets a young woman named Raine, who will challenge his view of the Empire, of Princes, and of himself.

This next one also sounds good, and is also along the apocalyptic/dystopian theme:

IT’S WORLD WAR III.
THE ENEMY IS WINNING.
WHAT IF THE GOVERNMENT’S SECRET WEAPON IS YOU?

More than anything, Tom Raines wants to be important, though his shadowy life is anything but that. For years, Tom’s drifted from casino to casino with his unlucky gambler of a dad, gaming for their survival. Keeping a roof over their heads depends on a careful combination of skill, luck, con artistry, and staying invisible.

Then one day, Tom stops being invisible. Someone’s been watching his virtual-reality prowess, and he’s offered the incredible—a place at the Pentagonal Spire, an elite military academy. There, Tom’s instincts for combat will be put to the test, and if he passes, he’ll become a member of the Intrasolar Forces, helping to lead his country to victory in World War Three. Finally, he’ll be someone important: a superhuman war machine with the tech skills that every virtual-reality warrior dreams of. Life at the Spire holds everything that Tom’s always wanted—friends, the possibility of a girlfriend, and a life where his every action matters—but what will it cost him?

Gripping and provocative, S. J. Kincaid’s futuristic thrill ride of a debut crackles with memorable characters, tremendous wit, and a vision of the future that asks startling, timely questions about the melding of humanity and technology

And what is this, ANOTHER post-apocalyptic novel!?! I can hear the groans already! Yes, yes I know, but I love these so there. (The cover looks like a bad ABC Family poster, which makes me cringe a little bit, too…)

WHAT IS OLDEST WILL BE NEW, WHAT IS LOST SHALL BE FOUND.

The ozone is ravaged, ocean levels have risen, and the sun is a daily enemy. But global climate change is not something new in the Earth’s history.

No one will know this better than less-than-ordinary Owen Parker, who is about to discover that he is the descendant of a highly advanced ancient race—a race that took their technology too far and almost destroyed the Earth in the process.

Now it is Owen’s turn to make right in his world what went wrong thousands of years ago. If Owen can unlock the lost code in his very genes, he may rediscover the forgotten knowledge of his ancestry…and that less-than-ordinary can evolve into extraordinary.

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

11 Comments

  • Candice
    February 4, 2012 at 8:23 am

    The cover looks like a bad ABC Family poster — LOL!! I agree completely.

  • Ana
    February 4, 2012 at 8:51 am

    oooooooo A Confusion of Princes sounds really good, Thea!JOINT!

    *highfive*

  • Katie
    February 4, 2012 at 9:37 am

    New Libba Bray! Yay! Her Gemma Doyle trilogy is still my fav; her writing has changed so much since then! Not for better or worse – just very different. I like the cover of The Diviners!

  • Karen
    February 4, 2012 at 11:07 am

    Wow, so many of these sound amazing! Love the radar posts.

  • Lauren
    February 4, 2012 at 11:53 am

    So many new books to add to my TBR Pile!!! New Garth Nix about a space prince??? Hell yes. World Soul sounds like a real winner too. Libba Bray’s new book sounds really interesting. I haven’t liked anything since her Gemma Doyle series, buuuut this looks promising.

    So many books to read . . . What a beautiful thing. :mrgreen:

  • JL
    February 4, 2012 at 11:55 am

    So many of these titles look great. I’m especially looking forward to Nightshifted and Worldsoul, especially after that awesome tag line.

  • Deirdre
    February 4, 2012 at 2:37 pm

    Thea and Ana,

    Thanks to you, I now have some new books to look forward to this Spring/Summer–Some Kind of Fairy Tale and Blackbirds in particular look interesting. I may even look into Ashes of Twilight even though I don’t generally care for steampunk (the only steampunkish books I’ve liked have been MK Hobson’s).

    As for what’s on my radar…I just recieved my copy of Jacqueline Woodson’s Beneath a Meth Moon today, and am looking forward to it. A lot of her backlist looks interesting too.

    This week I’m also expecting to get Saladin Ahmed’s Throne of the Crescent Moon, Lisa McMann’s Dead to You, and the Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily m Danforth.

  • Mary
    February 4, 2012 at 3:34 pm

    Love seeing what is on your radar every week. So many great titles to explore. Can’t wait for The Twelve and Ashes of Twilight and Insignia are on my “To Read” list. You do a great job. Thanks!

  • Heidi
    February 4, 2012 at 3:44 pm

    I’ve found the Blackbirds cover absolutely stunning every time I’ve seen it. I have high hopes for The Diviners, and am hoping for some happy medium between Going Bovine and Gemma Doyle.

  • Nikki Egerton
    February 6, 2012 at 5:11 am

    OMFG The Twelve has a cover, I have chills!

    There are not enough words for how much I loved The Passage, I remember finishing it in 2010 and thinking 2012 was so very far away. I think I might book a few days off work when this comes out.

    Lots of book on this list sound great, the cover of Blackbirds is stunning and Some Kind of Fairy Tale sounds right up my street. Is it just me, or does Insignia remind anyone of Enders Game?

  • erinpoetchica
    February 6, 2012 at 12:25 pm

    That last cover looks super-cheesy, but I have been absolutely WAITING for someone to do an Atlantis-based YA!

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.