Showing posts with label Leah Cypress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Leah Cypress. Show all posts

Monday, March 3, 2014

Death Sworn Blog Tour: Me vs. Ileni + A Giveaway

http://www.rockstarbooktours.com/2014/02/tour-schedule-death-sworn-by-leah-cypess.html

Today I'm thrilled to be a part of the promotional tour for Death Sworn, the newest young adult fantasy novel from Leah Cypess. This was a darkly fascinating read for me, but before I get to my thoughts on the book itself, I thought I would share with all of you the top three ways protagonist Ileni handles her time in the Assassins' Caves far, far better than I would.

Be sure and check out the bottom of the post for a list of all the participating blogs as well as the details on a fantastic giveaway!

THE TOP 3 THINGS THAT WOULD MAKE ME
A POOR SUBSTITUTE FOR ILENI

• The Dark - I'm not afraid of the dark per se, however, I do tend to invent epic and completely illogical explanations for any and all sounds I hear when alone in the dark, which often leads to my assuming the fetal position and rocking. A creak on the stairs? Clearly I'm seconds away from a gruesome death via axe murderer. A scratching sound at the window? Sweet baby Jesus, a creature of some kind is trying to break in and its grotesque and freakishly long fingernails are going to tear me apart, and OH MY GOD, what if my dogs try to protect me and get hurt in the process? As you can see, noises in the dark cause my mental stability to decrease at a fairly alarming rate.

Ileni, on the other hand, handles herself in the dark extraordinarily well. She's always on alert but yet never overreacts like some people whose name may or may not rhyme with Benny. She never lets her imagination run away with her and manages to keep a level head despite the dangers quite literally around every corner.

• Attitude - I have one. It often makes an appearance at inopportune moments, like when I should be professionally polite but can't quite manage to keep my snark from slipping out. Ileni has to deal with a class full of young men of various ages, some of whom are intent on proving they are bigger/badder/generally more awesome than she could ever hope to be. Instead of verbally putting them down in a most satisfying, if not entirely mature, way, Ileni continually takes the high road and refuses to rise to their most tempting bait. She manages to walk away from each class with her head held high, whereas I would walk away with my mouth stretched abnormally wide in order to accommodate my foot.

• Secret keeping/Sleuthing - As established by the previous bullet point, I have trouble keeping my mouth shut when it would behoove me to do so. While this typically applies to situations where sarcasm is not the entirely appropriate response, it also extends to keeping secrets. I can't do it. I have to buy all my Christmas presents for other people just a couple days before the holiday otherwise I inevitably blurt out what everyone can expect to get from me as soon as I've left the store. Ileni keeps things much closer to her chest, not in an irritating way but rather as a means of self-preservation, and I couldn't help but admire the way she slowly but surely put the various pieces of the puzzle together without ever tipping her hand to those who would easily see her dead.

To sum up, Ileni is a far stronger young adult heroine than I could ever hope to be :-) *pats self on back*

• • • • • • • • • • • • • 

MINI REVIEW

DEATH SWORN
Death Sworn #1
Leah Cypess
Young Adult/Fantasy
352 pages
Greenwillow Books
Available March 4th
Source: eARC from publisher for review

THE STORY
When Ileni lost her magic, she lost everything: her place in society, her purpose in life, and the man she had expected to spend her life with. So when the Elders sent her to be magic tutor to a secret sect of assassins, she went willingly, even though the last two tutors had died under mysterious circumstances.

But beneath the assassins’ caves, Ileni will discover a new place and a new purpose… and a new and dangerous love. She will struggle to keep her lost magic a secret while teaching it to her deadly students, and to find out what happened to the two tutors who preceded her. But what she discovers will change not only her future, but the future of her people, the assassins… and possibly the entire world.

MY THOUGHTS
Death Sworn is an intriguing story, the singular setting of the Assassins' Caves adding an intimacy that would have been missing should we have found ourselves in the middle of a vast fantasy world, but though we spend our time in close proximity to many of the characters, they exist somewhere just outside the reach of our grasping fingers. Though that may sound like a flaw, the distance Ms. Cypess creates between us and everyone else save for Ileni is clearly deliberately done, leaving us fumbling for purchase with the assassins just as Ileni herself is. As a result, we feel a kinship with Ileni throughout, warmed by her seeming progress with her guide and protector Sorin, and then a short time later surprised by the reminder of how cold he can be. While there is a bit of push and pull with regard to their relationship–something that’s usually quite frustrating–in this case there’s an indefinable added layer to his behavior that piques our curiosity rather than raising our ire (for the most part).

Ileni is our anchor in this story, her questions regarding the startlingly fanatical loyalty and submission to the man the assassins call the master mirroring our own to make us feel as though we’re on this potentially futile mission together. She has trouble wrapping her mind around Sorin and the rest of the assassins’ willingness to do anything and everything their mysterious master asks of them–including handing over their lives when he requires it–just as we do, but she also recognizes in herself her own previously unwavering dedication to the beliefs of her people. She plays it smart with Sorin throughout, lowering her guard on occasion without dropping it completely, and she remains vigilant even when she desperately hopes her caution will prove to be unnecessary.

There’s a murky quality to this story, almost as though we’re viewing it through frosted glass rather than clear, and where this would normally be a drawback in any other story, for an inexplicable reason it works to Death Sworn’s advantage, leaving us on edge as we read and wanting more when we finds ourselves on the last page.

Rating: 4/5


• • • • • • • • • • •

LEAH CYPESS


I wrote my first story in first grade. The narrator was an ice-cream cone in the process of being eaten. In fourth grade, I wrote my first book, about a girl who gets shipwrecked on a desert island with her faithful and heroic dog (a rip-off of both The Black Stallion and all the Lassie movies, very impressive).

After selling my first story (Temple of Stone) while in high school, I gave in to my mother’s importuning to be practical and majored in biology at  Brooklyn College. I then went to Columbia Law School and practiced law for almost two years at Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, a large law firm in New York City. I kept writing and submitting in my spare time, and finally, a mere 15 years after my first short story acceptance, I sold my first novel to Greenwillow Books (HarperCollins).

I live in Brookline, Massachusetts (right outside of Boston) with my husband Aaron, a researcher and doctor at the Joslin Diabetes Center, and our three children.


• • • • • • • • • • • 

GIVEAWAY

One Grand Prize pack including signed copies of all 3 of Leah’s books (Mistwood, Nightspell, and Death Sworn), plus signed SWAG for all 3 books as well! Please enter via the Rafflecopter form below. Giveaway is US only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway
Be sure and check out the rest of the participating blogs:

WEEK ONE:
2/24/2014- Two Chicks on BooksOriginal Content
2/25/2014- Mundie Moms-Original Content
2/26/2014- BookishOriginal content
2/27/2014- FiktshunOriginal Content
2/28/2014- Magical Urban Fantasy Reads-Review or Original Content

WEEK TWO:
3/3/2014- Supernatural SnarkOriginal content
3/4/2014- Page Turners - Original Content
3/5/2014- Tales of a Ravenous ReaderOriginal content
3/6/2014- YA SisterhoodReview
3/7/2014-  A Backwards StoryOriginal content

Friday, November 9, 2012

Two and Twenty Dark Tales Blog Tour: Review, Interview + Giveaway

TWO AND TWENTY DARK TALES: DARK RETELLINGS OF MOTHER GOOSE RHYMES
Anthology
Paranormal Young Adult
340 pages
Month9Books
Available Now
Received from publisher for review

THE STORY (from Goodreads)
In this anthology, 20 authors explore the dark and hidden meanings behind some of the most beloved Mother Goose nursery rhymes through short story retellings. The dark twists on classic tales range from exploring whether Jack truly fell or if Jill pushed him instead to why Humpty Dumpty, fragile and alone, sat atop so high of a wall. The authors include Nina Berry, Sarwat Chadda, Leigh Fallon, Gretchen McNeil, and Suzanne Young.

MY THOUGHTS
Dark is an extremely apt description for the short stories in this anthology, the lives of the protagonists in each one often marked by pain and sorrow, their journeys, however short or long, traveled with Death as a constant companion. While there is darkness to be found in every tale, each author threads their needle with a different shade of black, some weaving terror and brutality through their stories while others add beautiful stitches of light to break up the darker threads, ensuring a drastic fluctuation in our emotions from story to story.

FAVORITES:
Sing a Song of Six-Pence by Sarwat Chadda
Based on the rhyme in which twenty-four blackbirds are baked in a pie, "Sing a Song of Six-Pence" is one of the tales that beautifully combines dark and light, a brief look at a gritty and corrupt fantasy world making us wish we had all the pages leading up to this brief snippet to enjoy, as well as all the pages that might come after. The two leading characters have both experienced profound loss, but by the concluding paragraphs have gained back the pieces of themselves they've been missing, leaving us with peace, though it's a peace tinged with melancholy.

Wee Willie Winkie by Leigh Fallon
One of the shorter stories in the anthology with one of the biggest impacts, Ms. Fallon crafts and extraordinarily eerie tale set in a small town that has a shocking abundance of older people and a relative dearth of younger children. The explanation for this skewed population is one that raises the fine hairs on our arms and includes a parting line that echoes in our memories late at night when we’re all alone.

Boys & Girls Come Out to Play by Angie Frazer
Ms. Frazer does a stunning job of creating a world with substance and detail in only a few short pages, bringing to life a characters who face death as payment to a to a coven of witches; a calling card left to those who are chosen beckoning them to tempt fate as the witches brutally test young men and women to see who has the most potential. Cruelty runs rampant, happiness is a foreign emotion, and love is briefly found and then violently snatched away to leave us with pounding hearts and wet cheeks.

Tick Tock by Gretchen McNeil
"Tick Tock" is one of the true horror stories in this anthology, a short nightmare of a tale involving a babysitter, a disturbing clock, and a quartet of unnerving children who speak only the Mother Goose rhyme on which this story was based. Our skin breaks out in tiny pebbles and full body shudder runs through us as we reach the end, needing a few moments to breathe deep and regain our equilibrium before we move on to the next dark interpretation.

A Ribbon of Blue by Michelle Zink
The final short story in the anthology, "A Ribbon of Blue" eases us out of the shadows and both literally and figuratively into the light with a tale of a young girl struggling to take care of a grandmother with rapidly deteriorating health even as she herself battles the everyday challenges of cerebral palsy. We instantly connect with Ruby, hoping that though the multitude of tales that came before it suggest things won’t end well for her, her fate will be positive in nature. While our wish for only good things for Ruby isn’t granted without a steep price, we are left with a warmth in our hearts as we close the back cover, grateful Ms. Zink’s story was last.
 

 Overall Rating: 4/5


As part of the promotional tour for Two and Twenty Dark Tales, I'm thrilled to welcome author Leah Cypess to the blog to answer a few questions about her fabulous addition to this anthology!

If you had the opportunity to retell and put your spin on another nursery rhyme, fable, or fairytale, which one would you choose?

That’s an easy one, since I’m currently working on a “prequel story” to Twelve Dancing Princess and shopping around a science-fiction retelling of Bluebeard and a fantasy retelling of The Boy Who Drew Cats. I am a big fan of retellings! (I also have a sequel to Rumpelstiltskin being published soon in Sword & Sorceress.) I don’t know which one will be up next, but if it turns out to be a nursery rhyme, I think Jack & Jill has a lot of possibilities.
 

After reading the Mother Goose rhyme on which “Clockwork” is based, what was the first element of the world you created to pop into your head?

It was obvious to me that the mouse is the central character, and that the mouse is actually a person who been changed into a mouse. So the first element that occurred to me was the question of who turned her into a mouse and why.
 

Let’s say Amarind was able to turn back time and leave a brief message for either herself or her sister before the events of “Clockwork” take place. What would she say and where would she hide it to ensure only she or her sister found it?
Interesting question! I’m guessing she’d warn herself about the coup, and she’d probably leave the message somewhere pretty typical… like her underwear drawer. It’s not like anyone would be searching for it.
 

When we first meet Amarind, she’s been transformed into a mouse. If you fell prey to transformation magic, what type of creature would you most hope you were changed into?

NOT a mouse – I hope the story made that clear! Probably a bird with the least possible amount of predators. Or, wait, an extinct animal whose predators are all extinct too! Yes, that sounds pretty safe.
 

The Witch from “Clockwork” is to interview you as part of a promotional tour for Two and Twenty Dark Tales. What’s the first question she would ask and how would you answer?

Her: Who was it who trapped me and how can I break the trap?


Me: I don’t know yet, silly. That’s fodder for another story…

Thanks so much for taking the time to answer my questions Leah! This tour kicked off back in October, so if you're interested in checking out all the amazing reviews, interviews and giveaways that have already taken place, be sure and take a look at the full schedule HERE. The next stop will be tomorrow at Novel Thoughts Blog. More information on Two and Twenty Dark Tales, the tour, and Month9Books can be found here:

Website
Blog
Goodreads
Facebook
Twitter
Buy Two and Twenty Dark Tales on Amazon

GIVEAWAY


Thanks to the wonderful team at Month9Books and Leah Cypess, I have one ecopy of Leah's MISTWOOD to give away to a lucky winner! Since this is an ebook, the giveaway is INTERNATIONAL, please just leave a comment on the review or interview along with a valid email address so I can contact you if you win. This giveaway will run through midnight on Friday, November 16th after which time a winner will be chosen and emailed. Have a great weekend everyone!