Pip Goes to Camp Blog Tour and Review

27 Aug, 2012 by in middle grade reader Leave a comment

We are today’s stop on the official blog tour for Pip Goes to Camp hosted by Cedar Fort Books and Donna L. Peterson. Here’s our 5 star review…

Pip Goes to Camp (The Misadventures of Phillip Isaac Penn)
by Donna L Peterson
Hardcover, 144 pages
Published: August 14, 2012
by Cedar Fort Inc
ISBN: 1462110770
Book source: Netgalley
5 stars

Book summary from Book’s websiteSummer camp won’t know what hit them! Pip’s parents are sending him away on an adventure, but Pip’s sure a whole week at camp will be more like torture! Filled with fun comedy, eye-catching pictures, and an easy-to-follow storyline, this book is perfect for young readers and guaranteed to keep the whole family grinning to the very last page!

Cathy’s review: Phillip Isaac Penn or Pip as he’s called by everyone, is thrilled to finally be done with school for the summer. But his father informs him that he is leaving the very next day for “8 fun-filled days at summer camp!” Summer camp! Pip doesn’t want to go to summer camp, especially right after school ends. Pip’s father assures him that he is going to mature only Pip can’t find “mucher” in the dictionary, and he’s unsure of what it means or why he would even want to do it. Pip reluctantly climbs aboard the bus to summer camp only to find his nemesis, Cheater Chad, already aboard the bus. He knows there’s bound to be problems with Chad at the same camp and wants to run off the bus, but he sticks it out, only to find that Chad is not the worst boy at camp. Oh no! Join Pip and see what kind of misadventures he has in his week at summer camp.

This book was hilarious! I loved that you could sense Pip’s mischievous personality from the very first page. You can tell that he very much needs to “mucher” like his dad says. He’s always in trouble at camp, yet he’s not really a bad kid, he just ends up in the wrong place at the wrong time an awful lot. This book teaches kids to be treated how they would want to be, without sounding preachy. Kids are able to see the difference between Cheater Chad, Joker Joey, Show-Off Shad, Bossy Billy and Corrector Cora and how you really should act. This book would be a fun book to read aloud to your kids. It’s the second of The Misadventures of Phillip Isaac Penn, but it stands alone just fine. I hadn’t read the first misadventure and I had no problem understanding what is happening. I like that the book is fun for both adults and kids. 

Content: clean



About the author: Donna Peterson has enjoyed writing stories and poetry since she was in the second grade. Donna had her first book, The Misadventures of Phillip Isaac Penn: It’s Not Easy Being a Kid, published in 2011. She has also been published four times in the Idaho Magazine and wrote a weekly humor column, “Kaleidoscope,” for the Three Rivers Chronicle. Donna recently made a difficult decision to take an early retirement from her job of twelve years with the school district so that she will be able to spend more time doing what she enjoys most: writing for young readers. However, she has signed up on the sub list, so she plans on being involved with school activities.

Donna lives in Idaho with her husband, Brad, and their three beloved pets: Rusty, Sam, and Links. Her son Erik and his lovely wife, Shawna, live in Utah. Her other son, David, just joined them as a roommate while he plans on attending a nearby college in Utah.

Along with writing, Donna’s other favorite pastimes include Zumba and photography. Having her first children’s book published last year was a dream come true.

Find out more about author Donna L Peterson: Goodreads/ Facebook/ Website


Free Ebook – A Still Small Voice

26 Aug, 2012 by in Uncategorized Leave a comment

“A Still Small Voice: Sequel to Me, My Family and GOD”  by one of our reviewers, M L Walling is now available in  Kindle format. 

In honor of Writer’s United to Fight Cancer, it will be free August 26th through  August 28th 12 pm Pacific time.  Please support the fight for cancer  and at the same time enjoy a free book.
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YA Content Review- Unearthed

24 Aug, 2012 by in YA ficiton 1 comment

Unearthed 
by Lara Stauffer
Paperback, 288 pages
Published: July 10th 2012
by Cedar Fort Books
ISBN13: 9780882909813
Book source: Netgalley
4 1/2 stars
Book Summary from unearthedthebook.com: The pilot’s voice came over the loudspeaker. “Sorry folks, it’s a bit choppy this last part. We’re slightly ahead of schedule, and the current time is 5:13 p.m. Temperature is a balmy 89 degrees, and there’s a nice wind from the east at about eight miles per hour. In other words, a perfect day for lying on a beach.”
Except I won’t be lying on a beach, Matt thought irritably. I’m going to go stare into some big crack in the ground and pretend I’m enjoying myself.

Matt’s never understood how his father could be more interested in piles of ancient rocks than his own son. While Matt was playing his way through championships and earning a basketball scholarship to Duke, his dad was always gone—too busy digging up dust to notice anything going on in the current century.

But now that he’s agreed to spend an entire month at one of his father’s digs, Matt’s about to discover a whole lot more than he bargained for in the wonders of a mysterious city that’s been lost for centuries.

This thrilling adventure is bursting with action, laugh out loud humor, and maybe even a little romance. A guaranteed page-turner from cover to cover!

Cathy’s review: Matt has never really been interested in his father’s job as an archaeologist. In fact, it’s driven a huge wedge between them to the point that Matt has no interest in anything his father is doing, including anything in Church. His dad is getting ready to head to Mexico for a big dig and his mom would love for him to go before he heads to Duke for his basketball scholarship. As his dad gets ready to leave for the dig, there’s a big earthquake in Mexico, causing a fissure to open at the dig site and exposing…something. No one really knows, what they do know is that it’s time to get down there. Matt’s dad puts getting things together to go into high gear, meanwhile Taryn, a girl that Matt has known forever and has never really liked or gotten along with because she seems a little awkward, bribes Matt into going to Mexico to see just what his dad does for a living by telling him she will tutor him with any class that he needs help with for an entire year. Matt goes, unwillingly, but little does he know that his life is about to change forever. With the help of Taryn he’s able to see that what his dad does has value, and may be a little bit interesting and that he’s been selfish and vain, and he’s able to make an astonishing find.

I really enjoyed this book. I loved the way that Matt grew from a self-absorbed party boy at the beginning of the book to a really nice guy by the end. I thought that the story was fun and engaging. I have never been on an archaeological dig and will probably never go on one, but through the eyes of Matt, I kind of understand the excitement of finding something really old that no one else has seen in a really long time. I enjoyed the way the story related to the scriptures, and I really enjoyed when the two time periods were represented side by side. The scriptures came more alive for me, especially the part filled with Gadianton robbers, which will also help teenagers, definitely a good thing! 

Content: talks about teenage drinking and making out, but you don’t really “see” any of it

About the author: A lifelong member of the LDS Church, Lara Stauffer grew up wanting to write. A voracious reader, she loved the escape a good read would always provide. Her writing has been shaped by a deep love of the things of the past, and Unearthed is the result of her fascination with history and the people of the Book of Mormon. Lara is the author of the blogs Ramblings of a Suburban Soccer Mom and The Potted Pen, and she can be found on Facebook and Twitter. She currently lives with her husband and four children (and a maltipoo named Maggie) in North Carolina.            
Find out more about Lara Stauffer: Goodreads/ Website

Feed Your Reader Hop- Ereader and Ebook Giveaway

23 Aug, 2012 by in nook 74 comments

Fire and Ice is proud to be a participant in the “Feed Your Reader” (Ebooks Only) Hop!
August 23rd to 29th

Some lucky winner get to win an ereader from Amazon or Barnes & Noble. The winner will be emailed a gift card for $200 to either Amazon or Barnes & Noble.

Hosted by I Am A reader Not A Writer and Books: A True Story

This giveaway is brought to you by the following bloggers!
alchemyofscrawl
To enter to Win a Kindle Fire, Nook Tablet or other Ereader of your choice (Up to $200) fill out the rafflecopter form below.
And be sure to follow our twitter feed @fireicephotos for lots of amazing Ereads under 3.99!

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As our part of the hop we are giving away an ebook of your choice from the list below.

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To enter to win an ebook of your choice fill out the rafflecopter form below. Open internationally. Good luck!
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Book Review- Albrek’s Tomb

22 Aug, 2012 by in M L Forman, middle grade books, Shadow Mountain 3 comments

Albrek’s Tomb (Adventurers Wanted #3)

by M L Forman
Hardcover, 504 pages
Published January 24, 2012
by Shadow Mountain
ISBN: 1609088921
Book Source: Publisher
5 stars
Book Summary from Goodreads: Two thousand years ago, the dwarf Albrek went looking for new mines in the land of Thraxon in the hopes of becoming rich. No one knows if he ever succeeded, though, as all trace of Albrek and his followers simply vanished from history. Now, however, the dwarves must find the magical talisman that Albrek carried with him before their mines run dry, which would threaten the livelihood of the entire dwarf realm. And so the newly named wizard Alexander Taylor joins a familiar company of adventurers on a quest to discover what happened to Albrek, find his mythical tomb, and locate the lost talisman. Discovering Albrek s fate, however, may be the least of the adventurers problems when they cross paths with an ancient, wandering paladin who has a taste for confrontation and a paranoid belief that some great evil is working in all of the known lands. Alex and his friends must travel through the shadow of an empty oracle s tower, where a whispered legend is about to come true, and strike out for the distant parts of Thraxon that are only spoken of in old tales and half-forgotten myths. Join Alex and his brave companions on an adventure that will test their courage beyond their limits.

Cathy’s review: Alex has a lot of new choices to make in this book, choices about adventures to go on, and most importantly where he will make his home. He knows that he is welcome to stay with his step-father Mr. Roberts for as long as he would like, but he also knows that he would like to stay with his friends, maybe in the land of Alusia. He knows that the choices will need to be made, but first things first, is he ready for a new adventure? His friend and mentor Whalen has recommended him for a new adventure as a wizard, but first Alex must go meet the leader at Mr. Clutter’s adventure shop. He’s very surprised to see that the leader of the adventure is none other than his friend Trang. Trang has been asked by the king of Thraxon to find the tomb of a dwarf adventurer named Albrek. Albrek and the dwarves he took with him simply vanished and nothing was ever heard from them again. The king of Thraxon needs a special ring that Albrek carried that was most likely put in his tomb when he died. Several things don’t really add up for Alex though, the first thing being that Mr. Clutter had mentioned a second secret expedition in Thraxon at the same time. Alex decides to join the company and is happy about going on the adventure with several of his old friends and several new ones to, but this mission will tax Alex in ways that he could never even imagine.

This is such a fun series! I started reading this series just a few days ago, it really sucks you into the story and makes you want to read more and more. Alex is such a fun character, he is so strong in his beliefs of right and wrong. There is one part of the story where they find a great evil and Alex knows that no matter how close they are to finishing their adventure, he must fight this great evil and destroy it if he can, even if it means his own death. I love how Alex learns more about himself and his family history in this book. The other adventurers that he journeys with are true people of character as well. I love how this series shows that you can be a person of character and still have many great and wonderful adventures! This book is full of adventure and tons of creatures that I’ve never heard of, let alone thought of. It’s definitely a fun series for boys or girls, young or old!
Content: Clean

About the author: M L Forman was born and raised in Utah and now resides in the foothills of the western Rockies. He tries to write as much as possible when he’s not working as a systems administrator and attending to his many other hobbies, such as fishing, camping, hiking and almost anything that will allow him to enjoy the magic of nature.

Find out more about M L Foreman: Goodreads/ Website/ Facebook

Young Adult Ebook Review- Castles on the Sand

21 Aug, 2012 by in ya Leave a comment

Castles on the Sand
by E.M. Tippetts
Kindle Edition,
Published August 2012
by E M Tippetts
ASIN: B008ZGNMDS
Book Source:  Bought
5 Stars
Book Description: Madison Lukas knows her place in the world. She’s not pretty, not interesting, and therefore easy to forget.
John Britton is serving his mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and has been praying for fifteen years to find the sister he lost in his parents’ divorce. She is beautiful, talented, and makes kindness a fine art.

When John and Madison cross paths, he recognizes her at once, but Madison is certain that he’s got it all wrong. Even if she is his long-lost sister, she can’t possibly be the exceptional, amazing girl he thinks she is, can she?

Mary’s Review: What a wonderful book.  It took only a few quiet hours to read it.  It is an easy read and is so enjoyable.  I’m looking forward to a sequel.

Madison Lukas is a young 16 year old girl who has a low self esteem and feels she is ugly and no boy would or could ever like her.  She is kind to a fault to everyone, even those who are unkind and mean to her.   She has a mad crush on JP the high school heart throb who acts like he’s interested in her.  But is he?  Then there’s Carson, the Mormon boy who has eyes only for Madison and thinks she’s the most beautiful girl he’s ever seen.  Of course, there’s the bad seed Alex who never talks and everyone is afraid of and every girl thinks is handsome in the male model way.  Then Hailey, Madison’s best friend who makes you wonder “with a friend like her, who needs an enemy”.

And let’s not forget Elder John Britton who claims to be Madison’s brother.  Is he really?  This book is a cast full of characters that will make you love them, hate them and cry for them.  This is a must read book.  It will truly touch your heart in many ways and teach you about what families and friends should really be all about.

I recommend this book for young adult women ages 16 and older.  There are some very mild sexual issues addressed.

Well done Miss Emily.

About the Author: Emily Mah Tippetts writes romance as E.M. Tippetts and science fiction and fantasy as Emily Mah. She is a former attorney with degrees in philosophy, politics and economics from Oxford University and business law from UCLA.
Originally from New Mexico, she now lives in London with her family. She is a devoted member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and thus often includes LDS (Mormon) characters in her work. When she isn’t chasing her small children or writing, she designs jewelry.
For more information or to sign up for updates on future book releases, visit her website at www.emtippetts.com.

Utah Book Month Author Spotlight- Jacqueline Osherow

20 Aug, 2012 by in utah book month 1 comment

Photo copyright Heather Zahn Gardner

Jacqueline Osherow is a teacher of biblical poetry and its legacy at the local university who I had the opportunity to interview for Utah Book Month. As a child, she always wanted to be a writer thanks to a marvelous fourth-grade teacher in Hebrew school, Mrs. Gelman, who instructed her on the possibilities and mysteries of biblical text. She was also inspired by her parents who often read from anthologies. Her father, a lawyer, read Tennyson at the dinner table. In particular, Jacqueline remembers The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner being read in her childhood home. She also enjoyed Psalms as a source of inspiration, and loved Stephenson’s A Child’s Garden of Verses (in particular The Swing.) Her favorite nursery rhyme being The Cow That Jumped Over the Moon.

Osherow’s first book was published in 1988– when she was 32 years old. She now has six books in print and feels that being both an author and a professor is a great combination. ” If  I’m actually engaged in writing, I can be more useful to my students. Writing is a very solitary thing. The beauty about being a professor is that I can interact with people who care so much about what I also care about. The university has a wonderful program in its graduate school. Students keep me young with the purity of their relationship to poetry, their love of poetry, and that excitement and thrill over a great line.”
Mrs. Osherow enjoys poems by King David, Dante, Shakespeare, Keats, and Byron. She also loves Donna Herbert, Hopkins, Langston Hughes, and Robert Hayden. Her teacher, Robert Lowell, still inspires her as well. 
As a Jew born in 1956, Osherow is obsessed by the Holocaust.  She married the son of survivors who met at at the Dachau concentration camp. She has visited Treblinka and several other camps in Poland

She’s especially interested in the hybridization of tradition and newness. ” I believe in never making stuff up but in interacting with the world as it has presented to me. I don’t change the facts; ther’es an obligation to be accurate”.

“If you’ve never read Keats or Coleridge, you can’t write poetry. The more you know, the more you become aware of what’s possible, what’s been done before, and what’s new and fabulous. The more you read, the more you have access to.” She’s dubious that you could ever really write something truly new. In the words of Solomon “there’s nothing new under the sun.” She adds, “the only newness that comes is your voice and your particular connections.”
The Bible is another popular theme base that shows up in much of Osherow’s writing. She is very interested in Jewish tradition and Jewish literary tradition. “I’m glad my children have an ancient tradition to connect to;  I like having tradition and care a great deal about history.” While Osherow’s father was brought as a baby to America from Eastern Europe, she’s quite certain her great-grandparents would not recognize her religion–for instance, the fact that, as a woman, she can chant from the Bible. She explains :”Women didn’t chant– and still can’t chant– in Orthodox Jewish religion. The sense of change is built into Judaism. It’s a religion that has changed with the times.”
When asked about creative exercises, Osherow claims that she personally doesn’t have any and doesn’t teach any to her students. ” Exercises may work for other people but I believe in simply writing about the thing that obsesses me. Work is always progress, and writer’s block comes from demanding that you immediately produce something useful. If you work, you get somewhere–even if it takes a long time.  It usually doesn’t happen all at once–that’s very, very rare. Writing is a long process of working, working chiseling and chiseling some more.”
Osherow is currently finishing her seventh manuscript with the tentative title White On White. She’s also working on a very complicated project through the University Research Committee which is sending her to Alhamra, Spain. As a part of her project, Ms. Osherow will take a long time studying wallpaper symmetry patterns. “It’s daunting, but doesn’t feel impossible. I’ll set out and maybe I’ll get there; it’s exciting.” 

“I always have a backlog of things to explore– other really valuable things that I never drop; I just put them off because I have a busy life. The stuff that sticks with me is the stuff I use in my poems. I read a lot about place. Place means a great deal to me.”

Her advice to people who want to be published:  read, read, read, and read more. Second–be stubborn. For those who want to be published in poetry, her advice is to “get a Norton anthology. When you find someone you love, read everything they wrote. Get a real sense of what’s possible, of what’s been done. ” “Go after what you are interested in; ideally, do something you can do. I spent a lot of time emulating Dickinson but eventually you have to sound like yourself. You have to be stubborn– especially about poetry.There’s a lot of rejection in tyring to get publsihed in poetry. About 99.9% of it gets rejected; so be thick-skinned.”
She added, “If I’m working, I’m satisfied. If you do those things, if you are stubborn– and if you push it– someone will like it. The pleasure has to come not from what other people are doing,  but from what you are doing. You have to be the one who is happy with your work.” 

“You are the judge, not these other guys, and the advice they give you has to resonate. If you’re doubtful about something– get rid of it. If everybody in the room says something negative, but you can articulate why you need it; keep it. If only you like it, then take it out.”

Ultimately, Osherow hopes that her students  “will notice more than they have noticed before, that they will be better leaders, and be more attentive readers.” She enjoys teaching students to notice more and to polish their abilities to clearlycommunicate what they notice. In the words attributed to Paul Celan  “poetry gifts to the attentive. The definition of art is a great fresco; the more you look at it, the more you notice. It’s not so much imparting information as having the skills to really open that piece of art.”

Author Bio: Raised in Philadelphia, poet Jacqueline Osherow received her BA from Radcliffe College, Harvard University, and her PhD from Princeton University. She is the author of several collections of poetry, including Hoopoe’s Crown (2005). Her debut collection, Looking for Angels in New York (1988), was chosen for the Contemporary Poetry Series.

Often inhabiting a variety of demanding formal structures such as terza rima and the double sestina, Osherow’s poetry is both conversational and learned, concerned with the intricacies of faith and the weight of history. As a reviewer for Publishers Weekly noted, Osherow is “a poet who offers opinions and reactions to the weightiest questions of history and religion, while sounding less like an authority than like a particularly well-traveled friend.” She is particularly interested in biblical inconsistencies, and her psalms have their root in the holy poems she heard as a child at temple. In a 1999 essay for the Poetry Society of America, Osherow wrote, “If I write out of a specific poetic tradition, it is the Jewish poetic tradition, American poet though I am.”

She has been awarded the Witter Bynner Prize by the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, several prizes from the Poetry Society of America, and fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Ingram Merrill Foundation.

Osherow’s work has been anthologized in Twentieth Century American Poetry (2003), The Wadsworth Anthology of Poetry (2005), Jewish American Literature: A Norton Anthology (2000), and The Penguin Book of the Sonnet (2001), and twice in Best American Poetry.

We Have Winners

18 Aug, 2012 by in Uncategorized Leave a comment

Congratulations to Alicia Marie Ezell who won a Jennifer Lynn Barnes prize pack and to Savannah Lauren who won the Realty Check blog tour prize pack. Email us your mailing address and we will send out your prizes!

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Content Review- The Lost Curse

17 Aug, 2012 by in T Lynn Adams, YA ficiton Leave a comment

The Lost Curse
by T Lynn Adams
Paperback, 304 pages
Published: July 10, 2012
by Cedar Fort, Inc
ISBN: 1599559552
Book source: Netgalley
4 stars
Book Summary from Goodreads: Easing his pace, Jonathon advanced only inches at a time. Instinct heightened beneath unseen eyes and he knew he moved in the presence of a creature that could kill him. As he progressed forward, his light caught a presence to his left… a human presence. The dark image startled him and Jonathon whirled to face the threat, the beam of his headlamp cutting into the darkness.

Jonathon’s had more than enough adventure for one lifetime. That’s why he’s planning to spend this summer camping in quiet central Utah with his Peruvian friend, Severino. But when the two of them accidentally discover an ancient artifact, they wind up in more danger than ever! 

Now Jonathon, Severino, and their new friend, Tallie, will have to choose between protecting a secret that’s been hidden for centuries or saving their own lives!

A perfect combination of action, thrills, suspense, and a hint of romance, this is a cover-to-cover adventure that you simply can’t miss. Join forces with this dynamic trio of teens as they delve deep into the mysteries of the past. An entertaining read that’s sure to keep you guessing!

Cathy’s review: After picking Severino up from the airport, Jonathon is excited to get to the plans he has had for his Peruvian friend. He plans to show Severino a whole new life in America, so hopefully Severino will see that there is more to life than the terrorist Shining Path group that he belongs to in Peru. They want to go camping in the desert canyons surrounding Kanosh and spend some time with Jonathon’s friend Tallie there. What they don’t plan on finding is an ancient artifact that was left by the Spaniards and may lead to a gold mine, and people that want the artifact and the gold mine and it’s contents for themselves. This puts the three of them in tons of danger that they hadn’t been planning on. What will they be willing to do in order to keep the others, especially Tally safe?

I enjoyed this book. I was glad to see a second story about Severino and Jonathon, I really enjoyed Tombs of Terror, set in Peru, and was glad to see this one set in Utah. I thought that the character development was good, I cared about what happened to the characters and that’s a big thing for me. There was plenty of action and bad guys in this book which makes the plot move right along. I enjoyed the story, and I wonder how many artifacts there really are like the books talk about in the deserts of Utah. I like that a book’s story can make me wonder things like that, it makes the book seem a little more real to me.

Contents: Clean, but tense situations

About the author: Confession time: I’m terrified of spiders, can’t fry eggs, and my inability to bake a chocolate chip cookie has become family legend. But blessings come from weaknesses. None of my children have a pet tarantula. My husband volunteers to fry the eggs for breakfast. And all of my sons and daughters are expert cookie bakers. Life if like that–it compensates for our weaknesses by sending others into our lives. Isn’t that wonderful? Writing books and reading them is another wonderful way we can strengthen ourselves and others. I believe it is a writer’s duty to craft words that lift people and help them feel better about their personal lives and those around them, to see the good in life. That is a responsibility I take very seriously.
Find out more about T Lynn Adams: Goodreads/ Blog

Cover Reveal- Nobody By Jennifer Lynn Barnes

16 Aug, 2012 by in Cover Reveal-, nobody 3 comments

Egmont USA and Mundie Moms have invited us to help reveal the newest book cover for Nobody by Jennifer Lynn Barnes…

What do you think?!!
NOBODY
Hardcover, 400 pages

Expected publication: January 22nd 2013
by EgmontUSA
ISBN1606843214

NOBODY Summary: There are people in this world who are Nobody. No one sees them. No one notices them. They live their lives under the radar, forgotten as soon as you turn away.   That’s why they make the perfect assassins. The Institute finds these people when they’re young and takes them away for training. But an untrained Nobody is a threat to their organization. And threats must be eliminated. Sixteen-year-old Claire has been invisible her whole life, missed by the Institute’s monitoring. But now they’ve ID’ed her and send seventeen-year-old Nix to remove her. Yet the moment he lays eyes on her, he can’t make the hit. It’s as if Claire and Nix are the only people in the world for each other. And they are—because no one else ever notices them.
Add Nobody on Goodreads
About the Author: Jennifer Lynn Barnes (who mostly goes by Jen) was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma. She has been, in turn, a competitive cheerleader, a volleyball player, a dancer, a debutante, a primate cognition researcher, a teen model, a comic book geek, and a lemur aficionado. She’s been writing for as long as she can remember, finished her first full book (which she now refers to as a “practice book” and which none of you will ever see) when she was still in high school, and then wrote Golden the summer after her freshman year in college, when she was nineteen.
Jen graduated high school in 2002, and from Yale University with a degree in cognitive science (the study of the brain and thought) in May of 2006. She was awarded a Fulbright to do post-graduate work at Cambridge, and then returned to the states, where she is hard at work on her PhD. Visit her webiste at http://www.jenniferlynnbarnes.com/

Fire and Ice is giving away RAISED BY WOLVES, TRIAL BY FIRE, TAKEN BY STORM and her stand alone title EVERY OTHER DAY all signed! A galley of NOBODY will be included in the prize pack with some Raised by Wolves swag. To enter to win click here.

Good luck!