The zombie cheerleader giveaway!

To celebrate the one year anniversary of The Geek Girl’s Guide to Cheerleading being in the wild–and still available in many bookstores–we’re teaming up with Stacey Jay to bring you two awesome prize packs.

Zombie Cheerleader prize pack #1:

A tote bag with original artwork inspired by MY SO CALLED DEATH
A signed copy of MY SO CALLED DEATH
A signed copy of THE GEEK GIRL’S GUIDE TO CHEERLEADING
One zombie emergency T-shirt (just in case)

 

Zombie Cheerleader prize pack #2:

A tote bag with original artwork inspired by UNDEAD MUCH?
A signed copy of UNDEAD MUCH?
A signed copy of The GEEK GIRL’S GUIDE TO CHEERLEADING
One zombie emergency T-shirt (just in case)

For more information and to enter, see the Geek Girl site.

I <3 Susan Beth Pfeffer

Sending you over to John Scalzi’s site and Susan Beth Pfeffer’s “big idea” post.

I ❤ Susan Beth Pfeffer. She was a mainstay of my YA reading when I was actually in that demographic. Two of my favorites were Marly the Kid and Starring Peter and Leigh. In fact, I read them so many times, I can still quote lines of dialogue and name significant plot points (and seriously, I wish she’d written a sequel where Marly does join the cheerleading squad like she–Marly–threatened to).

Susan Beth Pfeffer’s career is long, varied, and impressive. The story behind the three books Life As We Knew It, The Dead and the Gone, and This World We Live In is pretty incredible (and pretty funny).

Amazing news of the amazing variety

So last night, about 5:45, I’d been home about five minutes or so. Here’s what was going on:

  • I was on the computer, trying to order pizza* online, while fielding “suggestions” from the kids.
  • The dog was leaping about, wanting to go outside.
  • The cat wanted her food.
  • Other noisy things.

The phone rang. Andrew picked it up without answering it. He said, “Mom, this Birmingham number’s been calling all day long.”

He thought it might be one of our relatives from down south trying out a new cell phone. Why he thought this and didn’t answer the phone is one of those mysteries forever locked in the mind of a thirteen-year-old boy.

So. I’m not sure what to expect when I answer the phone. It turns out to be the contest coordinator from the Gayle Wilson Award of Excellence contest. And yeah, I wondered: Why is she calling me? They already announced the finalists.

Turns out, this is why:

Yeah, Geek Girl won the young adult category. I know. I can barely believe it either. But what a great way to start out a long weekend.

* We went with half pepperoni, half sausage and mushroom and some cheesy bread.

Contest fun

Two contests going on this week, all in an effort to help you survive Valentine’s Day.

First, The Geek Girl’s Guide to Cheerleading is being featured on Free Book Friday. Four copies (signed by both me and Darcy) are up for grabs, along with an interview for your reading enjoyment. (Free Book Friday also has a main/adult site–same deal, simply submit your email address to win. Doesn’t get easier than that.)

Second, we’re hosting fellow 2009 Debs author/Simon Pulse sister Rhonda Stapleton over at the Geek Girl site. Not only do we have a signed copy of Rhonda’s début novel Stupid Cupid, but a totally cute T-shirt from Think Geek. Stop on by to read Rhonda’s interview and check out Stupid Cupid.

Today’s post brought to you by the letter Squeee!

Okay, so squee isn’t a letter. It should be. Yesterday, our editor informed us that The Geek Girl’s Guide to Cheerleading is going into a second printing.

Am I excited? Is Darcy? Maybe a little. (Okay, maybe a lot.) But more than that, we’re grateful. Because, clearly, if people weren’t reading Geek Girl, there wouldn’t be a need for a second printing.

So, thanks to everyone who has read and support Geek Girl. We wouldn’t be here without you.

Storytime, Liebchen

I was going to write something profound and deeply moving today. Okay, I really wasn’t. Nevertheless, I was going to write something (such as word count on revision up 7,000 words this week).

Instead I think we could all use a break. The video below is quite possibly the funniest thing I’ve seen all week:

As the creator notes, it isn’t really Werner Herzog reading/interpreting Curious George, but that hardly matters. There are so many good lines, but I think my favorite are: 

In short order, a monkey has bested seven adult men. This should give you a dim view of human potential.

Enjoy and happy Sunday!

Huge prize pack for a very good cause

The 2009 Debs have banded together with The Leaky Cauldron Fansite to Help Haiti Heal. This weekend, donations will be taken for the cause, with prizes given away to random, lucky donors.

More information at the Leaky Cauldron’s announcement page.

And the Helping Haiti Heal Website here.

If you’re on Twitter, please mention the event and url:

Help Haiti Heal – win fantastic prizes! Sat. from 2pm to 6pm EST! http://bit.ly/5603s6 #hhh

Without further ado, here’s the Contents of the Debs Massive Prize Package:

R.J. Anderson — FAERY REBELS: SPELL HUNTER (signed hardcover)

Pam Bachorz — CANDOR (signed hardcover)

Lauren Bjorkman — MY INVENTED LIFE (signed hardcover)

Leigh Brescia — ONE WISH (signed hardcover)

Jennifer Brown — HATE LIST (signed hardcover)

Megan Crewe — GIVE UP THE GHOST (signed hardcover)

Kirstin Cronn-Mills — THE SKY ALWAYS HEARS ME AND THE HILLS DON’T MIND (signed paperback)

Erin Dionne — MODELS DON’T EAT CHOCOLATE COOKIES and THE TOTAL TRAGEDY OF A GIRL NAMED HAMLET (signed hardcovers)

Deva Fagan — FORTUNE’S FOLLY (signed hardcover)

Megan Frazer — SECRETS OF TRUTH & BEAUTY (signed hardcover)

Cheryl Renee Herbsman — BREATHING (signed hardcover)

Jennifer R. Hubbard — THE SECRET YEAR (signed hardcover)

Jennifer Jabaley — LIPSTICK APOLOGY (signed paperback)

Danielle Joseph — SHRINKING VIOLET (signed paperback)

Malinda Lo — ASH (signed hardcover)

Sarah Maclean — THE SEASON (signed hardcover)

L.K. Madigan — FLASH BURNOUT (2010 Morris Award winner) (signed hardcover)

Lisa Mantchev — EYES LIKE STARS (signed hardcover) and PERCHANCE TO DREAM (advance review copy)

Neesha Meminger — SHINE, COCONUT MOON (hardcover)

Kate Messner — THE BRILLIANT FALL OF GIANNA Z (signed hardcover)

Saundra Mitchell — SHADOWED SUMMER (2010 Edgar®-Nominated) (signed hardcover)

Jenny Moss — WINNIE’S WAR (signed hardcover)

Sarah Ockler — TWENTY BOY SUMMER (signed hardcover)

Jackson Pearce — AS YOU WISH (signed hardcover)

Shani Petroff — BEDEVILED: DADDY’S LITTLE ANGEL and BEDEVILED: THE GOOD, THE BAD, AND THE UGLY DRESS (signed paperbacks)

Aprilynne Pike — WINGS (signed hardcover)

Cindy Pon — SILVER PHOENIX (signed hardcover)

Carrie Ryan –THE FOREST OF HANDS AND TEETH (signed hardcover)

Sydney Salter — MY BIG NOSE AND OTHER NATURAL DISASTERS (signed paperback) and JUNGLE CROSSING (signed hardcover) and SWOON AT YOUR OWN RISK (advance review copy)

Kristina Springer — THE ESPRESSOLOGIST (signed hardcover)

Rhonda Stapleton — STUPID CUPID (signed paperback)

Charity Tahmaseb/Darcy Vance — THE GEEK GIRL’S GUIDE TO CHEERLEADING (signed paperback)

Lara Zielin — DONUT DAYS (signed hardcover)

Michelle Zink — PROPHECY OF THE SISTERS (signed hardcover)

Carry on

Yes, it’s true. Now you can have Geek Girl and carry things in it too: 

 

It's a book, a purse, a book, a purse!

That's the first page you see.

Actually, you can have just about any book and carry it too, thanks to Karla at Bagitude. Or playbill, or album, or game. 

This was one of my gifts from Bob this year. Except. I discovered Bagitude to begin with, and had a Geek Girl one made for Darcy. So … surprise? Not so much. Still, awesomeness factor = high. Bob suggested I keep my bookmarks and pens in there for book signings, which is exactly what I’m going to do. 

On a completely different note. It’s minus seventeen degrees here this morning. Minus. Seven. Teen. Dude. It’s so cold, the ice on the back deck is making that bone-jarring cracking noise. So every once in a while, it sounds like someone is firing a shotgun right outside the window. 

Because dangerously cold isn’t enough. It isn’t winter unless it’s scaring the crap out of you at random intervals.

War through the Generations WWII reading challenge: Complete!

 wwiiWar Through the Generations Reading Challenge

My goal was to read five WWII books and I read … five WWII books. I know. I’m astounded as well.

In all seriousness, I really enjoyed this challenge; it was my first reading challenge in general and I picked a great one to get started on what I suspect might become an addiction. Watching all the reviews come in on War Through The Generations added to my TBR pile. Keeping up with all that must have been a challenge on the part of the blog owner and I appreciated it.

On to the books!

Past and Present:

Two books I read fall into the “past influences the present” category.

Tamar: A Novel of Espionage, Passion, and Betrayal by Mal Peet

I have a longer review here, but I really enjoyed how Mal Peet wove this tale of past betrayals and damage from the war into a present-day coming of age story. It’s an important reminder that war doesn’t just end.

  

 

Sarah’s Key by Tatiana de Rosnay

While I enjoyed this book, of the five, it was my least favorite. There were parts I really liked. The history was riveting. I knew a bit about the 1942 Paris roundups and deportations, but not a whole lot, and not about the Vél’ d’Hiv’ in particular.

Like other reviewers, I found the modern-day portion of the story not quite as satisfying. Or rather, there were parts I thought added to the story and parts that left me less interested. When the story focused on Julia’s quest to find out how her in-laws were connected to the Sarah of the title and the repercussions of that, I felt the modern portion really hit its stride. I especially liked the growing understanding between Julia and her previously remote father-in-law despite her crumbling marriage to his son.

The ending, to me, felt removed, divorced from the story, although I don’t think the author meant it to be. I recommend this one with reservations.

Can you keep a secret:

Normally the setup where the protagonist is “living a lie” is one that is a challenge for me. It’s probably why I don’t like a lot of romantic comedies. I find the motivation for the lie silly or unnecessary. Wouldn’t it be easier to tell the truth? Yeah, I know, that would mean a fifteen minute movie, which wouldn’t exactly work.

When done well (as with the two books below), I’m So. Freaking. Tense. I can barely stand it.

Flygirl by Sherri L. Smith

I loved this book. I loved it so much, I nominated it for this year’s Cybils Awards. Not only is it an entertaining read, it packs in an incredible amount of information, not only about the WASP program, but life in the south and the military for African Americans during the 1940s. It would make an excellent book for a middle grade/high school classroom.

I adored Ida Mae. While Sherri Smith builds an excellent case for her to pass as white and join the WASP program (the only way she can join is to pass for white), as a former Army vet, she didn’t really need to convince me. Go Ida Mae!

I found myself grinning during the training scenes, and at the reactions of the civilian women to the flygirls (all women associated with the military must be “loose,” don’t you know). Some things simply don’t change.

All in all, an excellent read. I highly recommend it.

Ten Cents a Dance by Christine Fletcher

In this novel, Ruby, both tough and naïve, faces the challenge of providing for her family when her mother can no longer work due to rheumatoid arthritis. Choices are limited for a sixteen-year-old Polish-American girl in 1941. She’s tempted away from her job in the meatpacking plant (wonderfully and nastily described–I don’t blame Ruby) by the local bad boy heart throb.

She finds herself working as a taxi dancer, keeping five cents for every ten-cent dance, although she tells her mother she has found work as a night-shift telephone operator. Ruby gradually learns to “fish,” and gets a lot more than five cents for her efforts.

This is a downward spiral story, and it’s a hard fall for Ruby. Even so, Christine Fletcher had me cheering Ruby’s small victories, even the ones I knew would come back to bite her in the rear end.

It’s also a fairly gritty look at an era we tend to romanticize: organized crime, blatant racism, limited opportunity. It’s all there.

In the end, tough little Ruby saves herself. It might not be a rose petal happily ever after, but I found the end of her story totally satisfying.

I recommend this one, especially for writers. Not only is there the overall story arc to provide tension (oh, ow, ow, yes, it killed me), but Christine Fletcher has mastered the art of what Donald Maass calls micro-tension–that tension on every page that keeps people reading.

Squee-filled fan-girly love:

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows

This is a novel told in epistolary form, a series of letters between author Juliet Ashton, her publisher, and the inhabitants the channel island of Guernsey.

I knew next to nothing about the German occupation of Guernsey, and in that respect, this novel illuminates a great deal about that. But beyond that, it’s a bibliophile’s book, it’s a charming book, and I’m not going to attempt any type of review because I have massive fan-girly love for it.

Seriously, if I had to pick a favorite book read for 2009, it’s this one. Additionally, the audio book is doubly excellent, the actors for the various characters pitch-perfect.

Highly recommended, if you haven’t already guessed.