Reviews

Blog Tour: The Knife and the Butterfly by Ashley Hope Perez

The Knife and the Butterfly by Ashley Hope Perez
Format: eBook
Publisher: Carolrhoda Books (February 1, 2012)

After a marijuana-addled brawl with a rival gang, 16-year-old Azael wakes up to find himself surrounded by a familiar set of concrete walls and a locked door. Juvie again, he thinks. But he can’t really remember what happened or how he got picked up. He knows his MS13 boys faced off with some punks from Crazy Crew. There were bats, bricks, chains. A knife. But he can’t remember anything between that moment and when he woke behind bars.

Azael knows prison, and something isn’t right about this lockup. No phone call. No lawyer. No news about his brother or his homies. The only thing they make him do is watch some white girl in some cell. Watch her and try to remember.

Lexi Allen would love to forget the brawl, would love for it to disappear back into the Xanax fog it came from. And her mother and her lawyer hope she chooses not to remember too much about the brawl—at least when it’s time to testify.

Lexi knows there’s more at stake in her trial than her life alone, though. She’s connected to him, and he needs the truth. The knife cut, but somehow it also connected.

The Knife and the Butterfly takes readers on a journey with a teenage boy named Azael, who is a member of the MS-13 gang. He awakens in what he believes to be a detention center, with no clue as to how he arrived there. This so-called detention center is unlike anything he has experienced, with no guards or schedules, no meetings with his lawyer, and no phone call. As the days begin to slip by, he is able to leave his cell only to watch a girl named Lexi. Someone thinks he knows more than he’s letting on but Azael is sure he doesn’t. Will Azael remember how they are connected before Lexi’s trial? Or will it be too late?

Perez captures readers’ attention immediately by thrusting you into a world of violence, crime and revenge. The real-world feel of the characters and detailed descriptions are enough to propel you further into this exciting novel. Azael initially came off as a bad guy to me, but after he awakens in his cell with no memory, I quickly changed my tune. He softened up a little, making him more likeable as the story continued.

The language and sexual content was a little more than I cared for but worked very well in this realistic fiction novel. Perez created an emotional and shocking story that you simply can’t get out of your mind. The characters are memorable and realistic, giving a little piece of them with the turn of each page. This is a thrilling read that could easily be enjoyed by teens and adults alike.

The Knife and the Butterfly Tour BannerAbout Ashley

When I’m not reading, writing, or teaching, I am hanging out with our little boy, Liam Miguel. He keeps me very, very busy. In the scraps of time that remain, I also like to run (I did the Houston Marathon in 2007 and the Chicago Marathon in 2009), bake (but let’s don’t revive the “Cookie Girl” nickname, please), watch movies, work in my garden, and destroy my mom in long-distance games of Scrabble. My husband is a hard-core Metallica fan who’s also addicted to Vicente Fernández’s soulful ballads, which means I also get plenty of exposure to an eclectic mix of music. Our household also includes a very sweet-natured cat, Sugar Mama, who would like the world to know that she was here before Liam.

Fallen by Traci L. Slatton

Fallen by Traci L. SlattonTitle: Fallen
Author: Traci L. Slatton
Publisher: Telemachus Press (July 27, 2011)

When the world ends, all that is left is love….

As chaos descends on a crippled Earth, survivors are tormented by strange psychic gifts. In this time of apocalyptic despair, love is put to the test. One woman with mysterious healing power guides seven children to safety. Charismatic Arthur offers her a haven. Slowly Emma falls for him. But at the moment of their sweetest love, his devastating secret is revealed, and they are lost to each other. Will Emma stay with him?
The first in a romantic trilogy set during the end times.

Fallen is set in a post-apocalyptic world where death-dealing mists create chaos amongst survivors. Emma leads a group of young survivors through the remnants of a world they use to know in hopes of finding a safe zone. During a narrow escape with the mists, they encounter a group of men that joins their camp with the hopes that their situation will improve. It seems as though their prayers are finally answered and they are safe at last… or are they.

Slatton’s Fallen is a breath of fresh air and an exciting mix of the romance, dystopian, and paranormal genres. Slatton is a fantastic storyteller, quickly immersing you in the lives of her characters and the world they struggle to survive in. Several of the survivors are gifted with talents that define or support their character, propelling and strengthening the plot. The death-dealing mists are simply fascinating.

When it comes to emotions, Slatton puts it all on the table, allowing readers to feel the love, hate, pain, and hope of the characters as they fall in love, become wounded, or simply attempt to rebuild a life they once had. Fallen awakens emotion and captivates with the turn of each page.

Overall, Slatton developed an intense world with a paranormal twist that meshed very well within a post-apocalyptic romance. From every angle, Fallen is a captivating adventure with just enough romance to keep you enthralled and begging for more. Slatton is an author to watch as I expect this isn’t the last we will see of her.

The International Kissing Club by Ivy Adams

The International Kissing Club by Ivy Adams
Paperback : 390 pages
Publisher: Walker & Company (January 3, 2012)

Four Best Friends…
Piper, Cassidy, Mei and Izzy are the misfits of Paris, Texas. Too artsy, too determined, too smart and too hip to fit in with the rest of their classmates, they’ve spent most of their sixteen years determined to escape the stifling fishbowl of life in their small Texas town.

One Mean Girl…
Enter Germaine Stewart, mean girl extraordinaire and undisputed queen of Paris High School. Head cheerleader and girlfriend of the coolest guy in school, she’s made it her life’s mission to torture Piper and her friends…a mission that leads, among other things, to Piper kissing a pig in front of the entire school—in her underwear.

Ten Million YouTube Hits…
When the Kiss the Pig video hits YouTube and Facebook there’s nowhere in the entire state of Texas—or America—that Piper can hide. Desperate to escape the pig noises that follow her every waking moment, she becomes an exchange student to the real Paris. Only her friends can’t let her go alone and soon Piper, Mei and Cassidy are heading to different countries for the adventures of their lives, while Izzy is stuck at home.

The International Kissing Club Facebook Page…
To make their time abroad more interesting—the girls form the International Kissing Club, a Facebook fan page where they record each boy they kiss while abroad—or at home, in Izzy’s case (one point for a regular kiss, three for a “transcendent” one).

Too Many Kisses to Count…
But while each girl meets a guy who curls her toes, their twelve weeks on their own teach them a lot more about themselves and their friendship than they ever expected.

After devouring 13 Little Blue Envelopes by Maureen Johnson, I knew The International Kissing Club would be a book I couldn’t put down. I was so right, and I loved every minute of it. From the very first page, I was immediately immersed in the small-town life of this group of girls and their normal way of living. The realistic feel is definitely strong and is carried throughout the novel with each experience the girls have. I found myself laughing hysterically, having OMG moments along with them, and secretly wishing I had went abroad myself. LOL

The characters are fantastic, fun and down to earth, leaving you feeling like you know them personally. Knowing that the authors (Emily McKay, Shellee Roberts, and Tracy Deebs writing together as Ivy Adams) wrote three of the girls individually and the fourth girl as a team is mind-boggling. I’m not sure how they managed it but it worked like a charm and I hope to see more of these amazing characters really soon.

Initially, I wasn’t sure how well the novel would flow using screen captures of the IKC Fan Page throughout the novel. I feared it would negatively affect the natural flow of the plot, but that fear was quickly squashed. Each IKC update added a little more of the characters personalities and a more personal view into their romantic (or lack of romantic) encounters. Seeing the girls interact with each other was a fun and unique twist that definitely spiced up this exciting read.

Would I recommend The IKC? Heck yes! It’s super fun and filled with realistic, laughable experiences. I applaud the authors for creating a brilliantly executed, fresh view of life, friendship, and fun in one fast-reading novel. If there isn’t a second book, there darn sure should be.