Showing posts with label ilsa j bick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ilsa j bick. Show all posts

Monday, September 24, 2012

Win SHADOWS by Ilsa J. Bick!

Tomorrow Ilsa J. Bick's end-of-the-world story continues on.  The sequel to ASHES, SHADOWS, drops like it's about to get eaten.  Now if you're a good reader you should be salivating at the face for this title.  I mean the end of ASHES was so incredibly infuriating and cliffhangerish  that I started frothing about a year ago (maybe a bit more).  If you haven't even read ASHES yet then what the hell are you doing?  You have homework to do.

For the rest of you, in case you need a refresher you can head on over to Ilsa's site for a quick recap.  SHADOWS doesn't sucker into the standard billion-page recap that seems to creep all over YA series so if you don't know what's going on, or can't remember, you'll be rather lost.  I know I'll be diving into that ASHES cheat sheet.  I remember quite a bit of what happened (a rarity for me) but I figured anything that's pertinent to SHADOWS Ilsa will mention on her own recap.  Safe bet, right?


Coincidentally SHADOWS is also this month's pick for my fantabulous sooper sekret book club, YAckers.  We plan to YAck it good.  And we may even have a copy or two to give away when we post the YAck on the YAcker's site.

Not sure what's headed your way in SHADOWS?  Check out the blurb from Goodreads -
The Apocalypse does not end. The Changed will grow in numbers. The Spared may not survive.

Even before the EMPs brought down the world, Alex was on the run from the demons of her past and the monster living in her head. After the world was gone, she believed Rule could be a sanctuary for her and those she’d come to love.
But she was wrong.

Now Alex is in the fight of her life against the adults, who would use her, the survivors, who don’t trust her, and the Changed, who would eat her alive.
Rather elusive but there you go.  It's a tease, I'll admit that.  A big one.  Have you READ the end of ASHES?  This is nothing compared to that so I'll take it.

Now is your chance to win a finished copy courtesy of Egmont.  What do you need to do?
  • Open to US residents 13 years of age and older only.
  • One entry per person per email address.
  • Duplicate entries will be deleted.
  • Entrants must be a follower of Bites via one of the following mediums: GFC, RSS, Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr, Goodreads.
  • Entrants must follow the YAckers site (and be sure to come back to it to check out our YAck of SHADOWS, yes, I'm shamelessly whoring for followers here, sue me).
  • Giveaway ends October 8th at midnight, MST/Arizona time.
Now just fill out the form and have at it.  Happy release day, Ilsa!

Monday, February 27, 2012

A Week with Carolrhoda Lab Review: Drowning Instinct by Ilsa J. Bick

Published February 1, 2011.


There are stories where the girl gets her prince, and they live happily ever after. (This is not one of those stories.)

Jenna Lord's first sixteen years were not exactly a fairytale. Her father is a controlling psycho and her mother is a drunk. She used to count on her older brother—until he shipped off to Iraq. And then, of course, there was the time she almost died in a fire.

There are stories where the monster gets the girl, and we all shed tears for his innocent victim. (This is not one of those stories either.)

Mitch Anderson is many things: A dedicated teacher and coach. A caring husband. A man with a certain...magnetism.

And there are stories where it's hard to be sure who's a prince and who's a monster, who is a victim and who should live happily ever after. (These are the most interesting stories of all.) (netgalley.com)

I've been sitting on reviewing DROWNING INSTINCT for about two months now, doing the Homer Simpson "I wanna" dance waiting for Carolrhoda Lab's special week so I can finally put it up. And now I'm faced with what to say. What can I say other than Ilsa's done it yet again? She's ripped my heart out, stomped on it, sewed it back together and gently placed it back in my chest. I cried like a freaking baby at the end of DROWNING INSTINCT. It's hard to see such a sad character lose a rare piece of happiness in her life.

DROWNING INSTINCT was also the book that made me realize that I needed to step away from these kind of contemporaries for a while. It's so real and honest and gritty that it hurts me to read. As much as I shy away from the prospect of loinfruit, to see a child hurting kills me. Ilsa killed me with Jenna. She was so wounded and so alone and when she finally found the support she needed it was wrenched away from her again. And the story leaves you hanging. Kind of. You know what happens but you really DON'T. You can kinda tell how Jenna's going to do but you don't REALLY know and it's a killer. Is she okay, Ilsa? Please tell me.

Like DRAW THE DARK the story is a bit drawn out and slow at points but that's really the only nominally negative thing I can say about DROWNING INSTINCT and Ilsa's writing in general. She gets so thoroughly into her characters' heads its scary, like she could be automatic writing with a ghost or something. Or she trances out and channels the characters living inside of her. When she's writing she's not Ilsa, she's Jenna and that's why it feels so realistic. That's why every pang and pain and piece of anger jumps off of the page, grabs you by the collar and shakes you until you feel it too. It can't be helped. The story won't let you walk away without feeling something.

Jenna isn't just your average overcoming, strong heroine. She's life. She's reality. She's a piece of soul torn and put through the wringer. It's like you can hear her whispering the story in your ear. As she's talking into that recorder the cop gave her, it's like she's sitting right next to you and she's looking you dead in the eye while she's telling it. She isn't just a character that's been through some terrible crap. She hit the delete button at the end of the story and you don't even know if there's hope. But you pray there is. Because you're looking at her and you have to hope. You have to carry on her hope.

Before I completely jump off the cliff of nonsensical fangirling praise, I'm ending this here. DROWNING INSTINCT is as gritty at they come. It's realistic, poignant and will punch you in the gut by the end of the book. You will feel everything Jenna does. You will go through all of her ups and downs with her, even when you think you probably shouldn't. You still will. And then you'll get to the end and try to will more pages to appear because it can't end there. It just can't.


Ban Factor: High - Student/teacher relationship? I can hear the banner squeals already.

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

A Poll and an Awesome

First the poll. I created a poll on my Bites Facebook page so you guys can help me choose which books to give away for my Halloween contest. None of these books are about vampires or zombies (because I think those two things are pretty much overkill at this point) and I'm looking for your choice of which book sounds creepiest. The top three with the most votes will be given away here! So go vote! If you don't have a Facebook account or you can't otherwise vote, just leave your choice in the comments.


Now the awesome. Laura at A Jane of All Reads (formerly Life After Jane) went to an Ilsa Bick signing a couple weeks ago. She's a snot and likes to rub salt in my wounds because while I love Ilsa so, I've yet to meet her. But apparently I've made such an impact on Ilsa that she's permanently etched the awesome into Laura's autographed copy of ASHES. Take a look (squinting helps) -



Yes, you are allowed to bask in the awesomeness that is this image. I shall allow it just for now.

Tuesday, September 6, 2011

ASHES Lives!

Today is the day! ASHES by Ilsa J. Bick drops at all major book retailers, both brick and mortar and online, today! If you haven't picked up a copy yet, you really need to get to it. What are you waiting for?


Wednesday, August 31, 2011

ASHES US Tour Announced!

Well, at least part of it.


Ilsa announced the locations of the first two weeks of her ASHES US book tour next month! So if you're in Arizona (dammit it all, I was just there!), Mississippi, North Carolina, Michigan, Utah or Texas, be sure to check the dates, times and places so you can meet this lovely author! I've been trying to do it for years now but the tours don't bring her close! Or I keep missing her (like at BEA, srsly wanted to kick myself for that one).

She'll be announcing more dates as they become available. And count yourself extra lucky if you're in England or Ireland because she'll be seeing you all in October!

Saturday, August 27, 2011

ASHES Awesome Pre-Order Special!


Have I not already told you how awesome ASHES by Ilsa J. Bick is? Have I not told you that you need to go out and pre-order this fantasmagorical book immediately? Well, if you deign not to listen to me and haven't done it yet, then maybe this will light the much needed fire under your little asses.

Jennifer Laughran, Ilsa's agent, is having an AMAZING pre-order giveaway for ASHES. Check out her post about it for all the drool-worthy details. But here's what you can get for pre-ordering ASHES by 11:59 PM on September 5th:
  • With proof forwarded to the above email, you'll get your choice of an ASHES dog tag, pin or bookmark. EVERYONE will get one of these for pre-ordering. Freakin' sweet, right? But wait . . .
  • You'll be entered to win even awesomer things from Egmont, like an ASHES survival pack (I'm guessing similar or the same as the one they were raffling at BEA) or an ASHES-skinned tablet/e-Reader.
For serious, why WOULDN'T you pre-order ASHES? It's a fantastic book plus you can get free things just for buying it and are entered to win even bigger stuff? What the deuce are you waiting for???

Thursday, August 25, 2011

ASHES Gets Epic Marketing Push!

I've already waxed fangirlish on the awesomeness that is ASHES by Ilsa J. Bick. So imagine my squee moment when I see an article on Publisher's Weekly about how ASHES is getting the biggest launch in Egmont's history! With 125,000 copy first printing (which is huge), a pre-tour and another scheduled next month, it's a wonder that there's anyone left that HASN'T heard of ASHES yet.

Seriously people, it's a fantastic book. It really does put so many of those apocalyptic/dystopian books coming out now to shame in it's technical near-flawlessness. With a catastrophic world written so believably, it'll actually be pretty frightening to read. I'm telling you, you'll start looking at the sky differently after reading it. Considering in the past couple of months New England has gotten tornadoes, an earthquake and is bracing for a hurricane this weekend, it's only a matter of time before we have to start keeping an eye on our first born.

If you haven't read it already, put it on pre-order or mark your calendars to grab a copy when it drops on September 6th. Money absolutely well spent. Don't believe me? Then check out Lenore's joint review with Galleysmith. Four and a half zombie chickens don't lie, people.


Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Ashes by Ilsa J. Bick + Contest!


Pub date September, 2011.

An electromagnetic pulse sweeps through the sky, destroying every electronic device and killing billions. For those spared, it's a question of who can be trusted and who is no longer human . . .

Desperate to find out what happened and to avoid the Changed, Alex meets up with Tom - a young army veteran - and Ellie, a young girl whose grandfather was killed by the electromagnetic pulse.

This improvised family will have to use every ou
nce of courage they have just to survive. (book back blurb)

When I first saw Ilsa's new book in a Publisher's Weekly article highlighting look-out YA books at BEA this year, I emailed her immediately and started hunting for her publicist's information to get a copy. I loved, loved, LOVED Draw the Dark so much that Ilsa could have written PUDDING!!! in blue crayon for 180 pages and I still would have wanted to read it. Guys, I don't love books like this very often but DRAW? OMFG love. So I saw a chance to jump at ASHES and I took it.


After some back and forth I ended up with a copy and my ultimate goal was to read it before BEA and then gush about it here and send my attending readers over to her signings to get copies. Obviously I'm just reviewing it now but gush I did already. And I hadn't even finished it at that point. Now that I've finished it, I want to consume it piece by piece, perhaps marinated in a nice remoulade sauce, so I an absorb her talent for my own.

Srsly, ASHES is an apocalyptic/dystopian novel that all other YA apocalyptic/dystopian novels should aspire to. None of those lazy worldbuilding, OMG lurve triangle piles of horse poop. Well, there's a little bit of a love triangle but it's more like two disjointed lines that haven't connected yet that are on like 25% opacity in Photoshop. It's all about the world and the characters surviving in it. Everything is so expertly figured out that it's hard, if not impossible, to find loopholes in the logic. The shit that should happen does. Nothing is conveniently explained away. There are no fades to black and then POOF everything is better. Logic rules. Science rules. This all makes the story pwn.

Alex is one hell of a strong, resilient character that almost wasn't. To keep this review spoiler-free, I won't say why but I will say when this girl needs to keep pushing forward, there isn't much that'll be able to stand in her way. And just when you think she gives up, she slaps you upside the head and proves you wrong. Ellie is the type of character you want to slap. Yeah she's young and scared but Alex is a better person than I probably would be if our roles were switched. Would I leave Ellie behind? No. Would I slap the snot right out of her when she gets petulant? Probably. At the very least be screaming my head off. My patience with children is pretty low under normal circumstances. And Tom. Dear Tom. What a saving grace he was. A perfect compliment, filling in the gaps in Alex's survival knowledge. And I loved how Ilsa balanced that relationship that, for the most part, wasn't there like it is in many other similar books.

One of the reasons why I liked ASHES so much. Romance isn't the focus. It's hardly even a blip on the radar. The book is about the world, the destruction of it and these characters' subsequent survival. Romance is tertiary at best and that's how I like it. There's just enough in there to spark something but she has you so sucked into the world that it doesn't really matter.

Ilsa's writing is detailed almost to a fault. There were a couple of places where it went on a little too long and gave a few too many details that probably wouldn't have hurt the story if they were removed but ultimately I didn't mind. All that detail played well when it mattered. Again, no spoilers but I will recommend not reading this book while eating anything. There were many times I found myself a little nauseous reading some of the things that happened. In a good way, if that's possible.

I alluded to it before but I'll say it straight out: Ilsa is merciless with her characters. She shows them no mercy. Anything that can happen to them will. They don't get reprieves, they don't get spared, they don't amazingly escape dangerous situations without some damage done at least. Logic holds strong to these characters and just because Alex is the MC doesn't mean she's boo-boo free. Holy hell no. If anything she gets it the worst. Ilsa does everything with her characters that I hope to do with mine. It takes true bravery to submit your babies to this kind of torture and I commend her for it. Not many authors do this and it makes her work all the stronger for it.

And last but not least, there are zombies. Sort of. They're not the already-dead-and-then-alive type of zombies. They're Changed. And evolving. Oh man they evolve and that makes them all the more terrifying.

Seriously, this book is terrifying. It will have you looking up at the sky and wondering what if. Because it could happen. It makes sense. So why wouldn't it? Truly frightening that at any second ZAP! Gone. And what then? ASHES is the type of apocalyptic/dystopian novel that gives other like-minded novels complexes. It puts them to shame in terms of worldbuilding and character development. And the ending? GAHHHHHHHHHHHH! If you don't want to read more after that ending, then go to a hospital and have them check your pulse because I think you might be dead.

Read ASHES. Now. Or when it comes out. You will not regret it.


Contest time!!!

You want an ARC of ASHES? You know you do. Because you want to bask in its awesomeness. So just fill out the form below for your chance to win a copy. Open to US residents 13 years of age and older only. One entry per person per email address. Duplicate entries will be deleted. Contest ends June 14th at midnight, EST.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Ashes Cover Reveal and Why You Need to Go to Ilsa's BEA Signing

Remember when I reviewed a book called Draw the Dark and I gushed for it like I gushed for very few books in my book blogging days? Remember the fantabulousness that I thought it was? Remember how it made my 2010 Squee!!mers list that was, needless to say, rather short? Remember the last time I steered you wrong about a book I gushed about? Yeah, I didn't think so on that last one.

Ilsa J. Bick, author of Draw the Dark, is coming out with her next book, Ashes, in September through Egmont. Is it like Draw the Dark? Not so much. It's more along the lines of the current apocalyptic/dystopian trend that's hitting the YA market now. Take a look -

An electromagnetic pulse sweeps through the sky, destroying every electronic device and killing billions. For those spared, it's a question of who can be trusted and who is no longer human . . .

Desperate to find out what happened and to avoid the Changed, Alex meets up with Tom - a young army veteran - and Ellie, a young girl whose grandfather was killed by the electromagnetic pulse.

This improvised family will have to use every ounce of courage they have just to survive. (ARC back blurb)

A proper apocalyptic, but not like anything I've read yet. More on that in a minute. Right now I want to release its cover. If you get the Publisher's Weekly daily emails, then you've already seen it. If you've looked to the right and in my sidebar, you've seen the stock ARC cover. If you read my Added to the Pile post on Sunday, you've seen the tentative cover on my ARC. Creepy as hell. Rest assured I turn the thing over when it's on my nightstand. But the real cover? It looks like this -


You creeped out? Good. You should be. Because it's a creepy ass story. It's not meant to have some torn love triangle or really have any pretty romance in it at all. It's a survival story and it holds no qualms about it.

Ilsa's signing?

Tuesday, May 24th
10:30 - 11:30 at Table 4 in the Autographing Area
2:30 - 3:30 at Egmont Booth 4522

Why should you line up nice and early to get this ARC?

  • It's an apocalyptic story that makes sense. With a growing number of cranked out dystopians and general books of future dismay being released, it's plainly obvious Ilsa has spent a lot of time crafting this destroyed world. She did the research. She studied the people. The thing's so damn realistic that it'll have you looking up at the sky with a touch of fear in your eyes.
  • It's relatively romance-free. I say relatively because there is a hint of something. What would a YA book be without some nominal teenage hormones, even in the most desolate of times? But it's not a focus. The story is about these kids surviving. That's it. I know there are those of you out there yearning for a future-imperfect story sans romance. This is it.
  • It will make you feel things you didn't think a book could make you feel. Like how you really shouldn't read this when you're eating. And I'm not exaggerating. From nausea to pain to extreme loss, you will feel it all along with Alex.
  • Ilsa is merciless with her characters. They are spared nothing. Logic does not evade them. They don't miraculously escape tricky situations. They get pwned by them. They are ripped, torn and pulled apart until there's barely anything left, but their will to survive is so strong they just keep going.
  • Zombies. Sort of. They're kind of non-traditional in that they're not reanimated corpses. But the Changed aren't spared that classic title.
I could keep going but I'll save it for the review. So now you have no excuse not to go to either of Ilsa's signings. So go and tell her I sent you. You'll meet an awesome chick and get a fan-fucking-tabulous book while you're at it. Seriously, you won't want to put it down and, quite frankly, it blows the rest of those dismal-future books clean out of the water.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Draw the Dark Love

Remember back in May when I reviewed this little indie book called Draw the Dark by Ilsa J. Bick? Remember how much I loved it? Well now you can love it even more. As it turns out Amazon is shipping the book out already despite the fact that the title doesn't release until October. So if you want to order it from them, you'll get it nice and quickly!

Lerner Publishing is also expanding their horizons and releasing their books through NetGalley, including Draw the Dark! It's available for review now so be sure you request it. A couple of other Carolrhoda Lab titles are available too so you might as well request those while you're at it.

If you're not familiar with NetGalley, or you haven't registered for it yet and you're a book blogger, what are you waiting for? You get near-instant access to a slew of titles from a bunch of publishers including Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and Harlequin. And now Lerner and Carolrhoda Lab! The review copies are digital but you can request a tangible ARC if the publisher allows it. Personally, especially now that I have my Sony eReader Touch, I just take the digital copies. So much easier. It's where I received my copy of Wildthorn by Jane Eagland and The Ghosts of Crutchfield Hall by Mary Downing Hahn.

So go check out Draw the Dark if you haven't already. It's one title you certainly don't want to miss.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Author Bites - Ilsa J. Bick on History

I loved, loved, loved Ilsa J. Bick's Draw the Dark so I asked her to stop on by and talk about its creation a little bit. History is always a fascinating thing for me and I thank Ilsa so much for sharing some of hers with me on my blog. Thank you for stopping by, Ilsa!

First, I want to thank Donna for both reviewing Draw the Dark and asking for this guest post. Donna, you rock.

Second, thanks go to you—the readers out there—for taking a couple minutes out of your lives to spend here. I’ll try to be short and sweet about how I came to write this book, where Christian really comes from, that kind of stuff, bearing in mind that none of you have read the book yet. Remember, though: Most of what I do is a mystery to me, and there’s an advantage to keeping it that way.

So, short and sweet, this book happened because:
a) I’m Jewish and the daughter of a Holocaust survivor;
b) I live in rural Wisconsin about a stone’s throw away from an old Hebrew cemetery—which is weird because we’re the only Jewish family in town;
c) A German PW camp once stood about four miles from my house, and was only one of thirty-eight such camps in the state;
d) I think all art tells a story;
e) I’m a child shrink.

Like I said: relatively short and sweet. If that’s good enough for you, feel free to click away and thanks for dropping by. But, for those of you interested in the longer version, let’s take them in order.

A: Straightforward enough. My dad was in several camps, so the Holocaust has always been background music.

B: A disclaimer first: I love where I live. Wouldn’t dream of moving back East. Just so we’re clear on that.

But—we’re the only Jews in town. I’m not kidding. There are about fifty Jewish folks who form the nucleus of the one remaining synagogue the next town over, but the median age is about sixty-five. So we’re talking terminal dwindles here. To put this in perspective, there used to be about a thousand Jews and several synagogues as late as the 1950s: so many Jews, they called this area, “Little Jerusalem.”

More to the point, virtually no one in my village has ever met a Jew. I remember the first time this older guy found out I was Jewish. First thing out of his mouth: Hey, I heard Jewish people get buried standing up. I’m not making this up.

But . . . wait a minute. There’s that Hebrew Cemetery just spitting distance from my house. So what’s with that?

So I got curious and started digging and unearthed some interesting stuff, which leads us to . . .

C: History. I stumbled on a fabulous book, Betty Cowley’s Stalag Wisconsin, and here’s what I found out.

Prior to 1942, England held several thousand German prisoners of war. The Brits were really nervous that Hitler was going to destroy England from the inside-out by air-dropping weapons to all those prisoners. (I know. Sounds silly now but the Nazis had already bombed the crap out of London in the Blitz.) So England asked the U.S. to take the PWs off their hands.

We did. The first PWs started arriving in 1942. Wisconsin’s Camp McCoy was one of the first Army base camps, the place where captured Germans (and Italians and Japanese) would be processed before being moved along to other smaller, rural branch camps. The PWs were moved all over the U.S. and wherever they were needed to ease manpower shortages on farms and in factories. At its peak, the number of German PWs, held in the U.S., was about a half-million men.

In many towns, especially in the heavily Germanic Midwest, camp officials were deluged with requests from U.S. citizens about German relatives. Cowley’s book is chock-full of stories about things like German PWs knocking on relatives’ door, or of a German-American discovering a cousin or uncle or brother in a nearby PW camp. After the war, many German PWs came back to the U.S.—to these communities—to live.

All that history got me thinking: what would it be like to be Jewish and to live here at that particular time? There are these Germans PWs, who’ve worked for a government that pretty much wants to wipe you out, and now they’re just down the road. They’re working in factories, in the fields. Many times, there are people in town—your neighbors—who aren’t unhappy; who are, in fact, thrilled because some of those men are relatives or friends.

Think about it.

D&E: These are related, and here’s how. I think all art tells a story. I’m talking pictures now, but you can make the same argument about any art. Sometimes, the story’s about the artist’s reason for painting: where he lives, what’s going on politically, that kind of thing. Sometimes it’s about the relationship to what he’s painting. And—almost always, I think—the story’s about the painter’s relationship to the actual paint, the canvas, the brush, that palette knife. So when I look at a painting, I try to understand not only what an artist is trying to tell me but what the artist felt when he or she created the work.

That’s where Christian Cage enters: at the intersection of history and imagination and into a story I wanted to tell of the darkness of a town and its secrets, and of a personal darkness that takes courage to explore. (His name says it all, don’t you think?) Christian tells his personal story to himself by painting; he paints his history and his questions all over his walls. His room is the inside of his head. His problem is that he can’t make sense of it all; it never quite comes together. Sometimes, his darkness freaks him out.

Now, as a child shrink, I’ve always been interested in and drawn to the sideways place in people’s minds: the buried place where darkness lives. In fact, when I stop to re-read the first section of Draw again—which, one day, I hope you do as well—I realize that I’ve written a pretty fair description of what my job was as a child psychiatrist: to draw the dark. To try to help kids put words to what troubles or angers or haunts or frightens them. Which means—they have to go there: to that sideways place. Personally, I think that takes guts. But no matter how frightening, I think the journey through the darkness is worth it. Call the reward insight; call it understanding.

Or call it hope. I do.

So, there you go, some of the how and the why of Draw the Dark. As for the rest: If you’re inclined to read the book, you’ll take it from here.

Thanks for dropping by.

Ilsa J. Bick

Monday, May 10, 2010

Draw the Dark by Ilsa J. Bick + Contest!

Pub date: October 2010.

There are things in Winter, Wisconsin, folks just don't talk about. That murder way back in '45 is one. The near suicide of a first grade teacher is another. And then there is 17 year old Christian Cage. Christian's parents disappeared when he was a little boy, and ever since he's drawn and painted obsessively, trying desperately to remember his mother. The problem is Christian doesn't just draw his own memories. He can draw the thoughts of those around him. Confronted with fears and nightmares they'd rather avoid, people have a bad habit of dying. So it's no surprise that Christian isn't exactly popular.

What no one expects is for Christian to meet Winter's last surviving Jew and uncover one more thing best forgotten - the day the Nazis came to town. Based on a little known fact of the United States' involvement in World War II,
Draw the Dark is a YA dark fantasy about reclaiming the forgotten past and the redeeming power of love. (book back blurb)

Reading this book was kind of like riding the TGV train in Europe. It starts off kind of slow, just chugging along, until it gets it footing in wide open fields and starts barreling at its full potential: ramming down the countryside at 200 miles per hour and you're sitting there wobbling with the carriage enjoying the ride but somewhere deep in the back of your mind you're hoping the brakes are good.

This was such an amazing book. The more I read, the more I wanted to devour. I didn't want my lunch break to end because I wanted to keep reading. Would they notice if I went I few minutes longer? I just swallowed it up once I got over the beginning. It did meander a bit and it was a little slow to start. I felt getting into Christian's head could have been trimmed some because I was starting to feel, after a while, like saying 'get on with it.' Oh get on it did.

When I first met Christian I initially thought he was a little slow, mentally. Just the way he talked and the way he was portrayed as acting he just didn't seem like he was "all there," is I guess what you would want to say. But by the end not only was I totally over that notion, I thought Christian was actually a brilliant kid with a power that he didn't know how to wield so he functioned around it, not knowing how to control it. I loved him and felt for him and I was right there behind his eyes with him every step of the way.

I want to say this book is historical fiction but, technically, it doesn't fit the bill. But Christian relives the memories of people so much and I learned so much history about Winter through Christian's eyes that it's hard not to call it historical fiction. It also has fantastical elements too. It doesn't start out that way but once we start seeing that Christian isn't just strange but actually has the power to see people's thoughts, draw them out and tap into their darkest fears to actually destroy them, the fantasy starts coming out.

What I liked most about that, though, was that it's fantastical grounded in the realistic. We don't really know what's going on with Christian but we're in his head experiencing everything he is. But all of his visions are rooted in reality. He's not seeing Fey or ghosts but genuine memories from the past that help to solve a decades old murder and vindicate lives lost, both literally and figuratively.

The history that Bick draws on, Nazi prison camps in the US, just spurned my want to find out more. Really? Nazis here? I knew that our own government rounded up Japanese when we entered the war and relocated them to camps but we had POW camps? A quick Google search uncovered an extensive list of all the POW camps in the US just after World War II. One was about 20 minutes from where I live now, at the local airport. Reading, even fiction, enlightens us to historical facts sometimes. But in the midst of all of this, the strife that this caused this town of Winter (whether the actual events were real or not) is horrifying. A town populated by Jews are losing their jobs to Nazi prison workers. When they tried to unionize, the POWs took their jobs then too. Horrible.

The ending was bittersweet. It wraps up the overall story and the mystery aspect of the plot but at the same time shatters something so sweet and innocent it actually took my breath away. It doesn't end on a fluffy, happy note, but an empowering one. Christian has grown up. He's not seen as some weirdo that likes to draw and keeps to himself all the time. He saves people. He solves murders. And he still draws. He tried his hardest to break out of his own shell and let people in. But even at the end, whether he survives his own accomplishments is in question.

The writing is glorious, compelling, and will suck you right into your own sideways place. Maybe you'll want to crawl out and back into the light. Maybe you won't. But you'll go in there and meet Christian. You'll curl up in his brain and ride his life with him. You'll feel his pain, his fear, his anger, his frustration. And when the last page turns, you'll be feigning for more.

If you want a book that'll tug at your brain and your heart all at once, read Draw the Dark. It's a gripping historical fiction set during the present day and told through the eyes of a teenager with a miraculous and terrifying gift. Once you hop aboard the train, it'll take you away and while you might be afraid of the speed, you won't want to get off. You'll never want it to end.



Contest Time!!!

The lovely people at Carolrhoda Lab has graciously given me a copy of Draw the Dark to give away (because I'll be damned if I relinquish my copy!). Trust me, guys. You want to read this one. Just fill out the form below for your chance to win!


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