Welcome to The YA Spill!
The YA Spill is a (mostly) weekly meme where I'll have Q&A with YA book bloggers. As a founding member of a YA book blog, I've had the pleasure of getting to know many bloggers and even though I've stepped back from blogging in that capacity as often, I'm still a huge fan of reading YA book blogs and love hearing the blogger's opinions on the hottest books out there.
So each week I'll be spotlighting anywhere from one to three YA book bloggers with a few questions on what they're currently loving and can't wait to read next. If you're a YA book blogger, and you'd like to participate in The YA Spill, please email me at cindythomaswrites (@) gmail (dot) com.
Please welcome this week's awesome participant:
Kris from Imaginary Reads
(Blog / Twitter / Goodreads / Facebook / Pinterest)
What is the most recent book that you've read and loved?
This is a toughie. There are so many
outstanding books in the market nowadays. I’m going to go ahead and seriously
talk about the most recent book I read that made my favorites shelf, which
would be Endlessly by Kiersten White.
I
love Evie's wit and humor. And, bleep, I fell in love with a faerie midway
through the book! My poor little heart is broken over the end of the trilogy.
What book recently surprised you?
Tiger
Lily. I knew it was going to be a dark retelling of Peter Pan, but
it still blew me away. The characters are all broken and flawed yet compelling
and endearing in their own ways. Each character has a story to tell, and I
ended up sympathizing even with characters I wanted to hate. Also, the world
building was spectacular. This book is a keeper.
What types of books
do you wish there were more of?
I'd like to see more contemporary novels
out there, especially ones that get me thinking like Sarah Desen's books. It’s
getting harder to find them with all the paranormal and urban fantasy books out
there. I love paranormal and urban fantasy, but I like to read a good
contemporary too!
The bigger problem I'm experiencing is
finding YA books with diversity. Recently, I read Team Human by Justine Larbalestier and Sarah Rees Brennan and found
myself cheering over the great diversity I found in the book. It’s the book
that made me realize just how few books there are in the YA market that cover
diversity, so few that I'm ecstatic whenever I find even the smallest
hint of diversity in a book.
I would also like more stand alones. While
I love a good series, with so many series in the market nowadays, a good stand
alone is refreshing and much more likely to stand out.
What book comes out soon that you can't wait to get your hands on?
There are a bunch of awesome books coming
out, but I’ve already got a good number of them in the form of review copies. I’m
really looking forward to The Forsaken, and
I want Endlessly because I love it so
much and want a finished edition to complete my Paranormalcy collection. I’m also looking forward to Rift by Andrea Cremer. I love her
writing and world building and am excited to read the first book in the prequel
series to Nightshade!
Can you tell us a little about yourself and how you became a YA book
blogger?
My
friends all know that I have two obsessions: ballroom dance and books. When I’m
not studying, I am often either ballroom dancing or reading—or talking about
one of them. Okay. I might also be taking picture of squirrels running around
campus again, but that’s another story (in which I love stalking living
creatures with my camera).
I
began ballroom dancing late August of 2012 after my friend invited me to join
the ballroom dance club with her. I fell in love with the sport and joined the
ballroom dance team just so I could spend more time dancing. Seriously. I
wasn’t even sure I’d be good enough to compete; I just wanted to dance. Well,
I’ve been competing for almost a year now under the best coaches ever, and I’ve
been holding my own on the dance floor. It helps that I have amazing partners
to support me.
I
founded Imaginary Reads five months before that, in April 2011, when I realized
that I wasn't book talking as often as I liked and wanted to spread the book
love to a wider audience. I spend so much of my time with books that they're a
part of me. It's impossible for me to imagine a life without them. In fact, my
dream is to work full-time in the children's book publishing business, specifically
in the young adult section.
What is the first book you read & reviewed as a blogger?
Carrier
of the Mark by Leigh Fallon. I won a contest on her blog, granting me one
of the first review copies ever made. Literally. I received a first edition ARC
of the book back when it was still called The
Carrier of the Mark, and HarperTeen hadn’t remade the cover with the
lighter color scheme and the title change. I wasn’t yet a book blogger, but I
felt the responsibility of reviewing the book since I’d received a title that
few else had the privilege of reading yet. I posted the review on my personal
blog and then copied it over to my book blog later when I started it. Actually,
you could say that Carrier of the Mark
is the reason I began book blogging because it was so much fun writing the
review that I began reviewing more books on my blog, so much that I decided to
created a whole new blog for the sole purpose of talking about books.
As a book blogger, you probably get lots of review requests. What is the best
way for an author or publisher to receive a response from you when sending you
a request?
It helps to be addressed personally, as
it’s not that hard to find my name if you’ve even glanced over my blog, and it
definitely helps to show that you’ve looked at my review policies. I like to
see a request that includes the book synopsis and a link to the author’s site
and Goodreads, so I can learn more about the book. I also like to see understanding
and flexibility. While I’m honored that an author or publisher will take the
time to contact me out of all the bloggers out there, I receive so many review
copies that it’s impossible for me to accept every request that I receive. I
appreciate it when the author/publisher understands my situation and is willing
to work with my schedule.
I don’t like it when the request tries to
sell the book to me. I don’t care to see glowing remarks from other readers
copied and pasted into the email. That’s their opinion. A book that someone
enjoyed may not be the book for me. I certainly don’t like to see the author’s
book or anything attached if I haven’t requested it, unless I know the author
and he/she knows I want to read it. And unless I know the author, I hate
receiving a mass email from an author. I understand that authors have their own
busy schedule, but with so many review requests coming in, it helps when an
author shows consideration.
As an avid reader, are there any books that have stuck with you no matter how
much time has passed since you finished reading it? If so, which one(s)?
Anything by Sarah Dessen, Shannon Hale,
L.M. Montgomery, or Tamora Pierce, to name a few. The books that I’ve read by
them are books that I could reread forever. Add to that Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver, Tiger
Lily by Jodi Lynn Anderson, the Curse
Workers series by Holly Black, and the Vampire
Academy and Bloodlines series by
Richelle Mead. These are just the ones
off the top of my head.
If you were a YA character in a novel, which one would you be? Which one is
most like you?
I’d be a side character. I don’t want to be
the main characters, I want to meet them and be friends with them! There are a
lot of characters I can relate with, but I don’t know which one would be most
like me. Family and environment makes each of us unique! I could really relate
to Mel in Team Human because of her
desire to protect her friends at any cost and her desire to remain human. Gigi
from Smart Girls Get What They Want is another character I can relate to. I was
a quiet, studious girl back in the day, and it was in sophomore year of high
school (like Gigi and her friends) that I decided to start branching out more.
That was the year I founded the Environmental Awareness student group in my
high school.
Is there anything else about you that you'd like us to know?
I would like to thank
all the amazing authors out there. Without them, I wouldn’t be a book reviewer,
and I’d lose half my childhood, as a large chunk of it was spent raiding
library shelves. All my childhood librarians knew me. I was such a frequent
visitor.
Thank you so much for joining me for the Spill, Kris. It was lovely getting to know you and your fabulous blog!
I love that Kris is a ballroom dancer AND a book reviewer. Dancing is one of those things that I leave to the fantasy world, though I would LOVE to dance. That's why I'm supporting my daughter to learn ballet. :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for providing such a meaningful service by reviewing YA books. I love anyone who promotes/intelligently discusses these works.
Thanks, Mary. I actually had no prior dance experience before starting it this past Fall, but the right instructor and teammates can work magic!
DeleteI'm glad that my blog is making a difference. I review because I love books and am always happy to hear that people appreciate what I do :)
Loved learning more about Kris. I can't wait to read Rift too. For more diverse books Kris in fantasy and sci-fi, you should check out Tu Publishing's books, which specialize in this. I agree that we need more diversity in books.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Natalie. I will be sure to check out their publications!
DeleteAll of Justine Larbalestier's novels (well, the two that I've read so far) stood out to me due to the diversity and acceptance of shown in them. I'm glad others appreciate this and I wish it was the case in our world.
ReplyDeleteHow fun to be a ballroom dancer! I don't know anyone that does that- sot that seems really cool to me. I enjoyed getting to learn more about Kris. I look forward to stopping by her blog.
ReplyDelete~Jess
http://thesecretdmsfilesoffairdaymorrow.blogspot.com/