The Red Rising Trilogy, Pierce Brown

All that we have is that shout into the wind – how we live. How we go. And how we stand before we fall.

Pierce Brown, “Morning Star”

There are those books that come out and dominate the conversation. You wake up one morning and suddenly everyone is raving about this book or series or author. Apparently this was one of those series, and I totally missed it. The first novel in this fantastic saga by Pierce Brown is called Red Rising, and it was the 2014 Goodreads Choice winner. The two follow up novels, Golden Son and Morning Star, won the 2015 and 2016 prizes, respectively. So apparently these books have been around, and applauded, for half a decade, and I had no idea. Maybe I just wasn’t paying attention? I don’t think I have an excuse other than the fact that I don’t read science fiction books as often as I’d like to. It seems to be the genre that gets put on my back burner. But don’t worry, scifi enthusiasts. These books have called me to repentance.

I started the first book, Red Rising, about a week before I was due to give birth. I’ll be honest. I wasn’t excited. I’d seen a few reviews that dubbed the series, “The Hunger Games in space!” and I wasn’t particularly eager to read The Hunger Games…in space. Please don’t misunderstand me. The Hunger Games was an enjoyable series. But I’ve already read it. I certainly didn’t need to read it again (in space!).

All this to say, I had set myself up to not be blown away by Red Rising. But my friend Abby (who, incidentally, is notoriously reluctant to read any type of series) insisted that I had to read this trilogy. So I gritted my teeth and started in. The first few chapters lived up to my expectations. That is, I was underwhelmed. Maybe it was pregnancy hormones. Maybe I was overly critical. Whatever it was, reading became a chore. So I moved on to something else, and then promptly had a baby, which dropped reading several rungs down on my ladder of priorities.

I returned to Red Rising a few months later, committed to finish it this time. I remained skeptical until the middle of the book, when I suddenly realized that I couldn’t put it down. I thought, based on the thousands of other dystopian novels and that pesky “Hunger Games in space” label, that I knew exactly where the author was going with these books. My fellow readers, I am here to tell you that I did not.

The Red Rising series describes a dystopian future in which human beings have spread throughout the solar system and genetically altered themselves into a caste system based on “color.” If you’re a Yellow, you’re a physician or scientist. If you’re a Blue, you’re a pilot or a spaceship crew member. Golds are the aristocratic rulers of the Society, the highest cast; Reds are manual laborers, the lowest. There are fourteen colors in total, but I’m not going to enumerate them all. You get the idea.

If you’ve read any dystopian fiction, you can probably guess what happens. Certain members of the lower castes realize that their system is oppressive and unite together to challenge the injustice endemic to the color hierarchy. However, unlike other books with a similar plot line, the Red Rising saga places less emphasis on the “overthrow the government” bit and more focus on character development and philosophy.

Pierce Brown does such a good job of painting his characters in shades of gray. Let’s get real. In a book about class warfare, no one is walking away untarnished. Brown’s characters get dirty. Many of them start with good intentions, but all end up sullying themselves with underhanded deals, betrayal, and violence. What we are left with is not a band of noble heroes, but a cast of believable, three-dimensional, honorable, crooked, loyal, backstabbing, peace-seeking, violent, idiot geniuses. Did you get all that?

One thing I admired about Brown’s treatment of violence in this series is that he doesn’t glorify it. You’d think that a book steeped in blood would be more cavalier about it, but the author never loses sight of the horror of this brutal world he’s created. The characters are allowed to feel the violence of their actions, even as they commit them. He lets them sit with the emotional pain of war, of friends lost and lives destroyed.

But in spite of all of the ugliness, the thing that blew me away was Brown’s treatment of themes of friendship, loyalty, and forgiveness. He asks questions of the characters and, by extension, of the reader. What is honor? Is there a difference between “honor” as reputation and “honor” as integrity? (As the characters discover, yes, there is.) What makes a good leader? What is power, and who is worthy of it?

I realized that this series was going to be different when our protagonist, Darrow, started grappling with the weight and responsibility of leadership. I was moved by Darrow’s struggle as he fought, made bad decisions, trusted the wrong people, and learned, through cruel experience, how to be a leader worth following.

There are three more books in the series; two (Iron Gold and Dark Age) have already been released, and one more is in the works. I’m going to take a break from Darrow’s story for now, because there are hundreds of other books on my To Read list, but I’ll be back sooner than later. I’m anxious to discover what Pierce Brown has in store for Darrow and his friends.

Happy Reading!

The Likeability Trap: How to Break Free and Succeed As You Are, Alicia Menendez

The interview that first brought this book to my attention.

Several months ago, I was mindlessly browsing through YouTube clips, you know, as one does, when I came across this short interview between The Daily Show host Trevor Noah and Alicia Menendez, author of The Likeability Trap. I found Menendez’s talking points fascinating because she put into words something that I’d always been subconsciously aware of but had never been able to articulate. That is, that women in leadership often suffer from what she calls the “Goldilocks Conundrum.” They are either seen as “too much” or “not enough.”

I put this book on my To Read list, and forgot about it for a while. I found it again as I was browsing through my library’s online app, and I immediately put it on hold. I’d gotten a few other books as well, and it took me a bit to be in the mood for this particular brand of nonfiction. Let this serve as a PSA, by the way, that it’s okay to wait until you’re in the mood for something before you pick it up. I’ve found that I enjoy books more when I’m actually in the mood for that genre or topic. If I try to force myself to read something “intellectual” because I feel like I should, when I really just want to read what I lovingly call “cotton candy”, it feels like a slog and I don’t end up liking the book. I’ve learned that I’ll eventually be in the mood, so I wait until then, and I enjoy my reading a whole lot more.

So, when I was ready to dive into The Likeability Trap, I really liked it! Basically, her thesis is that women in the workplace and in the public eye are often passed over for leadership positions because they are either warm and well-liked, but seen as less competent, or they’re perceived as competent and effective, but no one likes them. People seem to believe in this dichotomy, that a woman can be likable or she can be successful, but not both. At its core, however, this is a false dichotomy, and Menendez points out ways in which corporate and political culture needs to change to accommodate different styles of leadership. A woman can be warm and tough. She can be competent and caring. But only if she’s allowed to be.

She also gives some ideas for how women can advocate for themselves more effectively while we wait for leadership culture to catch up with the times. I wish she’d fleshed this section out more. Her suggestions were good, but I wanted more of them.

If you’re a woman who doesn’t work in this type of environment, or even if you’re not a woman at all, I think there are still some valuable insights for you here. Who among us hasn’t felt like they needed to change themselves to be more likable? To smooth out their edges to glide more easily along with others? That’s not to say that we should go around making ourselves obnoxious or abrasive. It’s just that some of us (including yours truly) lose a lot of time and energy worrying about whether other people like us, and it’s time that could be better spent developing skills, engaging in work worth doing, and enjoying relationships with those who accept us for who we are, warts and all. Think of the mental space we could save if we gave ourselves permission to simply be who we are!

It’s not as though this book solved all of my issues and made me completely indifferent to how others perceive me. But it did give me some things to think about, and a few things that I will try to implement in my own life as I strive to be more fully myself. If that appeals to you, then consider picking this book up.

Happy Reading!

In Depth with Timecaster Chronicles Author R.L. Perez

A fall through time. A reckless witch. A war of monsters.

“The cauldron’s rattling intensified until a small funnel cloud formed within, swirling the ingredients into a sickening tornado. Thunder roared overhead, and a flash of lightning elicited a startled shriek from my lips. More flashes of lightning. It grew closer and closer until I swore the next bolt would electrify me.

White light consumed me. Thunder blasted in my ears and into my skull. I couldn’t see or hear anything. Wind tore at my skin and hair and clothes until I was so dizzy I knew I would collapse.

I screamed, but it was lost in the storm.”

R.L. Perez, Twisted by Time

I was lucky enough to be an early reader for the first novel in R.L. Perez’s new Young Adult Fantasy series, the Timecaster Chronicles. Twisted by Time follows Desi Campbell, a young witch who wants nothing at all to do with the magical world. When she tries an unfamiliar spell to sneak away to Miami for spring break, she accidentally sends herself to Cuba, one hundred years in the past. In trying to figure out how to return home, she finds herself embroiled in a war on two fronts – The Spanish-American War, and a war between witches and demons.

Twisted by Time is a fun, fast-paced young adult novel. There’s a little bit of everything – action, romance, monsters, betrayal, and even a bit of history. It’s pretty clean with regards to language and sexuality, but be aware that it can get a bit dark at times. I mean, there are two wars going on.

I reached out to R.L. Perez to tell us more about her debut novel and its sequel, Devoured by Darkness.

Timecaster Chronicles author R.L. Perez

How long have you been writing, and what got you started?

Ever since I learned how to write as a kid, I’ve written stories. It started as stacks of notebook paper folded over and stapled. I usually retold whatever fairy tale or Disney movie I was currently obsessed with, and it always had hysterically awful drawings to go with it. As I grew older, the stories became more mature but were also loosely based on whatever I was reading at the time. In high school, I finally created my own unique stories and participated in my first NaNoWriMo – National Novel Writing Month – and I’ve been doing it almost every year since then.

Where did you get the ideas for the Timecaster Chronicles from, and why was it important to you to tell this story?

The bare bones idea I had was to write about a witch who time traveled (this was inspired by an episode of Charmed). I didn’t know what time period to write about, so I asked my husband (the Cuban), and he suggested Cuba during the Spanish-American War.

So many time travel stories involve European settings or highlander romances, and I wanted this one to be different. I’ve never heard of a Cuban time travel story before, so I knew this one would be pretty original. I was also excited to write about it because my husband’s family is Cuban, so it gave me the opportunity to explore his culture.

The Spanish-American War was such a short moment in history that it’s not often touched on. To me it seemed like a pivotal event, especially for my husband’s ancestors, that deserved to be told. 

What made you want to make the Timecaster Chronicles your first published series?

I have several finished novels, but none of them resonated quite so much with me as the Timecaster Chronicles. I dabbled in science fiction, but it wasn’t a good fit for me. I had other stories that weren’t quite so fleshed out. But I’ve always loved fantasy and time travel, and when this idea came to me, I couldn’t shove it to the side like I had all my other stories. It was practically begging to be published.

Why did you decide to publish indie instead of traditional?

I struggled with this decision for a long time. I always assumed if I went indie, I wouldn’t be successful. I’m an introvert and didn’t know the first thing about marketing. I assumed I would fail. I worked on my science fiction novel and tried getting that picked up by an agent. For two years, I polished my novel and sent it to beta readers and critique partners and editors. I attended writing conferences and met with several agents. So many liked the idea of my story, but when I sent it to them, they decided it “wasn’t for them”. It was such a lengthy process – most agents take 6 months or more to respond after you send a manuscript.

At some point, I realized I might never get published if I kept this up. I found a group on Facebook called 20booksto50k and was astounded by the success I saw there. Thousands of authors are wildly successful at publishing and make a comfortable income – some make even more than traditional authors do because they don’t have to pay the publisher or agent a cut of the royalties. I was inspired. I liked the idea of having complete control and doing things my way – the book title, the cover, the story, the characters, the publishing timeline, etc.

So I took the plunge, and I’m so glad I did. I might not be filthy rich (yet haha), but I have a strict timeline and I’ll be pumping out books ten times faster than a traditional publisher would. Eventually, it’ll make me a lovely income. But for now, I’m happy to have my story out there and make my dream come true.

What is your favorite part about the writing process?

The writing! Outlining is fun and gets me excited, but the really fun part is writing those juicy, heart-stopping scenes and then reading it over and thinking, “Did I write that?” 

Did you plot the entire series out from the beginning, or did you have a general outline and let the characters lead you?

A little bit of both. In general, I’m a fierce outliner. I usually have an extensive overall outline as well as several chapters mapped out before I get started. But as I write, sometimes the story changes and I find myself altering the outline. But I can’t write if I don’t have a direction to go, so that first outline is critical.

Twisted by Time was set in Cuba, but Devoured by Darkness will take place in the Philippines. Why the Philippines?

During my research, I discovered that the Spanish-American War began in the Philippines and then moved to Cuba. Then the U.S. returned to the Philippines to claim the country as a result of the treaty after the war with Spain. I thought it was fascinating and a little-known tidbit of history that I wanted to touch on. Cuba and the Philippines were both under Spanish rule for about five centuries, and they were both fighting for their own independence. But the U.S. fought with Cuba and against the Philippines, and I wanted to highlight that contrast.

Who was your favorite character to create, and why?

My favorite character is Kismet. I didn’t expect her to play such a monumental role, but as I wrote the story, I knew she had secrets and a dark past. The more the mystery unfolded, the more her backstory came to light. She just has the coolest timeline. I wrote a prequel novelette about her and I plan to write another at the end of the series as well. 

In the series, Desi is a dancer. Why did you choose dance as her creative outlet?

A critique partner read an early draft of mine and pointed out that Desi needed a hobby – her character was too stale and didn’t have enough of a drive. I made her a dancer because she needed a hobby that was physical so she could apply it to hunting demons. It also helped her to be more carefree, which in turn helped Oliver to let loose as well. 

What do you think readers will enjoy most about the Timecaster Chronicles?

I think readers will enjoy the time travel. It takes you for a wild ride! More than one occurrence of time travel takes place, and as the mysteries unfold it all comes together and makes for a pretty incredible adventure. 

Lastly, when does Devoured by Darkness launch?

Devoured by Darkness launches on August 7!

Thanks to R.L. Perez for taking the time to share her thoughts about her new series, publication, and the writing process. I’m looking forward to grabbing a copy of Devoured by Darkness in August! If you enjoy the Young Adult Fantasy genre, go ahead and check it out!

Twisted by Time is available now as an eBook. You can find it on Amazon here, and it’s free with Kindle Unlimited.

Devoured by Darkness will arrive both as an eBook and in paperback on August 7, 2020! It’s available for pre-order now.

Bound by Blood, the final book in the series, will be published on September 6, 2020. Check it out here.

And, if you want to keep up with R.L. Perez and her future publications, you can follow her on Facebook and Instagram.

Did you read Twisted by Time? Let me know what you thought about it in the comments!

Happy Reading!

Five Nonfiction Books You Should Definitely Read

Nonfiction tends to get a bad rap. Some people are intimidated by it and think that they’re not going to be “smart enough” (whatever that means) to appreciate it. Others may think that it’s going to be dry, and they’d rather stick with fiction. Well I am here in defense of nonfiction.

It’s wonderful! Sure, some of it is dry and inaccessible, and if you pick up a book and you find that you’re not getting anything out of it, I give you permission to put it down. (A post about that coming later.) But I think that you’ll find a lot more nonfiction books that are totally fascinating. What have you always wanted to know more about? I guarantee there’s a book about it.

I once decided, kind of randomly, that I wanted to learn about octopuses. I’d learned a little bit about them, I thought they were interesting, and I wanted to know more. My search led me to a fantastic book by Peter Godfrey-Smith called Other Minds: The Octopus, the Sea, and the Deep Origins of Consciousness. It sounds formidable, right? I’m here to tell you that I loved that book. I satisfied my curiosity, learned a lot more about octopuses, and enjoyed a well-written book. Think of what I would have missed if I’d shied away from nonfiction!

Another time, I picked up a book about dolphins. That book, for whatever reason, didn’t click with me, and it’s totally okay. I’ll find another book about dolphins. But the point is, I’ll keep looking.

So my challenge to you, if you’re not already a reader of nonfiction, is to give it a try. Think of a topic you’d like to learn more about, do a little digging to find a book that others recommend, and dig in! Or, if you’re looking to get your nonfiction feet wet, try one of these five books below. I recommend them all.

1. John Adams, David McCullough

Anyone who’s seen Hamilton knows that John Adams was the butt of several jokes. They did him dirty. History has mostly forgotten him, but I wish that everyone would learn about this amazing man and his equally amazing wife.

John and Abigail Adams were a power couple in the truest sense. They weren’t perfect, but they spent their lives doing and being good. In a time when real goodness and integrity seem to matter not at all, it’s refreshing to read about someone who stood fast to his principles. I’m so grateful to David McCullough for bringing our second president back to life and giving him the recognition that he so rightly deserves, but seldom receives. This book is fascinating, and you should read it.

2. Evicted: Poverty and Profit in the American City, Matthew Desmond

Evicted is an important book, and one I think everyone should read. The author, Matthew Desmond, lived in a few different low-income neighborhoods in Milwaukee for a year. He writes about the people he met, their circumstances, and how difficult it is to keep a roof over your head when the cost of even bad housing outstrips your income.

What I like about the author’s take on this is that he doesn’t paint anyone as the bad guy. Landlords are given the benefit of the doubt, as are the tenants. He recognizes the right of landlords to collect rent and make a profit, but he also recognizes the impact that eviction has on tenants. I also appreciated that he suggested, and made a rather compelling argument for, a solution to homelessness and substandard housing. If you read one book this year, it should be this one. 

Note: The author does use some strong language, usually when quoting someone. I just want you to be aware if that’s not your thing.

3. Get Well Soon: History’s Worst Plagues and the Heroes Who Fought Them, Jennifer Wright

I first read this book in May of 2019, and I had no idea how relevant it would soon become to my lived experience of a pandemic. One of the things that stuck out to me, even at the time, was Wright’s insistence that we should elect our leaders based on how we think they’d handle a crisis, not based on who we’d rather go bowling with. I’m not quoting directly, but she said something to the effect of, “Who do you want in charge when the bodies start to pile up in the streets?”

I’d heard of most of these plagues before and thought I knew enough about them, but I was astonished at what I did not know. And moreover, I was touched, many times, by the author’s suggestion that we all be a little kinder. It soothes my inner Hufflepuff when I read about people coming together to support and uplift one another and fight a common enemy.

Get Well Soon was informative and reminded me that we don’t need to be geniuses to make a difference. We just have to give a darn about our fellow man.

Also, Jennifer Wright is hilarious. I want to be her friend. 

Note: Strong language here too. Not a ton, but it’s there occasionally. Do with that what you will.

4. Bury My Heart At Wounded Knee: An Indian History of the American West, Dee Brown

It took me a really long time to finish this, not because it was uninteresting or poorly written, but because it was so emotionally draining. At one point my husband said “It’s like they’re telling the same story over and over again. Like the author is just repeating himself.” It seemed like that because the same scenario played out again and again along the various tribes. Because of this, a lot of the stories are jumbled in my head. It was hard to keep it all straight. But my overall feeling at the end of this book was a deep sadness and an anger that these things were so glossed over in my history classes. I knew that the Native Americans had been poorly treated and tricked into giving up their land. I didn’t realize just how despicably the US government had acted.

Throughout my life, I have sometimes heard people speak unkindly about Native Americans. There are a lot of prejudicial views about them and I think some people feel as though Native Americans have no real reason to complain or feel resentment. I don’t think I really felt one way or the other about it before reading this book. Now, I really want to shout from the rooftops just how justified those feelings of resentment are. This book helped me understand, just a little bit better, the feelings that Native Americans have about things that are still happening to them, like the Dakota Access Pipeline at Standing Rock, or people dressing up in headdresses at music festivals. I get it now.

I really recommend this book. If it feels like a slog, push through it. It’s worth it.

5. King Leopold’s Ghost, Adam Hochschild

“An ancient English law made it illegal to witness a murder or discover a corpse and not raise a human cry. But we live in a world of corpses, and only about some of them is there a human cry.” – Adam Hochschild

When I read King Leopold’s Ghost, I was appalled not just by the atrocities committed against the Congolese people, but also by how much I didn’t already know about it. Before reading this book, my only exposure to this terrible part of history was reading Conrad’s Heart of Darkness in high school. I didn’t pay enough attention to that book at the time, and I’ll be rereading it.

I was struck by King Leopold’s cruelty and avarice, but also by his savvy. He convinced the whole world, for years, that his barbaric for-profit tyranny in the Congo was actually benevolent philanthropy. That’s Class A villainy. I was also inspired by the heroic efforts of E.D. Morel, Roger Casement, William Shepherd, George Washington Williams, Alice Harris, etc. These people basically started the entire concept of a campaign for human rights.

This book made me reflect on the horrific things that are still going on in the world, which things become newsworthy, which things spark outrage, and why. Why is it that American schoolchildren learn all about Germany’s atrocities in the Holocaust, but know nothing about it’s genocide of the Herero people in Africa? Why is it that many Belgians today have very little idea of the suffering their nation caused in the Congo? I think we know why, and it’s time that changed. Friends, read this book.

Bonus Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking, Susan Cain

Sorry, I couldn’t recommend just five. So you get a bonus recommendation!

Quiet was highly validating for me. I’ve lived my whole life feeling somewhat uncomfortable in my own skin in social situations. Actually, let me amend that statement. I’ve felt uncomfortable in large groups. Anyone who knows me knows I love a small group conversation. I can talk on the phone to my best friends for hours. But send me to a party or drag me to a school dance and I’m instantly off balance. In Quiet, Susan Cain became the first person in my entire life to tell me that that’s okay. She framed my introversion as a strength, as opposed to something that needs to be overcome. I’m grateful. So if you’re an introvert, I’d suggest giving this a read. And if you’re an extrovert, maybe this will help you understand your introverted friends and family a bit better.

Have you read any of these books? If so, what did you think of them? Tell me in the comments! And please let me know if you have a favorite nonfiction book to recommend. I’d love to hear about the books that you love.

Happy Reading!

On Books

“O, there is lovely to feel a book, a good book, firm in the hand, for its fatness holds rich promise, and you are hot inside to think of good hours to come.”

Richard Llewellyn, How Green Was My Valley

There is something infinitely precious about books. Humans have created a system whereby, through a series of markings on a page, we are able to get a glimpse into the mind and heart of another person. That person may have lived and died centuries ago, but, through books, we can come to know them.

It’s a kind of magic that allows us to live a hundred lifetimes, go on countless adventures, feel the pain of a thousand heartbreaks and the joy of a thousand loves. Books are the voice of our collective humanity crying out for our stories to be heard. They become our escape, our teachers, and our friends.

My love of literature began early. As a small child, I would sit on my mother’s lap in the evenings while she read to me. When I reached elementary school, my favorite part of the school day was SSR (Silent Sustained Reading). I was a socially awkward and introverted child, so being allowed to quietly read on my own was a delight. In the afternoons, I would rush home from school to watch Wishbone, a TV show about a dog who connected events in his life to classic works of literature like A Tale of Two Cities or Beowulf.

My aunt gifted me Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone for my twelfth birthday, and I devoured it. Few things, before or since, have captured my imagination like Harry’s adventures at Hogwarts. I recall the nights that I stayed up until the small hours of the morning reading the newest Potter book, knowing I’d be exhausted the next day, but too engrossed to possibly go to sleep. I’m a rabid Potterhead to this day.

As I grew, my taste in books matured, and my interests continue to widen. I discovered a love of nonfiction books well into adulthood, and find that reading nonfiction allows me to continue learning long after my formal education has ended. History and the social sciences are particularly interesting to me, but I’ll read just about anything.

I believe that being open to various genres is vital to a sustained love of reading. Books are food for the mind, and occasionally I find that I am (or am not) in the mood for a particular flavor. I crave genres like I crave different cuisines. Sometimes I really want to read a science fiction novel. Sometimes I’m in the mood for a Regency romance. Other days I find myself enthralled by a nonfiction book about octopuses. The variety keeps me interested, my ever-growing To Read list keeps me motivated, and the authors themselves keep me returning, time and again, to the page.

My goal with this blog is to celebrate books in all their varieties. You’ll find reviews of books as I read them. You’ll find my recommendations for books in several genres. I hope that you’ll find engaging content. But most of all, I hope that you’ll find a new literary friend.

Happy reading!