Showing posts with label Across the Universe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Across the Universe. Show all posts

Jan 15, 2013

Review: Shades of Earth by Beth Revis

Shades of Earth by Beth Revis
January 15th, 2013 from Razorbill

Amy and Elder have finally left the oppressive walls of the spaceship Godspeed behind. They're ready to start life afresh--to build a home--on Centauri-Earth, the planet that Amy has traveled 25 trillion miles across the universe to experience.

But this new Earth isn't the paradise Amy had been hoping for. There are giant pterodactyl-like birds, purple flowers with mind-numbing toxins, and mysterious, unexplained ruins that hold more secrets than their stone walls first let on. The biggest secret of all? Godspeed's former passengers aren't alone on this planet. And if they're going to stay, they'll have to fight.

Amy and Elder must race to discover who--or what--else is out there if they are to have any hope of saving their struggling colony and building a future together. They will have to look inward to the very core of what makes them human on this, their most harrowing journey yet. Because if the colony collapses? Then everything they have sacrificed--friends, family, life on Earth--will have been for nothing.


Here we are at book three, and it's do or die for Amy and Elder - literally. They need to make a life for themselves and the residents of Godspeed on this strange planet full of "monsters" or basically give themselves to the stars. At 360+ pages, you know their life on Centauri-Earth isn't going to be so easy. With the introduction of a new planet - plenty happens in this story! New plant life, animals, terrain, Revis paints an almost terrifyingly beautiful planet full of extraordinary things. We want to touch them (but not smell - inside joke) and get an up close look at this planet with two suns.

Jan 6, 2012

Review - A Million Suns (Across the Universe #2) by Beth Revis

A Million Suns (Across the Universe #2) by Beth Revis
January 10th, 2012 from Razorbill

**Spoilers if you haven't read AthU**
Remember how Across the Universe took place on a "ship of lies?" Yeah, that is still happening! Elder is now Eldest and Amy is still the only one on the ship from the original Earth. They are all sailing to Sol Earth and should be there at about half past never at the rate they're going. When Elder takes over as Eldest, he decides to let people essentially have their life back. No drugs in the water and no systematically planned Season of Schmexy times (loveeeed that part in the last book!) Without the control, the people on the ship start to get greedy, lazy, and all around dangerous. In just a short amount of time, all hell breaks loose and people end up dead. The people blame Elder and rally for a new leader, but there aren't any other choices. Or are there? (insert menacing music)

Jan 10, 2011

The "Launch" of the Good Ship Godspeed!

Across the Universe is out NOW!



io9 will be posting a 111 pg excerpt from 11:11 AM Eastern to 11:11 PM Eastern on 01.11.11. This is an io9 EXCLUSIVE!

You can visit Across the Universe on Facebook and the Official page to read the first chapter.

Visit Beth at her author website, blog and Twitter page.

Visit Penguin Teen at their website, Facebook and Twitter page

Read my 5 star review of Across the Universe HERE and a fun interview with author Beth Revis HERE

You have to read this book!

Happy Reading!

Dec 27, 2010

Across the Universe Swag Winners

Congratulations goes to...

Kate from WI

Llehn from Singapore

Nancy from UT

Kulsuma from England

Karenlyn from Philippines

Lucia from Uruguay

Inspired Kathy

IvaliceAlliance 


You have each won a signed bookmark and a signed book plate to put in your copy of Across the Universe! I will be mailing those out when I return from vacation.

Happy Reading!

Dec 16, 2010

Across the Universe - Interview with Beth Revis (& Giveaway)

If you haven't read my full review of Across the Universe, shame on you! It's a fantastic book and you should do everything in your power to get hold of a copy. Go read the review, then come back here!


You grew up in rural North Carolina. Were you obsessed with space or the stars?
I have always been obsessed with the night sky. Other kids asked for Barbies--I wanted a telescope. My parents had to spend HOURS after I moved out to go to college to take down the constellationally correct glow-in-the-dark stars on my ceiling. I started watching Sailor Moon based on the title alone.

That said: I'm terrible at math and science. So there was no chance of me going into astronomy as a career. Fortunately, when you WRITE sci fi, you get to make a lot of stuff up, and solve the science with words instead of numbers.


Across the Universe is your tenth manuscript, what makes this one different from the others that weren't published - besides the being published part of course!

Actually, it's the eleventh! And it's different from the others in nearly every way. The other ten were fantasy, a mix of YA and MG, all told in third person, all told in past tense. This one is a sci fi, definitely YA, told in first person present and in alternating points of view.

It's also the manuscript where I pushed harder. Before, I'd write something and think, "This is good enough." Now I write something and think, "Good enough isn't good enough," and I rewrite it until it's the absolute best I can do.


In the book we never really know why Godspeed went into space. On your website you explain that Godspeed's mission was simply for exploration, but on your blog, The League of Extraordinary Writers, the commonality between all five of the bloggers novels is "a future where the Earth we know now is twisted, gone." Will we learn more about Sol-Earth in future novels?

Ha! This is a question I get asked a lot--there's actually a small phrase in the book where it's explained that the ship is leaving to explore (specifically in the hopes of finding new resources to exploit), but that bit is so small that I've actually had a couple of critique partners who didn't notice it. The common assumption is that Earth is dying (there've been a few reviews that state as much) but that is definitely NOT the case, and that fact will be rather relevant in sequels...


In short: Earth is still Earth. The novel takes place in the future, after an economic crash and an establishment of a global economic union that re-establishes power, so it's not the Earth you know now...but it isn't that far of a stretch.


When Amy wakes up, she informs us that the people on the ship are monoethnic and speak with a sing-songy intonation. Is there are a particular region or location you had in mind when you were describing the people on the ship?

Yes! The accent (in my mind) is David Tennant as the Tenth Doctor, whenever he's trying to talk really fast to explain his ideas. First, I love David Tennant, and I love me a Scots accent. Second, I thought (that to Amy at least) she'd think everyone spoke much faster than her time. It does seem that we speed everything up as we progress through time. So, if you'd like to know what Elder sounds like to me: watch one of the DOCTOR WHO episodes where David Tennant has to talk fast!


I thought the scenes about The Season were hilarious! Were any Season scenes scrapped that we would love to hear about? 

Nope--all the original scenes are there, and the only thing I did to change them was to add more detail, which my mother hated! (And you're the first to think the Season was hilarious--I've heard everything from "squicky" to "inappropriate" to "hot," but not hilarious!)


Was Eldest based on your grumpy grandpa - or anyone else?

Not really! The only inspiration for Eldest was Joss Whedon's commentary on the SERENITY dvd, when he said the most important thing about the villain was that it be someone you *almost* sympathize with. So I tried to make him someone whose ideas--while extreme--were something you could almost see yourself doing, if you were put in his situation.


The ending was gut wrenching for me - I had to go back and reread to make sure I was hearing correctly. Did you always know where the story would end and the next in the series begin? 

I always knew that big twist at the end--the entire novel stemmed from that one sentence.

As for knowing it was a series--originally, I intended for the book to be a stand-alone, and just end on an ambiguous note. However, my agent and I talked, and she really sparked some ideas for me to turn it into a trilogy.


Any tour stops in Texas? (please say yes!)

Not that I know of! But one of my best friends now lives in Texas, and I'm thinking I might have to hit her up for a couple of nights on her couch--it seems like half the cool writing people in the world live in Texas, and the other half in Utah, and the other half in California, and the other half....did I mention I was bad at math?


THANK YOU, Beth! Because Beth is super awesome and I'm a pretty good beggar, I have some serious swag to give away!

THERE WILL BE EIGHT WINNERS. Each winner will receive:
1 signed bookmark and 1 signed book plate to put in your copy of AtU. Holla!

Giveaway Rules
International
Giveaway ends at midnight CST, December 26th
Winner will be chosen using Random.org
Must fill out form below to be officially entered
Winnings will be mailed after the new year
Good luck!


*Giveaway closed*

Review - Across the Universe by Beth Revis



Across the Universe by Beth Revis
Published January 11th 2011 by Razorbill

From the Publisher:
Seventeen-year-old Amy joins her parents as frozen cargo aboard the vast spaceship Godspeed and expects to awaken on a new planet, three hundred years in the future. Never could she have known that her frozen slumber would come to an end fifty years too soon and that she would be thrust into the brave new world of a spaceship that lives by its own rules.

Amy quickly realizes that her awakening was no mere computer malfunction. Someone--one of the few thousand inhabitants of the spaceship--tried to kill her. And if Amy doesn't do something soon, her parents will be next.

Now Amy must race to unlock Godspeed's hidden secrets. But out of her list of murder suspects, there's only one who matters: Elder, the future leader of the ship and the love she could never have seen coming.


Review:
Across the Universe is told from the perspective of Amy and Elder. Amy has been frozen along with her parents in order to be revived in 500 years. Her parents are important people on Earth and they have volunteered to explore new life on a planet. Elder is in training to be Eldest, the leader of Godspeed, the ship Amy and her parents are aboard. Elder is a teenage boy and has his entire life controlled. In fact, everything on Godspeed is controlled; food, medicine, information, and even life cycles. Elder and Amy meet when Amy’s frozen crypt is unplugged and she struggles for her life. The description of Amy being frozen and then thawed is horrifying to read. I knew Amy would live - obviously - but her struggle for survival was gripping. Amy and Elder form a friendship, a real friendship. They really don’t have a choice; they are the only people on Godspeed who are the same age. All of the other inhabitants on Godspeed are one or two generations older. Interesting huh?! As Amy begins to adjust to life on a space ship, other frozen people from Earth are being unplugged and die. Together, Amy and Elder try to solve the mystery of who unplugged Amy’s frozen tomb and why someone would want to kill the people from Earth. And of course...kinda fall in love.

I really enjoyed reading this story from both perspectives. It would be so easy to have only Amy’s voice. She has the jaw-dropping intro, suffers the temporary (?) loss of her parents, and the one suddenly forced to live on a small spaceship full of strangers. Thankfully, Revis gave Elder a chance to shine. Poor guy hasn’t had the peachiest of times either. Elder is under Eldest thumb and is constantly watched and medicated by the ship doctor. The only thing he looks forward to is landing on the new planet, but at times, that seems out of reach. Every character is well developed and distinct. There are mysteries at every corner. Not only are Elder and Amy trying to figure out who would want to see frozen people dead, but why is Eldest keeping secrets if Elder is going to rule the ship one day? Why does everyone on the ship act so strangely and in accordance? Slowly but surely answers are uncovered. This book is a page turner and when you get to the last few chapters - hold on to your suspenders! I. Was. Speechless. After a few minutes, it sunk in and I screamed, "What!?" Literally! I had to go back and reread the ending again to make sure I heard/read everything correctly. The ending alone makes you want to read the book over and over again.

Bottom line: Imaginative, gripping, and without a doubt - a must read! I can’t wait for you all to be amazed!

5 stars!

Interview and giveaway with Beth Revis coming up next....

You can still read the first chapter of AtU HERE


Happy Reading! 

Dec 6, 2010

A Week of Prizes - League of Extraordinary Writers

As you know, I have been gushing over Across the Universe by Beth Revis. I loved this book and because I want you to love it too, I will be posting an interview and little giveaway in the next few days. When I was looking for questions for Beth, I ran across her blog The League of Extraordinary Writers. Blog members are Jeff Hirsch, Elana Johnson, Julia Karr, Beth Revis, and Angie Smibert. Here is what the fabulous five have to say:

"The League of Extraordinary Writers is a group of debut YA authors who write science fiction and dystopian works. The five of us have works that run the gamut of near-future mind control to far-future space travel, but they do have one thing in common: a future where the Earth we know now is twisted, gone." 


Did somebody say dystopian? Squeeee - my favorite genre! 

The League is hosting a week of prizes and the grand prize is....books from ALL five authors. Because I loved AtheU SO much, I am passing the news on to you. Follow their blog, enter to win, and beg all of your friends to borrow ARCs and then pre-order a copy to keep. 

Go, run...now! 



Happy Reading!