Showing posts with label the conspiracy of us. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the conspiracy of us. Show all posts

Monday, December 14, 2015

Map of Fates by Maggie Hall Exclusive Giveaway: ARC & Swag!!!


If you've already read The Conspiracy of Us by Maggie Hall, you probably don't need to be told that its gorgeous, thrilling, sexy-as-hell sequel, Map of Fates, releases in three months. What you do need is an Advance Readers Copy of it, and some signed swag, and this is where you can get it!



DSC_0278

(Photo: Sofia Embid)

To get your hands on a beautiful ARC, signed postcard, signed bookmark, and tattoos, you have to make the same tough choice as every Conspiracy fan:




Team Jack?

Or

Team Stellan?


Pick one of the below pictures (with thanks to creator Diana Sousa!) and share it – on Instagram and Twitter – with the hashtag #MapOfMates, and tell us where you’d want to be swept away on an all-expenses-paid trip!














On January 2, five ARC winners will be selected, and yes, the giveaway is international!


  • 1 #TeamJack from Instagram


  • 1 #TeamStellan from Instagram


  • 1 #TeamJack from Twitter


  • 1 #TeamStellan from Twitter


  • 1 from either team who has one of the pics as their Twitter avatar


  • Haven’t read The Conspiracy of Us yet? Buy it now, and/or enter to win it (until 12/17) here! (Prefer paperback? That releases on February 2nd!)

    (Whether you enter or not, please spread the word; Maggie’s an amazing, generous, and talented member of the YA community, and due to emergency circumstances, she's unable to promote her own books right now, so please give all the support you can!) (But, like, you should enter, because these books are pretty damn good.)



    Winners will be notified on January 2, 2016. See you on #MapOfMates!

    Thursday, February 12, 2015

    Interview & Review: The Conspiracy of Us by Maggie Hall!!!

    Hello guys!!

    Today I have a lil bit of a special post in the blog today! After reading and loving The Conspiracy of Us, I asked Maggie Hall, the author, if she wanted to be on the blog for an interview and she very graciously agreed! And not only that, but I'll also be sharing my review for the book!

    But first, let me share some information about the book and the author for any of you guys that hadn't heard about this 2015 debut book!


    The Conspiracy of Us by Maggie Hall

    To fight her destiny as the missing heir to a powerful and dangerous secret society, sixteen-year-old Avery West must solve an ancient puzzle in a deadly race across Europe. Forbidden love and code-breaking, masked balls and explosions, destiny and dark secrets collide in this romantic thriller, in the vein of a YA DaVinci Code.

    Avery West's newfound family can shut down Prada at the Champs-Elysees when they want to shop in peace, and can just as easily order a bombing when they want to start a war.

    They are part of a powerful and dangerous secret society called the Circle of Twelve, and Avery is their missing heir. If they discover who she is, some of them will want to use her as a pawn. Some will want her dead.

    To thwart their plans, Avery must follow a trail of clues from the landmarks of Paris to the back alleys of Istanbul and through a web of ancient legends and lies. And unless she can stay one step ahead of beautiful, volatile Stellan, who knows she’s more than she seems, and can decide whether to trust mysterious, magnetic Jack, she may be doomed after all.


     
    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/23161641-the-conspiracy-of-us



     Hello! I'm Maggie Hall. I'm a YA writer. 


    My debut novel THE CONSPIRACY OF US, which features scheming and code-breaking, Paris and Istanbul, and forbidden love and fate, is coming from Putnam/Penguin January 13, 2015. It's the first in a trilogy.



    I've just come back to Albuquerque, NM after a year of traveling around the world with my husband. 

    When I'm home, you can usually find me DIY-ing something off Pinterest, or learning to cook new, delicious things, or watching USC football. (Fight on!)

     
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    Interview
     
    Welcome to the blog Maggie, thank you so much for taking the time during the whirlwind that is after-release-day!
     

    - Reading The Conspiracy of Us reminded me of two of my favourite and very much re-read books: The Eight & The Magic Circle by Katherine Neville. The girl that finds herself in the middle of a fight that spans the ages and is key in the struggle. In your case, what came first, the girl that hides her eyes? Or the centuries old struggle & secrets?

    I didn’t know about these Katherine Neville books, but now I’ve looked them up and am excited to read them! Thanks for the tip!

    I’d say both Avery and the plot came to me at more or less the same time. I knew I wanted to write about a girl who had secrets but didn’t really know it, and that learning more about herself and her past was going to be an important theme. And at the same time, I knew vaguely what I wanted to do with the conspiracy, and a girl who didn’t know about her importance to this group fit in perfectly. Her eyes, specifically, weren’t one of the first things I thought of, though—that came a little later.


    - I found the Circle of Twelve extremely fascinating and I've read that you based them on groups that conspiracy theorist insist that do exist. How did you choose their origin story?

    There have been conspiracy theories about powerful groups of people ruling the world for a long time. One of the most popular is the New World Order theory, which says, that certain families around the world (some theories even say twelve families!) hold immense power, and that many of our rulers have come from those families, etc. So that’s always been really interesting to me, to think about this very small group with enough power to mold the world as they wish.

    I don’t know of any conspiracy theories that tie these groups all the way back to Alexander the Great—that was just me! And so the Circle’s origin story came from twining powerful-family conspiracy theories to the real history of Alexander’s time.


    - Paris and Istanbul are fabulously described in your book and made me feel like I was there again (in Paris) and made me want to visit it madly (Istanbul). Was there any particular reason you chose those two for the first book? Can you give us any hints about any other cities we'd get to visit in the next books?

    I love both Paris and Istanbul because they’re places that have a personality of their own. I’ve been to some cities that are very nice, but don’t have as much character, and I knew I wanted the places Avery visits in the series to be places that leave a strong impression on her and the reader. There’s nowhere else quite like Paris, walking along the bank of the Seine at sunset, drinking wine. And there’s nowhere that has such an intriguing mix of ancient and modern as Istanbul.

    In book 2, we’re going to some places I really love. :) I don’t want to tell you too much! I can tell you one of them: Venice! It’s always been one of my favorite cities, and I’m so excited to have Avery and the boys go there. And another thing I can tell you is that they spend some time on a boat—not in Venice. ;)


    - We meet two of the families of the Circle of Twelve and learn a bit more about them and their symbols? How did you choose the compass and the sun? Can you tell us a bit more of the significance of those symbols?

    Each of the twelve families of the Circle has a symbol that corresponds to their house motto. The Saxons, for instance, have a compass symbol and the motto Know the Way. The Dauphins, with the sun symbol, are Light in the Dark. It has to do with how the family sees themselves, and what’s most important to them.


    - The book is being called The DaVinci Code, the YA version, but I really liked that our main character is a girl looking for answers instead of an expert symbologist. I liked that she had the help of an expert, but she was the one doing the digging and putting the puzzle together again. How did you planned the whole search for answers and the leaving of clues in ancient artifacts?

    It was really interesting planning all the clues, actually. With some of them the clue came first, and I had to decide where and how would be best to plant it. But with some of them, I would learn a historical fact that fit too perfectly, and I had to use it. For instance (I don’t think this is too spoilery), I learned that Napoleon was crowned Emperor at Notre Dame Cathedral, and that happened to fit perfectly into something I was doing. That’s happened quite a few times for these books—real history fits eerily well with the story. Hmmm… ;)


    - I'm usually not a fan of love triangles but I felt like the one that seems to be shaping up here might be more interesting that the usual trope. How did you find yourself with such interesting guys with reasons to want to be with our Avery? Which one of them arrived first in the story for you?

    Stellan has always been really easy for me to write. I just understand him, I guess. He pretty much came to me fully formed as a character, and has never changed from that—though there’s still a lot the reader doesn’t know! Jack is obviously intriguing, too, but he’s more mysterious to me. It’s like he’s so guarded he doesn’t even want to tell me his secrets. :) The boys have very similar life circumstances, but are really different people and react to things so differently, and that’s one of the things that I find especially compelling about the relationship between them and each of their relationship with Avery. 

    I hope you find where it all goes to be interesting! That’s one thing I’m looking forward to—there are such important relationships between each leg of this triangle (should I really call it a triangle? I feel like I’ll get people being angry about it. :) Let’s call it Three People Who Have Various Kinds of Relationships with Each Other), and the relationships are going to grow and change so much as the series goes forward.


    Wow, guys I'm even more excited now about the sequel that I already was before!


    My Review


    The Conspiracy of Us is pitched as a YA version of The Da Vinci Code, but although I enjoyed that book, for me it was more like a YA version of two of my favourite non-YA books that I've re-read tons of times: The Eight and The Magic Circle by Katherine Neville.

    Like those two, the main character is a girl that finds herself thrown into a situation she didn't know she was part of, has to run around looking for answers and she finds herself part of a conspiracy that spans ages! With historical references, adventures around the world and conspiracy theories this one was clearly like catnip for Pili!

    Avery is a teenage girl that lives only with her mum, moving from one place to another following her mum's job, not staying in the same place more than a few months or a year. She decides to stop making friends or form any sort of attachments, something that gets challenged by Jack, another new boy at the school.

    The beginning was quite particular with Avery trying to stick ot her resolutions, but once her mother decides to demand something, she ends up going against it (typical teenage principle, and another consequence of hiding things from people, if you don't give them the truth or a good reason, they won't understand why it might be important!) and finds herself flying to Paris with a stranger, going to meet her real father.

    Poor Avery is completely out of her league, thrown into a game of power and a fight that spans through the ages and she doesn't know a thing about it all, but still tries to understand what's going on and doesn't take lightly being manipulated. She finds an ally on Jack, who was not a new boy but works for one of the families that Avery finds herself part of, not knowing which one of them she is part of for sure.

    Once she finds herself with a bit more information she ends up travelling all over Paris and Istanbul, fearing for her life, trying to find out more about the past, her ancestry and the prophecy that will decide about the rest of her life, but she doesn't do it alone because she has Jack on her corner to help her no matter what, and there's Stellan, the stranger, a reluctant ally.

    I fell in love with the conspiracy bits of the book and the historical references and bases for this group of powerful people and I'm really looking forward to find out more and follow more clues on the next book! Alexander the Great, Napoleon, shootings at Prada, dancing at night in a club in Istanbul to end up covered in spices at a market... I simply loved how visual the writing was and how it made me want to visit every place!

    By the end of the book Avery has gone through quite a few adventures and that has put her in a position of more power and she's not just at the mercy of those that want to control her. She's ready to keep the fight going and discover the truth behind the prophecy.

    We're not left with the most horrible of cliffhangers, but surely intriguing enough to make me want to get my hands on the sequel as soon as possible! Addictive, fast paced and intriguing, well deserved 4 stars for this one!


    Tuesday, January 13, 2015

    Tell Me Tuesdays #24!!


    Tell Me Tuesdays is a meme/feature created by the awesome ladies of Please Feed The Bookworm and La La In The Library, where we can share how we choose the book we are currently reading from our TBR pile!

    I'm always curious about that, cause as much as I tend to make myself a rough schedule for books to read and the like, I'm quite a mood reader and sometimes I just HAVE to ignore my schedule and read something else!



     All The Bright Places by Jennifer Niven

    The Fault in Our Stars meets Eleanor and Park in this exhilarating and heart-wrenching love story about a girl who learns to live from a boy who intends to die.
    Soon to be a major motion picture starring Elle Fanning!
     
    Theodore Finch is fascinated by death, and he constantly thinks of ways he might kill himself. But each time, something good, no matter how small, stops him.

    Violet Markey lives for the future, counting the days until graduation, when she can escape her Indiana town and her aching grief in the wake of her sister’s recent death.

    When Finch and Violet meet on the ledge of the bell tower at school, it’s unclear who saves whom. And when they pair up on a project to discover the “natural wonders” of their state, both Finch and Violet make more important discoveries: It’s only with Violet that Finch can be himself—a weird, funny, live-out-loud guy who’s not such a freak after all. And it’s only with Finch that Violet can forget to count away the days and start living them. But as Violet’s world grows, Finch’s begins to shrink.

    This is an intense, gripping novel perfect for fans of Jay Asher, Rainbow Rowell, John Green, Gayle Forman, and Jenny Downham from a talented new voice in YA, Jennifer Niven.

    Includes a PDF Help Line Resource Guide and a Note Read by the Author.




     The Future Collection by Beth Revis

    This collection of sci fi stories from NY Times Bestselling author Beth Revis features worlds and technology from the future. Featuring three brand new, original tales and three reprints, each story explores a different set of characters in a different world and facing different problems in the future world.

    "Doctor-Patient Confidentiality": A girl wakes up in a cryomed unit and must recall why she's there and what's she's lost.

    "The Most Precious Memory": In a world where memories are sold and consumed like drugs, one deal has a weird twist.

    "The Girl & the Machine": A time traveller meets someone who claims she's met his future self and that they'll change the world together.

    "Lag": A reporter has found the story of a lifetime--but a malfunctioning teleportation has made her forget it...

    "The Turing Test": A college student must determine which test subject is human and which is an android with A.I.

    "As They Slip Away": A novella set in the world of Across the Universe, exploring the fate of a side character.




     The Conspiracy of Us by Maggie Hall

    To fight her destiny as the missing heir to a powerful and dangerous secret society, sixteen-year-old Avery West must solve an ancient puzzle in a deadly race across Europe. Forbidden love and code-breaking, masked balls and explosions, destiny and dark secrets collide in this romantic thriller, in the vein of a YA DaVinci Code.

    Avery West's newfound family can shut down Prada at the Champs-Elysees when they want to shop in peace, and can just as easily order a bombing when they want to start a war.

    They are part of a powerful and dangerous secret society called the Circle of Twelve, and Avery is their missing heir. If they discover who she is, some of them will want to use her as a pawn. Some will want her dead.

    To thwart their plans, Avery must follow a trail of clues from the landmarks of Paris to the back alleys of Istanbul and through a web of ancient legends and lies. And unless she can stay one step ahead of beautiful, volatile Stellan, who knows she’s more than she seems, and can decide whether to trust mysterious, magnetic Jack, she may be doomed after all.



    I'm still reading Thornhill but since my preorder of Willowgrove hasn't arrived yet, I've decided to set it aside until I have the final book too, just in case there's a cliffhanger at the end of this one!

    I've been trying to do my best to get through all the January/Feb eARCs that I got approved for via Netgalley, but I decided that some short stories are always great to read when I need a break from something else, and science fiction is like comfort food for me, and I just HAD to start The Conspiracy of Us as soon as it downloaded at midnight because secret societies, guys with a British accent, ancient puzzles, treasure hunting!!! 

    So what are you all guys reading and how and why did you decide to pick up that book? Shiny new ARC? Comfort read? Scheduled for review? Must have new release? Tell me!!