My top 5 auto-buy authors

Welcome back to my blog! Today I thought it’d be fun to discuss those authors whose books we buy without even reading the blurb or checking reviews. The ones we know we’ll enjoy, no matter what the book is about. The authors who can lend their hand to any subject matter, whether it’s an epic fantasy based on 15th century Spain, a supernatural ghost story about a haunted bakery, or a contemporary romance between two rival ballet dancers.

In no particular order…

 

Autobuy authors

1. Maggie Stiefvater

If you’ve been following this blog for a while, you’ll already know about my love for Maggie Stiefvater (check out my reviews of The Scorpio Races and The Raven Boys). I stumbled across Shiver back when I was a young pup (21, then…) just looking for something to satisfy my post-Potter reading addiction. It did the trick, and luckily was a trilogy (I’m still yet to read Sinner, #4 in The Wolves of Mercy Falls series!), so there was plenty of content to sink my teeth into.

After I finished that series, I picked up Lament and Ballad, which I didn’t love as much, but I just needed another hit of Stiefvater’s distinctive writing style. Then I got distracted by the likes of The Mortal Instruments and The Hunger Games, and didn’t get around to reading The Scorpio Races or The Raven Cycle until this year, when I realised what I had been missing and renewed my adoration of la Stiefvater once more.

Seriously, if you’re looking for a great young adult fantasy read, you won’t go wrong with one of Maggie’s books. Her style is slightly eerie and very suspenseful, with lots of mythology and supernatural elements mixed with complex and flawed characters.

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2. Sarah J. Maas

When I discovered S.J. Maas, she had already published three books in the Throne of Glass series as well as a collection of prequel novellas, and A Court of Thorns and Roses had just been released. There was a lot of hype around her books, and most of the reviews I saw were good – her books sounded right up my street, and I loved that there were a good few to get stuck into without having to wait too long for the next to be released.

Maas writes absolutely epic young adult and new adult fantasy, with some of the most book-boyfriend worthy male characters you will ever come across. She quickly became one of my favourite authors, and Empire of Storms and A Court of Mist and Fury cemented her newfound status as an auto-buy author. I’m impatiently waiting for the next instalments in both series!

She’s also writing a Catwoman novel which will be released in 2018, so if superheroes are your cup of tea then pop that on your TBR. You won’t regret it.

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3. Leigh Bardugo

I read The Grisha Trilogy because everyone else was, and I enjoyed it, it was an entertaining read (or listen, I got the audiobooks), but where Leigh Bardugo really came into her own was the follow up series, Six of Crows. Set in the same fictional world, but a different part and a few years later, Six of Crows features cameos from a few of the main characters of the Grisha series, but with a whole cast of new characters and a gripping, exciting plot.

Leigh’s talent for world-building is what really puts her up there in my list of favourite authors, she even created a new language for these series. Set in a fictionalised version of medieval Russia, the language and culture are heavily influenced by Russian. The magic system she invented is deeply complex and fascinating, and the characters really come to life as you’re reading.

I’d recommend reading The Grisha Trilogy before starting on Six of Crows, it’s not essential but it adds to the experience and they are a fun read, lots of people loved them just as much, if not more than SoC.

Bardugo is also working on a Wonder Woman novel as part of a DC Icons project, so there’s another superhero book for your list!

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4. Laini Taylor

Daughter of Smoke and Bone was the first book I listened to on Audible, so it has a special place in my heart, but the whole series is just fantasy heaven. The whole concept of creating creatures using teeth and bone fragments, and reincarnating souls into the bodies is really interesting, and the action is fast-paced and full of tension.

The detail in the descriptions of the characters, creatures, magic and the worlds Laini has created is just phenomenal. I loved every single book and was heartbroken when the series concluded, but the ending was really satisfying.

Laini’s next book, Strange the Dreamer (out this month) is hotly anticipated amongst the bookish community online, and I for one can’t wait to get my hands on it!

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5. Samantha Shannon

I was given The Bone Season by a friend who works at Waterstones, along with Half Bad and We Were Liars, so I trust his recommendations implicitly. It’s one of the best debuts I have ever read. Shannon wrote it whilst studying English at Oxford, and was a published author at 21. So, not intimidating at all, then.

The Bone Season series is set in London in an alternate future (2059, but with a different history since the 1800s). It has criminal gangs, psychic powers and alien-type creatures from another realm that control the UK government. It’s fantasy, sci-fi, steampunk, and just incredibly well written. It’s one of these really detailed books with a map and a glossary and a completely new lexicon. And I live for that.

The third book in the series comes out this month, and I’m going to a signing at Waterstones so I’ll hopefully be acquiring a signed copy and meeting Samantha!! I’m so excited, and also really nervous, but I bet she’s lovely. She’s a huge inspiration, so it will be a dream come true to hear her speak about the book and hopefully get a signed copy.

Who are your top 5 auto-buy authors? Do you love YA fantasy authors as much as I clearly do? Let me know in the comments!

See you next time,

Lyndsey

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Current word count: 44,243

Looking forward to smashing out 35k words during Camp Nano!

Top five auto buy authors Lyndsey's Book Blog

Review: The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater

Welcome back to my blog, readers and writers!

Before we get to today’s review, I have some exciting news! I’m over halfway through draft two of my WIP The Fair Queen, and thought now would be a good time to share another excerpt (you may have read the first draft of my prologue when I shared it a few months ago).

So, now I’m sharing the first three chapters of The Fair Queen with you all! I’d love to hear your thoughts on it, email me, tweet me, or leave a comment on here.

All you have to do to get your chapters is sign up with your email address and you’ll receive a link to download them, and if you’re already subscribed there’ll be a link in every email so you can download and read them at your leisure!

Head over to my Books page to sign up by email and get your chapters!

Right, on with the review!

 

The Raven Boys

5 stars

Let me start by saying that I am years behind, the final book in this series was published in 2016, and The Raven Cycle has been on my TBR for ages, but until I read The Scorpio Races recently and remembered how much I loved Maggie Stiefvater, it had languished at the bottom of the list. (I am ashamed. Too many books, too little time.)

Most of the book bloggers and readers I follow online absolutely adore this series, although some weren’t happy with the ending (I’ve only read the first book so far, so I can’t spoil that for you!). I heard that Maggie is writing a companion series about Ronan, so I’ll be looking forward to that when I finish. I’m going to try and avoid spoilers as much as possible – I’m desperate for some fan art, but Tumblr is a minefield!

Synopsis

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater is set in Henrietta, Virginia, a small town on a ley line, where psychics are real and magic exists. Gansey is searching for a dead Welsh king, and Blue is trying to avoid kissing any boys because her psychic mother and aunts have warned her that kissing her true love will result in his death.

“Impossibly, Blue realised that this other Blue was crying because she loved Gansey. And that the reason Gansey touched her like that, his fingers so careful with her, was because he knew that her kiss could kill him.”

Unlike her mother, Blue doesn’t have the Sight, but on St Mark’s day, she sees a spirit. The spirits that walk the corpse road on St Mark’s day are the people of the town that will die in the next twelve months. Mostly the sick and elderly. But this spirit is a young man, and for Blue to have seen him must mean that he is either her true love, or she is going to kill him. Or both.

The eponymous Raven Boys consist of:

  • Richard Gansey III, or just “Gansey” – a tortured soul in a Trust fund kid’s body.

“Gansey was just a guy with a lot of stuff and a hole inside him that chewed away more of his heart every year.”

  • Ronan Lynch – an angry, dark-humoured ruffian who drinks, swears and offends people. A lot.

“Gansey had once told Adam that he was afraid most people didn’t know how to handle Ronan. What he meant by this was that he was worried that one day someone would fall on Ronan and cut themselves.”

  • Adam Parrish – a sweet, intelligent boy who works three jobs to pay for school and wants to make his own way in life.

“The most important thing to Adam Parrish, though, had always been free will, the ability to be his own master.
This was the important thing.
It had always been the important thing.
This was what it was to be Adam.”

  • Noah – a vague, gentle kid with a warm heart and cold hands.

“Noah appeared beside Blue. He looked joyful and adoring, like a Labrador retriever. Noah had decided almost immediately that he would do anything for Blue, a fact that would’ve needled Adam if it had been anyone other than Noah.”

All but Adam live together in an apartment building owned by Gansey, Monmouth Manufacturing. Adam lives in a double wide trailer with his parents, to his embarrassment, and works several jobs to pay for the half of his school fees that aren’t covered by a scholarship.

The emblem of Aglionby Academy, where the boys go to school, is a raven. Hence the name.

“Aglionby Academy was the number one reason Blue had developed her two rules: One, stay away from boys because they were trouble. And two, stay away from Aglionby boys, because they were bastards.”

The atmosphere of the book is heavy and intense, like a hot summer. For those few weeks in the story, it feels like everything Blue and the Raven Boys do is life-or-death, and it just might be. Stiefvater is brilliant at creating suspense and a sense of urgency, it’s slow-building, picking up speed with each surprise revelation along the way.

The plot, whilst gripping, is almost secondary to the relationships between the characters. I’ve seen the group described as “co-dependent” and that couldn’t be more accurate, I can’t think of another group of teens in a YA novel that need each other quite as much as these do.

“Gansey could’ve had any and all of the friends that he wanted. Instead he had chosen the three of them, three guys who should’ve, for three different reasons, been friendless.”

There are a lot of components to The Raven Boys, but Stiefvater commands them all effortlessly, and it never feels like a single element doesn’t quite fit. Combining Blue’s world of eccentric women, mysterious psychic abilities and strong principles with Gansey’s world of privilege, money and the all-consuming search for Owen Glendower, the lost Welsh king, takes real artistry, and Stiefvater makes it look easy.

I’m giving The Raven Boys 5 stars, it is definitely one of my new favourite books – probably not quite surpassing The Scorpio Races, if only because it’s the first in a series rather than a standalone and so I won’t be satisfied until I’ve read the entire series!

I would liken it to Beautiful Creatures, thematically, which I sadly didn’t finish, but this is definitely the better book!

Have you read The Raven Cycle? Which other books would you liken it to? If not, I can’t recommend it enough, stick it on your TBR or bump it up to the top, and let me know what you think of it!

Lyndsey

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I am a member of the Book Depository affiliate program, so if you click through and buy any of the books mentioned in this blog I might make a little commission, but I am not paid to review books and all reviews are my own opinions!

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Currently reading:

Audiobook

And I Darken by Kiersten White

I’m only about 50 pages into this but I’m enjoying it so far, it’s different to my usual YA reads because Lada starts off as a young girl and grows up throughout the book, so she’s only about 13 right now and already she’s a badass. It’s fascinating learning more about Romania and the Ottomans, and it’s a really interesting adaptation of the Vlad the Impaler/Dracula story.

Paperback

The Shadow Queen by C.J. Redwine

I finally finished my beta reading, so I’m going to dive back into this one because it’s been sitting on my bedside table for weeks now, untouched. I’ve heard there are dragons, so I’ll be picking this back up sharpish!

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater review Lyndsey's Book Blog

Let me take a shelfie

I cleaned my bookcase this week and had a good sort out, so I thought I’d do a post with a before and after! We’re redecorating our spare bedroom at the moment, which is where all my books live, so I took the opportunity to take a couple of shelfies for you.

Enjoy!

Lyndsey's Book Blog my empty book case
Before
Lyndsey's Book Blog my donate pile
The donate pile
Lyndsey's Book Blog my keep pile
The keep pile
Lyndsey's Book Blog Half full bookcase
Almost done…
Lyndsey's Book Blog beautiful shelfie
The finished article!

So, I’ve got DVDs and Blu Rays on the bottom half, books on the top half, a few candles and nick nacks, and souvenirs from holidays. On top is a Bluetooth speaker that my husband’s mum bought him for his birthday last year, in the shape of a jukebox.

In case you can’t see, and don’t recognise books at fifty paces (call yourself a bookworm??), on the top shelf we have:

The Mortal Instruments and Lady Midnight by Cassandra Clare

Bone Season and Mime Order by Samantha Shannon

Half Bad by Sally Green (where is my copy of Half Wild? Nobody knows.)

Harry Potter by J. K. Rowling

Delirium series by Lauren Oliver

The Sin Eater’s Daughter and The Sleeping Prince by Melinda Salisbury

Divergent series by Veronica Roth

Who is Tom Ditto? By Danny Wallace (tbr)

I Let You Go by Clare Mackintosh (tbr)

The Husband’s Secret by Liane Moriarty (tbr)

Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton (tbr)

It Had to be You by Ellie Adams (tbr)

And on the second shelf, we have:

Fallen series by Lauren Kate

The Wolves of Mercy Falls series by Maggie Stiefvater

Books of Faerie series by Maggie Stiefvater

Once Upon a Dream by Liz Braswell

Twilight series by Stephanie Meyer

Hush, Hush series by Becca Fitzpatrick

Anna dressed in Blood and Girl of Nightmares by Kendare Blake

The Diabolic by S. J. Kincaid

Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer

The Infernal Devices by Cassandra Clare

On the right, I’ve put Harry Potter and the Cursed Child because it wouldn’t fit next to the other HP books (Why? Why?), and Red Sister by Mark Lawrence and Wintersong by S. Jae-Jones, which I got in last month’s Illumicrate and am yet to read. Underneath them are a few of my husband’s books, including Hannibal by Thomas Harris and Game of Thrones by George R. R. Martin. I’m pretty sure I’m going to borrow that one at some point!

So, these are the books I own physical copies of, as you know I’m a big audio book fan and I do love a good library (free books, you say? I’ll take them all). I also donate any books I didn’t love (The Maze Runner series – couldn’t get past Scorch Trials) or won’t reread (The Fault in our Stars and Before I go to Sleep). I don’t currently own a Kindle or read e-books, I’m not against it per se, but I do prefer the feel of a paperback in my hands.
Have you ready any of the books on my shelf? Which are your favourites? What would you recommend to someone who enjoyed these series? Give me all the recommendations! We all know my TBR is far too small and needs to grow.
Lyndsey

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Second draft word count: 36,041