“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:
Can we please take a moment to totally SWOON over Kaz Mahoney’s (almost final) cover for the first book in her new series?
The Lost Girl sounds like a Thea-book, but I might give it a go as it sounds so interesting….
Eva’s life is not her own. She is a creation, an abomination – an echo. Made by the Weavers as a copy of someone else, she is expected to replace a girl named Amarra, her ‘other’, if she ever died. Eva studies what Amarra does, what she eats, what it’s like to kiss her boyfriend, Ray. So when Amarra is killed in a car crash, Eva should be ready.
But fifteen years of studying never prepared her for this.
Now she must abandon everything she’s ever known – the guardians who raised her, the boy she’s forbidden to love – to move to India and convince the world that Amarra is still alive.
Antony John, author of the excellent Five Flavors of Dumb, has a new book coming out this year and I will most definitely be reading it…
One crazy road trip that’s a mix of rejection, redemption, and romance.
When sixteen-year-old Luke’s book, Hallelujah, becomes a national bestseller, his publishing house sends him on a cross-country book tour with his older brother, Matt, as chauffeur. But when irresponsible Matt offers to drive Luke’s ex–soul mate, Fran, across the country too, things get a little crazy. On the trip, Luke must loosen up, discover what it truly means to have faith, and do what it takes to get the girl he loves.
Told with Antony John’s signature wit and authenticity, and featuring smart, singular characters who jump off the page and into your heart, this story is a spiritual awakening and rockin’ road trip in one.
Not a lot available about the book below but I think it sounds great so far: “Thirteen-year-old orphan Caleb is a “time snatcher” who travels through history stealing valuable artifacts from the past for high-paying clients of his ruthless guardian.”
RIGHT?
I came across Ten om Goodreads. This IS a retelling of Ten Little Indians/And Then There Were None right? It has to be, it sounds exactly like it :
It was supposed to be the weekend of their lives – an exclusive house party on Henry Island. Best friends Meg and Minnie each have their reasons for being there (which involve T.J., the school’s most eligible bachelor) and look forward to three glorious days of boys, booze and fun-filled luxury.
But what they expect is definitely not what they get, and what starts out as fun turns dark and twisted after the discovery of a DVD with a sinister message: Vengeance is mine.
Suddenly people are dying, and with a storm raging, the teens are cut off the from the outside world. No electricity, no phones, no internet, and a ferry that isn’t scheduled to return for two days. As the deaths become more violent and the teens turn on each other, can Meg find the killer before more people die? Or is the killer closer to her than she could ever imagine?
AAAAAAND another time travel book, yay!
The first time his father disappeared, Tucker Feye had just turned thirteen. The Reverend Feye simply climbed on the roof to fix a shingle, let out a scream, and vanished — only to walk up the driveway an hour later, looking older and worn, with a strange girl named Lahlia in tow. In the months that followed, Tucker watched his father grow distant and his once loving mother slide into madness. But then both of his parents disappear.
Now in the care of his wild Uncle Kosh, Tucker begins to suspect that the disks of shimmering air he keeps seeing — one right on top of the roof — hold the answer to restoring his family. And when he dares to step into one, he’s launched on a time-twisting journey — from a small Midwestern town to a futuristic hospital run by digitally augmented healers, from the death of an ancient prophet to a forest at the end of time. Inevitably, Tucker’s actions alter the past and future, changing his world forever.
Kicking off a riveting sci-fi trilogy, National Book Award winner Pete Hautman plunges us into a world where time is a tool — and the question is, who will control it?
On Thea’s Radar:
I saw this title on Goodreads, and yes, it’s another post-apocalyptic YA novel.
A dark and tender postapocalyptic love story set in the aftermath of a bloody war
In a city where humans and Darklings are now separated by a high wall and tensions between the two races still simmer after a terrible war, sixteen-year-olds Ash Fisher, a half-blood Darkling, and Natalie Buchanan, a human and the daughter of the Emissary, meet and do the unthinkable—they fall in love. Bonded by a mysterious connection, that causes Ash’s long dormant heart to beat, Ash and Natalie first deny and then struggle to fight their forbidden feelings for each other, knowing if they’re caught they’ll be executed—but their feelings are too strong. When Ash and Natalie then find themselves at the center of a deadly conspiracy that threatens to pull the humans and Darklings back into war, they must make hard choices that could result in both their deaths.
Next up, a fun play on Lost in Space:
In 2129, hoping to bypass the exams and training that might lead to a comfortable life, Susan, her almost-boyfriend Derlock, and seven fellow students stow away on a ship to Mars, unaware that Derlock is a sociopath with bigger plans.
Next up, a science fiction novel with a clone for a protagonist. I like that.
In a world constructed to absolute perfection, imperfection is difficult to understand—and impossible to hide.
Elysia is a clone, created in a laboratory, born as a sixteen year old girl, an empty vessel with no life experience to draw from. She is a Beta, an experimental model of teenaged clone. She was replicated from another teenage girl, who had to die in order for Elysia to be created.
Elysia’s purpose is to serve the inhabitants of Demesne, an island paradise for the wealthiest people on earth. Everything about Demesne is bioengineered for perfection. Even the air there induces a strange, euphoric high that only the island’s workers—soulless clones like Elysia—are immune to.
At first, Elysia’s new life on this island paradise is idyllic and pampered. But she soon sees that Demesne’s human residents, the most privileged people in the world who should want for nothing, yearn. And, she comes to realize that beneath its flawless exterior, there is an undercurrent of discontent amongst Demesne’s worker clones. She knows she is soulless and cannot feel and should not care—so why are overpowering sensations clouding Elysia’s mind?
If anyone discovers that Elysia isn’t the unfeeling clone she must pretend to be, she will suffer a fate too terrible to imagine. When Elysia’s one chance at happiness is ripped away from her with breathtaking cruelty, emotions she’s always had but never understood are unleashed. As rage, terror, and desire threaten to overwhelm her, Elysia must find the will to survive.
This next book sounds like a television show (kind of), but I like the premise and the cover colors (yay for colors other than pastels and misty/smoky gray purples):
A romantic sci-fi thriller about love and second chances.
Camden Pike has been grief-stricken since his girlfriend, Viv, died. Viv was the last good thing in his life: helping him rebuild his identity after a career-ending football injury, picking up the pieces when his home life shattered, and healing his pain long after the pain meds wore off. And now, he’d give anything for one more glimpse of her. But when Cam makes a visit to the site of Viv’s deadly car accident, he sees some kind of apparition. And it isn’t Viv.
The apparition’s name is Nina, and she’s not a ghost. She’s a girl from a parallel world, and in this world, Viv is still alive. Cam can’t believe his wildest dreams have come true. All he can focus on is getting his girlfriend back, no matter the cost. But things are different in this other world: Viv and Cam have both made very different choices, things between them have changed in unexpected ways, and Viv isn’t the same girl he remembers. Nina is keeping some dangerous secrets, too, and the window between the worlds is shrinking every day. As Cam comes to terms with who this Viv has become, and the part Nina played in his parallel story, he’s forced to choose—stay with Viv or let her go—before the window closes between them once and for all.
I can’t tell if this is a speculative fiction novel, or a mystery/coming-of-age YA novel. In any case, I’m intrigued!
Nothing ever happens in Norway. But at least Ellie knows what to expect when she visits her grandmother: a tranquil fishing village and long, slow summer days. And maybe she’ll finally get out from under the shadow of her way-too-perfect big brother, Graham, while she’s there.
What Ellie doesn’t anticipate is Graham’s infuriating best friend, Tuck, tagging along for the trip. Nor did she imagine boys going missing amid rumors of impossible kidnappings. Least of all does she expect something powerful and ancient to awaken in her and that strange whispers would urge Ellie to claim her place among mythological warriors. Instead of peace and quiet, there’s suddenly there’s a lot for a girl from L.A. to handle on a summer sojourn in Norway! And when Graham vanishes, it’s up to Ellie—and the ever-sarcastic, if undeniably alluring Tuck—to uncover the truth about all the disappearances and thwart the nefarious plan behind them.
Deadly legends, hidden identities, and tentative romance swirl together in one girl’s unexpectedly-epic coming of age.
I’ve been really craving a good, solid zombie novel. I don’t know if either of the next two books will deliver, but I have high hopes!
The outbreak tore the USA in two. The east remains a safe haven. The west has become a ravaged wilderness, known by survivors as the Evacuated States. It is here that Henry Marco makes his living. Hired by grieving relatives, he tracks down the dead and delivers peace.
Now Homeland Security wants Marco for a mission unlike any other. He must return to California, where the apocalypse began. Where a secret is hidden. And where his own tragic past waits to punish him again.
But in the wastelands of America, you never know who – or what – is watching you.
And finally, the last zombie novel of the day (anything billed as Buffy meets The Walking Dead earns a read in my mind):
Ashley was just trying to get through a tough day when the world turned upside down.
A terrifying virus appears, quickly becoming a pandemic that leaves its victims, not dead, but far worse. Attacked by zombies, Ashley discovers that she is a ‘Wild-Card’ — immune to the virus — and she is recruited to fight back and try to control the outbreak.
It’s Buffy meets the Walking Dead in a rapid-fire zombie adventure!
And that’s it from us! What books do you have on YOUR radar?
14 Comments
Vildea
March 10, 2012 at 8:52 amThere’s a few books on your radar that I really want to check out, and then there’s one that stole my attention and immediatley made me skeptical. Namely Valkyrie Rising. I’d like to think that it’s going to be great and fun, but at the same time… As a Norwegian I’m a little put off by saying Norway is “boring” on the whole, sure, small fisherman’s town? I can get behind that. Norway on the whole? … Not so much.
Still, it looks really interesting and I am looking forward to seeing some of Norway presented though I can tell right now – if there IS something wrong I’m most likely going to get hung up on it far more than anyone else.
Then again, the books that I’m at first the most skeptical of have turned out to be the books that blew my socks of the most as well, so I’m definitely keeping an eye on that one!
Karen Mahoney
March 10, 2012 at 11:29 amI am looking forward to THROUGH TO YOU! Sounds pretty awesome.
On my radar currently is the forthcoming Ilona Andrews: GUNMETAL MAGIC. This is Andrea’s book, and the cover is perfect!
(Also, thanks for featuring Moth’s book. :))
Kaz
MarieC
March 10, 2012 at 1:44 pmSo many interesting books on your radar, especially Plague Town.
—Me too! As well as Meljean Brooks’ Riveted.
Karen Mahoney
March 10, 2012 at 2:19 pm@MarieC Yes! Mejean’s new one looks great – I like what they’ve done with the cover.
Kaz
Ana
March 10, 2012 at 2:42 pmOMG THE RIVETED COVER IS AWESOME. FINALLY! Finally, this great series has a cover that fits it! NO MORE MAN-TITTY!
bram
March 10, 2012 at 3:05 pmTen Little Indians/And Then There Were None/Ten Little Niggers (the original title) was fucking psychopathically racist, as was Agatha Christie. Hope you do your research before saying anything about Ten in your review.
Deirdre
March 10, 2012 at 7:57 pmThis feature of yours always makes my already overstuffed to-buy list even longer…not that I’m complaining! 😀
Deserae
March 10, 2012 at 9:54 pmAll of these sound awesome and have been on my radar as well! But I said the exact same thing about TEN. The author doesn’t specify it’s a retelling but SERIOUSLY. Same. Shizz!
Ana
March 11, 2012 at 12:35 am@ Bram – Duly noted. I honestly did not know any of this. I read all Agatha Christie’s books when I was 12-14 and that was over 20 years ago and I wasn’t aware.
asha
March 11, 2012 at 6:23 amLove your bookreviews. Check out my book blog. Here’s the link – http://www.immabkreviewer.blogspot.com/ 😛
Jackie Kessler
March 11, 2012 at 7:45 amLove, love, love Kaz’s cover! Can’t wait for FALLING TO ASH!
Amy @ Turn the Page
March 11, 2012 at 7:58 amI always love On the Smugglers Radar because you always have such a great selection of books I’ve never seen or heard of elsewhere!
And so the wishlist grows….
Helen
March 11, 2012 at 7:24 pmRe Ten and the book it may be based on…come on it (the original) was written in 1939. Pretty much everything written prior to 1960 that contained black characters was blatantly racist…the authors were products of their times. Are you going to diss Mark Twain? James Fenimore Cooper, Harper Lee, Margaret Mitchell…etc. I think it is important for the reader to KNOW that the author/book was a product of their/its times but otherwise there is much to admire about these authors, particularly Agatha Christie who is one of the preeminent mystery authors of our times.
capillya
March 17, 2012 at 2:12 pmI feel like I need to stop reading your blog. Every time you write these types of posts I’m like…”hmm. I should quit my job and just read books they talk about on TBS. Who needs money for food.” But that would be irresponsible.
I place all blame of you mentioning The Return Man. I’ve only read 1 zombie book – Isaac Marion’s Warm Bodies (which I liked), and I’ve been craving a zombie book too.