Showing posts with label Brodi Ashton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brodi Ashton. Show all posts

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Review: Diplomatic Immunity by Brodi Ashton


Diplomatic Immunity by Brodi Ashton
Publisher: Balzer + Bray
Publication Date: September 6, 2016
Rating: 4 stars
Source: eARC from Edelweiss

Summary (from Goodreads):

Raucous parties, privileged attitudes, underage drinking, and diplomatic immunity...it’s all part of student life on Embassy Row.

Piper Baird has always dreamed of becoming a journalist. So when she scores a scholarship to exclusive Chiswick Academy in Washington, DC, she knows it’s her big opportunity. Chiswick offers the country’s most competitive prize for teen journalists—the Bennington scholarship—and winning will ensure her acceptance to one of the best schools in the country.

Piper isn’t at Chiswick for two days before she witnesses the intense competition in the journalism program—and the extreme privilege of the young and wealthy elite who attend her school. And Piper knows access to these untouchable students just might give her the edge she’ll need to blow the lid off life at the school in a scathing and unforgettable exposé worthy of the Bennington.

The key to the whole story lies with Rafael Amador, the son of the Spanish ambassador—and the boy at the center of the most explosive secrets and scandals on Embassy Row. Rafael is big trouble—and when he drops into her bedroom window one night, asking for help, it’s Piper’s chance to get the full scoop. But as they spend time together, Piper discovers that despite his dark streak, Rafael is smart, kind, funny, and gorgeous—and she might have real feelings for him. How can she break the story of a lifetime if it could destroy the boy she just might love?

What I Liked:

This book was more enjoyable than I expected! Then again, I'm not sure what I was expecting. I remember trying Ashton's debut novel and not being able to get through it. I recently read My Lady Jane (co-written with two other authors) and liked it. I wanted to give Diplomatic Immunity a chance because it looked like cute contemporary and it was a standalone. I'm glad I gave this book a chance!

Piper Baird wants to be a journalist, and she's very good at being one. She has applied for a scholarship to the prestigious Chiswick Academy for the last three years. Finally, at the start of her senior year, she gets the scholarship. But Chiswick is completely different from her public high school. Chiswick is full of rich, privileged kids, children of international politicians and diplomats who have diplomatic immunity, a free pass to bad behavior. Piper really wants to win the Bennington scholarship offered by Chiswick, but the competition for the scholarship is fierce. She'll have to rite a juicy story that no one can write. But to do so, she'll have to hone in on one of the diplomatic immunity kids - Rafael Amador, the hot Spaniard who has a penchant for making mischief and trouble and being spontaneous. But there is more to Rafael than his bad boy status, and as Piper discovers this, she finds it harder and harder to publisher her scandalous story.

I totally felt for Piper, from start to finish. Her family is on the low end of middle class, and eventually, they reach the point of food stamps and bankruptcy. There was a time when they were richer... but that time was years ago. The only way Piper can follow her dreams of going to Columbia next year is to get a scholarship. The Bennington is a great scholarship, but she needs to get into Chiswick first. Piper is entirely focused on the Bennington (once she gets into Chiswick), and being a cutthroat journalist is exactly how she plans on winning the Bennington.

She doesn't plan on Rafael Amador though. On her first day at Chiswick, he saves her from an already embarrassing situation. Piper recognizes his insane hotness, but she also recognizes the massive amount of privilege he has. Diplomatic immunity covers his butt for everything - and Rafael takes advantage. There is nothing bad that he won't do - like climbing national monuments, or setting off the school's fire alarm to get out.

I personally thought Piper was justified in her disdain for all the rich, privileged students at the school. She definitely had some resentment for them at first, which I could relate to. But as she got to know more of them (especially Rafael), her attitude changed. She mostly hung out with other scholarship kids at Chiswick, but you could see her gradual change in attitude towards the diplomatic immunity kids.

Rafael... what a swoony dreamboat. Honestly he seemed a little too perfect, a little too bad-boy bad, but I really liked him. I've always liked Spaniard hotties, and it wasn't hard to fall for this particular one. He liked hearing Piper's opinion on the students at Chiswick, and how privileged he was. Rafael is totally unconcerned with rules and laws - or so it seems. But there is more to him, and I liked seeing behind the walls. 

The romance in this book is fairly slow-burn, and all of the musy-gushy crush feelings come first. It's cute, watching Piper fall for Rafael. At first I thought Rafael was hanging around Piper because she was a challenge, but it became clear that he really liked her. I love slow-burn romances, and a love a good girl/bad boy romance, so the combination was fantastic. The only thing that would have made it better was a slow-burn, good girl/bad boy, hate-to-love romance. A trifecta of romance awesomeness!

But still, the romance was cute. During half the book, Piper is in denial about her feelings for Rafael. Around three-fourths in, both of them hash it out. I liked the dates and the crazy outings and the warm and fuzzies I got, during the whole book.

No love triangle. Piper goes on a "date" with another boy, but literally nothing happened, and she wasn't interested in him at any point, really. It was all Rafael, physically and emotionally and such!

As mentioned, Piper begins writing her big story for the Bennington scholarship on the diplomatic immunity kids, including Rafael. So you can imagine how that goes... girl starts hanging out with boy to get dirt on him, but ends up falling for him... how is that going to end? I was so nervous about the ending, because Piper's story could end up ruining Rafael's life. But the ending was a happy one, if a little abrupt (see below), and I could get behind it since this is a standalone. The evolution of Piper's story was interesting, and a little heartbreaking too.

Did I mention that this book is hilarious? The humor is so on point. I had several good belly laughs while reading, which is actually pretty rare for me. Somehow, books don't get too many extreme reactions from me (belly laughs, crying, etc.). The mild ones (giggling, irritation, etc.), sure.

So I liked this book! It's the first solo book I've read by Ashton (I do not count Everneath), and it turned out to be great. If she keeps 

What I Did Not Like:

The ending is a little abrupt. I wanted to see more development in the ending! Why did Rafael choose to do this? Where did Samuel go? How did Piper's parents get by? I wasn't satisfied with the ending. It felt too neat and tidy. I loved that it was a HEA, but again, too neat and tidy.

Would I Recommend It:

I liked this book and I would recommend it, if you like cute contemporary! The romance is cute and there isn't too much drama, until the climax. The big climax scene at the end is as painful as you expect it would be, but the ending makes up for it (mostly -- see above). But this was a great standalone and well worth the time!

Rating:

4 stars. I wasn't sold on Ashton's debut series, but I liked her co-written book and I liked this one. I may read more books by Ashton if they're anything like this one! Standalones are a wonderful thing. And I'm not usually a YA contemporary person, but this one was pretty great!


Was this review helpful? Please let me know in the comments section!

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Blog Tour and Giveaway: My Lady Jane


Welcome to the blog tour for My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows! I'm really excited to be hosting these three wonderful ladies on my blog tour. Be sure to check it out, and enter the giveaway!



Meet the Lady Janies!


Alyssa: Hi ladies! My first question for you - how did the idea for the book originate? How did you three decide to work together on the project? 

B: Cynthia told me her idea over lunch one day. I thought, “There’s no one else I’d want to write a book with. Except maybe Jodi Meadows.” So, I said yes.

J: Brodi and Cynthia announced to me that they were writing a book together and asked if I wanted to write it with them. They didn’t tell me anything about it until after I’d agreed.

C: I’m devious that way. I’m also not very good at pitching my ideas, so it’s kind of a miracle that I got these two suckers to agree to write a comedy about the tragedy of Lady Jane Grey.

Alyssa: How did the title come about? Did any one of you chose it?

J: I’m pretty sure Cynthia came up with the title. 

C: I’m pretty sure I did, too. Although I don’t remember coming up with it.

Alyssa: Did you three do many retreats to get together and write parts of the book?

B: We would meet for a week at a time at my condo in Midway, Utah. We’d write a chapter a day, and then read them out loud at night. And laugh our butts off. 

J: It’s basically the most fun way to write a book . . . ever. 

C: It was. It kind of spoiled us for writing our solo books.

Alyssa: Are you allowed to tell us who wrote which character's point-of-view? Perhaps give us a hint!

J: I think it’s pretty obvious who wrote which character! But if you’re still not sure after you’ve read it, ask us and we’ll tell you. 

Alyssa: My last question - will there be more books to follow this story? Jane-related, or perhaps another alternative history retelling?

J: We are always writing books. 


About the Authors:

We're the authors of the upcoming young adult novel, MY LADY JANE, which will be out with HarperTeen on June 7, 2016. Our group is made up of Brodi Ashton (author of the EVERNEATH series and DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY), Cynthia Hand (New York Times bestselling author of the UNEARTHLY series and THE LAST TIME WE SAY GOODBYE), and Jodi Meadows (author of the INCARNATE and the ORPHAN QUEEN series). Between the three of us we've written thirteen novels, a bunch of novellas, a handful of short stories, and a couple of really bad poems, but this is the first time we've taken a stab at writing a book together. We're friends. We're writers. We're fixing history by rewriting one sad story at a time.



About the Book:


My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows
Publisher: HarperTeen
Publication Date: June 7, 2016
Rating: 4 stars
Source: eARC from Edelweiss

Summary (from Goodreads):

For fans of The Princess Bride comes the comical, fantastical, romantical, (not) entirely true story of Lady Jane Grey.

Lady Jane Grey, sixteen, is about to be married to a total stranger—and caught up in an insidious plot to rob her cousin, King Edward, of his throne. But that’s the least of Jane’s problems. She’s about to become Queen of England. Like that could go wrong.



The Giveaway:

Win one of three (3) copies of My Lady Jane! Open to anyone in the world, as long as The Book Depository ships to you.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Review: My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows


My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows
Publisher: HarperTeen
Publication Date: June 7, 2016
Rating: 4 stars
Source: eARC from Edelweiss

Summary (from Goodreads):

For fans of The Princess Bride comes the comical, fantastical, romantical, (not) entirely true story of Lady Jane Grey.

Lady Jane Grey, sixteen, is about to be married to a total stranger—and caught up in an insidious plot to rob her cousin, King Edward, of his throne. But that’s the least of Jane’s problems. She’s about to become Queen of England. Like that could go wrong.

What I Liked:

This book was splendid! What a fun story. I can see why people are recommending it if you liked The Princess Bride (which I loved, by the way). This is an alternate telling of the story of Lady Jane Grey, who became Queen of England for nine days. 

This book is told from three people's POVs - King Edward's, Lady Jane's, and Lord Gifford's (call him G). Edward is the teenage king of England, and he's also dying at the moment. So he names his cousin and closest friend Jane his heir, and he also mandates Jane's marriage to Gifford Dudley, second son of Lord Dudley, a powerful duke and adviser to the king. Book-loving Jane has no interest in marrying anyone, especially not a man who can never be found during the day, and is quite popular with the ladies at night (so the rumors say). And G - he doesn't really want to be married either, and his late-night adventures aren't what they seem. But Jane and G find themselves married to each other, and even crazier, they find out that they are pawns in a plot to make Jane the Queen of England. Even worse, there is someone else after Edward's throne...

This story was so funny and enjoyable! I think that is one thing that really sticks out to be, and was really well written - the humor. The book is well over five hundred pages long, but it never felt that long. Some of this is due to the fabulous humor in the book!

I liked G the most, of our three protagonists. G is an Edian, which is a human who can turn into a specific animal. G can turn into a horse, and unfortunately he cannot control the change, and he changes at dawn every day, and back to human again at dusk. G is a second son of a duke, and the duke and duchess have never treated G like a son. It's not wonder he loves being a horse, and enjoys running free while the sun shines. In any case, I liked G. He is patient and charming and sweet, and protective too (which I loved, but Jane wasn't always a fan).

Jane is truly a bookworm. Her nose is stuck in a book all the time, in the beginning of the book. She hates G as a principle and only marries him because it's Edward's wishes (he's dying and he's the king, so...). Jane can be pig-headed and silly sometimes, but she's also brave and fearless and bold. A little too bold, for this time period, but creative license and all that.

In fact, this whole tale is much too modern to really be historical, with all the modern slang. But it's a retelling of a practically medieval time in English history. There is no doubt that the authors did their research on this time period, even with this story reading so modernly. 

So our last protagonist, Edward. Edward is the dying king, who has never kissed a girl and barely rules as king. While Jane and G get married and are trying not to kill each other, Edward is busy trying to stay alive. But he finds out that he's being poisoned, and he barely escapes the palace. Edward's journey to getting back to the palace changes him, and he matures a great deal as the story goes on. 

In fact, all of our protagonists grow and mature. I was pretty pleased with Edward's character growth, but also Jane's. Jane could be pretty immature, in the earlier parts of the book. G... G had to grow up too, and face the responsibilities of being a duke's son, as well as a husband. Basically not just a horse anymore - in fact, he must learn how not to be a horse.

I loved watching G and Jane fall for each other! It's a hate-to-love relationship, and an arranged marriage. I actually really like both of these romance tropes, and they worked well inn this story. The authors never made it easy for the pair, but they found their way. There is also a second (separate) couple in the book. Yes, Edward finds someone he might be able to kiss! Anyway, I should mention that there was no love triangle, and the romances were pretty drama-free.

I loved how this book was not just the story of a newly married couple finding their way, or a king trying to take back his throne. G and Jane and Edward team up with some new friends to help Edward come up with a plan to take back his kingdom. The whole journey is filled with speed bumps and obstacles that are pretty funny, very reminiscent of The Princess Bride. There is a whole political aspect, between the Verities (people who think pure-blood humans are superior) and the Edians, and it greatly affects Edward's journey to reclaiming the throne.

If you think G is the only Edian in the story, think again. There are Edians everywhere! People who you least expect...

Overall, I really liked this book! I'd not read anything by Hand or Ashton before, but I love Meadows' The Orphan Queen duology. This standalone is pretty darn awesome!

What I Did Not Like:

Like I mentioned above, Jane was kind of annoying at times, especially in the beginning of the book. A little bratty, slightly stuck-up. But then, I feel like I understand her, and her position. Still, she could have been much less mean to G!

Would I Recommend It:

If you liked The Princess Bride, or YA historical fiction novels in general, this is a good for you! Also, people who like slow-burn, hate-to-love relationships. Also, HILARIOUS stories. 

Rating:

4 stars. I had a feeling that I would enjoy this book, and I did! I would if this trio of authors will write more alternate history stories... that would be fun!


Was this review helpful? Please let me know in the comments section!

Swoon Thursday (#168): My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows

Swoon Thursday is a hot meme hosted by the fabulous ladies at YA Bound!


- From the book you’re currently reading, or one you just finished, tell us what made you SWOON. What got your heart pounding, your skin tingling, and your stomach fluttering

- Try to make the swoon excerpt 140 characters (or less), if you are going to tweet about it. Use the hashtag #YABOUND when tweeting


This week, my swoon is from My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows!


"Oh, Jane." He kissed her. Softly at first, but then she pulled him close and pressed her lips harder to his. And that was it. She could feel him giving in by the way his body pressed against hers, the way one of his hands cupped her cheek, and the way the other slid down her arm. 

- eARC, 87%


A shorter swoon this week - I cut the scene to avoid spoilers! The entire scene is adorable and serious at the same time. And the book - the book was fantastic!

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

January 2014 New Release Giveaway!


Welcome to the January New Release Giveaway Hop! The January New Release Giveaway hop is sponsored by Bo-ok Nerd.


This month, I'm giving away an ARC of Defy by Sara B. Larson, or an ARC of Evertrue by Brodi Ashton!

    

(Click on each cover for the the Goodreads page)


The Giveaway:

Win an ARC of an ARC of Defy by Sara B. Larson, or an ARC of Evertrue by Brodi Ashton!! PLEASE SEE THE GIVEAWAYS PAGE AND/OR THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS LISTED IN THE RAFFLECOPTER BEFORE ENTERING!

Open INTERNATIONALLY! Good luck!



Friday, June 7, 2013

Feature and Follow Friday (#22)


The Feature & Follow is a creative meme that allows bloggers to get to know each other, and gain more followers! It is hosted by TWO hosts, Parajunkee and Alison Can Read.

If you would like, it would be great if you followed me via Email, GFC, Linky, Bloglovin, or Google+ (all on the right). Let me know in the comments if you did, leave a link to your blog, and I will comment and follow back! I always do, I promise! Thank you!

Q: Have you broken up with a series? If so which one and why?


It's no secret - I broke up with the Everneath series, after Everneath by Brodi Ashton. I didn't like Everneath at all. The plot, the pacing, the romance... blah blah blah!


The Carrier series, starting and stopping with Carrier of the Mark by Leigh Fallon... yeah NO. That book was so cliche and predictable. 


The Tiger Saga, starting and stopping with Tiger's Curse by Colleen Houck. As an Indian person, I wanted to like this book, but I did NOT take this book very well. Also? It was very boring in my opinion. And Kelsey is a whiny, weak, childish protagonist. And I hate love triangles.


I won't torture myself further with more examples. Nor will I be reading the rest of those series of those books!

Friday, March 8, 2013

Feature and Follow Friday (#9)


The Feature & Follow is a creative meme that allows bloggers to get to know each other, and gain more followers! It is hosted by TWO hosts, Parajunkee and Alison Can Read.

If you would like, it would be great if you followed me via Email, GFC, or Linky (all on the right). Let me know in the comments if you did, leave a link to your blog, and I will comment and follow back! I always do, I promise! Thank you so much!


Q: What is a book you didn't like that all your friends raved about or what book did you love that wasn't popular?

Well, that's easy.

Everneath by Brodi Ashton.


I hated that book. Love triangle? Hate it, but this one was especially stupid. I want Nikki to end up ALONE and tormented. SHE IS SUCH A SELFISH PERSON! And I saw absolutely NO character development (referring to Nikki) from start to finish of Everneath. "Love story"? Try wimpy heroine who complains A LOT and always wants to get her way, because she is SOOO complicated, and her decision to be wrapped with Cole in the very beginning of the series was brought on by some major issues which she reconciles.

NO. Ugh. Hate that book. Easily my least favorite read of 2012.

Hate, hate, HATE that book. Sorry, Brodi Ashton. This post might sound SO awful, but this is just how I feel. Will I read Everbound? Maybe.

There's another one that I really didn't like, that everyone seems to like:


Wait for You by J. Lynn


Guys. I LOVE Jennifer L. Armentrout's books - Young Adult, Adult, whatever. This one book will not stop me from reading her books. But her shot at New Adult? 

I think it was NOT so great. Is New Adult all the same? Broken girl, twisted yet HOT boy, they meet at college under weird-ish circumstances. OH, and of course, there HAS to be some mention of rape. 

Are authors trying to romanticize the idea of rape? Is that okay? Whatever. I didn't like this book. I've read a ton of New Adult books, and some of them just sound familiar. This one sounds a lot like My Favorite Mistake by Chelsea Cameron.


What about you?