Unraveling Chaos

unraveling the chaos that are my thoughts

Chasing the Stars Review

September 20, 2021

“I feel like I’ll be chasing stars for the rest of my life.” “This feeling. This moment. I want to hold onto it forever.”

Chasing the Stars is a companion novel to Chasing the Sun. You do not have to read Chasing the Sun before reading Chasing the Stars, but I suggest that you should. If you do, you will get more background on Naomi and Theo, and you will also enjoy it. I fell in love with Naomi and Theo’s characters while I was reading Chasing the Sun. Chasing the Stars just made me love them even more.

Melanie Hooyenga writes realistic and relatable characters. They’re not perfect; they have flaws and insecurities. I was able to relate to all of the characters in one way or another.
Hunter is like a cactus. Prickly on the outside. Soft and gooey on the inside. The three quotes from Hunter that I relate to the most are:

I’m sometimes slow to warm up to new people but that doesn’t mean I don’t like you.

How can I be so good with other people’s words but so bad at explaining my own thoughts?

Books saved me that first year and now I hope being an editor will allow me to capture the magic I felt when I got lost in books—to be part of that experience for other kids who need to escape reality.

Naomi doesn’t believe in insta-love. She’s self-aware. When you don’t believe in something or want it, it usually happens to you, especially in a story. When it said in the summary about Naomi not believing in insta-love, you already know what will happen. It was not the annoying type of insta-love. Considering their age and that it’s a YA novel, it was cute and done well. I usually don’t enjoy insta-love, but this one worked for me.
Not only do the main characters shine, but the side characters do as well. You learn more about the side characters without it being a random information dump. Instead, it makes the characters more dimensional and adds to the story. I loved all of the characters as well as their dynamics. Both of the families dynamics are different yet also the same. They were able to mesh together. There were strong family and sibling relationships that you would want as your own.

Chasing the Stars was an emotional roller coaster for me. I was frustrated throughout the story. Every chance that they tried to kiss, they were interrupted. They could never really catch a break. There were also moments when I laughed. Some of the lines were just too funny not to. The rest of the time, I couldn’t help smiling as I was reading. It was fluffy and wholesome. I wouldn’t mind reading more from Melanie Hooyenga.

I received Chasing the Stars in exchange for my honest review. It does not impact my opinions of Chasing the Stars in any way. The summary was what caught my attention, and I wanted to read the novel because of it. But I wanted to read Chasing the Sun beforehand, so I bought Chasing the Sun. I’m glad that I read both; I enjoyed them.

Goodreads

Amazon TK

Filed in: ARCS, Book Reviews, Reviews • by Reese •

A Clash of Steel

September 8, 2021

Favorite Quotes

Some of these quotes may contain spoilers. I tried to not include as many as I could that would spoil A Clash of Steel. But I couldn’t resist having some, because they were my favorites.

For anyone who has ever wanted more.

Words may disappear like the wind; a story is passed on forever.

“It’s just a storm, Thanh, it’ll pass”
“Hush, hush, it’s fine, it’ll be over soon”
“When?”
“That is not for us to know or decide. All we must do is endure it.”

“Once you’ve experienced ocean, nothing else is considered water.”
Yuan Zhen’s words have always spoken to me; this particular poem filled with longing is no exception. There’s something about describing a feeling that is so magnificent it may never come again, a love that is irreplaceable, that captures my imagination. I sigh, wondering what that would feel like.

I am sixteen, and I have never left the village. I’ve never even been to the bustling metropolis of Canton, despite my mother owning another teahouse—even more successful and busy than the one in the village. Mother has always said the city is no place for a young girl.

I’ve only glimpsed these other worlds beyond my small riverside village in my scrolls and books, precious rare luxuries, stories and poems collected from Master Feng’s collection or gifts from Mother’s travels.

The teahouse and this tiny village are all I’ve ever known. I do not wish to stay, but to be married to some man I hardly know? I can’t imagine that, either. I want to see the world, see the places in my stories, distant coasts and faraway lands.

I wonder if Father would be proud of my accomplishments. I feel like I’ve been trying my whole life to make Mother proud, but she is always leaving.

I wonder how well they know Mother, to see her every day, to know her moods so intricately. I’ve been seeking her approval my whole life, and to have this group of strangers seem to know her better than I ever could is jarring. 

“Are you happy here, my treasure?”
I falter at the word happy.
Am I happy?
“Of course,” I finally manage. Positioning myself to want more would be unseemly.
“But you long to live in the city.” Mother sighs. “I can see it, too, the restlessness in your eyes. Perhaps the city would be good for you. And you could be safe in Canton, with the right husband and the right protection.”

“You should know that city can swallow people whole, and many easily succumb to the ease of opium and other pleasures. There are those who would take advantage of you, a naive youth from the country. And to succeed as a business owner, you would need to be ruthless, to make allies, to drive hard bargains.”

After so many years of such sporadic contact, the opportunity for an extended amount of time with her is strange.
I’ve waited my whole life for Mother to see me, to be proud of me and acknowledge me. Now that she’s here, across from me at this small table, it’s all I can do to stare at the gently bobbing tea left in my cup, wondering if she would find it impertinent if I asked all the questions on the tip of my tongue.

Somehow, despite being on the ship with more people than the entire village houses, I’ve never felt more alone.

“Here we are,” Mother says, a glint of pride sparkling in her eyes. She’s never looked at me like that, and a deep hunger gnaws inside me. For her approval. For her to see me as valuable and useful as this business she’s created.
She will, I tell myself.

“Come on!”
“What?”
“You think I just wanted to tell you about all those places? Come on, I can show you!” She extends her hand to me, her palm open and inviting.
I take her hand, and her fingers close around mine. Her hands are warm  and solid, and the roughness of the calluses on her fingers brush against my own. Our fingers tangle together, my long brown fingers against her own golden-hued skin, and my heart skips a beat. 

“What do you want?”
“More,” I admit in a soft whisper.
“I want the world,” I say, my voice growing steadier as I say the words aloud. “I want to see everything, taste everything. Experience everything.”

I’ve never met someone who I felt such a connection to like this, who seemed to understand my hopes and dreams even without me having to say all of them out loud.

The night air seems to come to a standstill, and I cannot look away. This girl with a warm smile and bright eyes who has seen the world is looking at me. This girl who is within a moment knew me immediately and understood my yearnings for more. This girl who listened to me babble about the sea and my dreams of far-off places and who had a story for each one.

She dangles my dream in front of me like she knows me. She knows me because I let her, and I was a fool.

“Don’t worry, little lily. Whatever you’re running from, that’s in the past now.”

The ocean is constant, the waves drifting and never ending. There’s a peace here, and also endless possibility, the way the waters connect all the lands of the world. 

“This suits you,” “You remind me of myself the first time I sailed. I thought I had been missing something all my life.”

“I don’t know if I could miss something I couldn’t fathom,” I say, my eyes on the sea. “I knew the ocean existed, but when all your life has been rivers and mountains, this—this—“ I gesture at the broad expanse and turn around toward the other side of the ship, where the horizon extends to infinite possibilities. 

I’ve felt so alone my whole life, waiting to fulfill some expectation, to perform. In some way.
All my life I’ve been waiting, and now I’m doing.

“Nice work, little lily,” Thanh says, giving me a reluctant nod.
I can’t tell if the salt on my face is from the sea or exhausted, happy tears of relief. We are all weary, but the embrace seems to go on forever, and I am surrounded by the warmth of my crew as the storm rages on. 

There is something here in the way she’s holding my hands, a feeling inside me that might be the more I’ve been yearning for all along. These weeks in the ship, Anh has worked alongside me, teaching me the ways of sailing, and I’ve found friendship here, yes, but there’s another layer—something in the way she’s listened to me ramble about my dreams and has shared her own, and now this…this steadfast belief in me.

I swallow hard. She hasn’t let go of my hands as the waves crash down around us. In fact, she’s holding on tighter, like I’m an anchor and she’s afraid she’ll float out to sea.

“I can’t speak to what you’ve endured,” I say quietly, “but my life was not perfect. You have people who care about you, a mother who respects you and your opinion, a home where you belong. I had this…this expectation, and it was like trying to win a race I couldn’t even finish. I wish…I wish I was loved like you are.”

Anh lowers her sword and arched her eyebrow at me. “Why didn’t you move?”
“I—” I didn’t know I was supposed to, I don’t say, because even as the thought forms in my head, I can hear how silly it would be to say aloud. I’d been so captivated by Anh and the way she moves, the way she carries herself, that I had completely forgotten about the point of the lesson.

The truth of what I’m feeling, what I’ve been feeling about other girls for so long, jumps out at me. I’ve been pushing it back, focusing on my studies and how to make Mother proud. I’d pushed far into the back of my mind why the idea of marrying a man had always seemed loathsome to me….I’d read poetry and stories about love and yearning, about this deep longing and wanting, and I couldn’t place why I hadn’t felt it. Or maybe I had, but recognizing it would mean naming it, speaking it aloud. 

“I’ve always considered my crew my family. I’ve seen the way you look at Anh…and the way she looks at you.”
My breath catches. The words aren’t an accusation, just a statement.
She smiles at me. “You could be happy here, if you wanted to stay. You’re welcome to be a part of this crew. Continue to sail with us.”

“I enjoy getting things to where they need to be. If privacy is the means by which I must do it, then a pirate I am.”

I have no answers, only questions about why in every story I’ve heard, the pirates were always the ones portrayed as monsters.

It’s like she’s in my head and I’m in hers, and we move in sync, each blow met in exchange. 

“We all came on this ship for our own reasons. The past is the past. Whatever Xiang’s past is, she came to us for this chance at a greater future. Like many of us once did.”

“I’ve been grateful to have a place here. All my life I thought I was suitable only to be married off, and you all…you all taught me I could be more.” “The truth is, I ran away from a betrothal, and—“ “I’ve found a home here. I hope you will want to keep me.”

In sleep, her face loses the tough edge she tries to maintain…
Something about this moment is precious, the way Anh seems small and vulnerable here—such a contrast to the loud, boisterous energy she usually brings to the world. I see the confident and nonchalant way she appears not to care, but beneath that I also see the softness. 

“You’re not the grand mystery you think you are. I know you.”

“I want more than that,” I say, the honesty raw in my throat. “I want you by my side always.”

I wonder if all of them knew Mother more than I ever did. I feel hollow and strange. This journey to prove myself has just been one wide circle. 

I’m tired of others deciding my story for me.

I set out on this journey to find the treasure, all to prove that I was capable.
It took me leaving home and running after what everyone had thought was impossible to know it.
I’ve been taught that blood was everything—that family, where you come from, defined who you could be. Mother claimed she cared about me, but she was only ever looking after her own ends. 

“You’re my family, Anh,” I say. “She…she is my blood , yes. But that’s all I am to her. She always called me her treasure.” “She wanted to keep me safe. Like a doll. Like a story. She didn’t see me as a person, just…something else she could control. At the end of the day, the treasure was more important to her than I was.”

“The man who raised me, protected me, encouraged me to follow my heart. He told me I should find you. Because that is where my heart is.”

For so long I’ve dreamed of impossible destinies, of adventure. These past few weeks I’ve had all of that and more. I’ve found love where I wasn’t looking, and a crew that cares for me as if I were their own. I found my father and lost him.
I found myself.
I don’t need to prove anything to anyone.
I know who I am, and I know what I’m capable of.

“I want what you want. To be by your side. To make you smile every day. To have a life together.”
“However short it might be,” Anh says. Her hand finds mine in the darkness, and the water rises even higher.
“I love you,” she gasps. 

“Can you live on love?” I ask her.
“Of course,” she says.

For the first time, I can see that we can do it. That we can get away from everyone who expects us to be what we aren’t, to be pawns in someone else’s game, to be used as bargaining chips or to be made in someone else’s image. 

“I’m sorry we weren’t able to get any of the treasure.”
“Are you sure we didn’t?”
“I think what we have here is worth far, far more.”
Anh interlaces her fingers with my own, and together we face the beckoning horizon.

Title: A Clash of Steel

Author: C.B Lee

Publisher: Feiwel & Friends 

Publication Date: September 7th, 2021

Genres: Young Adult, Historical Fiction 

Synopsis:

Two intrepid girls hunt for a legendary treasure on the deadly high seas in this YA remix of the classic adventure novel Treasure Island.

1826. The sun is setting on the golden age of piracy, and the legendary Dragon Fleet, the scourge of the South China Sea, is no more. Its ruthless leader, a woman known only as the Head of the Dragon, is now only a story, like the ones Xiang has grown up with all her life. She desperately wants to prove her worth, especially to her mother, a shrewd businesswoman who never seems to have enough time for Xiang. Her father is also only a story, dead at sea before Xiang was born. Her single memento of him is a pendant she always wears, a simple but plain piece of gold jewelry.

But the pendant’s true nature is revealed when a mysterious girl named Anh steals it, only to return it to Xiang in exchange for her help in decoding the tiny map scroll hidden inside. The revelation that Xiang’s father sailed with the Dragon Fleet and tucked away this secret changes everything. Rumor has it that the legendary Head of the Dragon had one last treasure—the plunder of a thousand ports—that for decades has only been a myth, a fool’s journey.

Xiang is convinced this map could lead to the fabled treasure. Captivated with the thrill of adventure, she joins Anh and her motley crew off in pursuit of the island. But the girls soon find that the sea—and especially those who sail it—are far more dangerous than the legends led them to believe.

Review

C.B. Lee’s A Clash of Steel was a breath of fresh air. It hooked me right from the opening paragraph. Lee’s writing is so descriptive that you could imagine you were watching a movie instead of reading. It was a little slow-paced for me, but maybe it was because I was also reading back-to-back slow-paced books. I wished that I could listen to the book rather than read it because although I know Vietnamese, I can understand it more through hearing rather than reading. I can talk and understand Vietnamese but cannot read or write it. Other than that, I enjoyed my experience reading A Clash of Steel.

Growing up, my parents never told me Vietnamese stories. Which is something I wish they had done. Maybe it’s either because they didn’t have the time to, or I never asked/shown any interest. I believe that part of my Vietnamese culture was lost to me because I was raised in America. We go back every few years because most of my family are still there, but you can only learn so much in a limited time.

I didn’t know anything about Treasure Island, but what caught my attention about A Clash of Steel was the representation of Vietnamese, Chinese, and queer characters. There weren’t many books that had it when I was growing up. But I am glad that more and more representations are present in today’s books. People can be seen through our media today. It’s slow, but at least it is still progress.

Xiang wants more than the life she has. Her mother is never there, and she doesn’t know her father. All Xiang seeks is to have her mother notice her and be proud of her. She isn’t your typical Chinese girl who imagines having a husband and being a wife. She wants more.
She found a family who loves her on her journey, even if they aren’t her blood. Not only that, but she found love and herself along the way as well.

Book links:  

Goodreads

Amazon

Book Depository

Barnes & Noble

IndieBound

Indigo

Author Information:

CB Lee is a Lambda Literary Award nominated writer of young adult science fiction and fantasy. Her works include the Sidekick Squad series (Duet Books), Ben 10 (Boom!), and All Out Now (HarperTeen). CB loves to write about queer teens, magic, superheroes, and the power of friendship.

Lee’s work has been featured in Teen Vogue, Wired Magazine, and Hypable. Lee’s first novel in the Sidekick Squad series, Not Your Sidekick was a 2017 Lambda Literary Awards Finalist in YA/Children’s Fiction and a 2017 Bisexual Book Awards Finalist in Speculative Fiction. Seven Tears at High Tide was the recipient of a Rainbow Award for Best Bisexual Fantasy Romance and also a finalist for the 2016 Bisexual Book Awards in the YA and Speculative Fiction categories.

Author Links:

Website: https://cb-lee.com/ 

Twitter: https://twitter.com/author_cblee 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/cblee_cblee/ 

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/11230592.C_B_Lee 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/authorcblee 

Tumblr: https://authorcblee.tumblr.com/

Filed in: ARCS, Blog Tours, Book Reviews, Favorite Quotes, Promotions, Reviews • by Reese •

Vindictively Vicious

August 12, 2021

“I needed someone who understood the damaged individual that I was. Maybe Vee – with her own sordid background – was just the kind of fucked-up that I needed, thrived on.” 

Erin Mc Luckie Moya is not your typical author. You can’t box her in just one genre. Because chances are, you will be able to find something you enjoy reading from at least one of her books. 

Vindictively Vicious is the second book from Moya’s Hell Hounds MC series. Vivenne and Ammo were introduced in Catching Cole, but it is unnecessary to read that first because Vindictively Vicious could be read as a standalone. However, I do recommend it for both background and enjoyment. It has character growth, strong female friendship, family, love, and independent women.

Realistically, Ammo and Vee shouldn’t be together. They should be enemies, but they’re not. Ammo is the Sergeant in Arms of the Hell Hounds MC, and Vee is the Mafia’s princess. But they’re bound together by a baby. 

I love Vee and Ammo’s relationship. Each has a position of power. Yet, they don’t see one more powerful than the other. Instead, they respect one another and view each other as equals. They understand that who they are as individuals are important and will be whom they are without changing themselves. 

The foundation of Vee and Sadie’s friendship was built on a lie. Vee never told Sadie about her heritage of being the Mafia’s Princess. Yet Sadie didn’t care because she loves Vee regardless. To her, they’re not just friends but family. She would do anything for her. Sadie has grown into her role as Club Princess. Cole supports her and lets her be the leader she was always meant to be. 

I believe that strong female friendships should be prominent in today’s media. Friendships are important, especially healthy ones. Women should support and be there for one another. 

It was nice seeing Sadie and Cole’s growth from Catching Cole. Vee and Sadie are independent women, and their significant others know and respect that. They support them and help them grow into whom they were always meant to be. 

November 17, 2021, can’t come soon enough for Layla’s story, Lavishly Lawless.

Filed in: ARCS, Book Reviews, Reviews • by Reese •

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“A Bánh Mì for Two” is a feel-good story abo “A Bánh Mì for Two” is a feel-good story about food, family, and self-discovery.

Dual POVs: Lan, who lives in Sai Gon, wants to be the perfect daughter and fulfill “expectations,” all the while dealing with the grief of losing her father. Vivi is a Vietnamese-American who comes to Vietnam for the first time, wanting to learn more about her family and herself. Their love of food connects them. 

I wasn’t expecting to get emotional as I did.

“A Bánh Mì for Two” was what I needed growing up. Stories with characters who look like me are coming to traditional publishing in YA. And people even know about it!

If only the blog was real! I would use it the next time I go to Vietnam. It needs to be a thing.

It was relatable. However, I wished for more at moments. 
A few times, I had to stop to look up words. Since I can understand Vietnamese more than I can read it, I had to listen to the words to understand what they were. It would have been an even better experience if I had listened to the audiobook. 

“A Bánh Mì for Two” was one of my anticipated books of the year, and I am honored to be gifted a copy. 

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After my life goes sideways in the middle of sophomore year, I'm forced to move in with my older brother and two of his hockey teammates. I'm less than thrilled at the idea of living with three athletes and their stinky gear, their rotating door of hookups, and their tendency to inhale every snack in the house.
 
But when I walk in the front door with an armload of boxes, I'm faced with another problem entirely.
 
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🏒 TEASER REVEAL 🏒
𝐒𝐇𝐔𝐓𝐎𝐔𝐓 by Avery Keelan is releasing June 1st!!
 
Link in bio @averykeelan
 
What to expect:
✔️Brother’s Teammate
✔️Forced Proximity/Roommates
✔️Pierced & Tattooed Hero
✔️Sunshine Party Girl/Broody Goalie
✔️Enough heat and tension to melt your kindle
 
 
BLURB:
After my life goes sideways in the middle of sophomore year, I'm forced to move in with my older brother and two of his hockey teammates. I'm less than thrilled at the idea of living with three athletes and their stinky gear, their rotating door of hookups, and their tendency to inhale every snack in the house.
 
But when I walk in the front door with an armload of boxes, I'm faced with another problem entirely.
 
Hades.
 
One of my new roommates is the tall, tattooed stranger from my one-night stand on Halloween.
 
*This is a continuation of the Offside universe, but can be read as a complete standalone.
 
Blogger Sign up in bio @wordsmithpublicity
 
#TeaserReveal #Shutout #AveryKeelan #SportsRomance #Standalone #OneNightStand #RoommateRomance #preorder #ComingSoon #wordsmithpublicity
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