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Stacking the Shelves – March 2014 Edition!

Stacking the shelves

Hosted by Tinga’s Reviews

Okay, brace yourselves… I went a little hogwild buying books this month. You see, I left my job of eleven years with Barnes and Noble Bookstore, and the terror of having to pay full price for books after more than a decade of employee discounts made me a bit irrational. I may have drained my savings…

Anyway, I now have practically every book that was on my To Be Purchased list, which is a lot of excellent reading to look forward to:

Hardcopies (Adult):

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My favorite aquisition in this category is probably the new Brandon Sanderson – it’s gorgeous!

Hardcopies (YA):

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I’ve already read most of these, but I am excited to have so many pristine hardcovers to add to my colleciton!

Because of the circumstances, my Read 4, Buy 1 challenge went completely out the window. So much so, that I have decided to put myself on a book buying ban. We will see how long that lasts, ha ha. Stay tuned for April’s edition of Stacking the Shelves: Niki’s failed attempt at a book ban.

 Library:

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Yes, I am finally utilizing the library for the first time in my life… I can’t possibly support my habit without it now. I figure it will allow me to read the books before I buy them, and become a little more picky in deciding which ones actually spend money on.

Signed Awesomeness:

This month I was lucky enough to meet Patricia Briggs, Brandon Mull, Chad Morris, and Dan Wells – which pretty much makes this the best month ever! The signed Brandon Sanderson I got from BN.com as an exclusive preorder, and the Ann Aguirre I acquired from a post she did on goodreads. :-)

ARCs:

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 Yup, just one. That’s a vast difference from the ten I had on last months list. What can I say, I’ve managed to show a bit of restraint… But there also hasn’t been anything I’ve been just dying to read. Sad to say, but I’m pretty sure I went a little bit overboard in ARC requests last month, a decision I’m paying for. It wouldn’t of been so bad, but I requested a bunch of sequels to series I haven’t started yet simply because they were ones I was planning on reading eventually… not my brightest moment. My plan going forward is to limit myself to requesting sequels only if I am caught up in the series.

Anyway, if you need me, I’ll be reading…

 What books stacked your shelves this month?

by Niki Hawkes

 

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Top Ten Authors I Would Love to Meet!

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Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish

This week was supposed to be attributes to the top ten things on my bookish bucket list. Since over half of the things were desires to meet my favorite authors, I decided to switch it up a little:

Top Ten Authors I Would Love to Meet!

They all take turns as my favorites, depending on whom I’m reading at the moment. But the person I’d most like to meet right now is:

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Seriously, though, they’re all amazing authors. I would be willing to travel across a few states to meet these authors. Everyone of them is among my all-time favorites, and I hope to one day include them all in the “top ten authors I’ve met” list. :-)

Here’s a list of some of the authors who would have been included on my list, had I not already had the pleasure of meeting them:

Patricia Briggs

Dan Wells

Jennifer Lynn Barnes

Brandon Mull

David Farland

Rachel Caine

Just to name a few… :)

by Niki Hawkes

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Adventures Beyond the Book Blog – The Arch and Sandstone Mountain

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I know, it’s really hard to believe that I have a life outside of reading, but even I have been known to go out and smell the desert wildflowers once in a while. The cool thing about my adventures is that I always find something I can use in the novel I’m writing (see, you knew there had to be books involved somehow). For example, a couple of weeks ago in the few friends and I hiked a trail near where I grew up (one that I had no idea existed even though I only lived a couple of miles from it for five years, but that’s another story). Those of you who have ever been to Southwest Utah know how absolutely gorgeous the landscape is around here. Beautiful red rocks that take on countless formations and provide an endless stream of inspiration for my stories… It really is quite cool.

 There were two separate hikes in this area that we went on, one called Arch, the other called Sandstone Mountain… Both were gorgeous in their own way, and both made me feel like my legs were going to fall off. Seriously – it was a lot of uphill trekking through sand and I missed a good deal of the end of the hike because I was so focused on where I was putting my feet.

Anyway, because I found it to be such an awesome setting for a specific scene within my novel, I figured I would share the beauty for anybody else in need of inspiration… Please enjoy. :-)

Arch

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 Sandstone Mountain

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I debated for a long time whether or not compose this post. On one hand, I love that when I scroll down my posts it’s books! books! books! But on the other, I realize that it’s not as personal as it could be. The response I get from this post will probably strongly influence whether or not I do more of the same variety. As I am now a part of a local hiking group, I know I’m going to have more opportunities this summer than ever before.

I hope you enjoyed this small adventure. :-)

by Niki Hawkes

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Top Ten Books on My Spring 2014 Reading List!

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 Hosted by The Broke and that Bookish

This quarterly topic of TTT is by far my favorite to compose, mostly because it helps me stay focused on my goal to read only the books I’m most excited about (rather than the “obligation” ones). This month, I am pleased to say I am caught up enough with some of my favorite authors to include their latest books on this list.

Top Ten Books on My Spring 2014 Reading List!

There are so many killer titles in this top ten that I’m not even going to try to pick a favorite… I’m pretty sure I’m going to love them all. :-)

What books are at the top of your reading list?

by Niki Hawkes

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A Q&A with Dan Wells!

Last week marked the release of Ruins, the final book in the Partial Sequence by Dan Wells. As this series is easily my favorite of the post-apocalyptic genre, I was positively thrilled when Wells agreed to answer a few questions on my blog (which, by the way, I think is one of the coolest things ever). If you’ve read my review of Partials and Fragments, you know I admire this author for the many things he does brilliantly in his novels. From world building to great characters to amazing plots, he can do no wrong. Now, join me in a geek-out as we learn more about inspiration behind this series!

Q&A with Dan Wells:

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What was the inspiration behind the Partial series?

There are so many inspirations for this series, but I’ll narrow it down to three:

1) I love post-apocalyptic stories, and I wanted to tell one. I grew up in the Cold War, when we were certain that the world would end in a nuclear salvo, but I was more interested in writing a plague-based apocalypse because of how personal it is: it doesn’t destroy our cities or our structures, just the people. We’re all gone, but our stuff remains behind, and the few survivors would be living not in some barren wasteland, but in the ruins of our homes, with our clothes in the closets and our pictures on the wall. There’s something so evocative about that, I had to write it.

2) I love Battlestar Galactica, and particularly the human-like Cylons in the new series, and I every time I watched an episode I’d think about new stories to tell about them, and new ways to play with the idea of humanity, and what it means to be human, and how very subtle differences can divide us in vast, irreconcilable ways. My Partials are a hundred miles away from the Cylons, in terms of where they come from and how they work and what makes them different and what makes them the same, but that core idea of the artificial almost-human alien was a big inspiration.

3) I love Hermione Granger, but it always bugged me that she would find all the answers and solve all the puzzles and then stand to the side while Harry got the credit. I created Kira as the fiery, super-smart heroine because I wanted to give Hermione a chance to be the star.

Who was your favorite character to write about and why?

I love them all. I love writing Kira because her heart goes so much faster than her head, and she rails against injustice no matter what the consequences might be. I love writing Marcus because I see so much of myself in him, and I love writing Samm because he wants everything Kira wants but for such different reasons, an he goes about it in different ways. I love writing Afa because he was such a good-hearted, complex challenge, and I love writing Haru because he’s a complete douchebag who’s right way more often than we want him to be. More than anybody else, though, I love writing Heron. She’s so far removed from human thought and emotion, and so ready to do whatever it takes to survive, and so ripe for incredibly dark humor. Every scene she’s in was so much fun to work on.

Did you have any struggles while writing the series?

The single biggest struggle in this series was the time frame, which was incredibly short. I had just a few short months to outline, write, and revise each book before it had to be turned in and off to the printer, and I ended up with long hours and sleepless nights on all three just to get it done. We got better with each book, though, and everyone at Harper was amazing to work with, which made it easier. Still, though. At one point the deadlines were so tight we had to do two simultaneous edits, each focusing on a different thing, and then shuffle them together for a final proofread. It all turned out great in the end, but if I ever have to do that again it will be too soon. The next series I’m doing with Harper we pushed back a few months, just to give us more breathing room :)

What do your writing habits look like?

I have an office in my home, with a door I can lock to keep out the kids; it has bare walls, and a mostly bare table, and if I had to work in those conditions for a real office job I’d hate it, but for my purposes at home it’s exactly what I need. I have my laptop open to several different outline and planning documents, and then I write everything on my tablet and bluetooth keyboard. I spend a few hours each morning doing Internet stuff like twitter and facebook and awesome interviews like this, and then I’ll review everything I wrote the day before, and then I write for four or five hours–usually 2500 words a day on an average.

Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

Allow yourself to write a bad book. Aspiring authors tend to think they’re first book has to be perfect, because they’re going to publish it and make a zillion dollars, but that’s not how art works. A painter doesn’t get his first painting hung in a museum, and a sculptor doesn’t get her first statue into an expensive gallery, and we authors need to remember that our first works are just like theirs: they’re practice, not designed to sell but designed to teach us how to write. Finish your first book, warts and all, and then your second will be better, and your third will be better than that, and so on until your writing is awesome. I wrote five books before finally selling my sixth, and now I’ve published eight, but if I’d insisted on perfection I’d still be revising that first one, over and over, all alone in a room somewhere.

What are you working on next?

Lots of things! Here are the main ones:

1) I have finished a manuscript I’ve been working on for about three years, tentatively titled Extreme Makeover: Apocalypse Edition. It’s a corporate satire about a health and beauty company that destroys the world, and I love it beyond measure. We’re still working on selling this one, but I hope you’ll be able to read it soon.

2) New John Cleaver books! My first trilogy, before Partials, was a supernatural thriller about a teenage sociopath who fights demons. I’ve just signed a deal to write three more in that same series, and it’s been great to get back to that character again.

3) An all-new YA science fiction series called Mirador, about a teenage hacker in a cyberpunk Los Angeles. It’s got high-tech mysteries and scary criminals and steamy romance. The first book is called Bluescreen, and it comes out in Fall of 2015.

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Thanks again Dan Wells for taking the time to answer all of my questions. I loved learning more about the process of creating the Partials series, but was most inspired by your advice to writers – it described me to a T (which was a little freaky, by the way) and was exactly the advice I needed to push forward with my own projects. I am really looking forward to reading all of your upcoming books!

 I hope you all enjoyed this Q&A as much as I did. If you haven’t picked up the Partials Sequence yet you are sorely missing out – it is amazing!

 by Niki Hawkes

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Top Ten Young Adult Books!

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Hosted by The Broke and the Bookish

Over the last several years, my reading habits have been heavily skewed towards YA books. I figured now would be as good a time as any to compose a Top Ten of my favorites. While composing this post, however, I had a major epiphany. You see, while there are many books from this genre that I enjoyed, there are very few that I absolutely LOVED. This is a stark contrast to the Top Ten Fantasies list I composed where I had a difficult time narrowing it down from the 20+ series that totally rocked my world. Evidently, I’ve been focusing on the wrong genre. Nonetheless, I did manage to figure out which YA books were the cream of the crop:

Top Ten Young Adult Books!

 What books would make your Top YA list?

by Niki Hawkes