Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Legend of Korra Episode Recaps: Episodes 1 & 2



"The Legend of Korra Episode Recaps" is a book blog feature created by the indubitably awesome Lisa @ Lisa Is Busy Nerding.



Okay, people. Let me explain what this is. This is a new weekly feature I will participating in along with Lisa from Lisa is Busy Nerding every Wednesday where I will be recaping and discussing the previous Saturday morning premiers of the new Nickelodeon cartoon, The Legend of Korra.

I have been a HUGE fan of the Avatar: The Last Airbender cartoon series for the past five years because it is so unique, refreshing, and like nothing else out there. What an amazing show! And, it really isn't just for kids. It's one of those kids' cartoons that can honestly be enjoyed by people of all ages. No, I don't have any kids that got me into the show. I seriously just channel-surfed one day and found it all on my own. I am that awesome (read: weird).

So, today I will be discussing Episodes 1 & 2 (they premiered together on Saturday, April 14th), and this will be the usual routine. Go HERE to watch the first 2 episodes online for free! You will be most impressed by the beautiful fantasy elements and incredible world-building. I hope you will join me in watching and discussing this amazing new series!



Re-Cap Discussion: Episodes 1 & 2
 

Korra is the next Avatar after Aang, living in a world united by his legacy, but it has fallen into a bit of chaos since his death seventeen years ago. She was born into the Southern Water Tribe, and we see right away from Episode 1 that everyone knew she was the world's next Avatar because she could already bend all the elements except air from a very young age. She comes out guns-a-blazing from the womb! This girl is p-o-w-e-r-f-u-l and she knows it. She makes sure everybody else knows it, too.

Her issue is that she needs to learn how to airbend, and the only person on the planet who can teach her is Aang's son, Tenzin, who is carrying on his airbender teachings. One thing that the creators of the show are doing perfectly for this sequel series is bringing back some old familiar characters. We actually get to see old lady Katara who has become the medicine woman for her Southern Water Tribe, and she knows through spiritual divination that Korra must leave her home and find her own path as the world's Avatar.

This doesn't sit well with Tenzin because he knows how to teach airbending, but Korra is just not having it. She thinks like an earthbender, all "shoot-em up and crush em into dust" type of mentality, which is the opposite of the Air Nomads' way. She decides to chill in Republic City, which has an anti-bending movement on the rise because non-benders feel oppressed by benders due to the natural selective process of whatever it is that endows one with bending abilities. Yeah, it is kind of unfair when you're not born with these abilities (but, life is unfair. As Korra says, you gotta deal with it!).

She doesn't have to worry much about this movement in the first two episodes just yet, and instead, opts to check out a pro-bending tournament. In this series, bending is a professional sport and there's a whole new way to bend all the elements unlike anything Korra has ever seen before. She totally digs it! It's modern and the bee's knees (this expression will make sense in a moment, I promise).

She meets a guy around her age named Bolin and his brother Mako, both of whom are on the Fire Ferrets, a pro-bending team. Mako is like the Babe Ruth of pro-bending, but he's a bit unfriendly and unsociable, unlike his outgoing brother, Bolin. Korra gets a chance to play in one of their matches when their third team member flakes out on them at the last minute. She doesn't know what she's doing, but she's found her place in the world, as pro-bending is the freakin' berries and totally copacetic.

Why am I using all this 1920's American slang? Well, that's what decade it is in the Avatar world, and you can see the style reflected in all their technology, clothing and way of life. Call it 'steampunk lite.' You'll even see some airships floating around. Despite this, I still see mostly familiar attire and martial arts from the original series, so this makes me happy. I'm still watching a show that reflects its predecessor very well.

Now, I can't help musing on what I want to see in future episodes. Korra x Mako!! Of course these two seem to be getting shipped together already. If you consider that Korra is a Southern Water Tribe girl (like how Katara was), and that Mako is a Fire Nation guy (like how Zuko was), then it's like Zuko x Katara (Zutara) gets to happen now! I always liked Katara and Zuko together, even though they never got romantically involved. I actually still hold out hope that they will get together in this series because Zuko could still be alive, for all I know at this time.  


Needless to say, I'm super excited about this season and about seeing what's in store for Korra and her new friends. Who else is still alive from Avatar: The Last Airbender? Who is this masked villain character that hates element bending? Who was that pretty boy Korra was mocking to his face in that preview I saw? Seriously, this looks like it's going to kill it, and I can't wait to see every minute of this show!


If you're following the show, what did you think of Episodes 1 and 2? Do you like this new, very different type of Avatar hero? 

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Book Haul Fun Time! (#12)




"Book Haul Fun Time!" is derived from the social book blogger meme,
"In My Mailbox," created by Kristi @ The Story Siren.


I've got another book haul for y'all. Why haven't I been doing these for so long until now? I seriously want to whack past-me for that. Anyway, shall we proceed...?


For Review
 

 


Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore: Got an ARC of this, although I still need to read at least the first book in the series. I will be soon enough.

Artemis Fowl, Book 1 and The Arctic Incident: Artemis Fowl, Book 2 by Eoin Colfer: NetGalley is putting these books up as review copies for anyone to read, or reread, in time for the last Artemis Fowl book's release later this year. I've never read any of these books, so I figured I'd take the opportunity. 


Swapped

  
 


The Body Finder by Kimberly Derting: I got this in a book trade through Swap.com. I hope this book is good, although I've read The Pledge by Kimberly Derting and wasn't too terribly impressed by it. Isn't this one a bit more respected by her?



Giveaway Win


 


Across the Galaxy by Heather Hildenbrand: I actually WON this from Goodreads.com! I'm still shocked I won a Goodreads giveaway, but it finally happened (years of waiting). I've heard some good things about this book, so I hope it lives up to it. I won the older paperback version, which has a different cover. This one up here /\ is gorgeous, isn't it? 


That's my book haul for this week. What books did you haul in? 


Friday, April 13, 2012

Book Review: Borrowing Abby Grace by Kelly Green


by Kelly Green 

Genre: Mystery/Paranormal
Reading Grade: Young Adult
Publication Date: October 16, 2011
Source: Kindle Store
Age Rating: 12+
  
When Abby Grace wakes up in the back of a van, she has no idea who she is, how she got there, or why anyone would want to kidnap her. After escaping her masked captors, she hurries home, only to discover that she unknowingly left her younger brother behind in the van. Unable to answer the police’s questions with her memories gone, she retreats to the safety of her bedroom where she tries to reconstruct her life. Just as she is settling into the belief that things will one day return to normal, she looks in the mirror—and sees a stranger’s face.

As Abby learns next, she has become a Shadow, sent to inhabit the lives of strangers in trouble. With nothing to go on except the vague hints of her cute but maddening Guardian, a 19th century ghostly teenager named Will, Abby sets out to rescue the missing brother. But she will need all of her intelligence, fearlessness, and wit, because if she fails to find him in time, she will remain trapped in this unfamiliar body forever. 


My Review

Borrowing Abby Grace is a little book I'd been meaning to read for a while and finally did. It's a very short and cheap ebook-only story, so it was a no-brainer for me to give it a try...


  • Plot: Abby Grace is a Shadow, a mystical being, formerly human, who inhabits the bodies of living people who need her to solve their problems. But, her problem is that she has amnesia upon first inhabiting her new body and doesn't remember anything about herself. She is in the process of being kidnapped when she first comes to, in the beginning, and manages to get away. Then, discovering who she is and who she's pretending to be takes her on a wild Nancy Drew-like mystery solving journey. The main objective of this episode is for Abby to find the kidnapped younger brother of Brooke, the girl whose body she's inhabiting.
  • Characters: Abby is a funny girl, apparently a teenager herself, though she has no body. We never find out why she is a Shadow, or rather, she never finds out how the whole “shadowing” process works and why she's a part of it. The other presence in the story is a boy her age named Will, who is like a ghost, and he's there to help her out. He can't tell her how to solve her mysteries, or anything about who she's supposed to be helping, but he can tell her some things about what is expected of her, how much time she has to complete her mission, and the consequences if she doesn't complete it on time. Clearly, he has an important function, but I can't form an opinion of Will because he simply isn't in the story enough.
  • Technical Writing: It's good and written in a believable YA voice. Abby has probably been leaping around from body to body (kind of like Quantum Leap) recently, since she's aware of modern technology and knows how to use it, even with amnesia.
  • Storytelling: It's supposed to be an homage to the Nancy Drew mysteries of yesteryear, but I can't even draw that comparison because I never read any Nancy Drew. My older sisters loved those books, but they're ten years older than me, and I just had no interest. I thought the books were outdated, but, that was how I felt as a kid. (Don't kill me!) Still, I thought the mystery was done really well insofar as mysteries are concerned, and I never saw the climax coming. It wasn't predictable, and Abby did her job, even helping to repair a broken family at the end. It was very sweet.
  • Overall Quality: Great. I wasn't sure what to think when I first started reading, but it quickly became a fast, fun, engaging story as Abby tried to figure out so many different unknowns all at once. I'm surprised it could be done within such a short space (40 pages).
  • Favorite Scene/Moment: Easy. The scene where Abby sings a solo as Brooke (who has a killer voice) in the choir concert. She didn't know the words to “Danny Boy,” so she started making up stuff around the middle of the song—stuff about Danny losing his teddy bear and eating a hamburger. Then, in the middle of her solo, she takes off, chasing after a kid she believes is connected to the little brother's kidnapping, leaving the entire audience completely O__O. I laughed out loud at the pure Randomy McRandom-ness of it all!
  • My Score: 4 stars out of 5.


Buy this ebook from | Amazon | for $2.51. 
 

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

My Writing Influences: Guest Post by Rosemary Fryth


Today, I’m very excited to have my first author guest blogger. I’ve decided to offer authors an alternative to requesting reviews of their books from me. Seeing as how I can’t keep up with reading review copies any longer, I wanted to figure out a way to still do something for them without requiring me to necessarily read their books. They still get exposure on my blog and get to impress my readers directly with their posts.

The following is a guest post by Rosemary Fryth, Australian author of the adult dark fantasy, Dark Confluence….


All my life I’ve read fairy tales. As a child I read stories by the Brothers Grimm and Hans Christian Anderson; as an Australian child I also read Snugglepot and Cuddlepie by May Gibbs about her Gumnut babies, and the big, bad Banksia men. As a teenager I progressed onto Tolkien, Susan Cooper and C.S. Lewis. As an adult my fantasy reading became even more voracious, devouring works by Charles de Lint, Raymond E. Feist, Mark Chadbourn, Robert Jordan, David Eddings, and many more. All these books I read and loved; however, for the exception of May Gibbs, all were overseas authors, telling fantasy stories set in England, Europe, Canada or America. As a reader, what I really wanted was an adult fairy story set right here in Australia, in a place I was familiar with, and could relate to.

My love of fairy tales also cultivated in me a love of Celtic mythology, music and culture. Words like the Fae, the Faeries, the Sidhe, and the Tuatha DĆ© Danann, immediately captured my interest, and I read anything and everything about them. I felt too, that Celtic mythology should not simply be confined to the old lands, to the Celtic lands; but also be transported via words and music to the new lands, to the southern lands where so many families of Celtic ancestry made their home. In my book, the faerie race was my main protagonist; or rather, warring factions with the faeries, who decided to conduct their manoeuvrings for power and influence in an unassuming and small Queensland country town.

So Dark Confluence was written, and recently self-published on Amazon Kindle. It is a dark fantasy/paranormal fantasy/paranormal romance, set right here in Queensland, Australia. Once I started writing Dark Confluence, I felt too that other things needed to be said and written. Nowadays, too many books in the paranormal genre feature teenagers and their love for vampires and werewolves; as an older woman I felt disengaged from these characters, from these heroines. I understood that it was important for ordinary, mature-aged women to be able to relate to the characters in the books they read, so ‘Jen McDonald’ was ‘born’, an ex-patriot Scottish spinster, who, in her fifties, makes ends meet through her work as a proof-reader. Jen is not a beautiful woman—in fact she is quite plain, however because of her gift, she is faced with a problem that few understand, and ends up making what is effectively a life-altering decision. I like Jen as a person—she’s quiet, unassuming, and would rather let the world go by without interference, however she is put in a situation where she may well have to act in order to save her town from destruction.

I also felt that there should be ‘a story, within a story’, so I wove within the plot, messages and meanings that would be especially relevant to Australians who might be seeing their country change before their eyes and feel uncertain and unsettled by those changes—changes that in many ways have not been for the better. It is also a teaching story, with themes of self-sacrifice, of the acquisition of power at any cost, and ultimately the consequences of the same. In many ways Dark Confluence is my personal Pilgrim’s Progress—it may not be Christian fiction as such, but it does have themes that a spiritual person can relate to. There are also universal themes of love, the quest for power, and about making the right sort of choices, not just for you, but for others as well. 

I hope to have a sequel out this year, because Jen is telling me that her story isn’t finished yet, and there are other important things still yet to be said.


Summary of Dark Confluence

The small Queensland country town of Emerald Hills is under siege.

Jen McDonald, a small, neat, almost-overlooked spinster in her fifties faces a quandary. Traumatised by a car accident after seeing a mysterious, dark-shrouded figure on the road, the last thing Jen wants to be is a heroine. Is she losing her mind, or is there a far more malign reason for the terrible storm, frightening deaths and vanishings, and other mysterious goings-on in Emerald Hills. Jen feels trapped, not only between warring factions of the Fae, but also by her desire for one of them and that she may be fated by her special gift to be the town’s defender.

Dark Confluence is an Australian-themed, short novel in the dark fantasy genre. It is a modern-day adult fable, and through allegory, it deals with themes of self-sacrifice and the acquisition of power at any cost. It is written for readers eighteen years and older.

Dark Confluence is available for download from | Amazon Kindle | for FREE with Amazon Prime ($2.99 regular price).


ABOUT ROSEMARY FRYTH, IN HER OWN WORDS:
 
I’m on the wrong side of forty, I work and am happily married to a wonderful man, and we have two ‘fur kids’. If you check out my Facebook page you’ll see the furballs in all their wondrous glory. I live in Brisbane, Australia which for all you northern hemisphere folk, is in the sub-tropics…ie hot and humid in Summer. Christmas downunder involves eating vast amounts of prawns and crab and cold chicken/turkey, plus delicious home made trifle, sweating a lot, driving to rellies from one end of town to the other whilst getting hot and bothered, and if you are fortunate, cooling off later in the pool.

My other interests involve vegging out on the sofa whilst watching favourite movies, gaming (currently enjoying Civ5), reading, playing the bodhran at Irish music sessions, listening to a wide variety of music and of course, writing.
  
You can find her over at her author blog, RosemaryFryth.com. 


Monday, April 9, 2012

Book Haul Fun Time! (#11)



"Book Haul Fun Time!" is derived from the social book blogger meme,
"In My Mailbox," created by Kristi @ The Story Siren.



I haven't done a book haul post in AGES, and I figured that has been pretty silly of me. I'm going to do one again, and maybe even some more in the future. So, the following list is of the books I've received for one reason or another in the very recent past. Getting a new book is like Christmas every time, isn't it?


Purchased





I bought Graceling and Fire (both by Kristin Cashore) as emergency books because I won an ARC of Bitterblue. Yeah, haven't read any of these books, yet, so sometimes you really do need to buy some books. 

The Ask and the Answer and Monsters of Men (both by Patrick Ness) were on sale for only $0.99 on the Kindle! Sadly, that is not the case any longer. Sorry, folks.


Received for Review





I'm so excited to read these! I'll be getting to The Hunt by Andrew Fukuda and The Girl in the Clockwork Collar by Kady Cross very soon, but I won't be reading Velveteen by Daniel Marks for a long time. It's release day is all the way in October, so I'm waiting until September to start reading it. But, I've been waiting for that book for the past year-and-a-half because I've been a huge fan of Danny's vlogs all this time. I remember when he vlogged about editing it, and even when his agent sold the manuscript. Totally exciting! 


Okay, that's my haul. What books have you hauled in lately? 

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