YA Early Book Review- Tiger’s Destiny

15 Aug, 2012 by in splinter books, Tiger's destiny Leave a comment

Tiger’s Destiny
by Colleen Houck
Hardcover, 464 pages
Expected Publication date: September 4, 2012
by Splinter
ISBN: 1402798431
Book Source: ALA
5 stars
Book Summary from Goodreads: With three of the goddess Durga’s quests behind them, only one prophecy now stands in the way of Kelsey, Ren, and Kishan breaking the tiger’s curse. But the trio’s greatest challenge awaits them: A life-endangering pursuit in search of Durga’s final gift, the Rope of Fire, on the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal. It’s a race against time–and the evil sorcerer Lokesh–in this eagerly anticipated fourth volume in the bestselling “Tiger’s Curse” series, which pits good against evil, tests the bonds of love and loyalty, and finally reveals the tigers’ true destinies once and for all. A smart phone tag code on the back cover links readers to the series website.
Cathy’s review: Kelsey’s been dreaming a strange dream of a boat, the ocean and some small pin pricks, but when she wakes up in a strange room with bars on the windows she knows it was no dream, and in fact she was kidnapped by Lokesh. This nightmare that she’s woken up to includes Lokesh demanding that she provide an heir for him to teach his evil ways. Kelsey knows that she will no longer be of any use to him after providing an heir, and she has no desire to help him in that way in the first place, but she also knows that she must stall for time so that Ren and Kishan, her two amazing tigers, can free her from the evil man’s clutches. But even after being freed, Ren, Kishan and Kelsey know that there’s more they must do to fulfill their destinies and to stop Lokesh’s evil schemes. They must battle more dangerous beasts and make many sacrifices of themselves to show that they are pure in heart and willing and able to fulfill their destinies. 

I love this series, Colleen Houck is seriously one of my favorite authors. When you read her books you feel as though you are right there with Kelsey, I could almost imagine myself as the one trapped in the room with the bars on the windows, knowing there’s an evil man just outside the door. The characters in this book are very well developed. You can feel the evilness emanating from Lokesh and the goodness from Ren. If you are a fan of clean, romantic adventures then this is the series for you!

Content: clean – as far as I can remember!

About the author: Colleen Houck is first and foremost a reader. She loves action, adventure, sci-fi, and romance, and her favorite books include a little bit of each. After getting an Associate’s Degree from Rick’s college and transferring to the University of Arizona, she dropped out of school to go on a church mission where she met her husband. Since then, she’s had a variety of job titles including; Group Home Advocate, Donut Sprinkle Girl, Chinese Kitchen Manager, Salad Bar Maven, and more recently American Sign Language interpreter. She also considers herself an expert in the assembly of Big Macs and Big Bacon Classics and yes, the Food Network Channel is her favorite station. Colleen has lived in Arizona, Idaho, Utah, California, and North Carolina and is now permanently settled in Salem, Oregon with her husband and her giant stuffed white tiger.
Find out more about author Colleen Houck: Goodreads/ Website/ Twitter

Author Interview with Diony George

14 Aug, 2012 by in Uncategorized 1 comment

Fire and Ice is thrilled to have author Diony George here today to talk about her book A Sisterhood of Strength.

Tell us what inspired your book:
When I served as a ward RS president, my love for my sisters grew immeasurably from serving them and seeing them unselfishly serve one another. I felt a book of stories written by many different women who experienced that bond of sisterhood in their lives would be inspiring to others as well.
How do you think women can become stronger and more unified in today’s world?
Women are the heart of the home and the family. We can have a powerful influence for good on our husbands, our children, and others we meet by the way we carry ourselves and give love. A woman’s true feminine beauty lies far beyond her outward appearance. When we remember our worth is infinite because we are daughters of God, our strength grows and the world will see it.
What writing rituals do you have if any?
Nothing specific, except to try to write a little everyday
Favorite books and authors?
I love Rebecca, by Daphne du Maurier, Josi Kilpack’s early novels, and Mary Higgins Clark.
What advice would you give to young women?
Be true to yourself and keep your standards high—its worth it.
How was being a mother shaped your character?
Being a mother has been immensely challenging and rewarding. It has helped me develop unconditional love and realize how important setting a good and consistent example is. Our children learn so much by watching us. It has also greatly increased my appreciation for my own parents.
What has been the most rewarding experience you’ve had as an author to date?
I’ve had several rewarding experiences as an author, it would be hard to narrow it down to just one. The big thing is I love that my books help people. When they feel something from what I’ve written, especially if it brings them closer to God I am exhilarated.
Author Bio: I’m a wife, mother of seven, and grandmother of two originally from Alaska, but currently live in Utah with my family and now consider myself a true city girl at heart. I will readily admit I don’t miss the giant mosquitoes or the cold and long, dark winters way up North, but I absolutely miss the fresh seafood. Fish and chips made with fresh-caught halibut is my favorite!
My beginning as a writer started in elementary school when a poem I had written for a contest was chosen as a winner, set to music, and sung by the whole school at an assembly. I wrote my first picture book, 11 pages long in fifth grade as an assignment,  bound it myself and have read it to my children several times. The next book I wrote, I was in eighth grade, 48 pages long with photograph’s and was a memoir.
The first edition of my first published novel, Torn Apart was released in July 2008, when I was 42 years old, the second edition under a new publisher was released nationally in February of 2009. So…never give up on your dream of writing. I’m currently working on my third novel.
When I’m not imagining a new plot-line or typing frantically away at my computer, I love to spend time with my family, read (my favorite genre is romantic suspense) travel, cook or bake something delicious, sew, scrap-book, or work on crafts.
Find out more about author Diony George: Goodreads/ Blog
Fire and Ice is giving away one paperback copy of  A Sisterhood of Strength courtesy of Diony George and Cedar Fort Books. To enter to win fill out the rafflecopter form below. Good Luck! a Rafflecopter giveaway
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Utah Book Month Author Interview with Stephen Trimble

13 Aug, 2012 by in stephen trimble, utah book month 3 comments

Photo courtesy of StephenTrimble.net
 Stephen Trimble rode up to the locally owned cafe on bicycle and immediately greeted the founder of one of the nation’s most successful independent bookstores — the King’s English. In his personable and down-to-earth manner, he continued to greet other locals from his Avenues neighborhood. When we sat down for an interview, I recognized how knowledgeable Stephen is about the Utah landscape. One passerby complimented him on some spots he had recommended for their Grand Canyon trip. Stephen knows the national parks well. He always felt that park rangers were the coolest people, and after college he got a job as a ranger himself. Mr. Trimble explained that, back in his day, the parks would publish 32-page booklets with photographs of each park and that, as a resident ranger, one of his first jobs was to photograph and write for the National Park Service. Through the years he has published more than 20 books and sold many photos as a result of his love for editorial photography.
As a kid, he loved books more than baseball. Interestingly, he sees the world flat, like a photo print, due to an inability to see things in 3D. His father, a geologist who loved history, gave Steve a camera — then started critiquing his photos. “I take photos to record what I see and tell a story with the photos. I try to do my craft well,” Stephen relates. (I also found it interesting that Stephen has always shot Nikon.)
 He has seen the publishing process and photography business change over the years. At first he published through the national parks, the museum presses, and finally university presses. “My photography always made more money than the words. I made money from the reproduction of my images and stock photos. But nowadays, photo editors can go poking around on the web and someone who has uploaded their pictures on Flickr will be offered a spot in a magazine or book for free. Stock photography has all but disappeared.”
Mr. Trimble now teaches a writing course to incoming Honors students at the University of Utah and teaches seminars on photographing western landscapes. His narrative writing skills have been used featured in the new Natural History Museum. Conservation organizations hire him as a writer for his knowledge as a naturalist and for his passion for the natural world. He’s been writing about the Canyon Country in southern Utah since age 20 and now maintains a home in Torrey, Utah — the true geography of his childhood. “Utah’s a great place to be a writer because there are several very supportive communities and there are so many people connected to the land, like Teresa Jordan, Amy Irvine, and Terry Tempest-Williams. There are other fine nature writers teaching, as well:George Handley at BYU and Jim Aton at SUU. The landscape here is powerful; it draws people. Writing about it is a humbling experience.”
His advice for up-and-coming authors? First: “write what you know and know what you write. It has to be something you are passionate about. Write about what you care about.” Secondly “always try to keep making your writing better. Look at the newer style guides, and when you find yourself feeling stale, read breathtakingly good books.” For Stephen, those include a wide range of writers from John McPhee of the New Yorker, Annie Dillard, JK Rowling, and Ellen Meloy.
 I asked Stephen what legacy he hopes to leave behind and he answered, “I hope to do everything I’ve done as well as I can do it. I recently heard Colin Powell talk about the lessons he learned as a young man. One was ‘Do a good job even when no one is looking.’ I like that.” He often asks himself “what is the most important thing I can do next with my time ? What’s important to spend my time on right now?” “I think maintaining relationships with the people I love and doing work well — to the very end — is important, because you never know when the end is going to come.”
Stephen Trimble was born in Denver, his family’s base for roaming the West with his geologist father. After a liberal arts education at Colorado College, he worked as a park ranger in Colorado and Utah, earned a master’s degree in ecology at the University of Arizona, served as director of the Museum of Northern Arizona Press, and for five years lived in Indian Country near Santa Fe, New Mexico. He has been a full-time free-lance writer and photographer since 1981,based in Salt Lake City for twenty-five years.
Trimble’s distinctive voice as a naturalist leads visitors through the new (2011) Natural History Museum of Utah, where he wrote much of the exhibit text. Trimble has received significant awards for his photography, his non-fiction, and his fiction—and the breadth of those awards mirrors the wide embrace of his work: The Sierra Club’s Ansel Adams Award for photography and conservation; The National Cowboy Museum’s Western Heritage “Wrangler” Award; and a Doctor of Humane Letters from his alma mater, Colorado College,honoring his efforts to increase our understanding of Western landscapes and peoples. As one of two Wallace Stegner Centennial Fellows at the University of Utah’s Tanner Humanities Center in 2008-2009,he co-taught two classes and led a statewide conversation about Stegner: www.stegner100.com.
Environmental historian James Aton believes Trimble’s “books comprise one of the most wellrounded,sustained, and profound visions of people and landscape that we have ever seen in the American West.” Bloggers at The Gulch judge Trimble to be “one of America’s best naturalist writers; nobody else produces prose that is quite so pure, spare, beautiful and clean.”
As writer, editor, and photographer Trimble has published more than 20 books. His bedrock focus is the land—western wildlands and natural history—including: Bargaining for Eden: The Fight for the Last Open Spaces in America • Lasting Light: 125 Years of Grand Canyon Photography •The Geography of Childhood: Why Children Need Wild Places (with Gary Paul Nabhan) • The Sagebrush Ocean: A Natural History of the Great Basin • Earthtones: A Nevada Album (with Ann Ronald) • Blessed By Light: Visions of the Colorado Plateau • and • Words From the Land:Encounters with Natural History Writing. Trimble spent ten years listening to Southwest Indian people, and their stories fill his books: The People: Indians of the American Southwest • Talking With the Clay: the Art of Pueblo Pottery in the 21st Century • and • Our Voices, Our Land. He has also appeared on local and national NPR, including “Talk of the Nation” and “The Savvy Traveler.”
Trimble co-compiled (with Terry Tempest Williams) a landmark effort by writers hoping to sway public policy: Testimony: Writers of the West Speak on Behalf of Utah Wilderness. On March 27, 1996,Senator Russ Feingold (D-WI) read Trimble’s essay from Testimony on the floor of the United States Senate during his plea to protect Utah wilderness. Feingold concluded with, “That short piece of writing is so powerful…because it is a timeless statement about how people feel about natural places.”
With his family, Trimble makes his home in Salt Lake City and in the redrock country of Torrey,Utah. From his attic studio in the city, he looks out on the Wasatch Mountains and Great Basin Desert.He is currently presenting readings from Bargaining for Eden, his book about the tension between community and development at the beginning of the 21st Century (which won support from the Utah Humanities Council and Utah Arts Council and the 2008 Utah Book Award in Nonfiction), consulting with The Nature Conservancy’s Colorado Plateau Conservation Initiative, and teaching writing in the University of Utah Honors College. Trimble’s website is www.stephentrimble.net.
Upcoming Events with Stephen Trimble– He’ll be speaking at the Orem library on the evening of September 27th.  And he’ll be speaking at BYU at lunchtime in the library special collections room at noon on October 19.  Both talks will be general discussions of themes in his work
In addition be sure to sign up for Tutored by the Land: A Writing and Photography Workshop with Stephen Trimble at The Environmental Humanities Education Center at Centennial Valley, Montana. Sept. 12–16, 2012. Details can be found at http://continue.utah.edu/golearn/montana12
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A Sisterhood of Strength Blog Tour and Giveaway

13 Aug, 2012 by in Uncategorized 2 comments

Fire and Ice is pleased to be today’s stop on the official Cedar Fort blog tour for

A Sisterhood of Strength
by Diony George
Paperback, 128 pages
Expected Publication Date: August 14, 2012
by Cedar Fort
ISBN: 1462110762
Book Source: Author
5 stars
Book summary from goodreadsExperience for yourself the pure love that inspires ordinary women to serve and accept service in a truly extraordinary manner. This inspiring collection of true stories from the lives of women just like you is told with heartwarming sincerity. Perfect for sharing, this remarkable book is sure to uplift, encourage, and cheer any woman, whether it’s her turn to serve or be served.

Cathy’s review: I was excited to read this book, because I’ve enjoyed reading the new book about the organization of the Relief Society, I thought this would be similar and I wasn’t disappointed! This book contains many stories from real women of ways that they have either served and been blessed by it or been served and blessed by another sister. I loved how there was a story and then a short quote or poem. There were a lot of quotes by Prophets, Apostles, and General Relief Society presidents. This book made me want to be a better visiting teacher and even just a better friend. I highly recommend this one!
Content: Clean
Author Bio: I’m a wife, mother of seven, and grandmother of two originally from Alaska, but currently live in Utah with my family and now consider myself a true city girl at heart. I will readily admit I don’t miss the giant mosquitoes or the cold and long, dark winters way up North, but I absolutely miss the fresh seafood. Fish and chips made with fresh-caught halibut is my favorite!
My beginning as a writer started in elementary school when a poem I had written for a contest was chosen as a winner, set to music, and sung by the whole school at an assembly. I wrote my first picture book, 11 pages long in fifth grade as an assignment,  bound it myself and have read it to my children several times. The next book I wrote, I was in eighth grade, 48 pages long with photograph’s and was a memoir.
The first edition of my first published novel, Torn Apart was released in July 2008, when I was 42 years old, the second edition under a new publisher was released nationally in February of 2009. So…never give up on your dream of writing. I’m currently working on my third novel.
When I’m not imagining a new plot-line or typing frantically away at my computer, I love to spend time with my family, read (my favorite genre is romantic suspense) travel, cook or bake something delicious, sew, scrap-book, or work on crafts.
Find out more about author Diony George: Goodreads/ Blog
Fire and Ice is giving away one paperback copy of Sisterhood of Strength courtesy of Diony George and Cedar Fort Books. To enter to win fill out the rafflecopter form below. Good Luck! a Rafflecopter giveaway

LDSBA Convention Recap and Giveaway

11 Aug, 2012 by in Uncategorized 7 comments

This week I was privileged to attend the LDS Booksellers Association Convention or LDSBA with a couple other bloggers including I Am A Reader Not A Writer, LDSWBR and Tristi Pinkston. This is a closed event to the public and it’s the first year they have let bloggers enter, so it was very exciting to see all of the new books and merchandise being offered to bookstores and buyers.
We were invited to a speed dating session with vendors, an author dinner with Frank Cole, Heather Ostler, Carla Kelly and Jenni James and finally a day in the exhibit hall. Among the vendors were Cedar Fort Books, Deseret Book, Covenant Communications, Brigham Distributing and many others. We caught a sneak peek of some of the new advanced reading copies and picked up swag which we are sharing with our blog readers.
To see my live feed of all the photos, and people I met, go to twitter #LDSBA, our facebook page and Heather Gardner Photography’s facebook page. Thanks so much to the organizers of LDSBA for inviting us! We hope to be back next year!

Some of the titles featured at LDSBA

To enter to win three books from the LDSBA convention fill out the rafflecopter form below

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YA Early Book Review- The Dark Unwinding

10 Aug, 2012 by in scholastic, Sharon Cameron, The Dark Unraveling Leave a comment

The Dark Unwinding
by Sharon Cameron
Hardcover, 352 pages
Published:   September 1st 2012
by Scholastic Press
ISBN  0545327865
Book Source: Publisher
4 Stars
Book Summary From Goodreads:  
A spine-tingling tale of steampunk and spies, intrigue and heart-racing romance!

When Katharine Tulman’s inheritance is called into question by the rumor that her eccentric uncle is squandering away the family fortune, she is sent to his estate to have him committed to an asylum. But instead of a lunatic, Katharine discovers a genius inventor with his own set of rules, who employs a village of nine hundred people rescued from the workhouses of London.

Katharine is now torn between protecting her own inheritance and preserving the peculiar community she grows to care for deeply. And her choices are made even more complicated by a handsome apprentice, a secretive student, and fears for her own sanity.

As the mysteries of the estate begin to unravel, it is clear that not only is her uncle’s world at stake, but also the state of England as Katharine knows it. With twists and turns at every corner, this heart-racing adventure will captivate readers with its intrigue, thrills, and romance.

Review by ephrielle:
Upon finishing this book I was ready to rate it a three star. At which point I read the inspiration for this book and it immediately deserved a higher rating. Knowing that this book has in some small measure basis in fact made it much more real.
I think the reason I wasn’t completely enamored  was the book primarily revolved around a person loosing their mind. That is a some scary and loose ground to cover. In fact the book was so well focused on this that when a 180 degree turn comes about the book sort of unraveled. Nothing quite made sense. Or perhaps it was my mind that was a bit unraveled page by page.
Also, the book seemed more than ordinarily out on a limb than I expected. It didn’t feel as grounded in the time frame as you would expect. Sure it is steam punk so there is going to be some grand differences but it should still feel time appropriate. This isn’t a big deal as it is supposed to be part of the point. They are in this very remote pocket of land where society and the natural order hold little sway.  Which also likely accounts for the jarring feeling I felt after the climax. Society all of sudden begins to creep its talons back into the area.
The ending was a little bit bitter sweet. There wasn’t a solid happy ever after but more of a good hope for one in the future.  All in all it was a great book and it didn’t take long to read. The characters are fun to meet and one in particular unique and endearing. I can’t say I agree with the opening paragraph of the summary of the book. While yes everything it implies does occur it is a bit exaggerated. I do however recommend reading this book as it was an enjoyable read.

About the author: Sharon Cameron was awarded the 2009 Sue Alexander Most Promising New Work Award by the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators for her debut novel, The Dark Unwinding. When not writing Sharon can be found thumbing dusty tomes, shooting her longbow, or indulging in her lifelong search for secret passages.

Find more about author Sharon Cameron on  Website / Facebook
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Nobody By Jennifer Lynn Barnes Giveaway and Video

09 Aug, 2012 by in mundie moms, nobody 19 comments

Egmont USA and author Jennifer Lynn Barnes are gearing up for the cover reveal of her newest book Nobody on Mundie Moms August 16th. In order to get ready we are posting a video by the author about what is coming up next in YA and offering up a huge giveaway! Be sure to check back here on the 16th for the cover reveal.

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.
Author Jennifer Lynn Barnes talks about YA:
The Giveaway: Fire and Ice is giving away Raised by Wolves series (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 as well as some Raised by Wolves swag. To enter to win fill our the rafflecopter form below. Good luck!

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Book Review- Palace of Stone: Princess Academy #2

08 Aug, 2012 by in Palace of Stone, Shannon Hale, young adult fiction 2 comments

Palace of Stone (Princess Academy #2)
by Shannon Hale
Hardcover, 336 pages
Expected Publication Date: August 21, 2012
by Bloomsbury USA
ISBN: 1599908735
Book source: ALA
5 Stars
Book Summary from Goodreads: Coming down from the mountain to a new life in the city seems a thrill beyond imagining. When Miri and her friends from Mount Eskel set off to help the future princess Britta prepare for her royal wedding, she is happy about her chance to attend school in the capital city. There, Miri befriends students who seem so sophisticated and exciting . . . until she learns that they have some frightening plans. They think that Miri will help them, that she “should “help them. Soon Miri finds herself torn between loyalty to the princess and her new friends’ ideas, between an old love and a new crush, and between her small mountain home and the bustling city. Picking up where “Princess Academy “left off, this incredible stand-alone story celebrates the joys of friendship, the delight of romance, and the fate of a beloved fairy tale kingdom.
Cathy’s review: Miri is back to living her regular, old, boring life after the Princess Academy. She thought that things would have changed when the price of linder had been made more fair, but life has gone on as normal for the people in Mount Eskel. Miri is soon summoned to the capital city to help her best friend and Princess to be, Britta, with the wedding preparations. Miri is also to attend school, something she’s yearned to do for a long time. As she attends school, Miri begins to notice the chasm between the royals and the common people that they rule. She makes some new friends, including a boy named Timon, these friends seem to want to make things better for the common man, and they would really like Miri to join them. But Miri is confused, she is unsure whether she should help in the fight for the common man with Timon, or learn all she can and go back to her life in Mount Eskel with her love Peder. She begins to see that she must make a choice and soon, before that choice is made for her, but just what should she choose?
This book was so great! I love Miri, she is such a strong young woman, she wants to do what’s right, but she’s unsure of just which way she should go. I loved the feel of this book, you can feel the tone of revolution from the very beginning. I love reading the letters that Miri writes to her sister Marda, you can tell just how Miri feels and how much she is learning, including about herself, and changing. I love that this book can be read as part of a series, but it’s great to read just by itself too. It’s been quite awhile since I’ve read the original Princess Academy, but I didn’t feel lost at all. I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves to read books by Shannon Hale, and anyone who loves to read about Princesses!
Content: Clean
About the Author: Shannon Hale is the New York Times best-selling author of six young adult novels: the Newbery Honor book Princess Academy, multiple award winner Book of a Thousand Days, and the highly acclaimed Books of Bayern series. She has written three books for adults, including Midnight in Austenland (Jan. 2012), companion book to Austenland. She co-wrote the hit graphic novel Rapunzel’s Revenge and its sequel Calamity Jack with husband Dean Hale. They live near Salt Lake City, Utah with their four small children, and their pet, a small, plastic pig. 
Find out more about author Shannon Hale: Goodreads/ Website/ Twitter

Populazzi Paperback Release and Author Guest Post

07 Aug, 2012 by in populazzi 4 comments

Fire and Ice is the stop today on the blog tour for

Populazzi
by Elise Allen
which came out TODAY in paperback
from Harcourt Children’s Books
ISBN 0547481535
Cara has never been one of those girls: confident, self-possessed, and always ready with the perfect thing to say. A girl at the very top of the popularity tower. One of the Populazzi.

Now, junior year could change everything. Cara’s moving to a new school, and her best friend urges her to seize the moment—with the help of the Ladder. Its rungs are relationships, and if Cara transforms into the perfect girlfriend for guys ever-higher on the tower, she’ll reach the ultimate goal: Supreme Populazzi.

The Ladder seems like a lighthearted social experiment, a straight climb up, but it quickly becomes gnarled and twisted. And when everything goes wrong, only the most audacious act Cara can think of has a chance of setting things even a little bit right.

To celebrate we have an exclusive guest post from the author, Elise Allen…
First, a big thank you to Heather for having me here at Fire and Ice to celebrate the paperback release of my debut novel, Populazzi!

It’s been a year since the book was first released, and a question I often get from people who haven’t read it yet is, “So… what’s the book like?”
Well, if Populazzi were…
…a dessert, it would be fresh-baked chocolate-chip cookies – light and crispy on the outside, rich and chewy on the inside.

…a dog, it would be a Jack Russell terrier – super-smart and playful.

…a gem, it would be a diamond – fun and sparkly, but sharp enough to cut glass.

…a drink, it would be champagne – the more you have, the more you laugh.

…a place, it would be Los Angeles – exciting, with something there for everyone.

…a piece of clothing, it would be the perfect little black dress – a little racy, but always in great taste.

…an amusement park ride, it would be the new Star Tours at Disneyland – you think you know what you’ll get, but it constantly surprises you.
Thanks again, Heather! And thanks to everyone out there who has read or is planning to read Populazzi!

About Elise Allen: POPULAZZI is Elise Allen’s first solo novel but she previously co-wrote the bestselling novel ELIXIR with author and actress Hilary Duff and is at work on the next book in the series with Hilary. She’s written for several television shows from Cosby to Muppets to Dinosaur Train, which garnered her two Daytime Emmy Awards. Elise Allen has among the most random television-writing resumes ever, with credits that run the gamut from Cosby to Dinosaur Train. She recently fulfilled one of her many life’s ambitions by writing for the Muppets. Another ambition, anytime-access to Disneyland’s Club 33, is for the moment still a pipe dream. Elise has a sick penchant for running marathons, and can’t seem to stop even though fifteen really should be enough already. She lives in L.A. with her husband, daughter, and insatiable food-hound of a dog, Riley.
For more, visit www.eliseallen.com or follow Elise on Twitter at www.twitter.com/EliseLAllen.