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In 1348, a group of travelers thrown together by fate, each with their own dark secret, is trying to outrun the plague as it sweeps across England.
Host Jill of Breaking the Spine asks us every week to talk about one book we are really looking forward to. My pick this week is Laura Whitcomb's The Fetch, coming February 2009. Check out this book description and just try not to get excited:
It’s difficult to distill everything that’s going on in this novel into a short summary, but I’ll try. Basically, it follows two plotlines which merge in the later part of the novel. One is narrated by the disgraced (and drunk) former Revolutionary War spy Ethan Saunders as he seeks to aid a former sweetheart and gets involved in trying to stop a plot against the US Treasury. The other is narrated by Joan Maycott who together with her husband, also a war veteran, try to improve their lot on the frontier by coming up with a new whisky recipe (which proves so popular that the government decides to tax it to raise funds).

(2) signed copies of Cecelia Ahern's Thanks for the Memories (April 2009) - Congrats to Janie and WordLily
(1) copy of Aurelia by Anne Osterlund (April 2008) - Congrats to Carol (unconfirmed)
(1) copy of Death by Bikini by Linda Gerber (May 2008) - Congrats to Cynthia
(1) copy of You are so undead to me by Stacey Jay (March 2009) Congrats to Shalonda
(2) copies of Beautiful Americans by Lucy Silag (January 2009) - Congrats to Kelsey & Amber
(1) copy of Schooled by Anisha Lakhani (August 2008) - Congrats to Mari
(1) signed set of Libby Bray's Gemma Doyle trilogy!! Congrats to Keri (unconfirmed)
and more!
SURPRISE ADDITIONS:
(5) copies of Audrey, Wait! by Robin Benway - Congrats to Yan, Carolina, Kimberly Derting, Simply Megan and Book Lover Lisa
(5) copies of Chalice by Robin McKinley - Congrats to Jana, S. Krishna, Jeane and AC and Cuileann
(1) box of at least 6 YA books from Penguin in a "Publicist's Choice" prize pack - Congrats to Allison (unconfirmed)
There will be a separate entry post for each contest, and some will be instant win (meaning that the first person to "claim" the book will get it), so it pays to become a follower of my blog (see sidebar) or to subscribe to my blog. Some giveaways will even be open worldwide. NOTE: Regardless of when winners are announced, I will be sending all books the week of December 15th.
If you are an author that would like to donate bookmarks or promotional items to send along to the winners, please let me know at lenoreva AT hotmail DOT com.
After a disaster which kills the master and chalice of the Willowlands, beekeeper Mirasol is appointed new chalice and the master’s brother is recalled from the priests of fire and asked to assume master duties in a world he has mostly forgotten. With no training, Mirasol struggles to find her way as chalice and to bind the land and people to a strange new master, one whose very touch can burn human flesh to the bone.
It by Stephen King
Todd lives in Prentisstown, a dystopian nightmare where all women are dead and everyone can hear each other’s thoughts (known as noise). As the only “boy”, the youngest in the restless and violent town, Todd’s only real companion is his (talking) dog, Manchee. When he discovers a girl in the swamp one day, his caretakers tell him he’s in danger and he has to make a run for it.
Best friends Josie, Perri and Kat go into the bathroom at their high school. Shots are fired. One emerges with a minor injury, one with a life-threatening one, and one is dead. What happened is the mystery at the heart of this riveting thriller.
One of my Frankfurt Book Fair finds that I was not able to get a copy of is The Angel Maker, described as a literary page-turner about one man’s macabre ambition to create life—and secure immortality. It is already a sensation in the author's native Belgium and it's now been translated into English and will be released December 30 in North America.
A chilling story that explores the ethical limits of science and religion, The Angel Maker is a haunting tale in the tradition of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Frankenstein. Brought to life by internationally bestselling author Stefan Brijs, this eerie tale promises to get under readers’ skin.
Another Frankfurt Book Fair has come to a close. Like last year, I went every day. Here’s a short (ok, it is rather long) retrospective inlcuding a list of the books I brought home each day (and I was VERY picky about what I took with me because books are heavy and I had to carry them around).


Are you experienced? by William Suttcliffe
The Gashlycrumb Tinies by Edward Gorey
Thank You For Smoking by Christopher Buckley
Bitter with Baggage Seeks Same: The Life and Times of Some Chickens
The Complete Far Side by Gary Larson
This week I'm lusting after Gayle Forman's new one which has been compared to The Lovely Bones and Elsewhere but BETTER! That's enough to hook me! (That and the beautiful cover!)

Quentin has always had a thing for his next door neighbor Margo Roth Spiegelman, an adventurous free-spirit who exists on a higher social plain. So when she invites him out for a semi-law breaking all-nighter of getting even with those who have wronged her, Quentin joins in and has high hopes for a future together. But when Margo doesn’t show up for school the next day, Quentin finds out that she’s run away and only a series of clues, left just for him, might lead to her whereabouts. Will Quentin find Margo in time, or is she lost to him forever?
Alec Flint Super Sleuth: The Nina, The Pinta and the Vanishing Treasure by Jill Santopolo
Ignatius MacFarland: Freqenaut by Paul Feig
RuneWarriors by James Jennewein and Tom S. Parker
Doomsday Book by Connie Willis
Never Let Me Go by Kazuo Ishiguro
Bel Canto by Ann Patchett
The Tiger Rising by Kate Dicamillo
The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak
The Robe of Skulls by Vivian French
Storm: The Ghost Machine by E.L. Young
Creepers by Joanne Dahme
Beth Kephart revealed this awesome cover for her next YA novel Nothing but Ghosts, which is due out June 2009, a couple of weeks ago on her blog. I couldn't find a summary anywhere, but it apparently involves the decoding of a mystery on the site of a reclusive gardener’s. Also, the main character, a high school senior, is grappling with the death of her mother. I'm actually a little afraid to read it because my mother died when I was a freshman in college, and if you've lived through that, you know it's something you never completely get over. But what Beth says about it in her blog post makes me think it's a MUST read:
First up, Brooke Taylor, author of Undone (which I really, really want to read), is having A Monster Month of Giveaways at her blog. EVERY Thursday during October she will be holding a contest for awesome Halloween gift baskets loaded with cool YA books and themed gifts! How cool is that? You have time to enter the first themed contest (Vampires - which includes the House of Night books and tons of other goodies) until this Thursday October 9th.
Benjamin Holt is not a normal preteen and his summer will be anything but normal. He’s a telegen with powers mere humans don’t have and he has to go to summer school to hone his special abilities on the sunken continent of Lemuria, a sort of sister continent to Atlantis. And while there, a talking Emerald Tablet tells him only he can save the world as we know it.


Anyone else want to join in the fun?
I'll keep a link list here of those that do:
A sad story from Kristin of We Be Reading
A romantic story from Alea at Pop Culture Junkie
A few good ones from Jeane at Dog Ear Diary
Two from Rol at Sunset over Slawit
A thriller from Inchy at Punch It Chewie!