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Tuesday 6 August 2013

Top Ten Tuesday: Top Ten books I wish had sequels

   
 

This weeks top ten, hosted by The broke and bookish is based on books we would love to see sequels of. 



1) Eleanor and Park - I just loved these characters far too much. I don't want to let them go. Plus I think Ia sequel based a few years in the future (maybe at College?) could work. The idea of a sequel to this both terrifies and thrills me. I would be happy with an anthology of their futures, each short a different episode in their lives... (Any of you fanfiction people take this challenge on then link me up!)

2) Mockingjay - If there was ever an award for the worst epilogue in history it would go to this book. I felt as though Collins was forced to tie the story up in a nice pretty bow, and that's why she tortured us with this epilogue. If she, or anyone else, could write me a short sequel and make it justifiable why Katniss turned her back on the very foundations of her beliefs in the epilogue then I challenge them.

3) The Perks of being a wallflower - I just love this book, and would love to catch up with the characters.

4)Forbidden - This may not count, as I kind of want a different ending rather that a sequel. Although I would love a sequel to catch up with Maya and see how she is coping.

5) Sempre - OK, so there is a sequel in the works for this one. But I want it now!

6) Easy - I just loved it, and I always want more of what I love.

7) My life next door - I presume there will be a sequel to this book. The ending kind of calls for one.

8) 1984 - Not to this book, exactly, but to the premise George Orwell created. I would love for him to write a Dystopia based in our future now. You know, if he was alive and all.

9) The Very Hungry Caterpillar - because he might be thirsty.

10) Animal Farm - Imagine an Animal Farm type sequel based around the events of the wars effecting current affairs today? Every generation should have one. Do you guys think there is a novelist today who could tackle something like this to the standard of Orwell?

So these are mine, what are yours? Be sure to comment and let me know!


Tuesday 30 July 2013

 

Top ten Tuesday is a blog feature hosted by Broke and Bookish. This week the topic is: 
Top ten best beginnings and endings of books.

1) “Dear Friend, I am writing to you because she said you listen and understand and didn’t try to sleep with that person at that party even though you could have. Please don’t try to figure out who she is because then you might figure out who I am, and I really don’t want you to do that.” 
The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky

It's just so perfect. It sets of the tone of the novel in a simple yet completely ideal way. I felt like I already knew the character, before I knew anything about them I felt them as a human, and that's just perfect to me.

2) “Blue Sargent had forgotten how many times she’d been told that she would kill her true love.”
 The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater

 I admit, it took me a minute to adjust to the name choice, but the promise of magic here is so real it cast me into a spell straight away.

3) “It’s so hard to talk when you want to kill yourself.” 
 –It’s Kind of A Funny Story by Ned Vizzini

This book pulled me in and sucked me under straight away. You're rooting for the MC from the very first line, and that is always ideal.


4)  “There is one mirror in my house. It is behind a sliding panel in the hallway upstairs. Our faction allows me to stand in front of it on the second day of every third month, the day my mother cuts my hair.” 
- Divergent by Veronica Roth

I love a good dystopian, and this opening screamed dystopian. Loved it.

 5) "When I wake up, the other side of the bed is cold. My fingers stretch out, seeking Prim’s warmth but finding only the rough canvas cover of the mattress. She must have had bad dreams and climbed in with our mother. Of course, she did. This is the day of the reaping."
- The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins

 Once you finish the series, you understand the complete significance of this opening. The first thought Katniss has is of Prim. The second is that she is missing because of the reaping. It's a summary of the whole book series woven into the first page.


For the endings, I will tell you the books, but I won't quote them. I don't want to run the risk of spoiling them for some of you.



1) Eleanor and Park - Rainbow Rowell. 

2) The Fault In our Stars - John Green.

3) The Raven Boys - Maggie Stiefvater

4) Rules of Attraction - Simone Elkeles (I'm talking about the epilogue here)

5) You against Me - Jenny Downham



Agree? Disagree? Have some suggestions of your own? Let me know!

Wednesday 24 July 2013

Top Ten Words/Topics That Will Make You NOT pick up a book

 

This weeks top ten theme hosted by Broke and Bookish is: Top ten words/topics that will make you NOT want to pick up a book.

(Side note: I'm writing this in a rush between yoga and a seriously needed girly catch up so best not to be on grammar watch. I'll correct it later.)


1) Wolves. Popular little critters, aren't they? They're just not my thing. Falling in love with a boy/girl who spends half their time as an over grown dog? No thank you. Not for me. In fact, pretty much any book which involves it's MC or their love interest turning into an animal half the time and being called 'Hot' is just not my slice of toast.

2) OTT Fantasy. If I read a blurb, and two lines in I'm confused, it's not for me. Don't get me wrong, I love fantasy, I just hate not being able to pronounce 98% of the names, locations etc... Make it new and interesting, sure, but leave it as simple as possible.

3) 'Fluffy'. I'm just not a summer read, swoon over the nice boy and the appropriate girl and their sweet relationship kind of girl. If the biggest obstacle in a book is the girl or boy being 'too good for me' then it's toooooo good for me. Like, too sickly sweet.

4) 'Faith books'. Don't get me wrong, I have nothing against the genre, I'm just not religious. 

5) Broken promises. If you say the only way for the world to survive is for Jane Doe to kill her beloved John Doe then I don't want to see 'he comes back to life'. I signed on for heartache for the ultimate good.

6)Robots, cyborgs, human hybrid thingies. I saw the cover for Cinder and thought I would love it, five seconds with the blurb and I knew I was wrong. Half human, half robot is not for me. 

7) Aliens. With this one I mean aliens that control the mind, take over the world. Just not for me.

8) Murder mysteries/thrillers. In general, I like. But not for Young Adult.

9) Girl hate. If you describe your main character by the girls that just hate, hate, hate her for no reason at all consider me lost to you. 

10) Royalty. Kings, Queens, Princess... blah blah blah. They royal thing has never tickled my pickle. I'm just not into the corset wearing, gentle princess who side lines as a badass warrior. 


There you have it. Agree? Disagree? Let me know.

Monday 22 July 2013

Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell Review





Author: Rainbow Rowell
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Pages: 336
Genre: Contemporary, romance
Published: February 26th, 2013 
 

Goodreads summary
 
Set over the course of one school year in 1986, ELEANOR AND PARK is the story of two star-crossed misfits – smart enough to know that first love almost never lasts, but brave and desperate enough to try. When Eleanor meets Park, you’ll remember your own first love – and just how hard it pulled you under.



      --------------------------------------------------------------------------





Take my stars. Take all of them. This book is incredible. Rainbow Rowell is what I like to call a master of emotion. She weaves a story of first love, innocent love and heartache so beautifully that I read the entire book in one sitting. And by the end I was all:



I couldn't decide which character I loved more. The book is told through the joint narration of Eleanor, a vibrant red head with quirky fashion who makes the best of a very bad situation, and Park, a lovable, shy half-Korean boy who isn't really sure what that means other than other people tend to judge him on it. Eleanor isn't nice and Park isn't a valiant knight, they're just two kids who find something worth having in a place neither really want to be.

I just can't believe that life would give us to each other," he said, "and then take it back."
"I can," she said. "Life's a bastard
.”




This book hits you right in your nostalgic places. By the time Park slips a comic book onto the seat beside him I was all:


Because that's what this book does.


It's truthful and hurtful and by the time I finished I found myself staring aimlessly out of my window, wondering if I should write a postcard...


Eleanor is just trying to get through school, and her childhood, without drawing too much attention to herself. She is strong, much stronger than she knows, but she isn't perfect. She is nobody's hero. She wants to help, but she can't. She wishes things were different, but she accepts that they're not. She's only sixteen, and she knows the world is full of false hope.

 Eleanor was right. She never looked nice. She looked like art, and art wasn't supposed to look nice; it was supposed to make you feel something.” 


Park is just trying to finish out high school without drawing too much attention from the kids at the back of the bus. Afraid he is a disappointment to his dad, and annoyed his music sometimes can't drown out the world he isn't prepared for Eleanor. He doesn't want to share his seat, he doesn't want to be associated with 'Big Red', but then things change. Time passes, time spent watching Eleanor, and suddenly he can't remember what he first thought of her. All Park knows is that he doesn't want her, he needs her - something anyone who has ever felt the sting of first love can relate to.

"I just meant that... I want to be the last person who ever kisses you, too.... That sounds bad, like a death threat or something. What I'm trying to say is, you're it. This is it for me.


Eleanor and Park is a bittersweet, heartbreaking novel from an author who has instantly become a favourite. It's refreshing, sweet, laugh-out-loud, cry into your pillow kind of good.

"He was quiet. He wanted everything she'd just said to be the last thing he heard. He wanted to fall asleep with 'I want you' in his ears.


My only criticism is that the ending kind of tumble's out really fast. But, then again, sometimes things in life do tumble by fast. Maybe that's the point.


He wound the scarf around his fingers until her hand was hanging in the space between them.

Then he slid the silk and his fingers into her open palm.

And Eleanor disintegrated.




If you read anything ever again in your life let it be this book. Love it or loathe it I guarantee you will relate to it. You will feel something.


 

Sunday 21 July 2013

Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell

 


So I just read Eleanor and park in one sitting, and I want to tell you guys about it. I really do. But right now it's still so raw and... intimate to me that I'll have to settle to promise to tell you all about it soon.

For now, you can have this:

Too bad, so sad



sad John Bradley



 love



Sad Walking in the rain








Sherlock Feelings


If you haven't read it yet, then do so. Immediately.  If you have then comment here and we can figure our feelings out together. All I know is that I haven't read a book since The fault in our stars that made me laugh aloud and cry silently the way this book did. I can't review it now as I wouldn't do it justice.

It's truly beautiful.

I promise to review soon.

Sunday Sizzler




Sunday sizzler is a new feature I'm testing out on my blog. Basically, a Sunday sizzler is a book or book series that I will review that is red hot in current popular trends.

  

Published: March 27th, 2007
Page Count: 485
Genre: Paranormal, Romance, Vampires, Urban Fantasy
Source: E-book

Goodreads Summary:

When fifteen-year-old Clary Fray heads out to the Pandemonium Club in New York City, she hardly expects to witness a murder -- much less a murder committed by three teenagers covered with strange tattoos and brandishing bizarre weapons. Then the body disappears into thin air. It's hard to call the police when the murderers are invisible to everyone else and when there is nothing -- not even a smear of blood -- to show that a boy has died. Or was he a boy?

This is Clary's first meeting with the Shadowhunters, warriors dedicated to ridding the earth of demons. It's also her first encounter with Jace, a Shadowhunter who looks a little like an angel and acts a lot like a jerk. Within twenty-four hours Clary is pulled into Jace's world with a vengeance, when her mother disappears and Clary herself is attacked by a demon. But why would demons be interested in ordinary mundanes like Clary and her mother? And how did Clary suddenly get the Sight? The Shadowhunters would like to know...


---------------------------------------------------------------------- 


"He smelled of salt and blood, and only when his mouth came close to her ear did she understand what he was saying, and it was the simplest litany of all: her name, just her name.” 


I'm almost ashamed to admit that I've been putting off reading this series, but it's the truth. By the time news of this series reached me it was already kicking up a fuss, and, to be honest, I was hearing all the bad rumours. The, don't go there kind of rumours. There were even whispers of plagiarism (Note: read whispers as chants and yells.).  However, whilst thrift shopping in Wales on holiday I came across the first three books for a pound each. I don't care what anyone says, your curiosity would of been swayed for that price! 

And I'm so glad I stopped by that quite little charity shop that morning, because everything negative I had heard was rubbish. Well, not everything, but the majority. 
 
 Even in half demon hunter clothes, Clary thought, he looked like the kind of boy who'd come over your house to pick you up for a date and be polite to your parents and nice to your pets.
Jace on the other hand, looked like the kind of boy who'd come over your house and burn it down just for kicks
.

 The main female character, Clarissa (Clary) Fray is a bland, easily imprintable female lead. She's best friends with Simon, a character with more personality and appeal, but with whom she has no idea the true value of until he explains it to her. I wasn't a fan of her name, and I didn't care much for her personality, but I wasn't really offended by her either. Aside from her ridiculous hatred of any/all other females (spoiler: which seemed to include her mother because she barely bats and eye-lash at her kidnap and possible torture), she was actually kind of meh. Although, to be fair, she didn't really need to be more. Would it have been better if the female lead was the best character in the novel: sure! Would I have enjoyed the book any more: possibly. Do I wish Clary would have never existed: No. Like I said, she isn't really a major bother, she just isn't really major at all to me. Faceless, bland and easy enough for me to insert myself into her place. 

.
http://www.reactiongifs.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/oh-goodie.gif 

Now, let's talk about the characters I did like.

In future, Clarissa," he said, "it might be wise to mention that you already have a man in your bed, to avoid such tedious situations."
You invited him into bed?" Simon demanded, looking shaken.
Ridiculous, isn't it?" said Jace. "We would never have all fit
.
 

 Ah, I just love the male lead Jace. I have an innate soft spot for snarky MC in my novels, and I refuse to be embarrassed about that. Jace is snarky and then some. And I love him. I love, love, love him. Just so you know. 
 Heart Beating

" “One of the Silent Brothers is here to see you. Hodge sent me to wake you up. Actually he offered to wake you himself, but since it's 5 a.m., I figured you'd be less cranky if you had something nice to look at."
"Meaning you?"
"What else?” "

That's not to say he didn't have his faults. His lack of knowledge of 'our world' was annoying. Especially since he has lived on the fringes of it for so long, but it was easy to over look. His ego was another thing. Not so much his snarky attitude, because we all know how much I love that, just his I'm better than anyone and everything attitude. The boy seemingly has no fear, which was hard to believe, everyone fears something, and yet all he fears is love. Yet in walks Clary, the girl with nothing about her, and he overcomes his one great fear faster than it takes to say What? Yeah right! 

I did love the world building of this novel. It was very Buffy like: everything just seemed to fit perfectly together. I loved Magnus, although I wish we had more glimpses into his and Alec's relationship. I also loved the glimpses of the institute, but would have loved more description of the interior. I wanted to know more. 
Hodge was another interesting character I felt was used too little, and when he was used it was flippantly.  


 
"Unfortunately," said Hodge, "we're all out of bitter revenge at the moment, so it's either tea or nothing.” 



I also couldn't get over the fact nobody, especially Clary, mentions the fact that Valentine has a ludicrous name. That one would never slip by me.

 http://www.reactiongifs.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/MorganFreeman-bobbing.gif


Over all I really enjoyed the book, and couldn't be happier that I invested my time into it before the release of the movie. If I could convince you all to do the same then I would be happy. Fall in love with this world in words, first. The book deserves that. 


 




Friday 19 July 2013

BOOK REVIEW: My life next door by Huntley Fitzpatrick

Title: My Life Next Door   
Author: Huntley Fitzpatrick
Release date: June, 14th 2012
Publisher: Dial Books
Page Count: 394  
Genre: Contemporary
Source: EBook

Goodreads description

"One thing my mother never knew, and would disapprove of most of all, was that I watched the Garretts. All the time." 

The Garretts are everything the Reeds are not. Loud, messy, affectionate. And every day from her rooftop perch, Samantha Reed wishes she was one of them . . . until one summer evening, Jase Garrett climbs up next to her and changes everything.

As the two fall fiercely for each other, stumbling through the awkwardness and awesomeness of first love, Jase's family embraces Samantha - even as she keeps him a secret from her own. Then something unthinkable happens, and the bottom drops out of Samantha's world. She's suddenly faced with an impossible decision. Which perfect family will save her? Or is it time she saved herself?

A transporting debut about family, friendship, first romance, and how to be true to one person you love without betraying another.

 

 

  ---------------------------------------------------

 

 

  There's no way I could talk about this book without first mentioning the issue it deals with best - sex.

 I hadn't heard much about this book before I read it, but I had heard about the truthful, YA appropriate way in which Fitzpatrick deals with sex in the novel. It's awkward, it's planned, it's sweet, it's perfectly presented within a YA book. 

 

"The Garrets were forbidden from the start. But that's not why they were important."

 

Another issue dealt with extremely well in the novel is that of family. I was actually surprised to find this novel is more about family than romance. I must admit, I had expected this book to be a rush of hormones, teenage angst and heavy-petting, and I couldn't of been happier to be wrong.

 

 

 Samantha Reed's mother is a high class woman. She expects her home, her children and even her hair to exceed expectations at all times. Samantha, on the other hand, just want's to know more about the family next door. The loud, laughter filled Garret house with their many children and relaxed atmosphere is a completely alien kind of concept for Samantha. She may have secretly watched them for years, but she's no closer to knowing them. Not until Jace Garret decides to introduce himself. 

 

"Let's see. Swimming. At night. With a boy. Who's virtually a stranger. And a Garret. It's dizzying how many of my mother's rules this is breaking."

 

 

 

 I loved that Samantha wasn't a typical angst filled character that's determined she is unworthy of the 'hot' boy and too meek to speak to her family about things that matter to her. She was a refreshing character in that she was so normal. Sometimes, though I think I should dare not say it, I find myself not rooting for female MC as they are too whiny, bitchy, angsty, annoyingly cynical etc... Sometimes all that keeps me reading is the cheep thrill of a smile when the hot boy smirks. I know, I know, it's a bad quality of mine, I should just stop reading... However, I didn't get that feeling from this book. I wanted to know how things would work out, even if I did guess the ending fairly quickly. 

 

Another highlight of the novel is Jace, the love interest. He's calm, he's honest, he's refreshingly open with Samantha and doesn't want to hurt her or save her, he just likes the girl next door and isn't afraid to tell her so. He's adorable. 

 

"“Jase?” 
    “Mmm-hmm?” He lifts up on one elbow, his face barely visible in the twilight.
     “You have to kiss me,” I find myself saying.
      "Yeah." He leans closer. "I do.""
 

 

 There were some pits in the novel though. 

 

1) George. 

 

Wait. WAIT. WAAAIIITTT. Don't lynch me yet! I loved George. I loved his personality and his quirkiness, I just didn't believe him. He was four! FOUR! Maybe if he had been aged older, or someone had slipped in the conversation he was a Mensa kid or something... IDK. Great character just needed an age adjustment. 

 

 2)  The twins

 

I never liked Nan. Not her name, not her annoying analytical personality or her boyfriend, the enigmatic Daniel. I did, however love Tim. Tim should have his own novel. Tim was actually my favourite character. Tim was the best. Unfortunately some things regarding his and Samantha's past were left a bit sketchy. I wanted to know why they fell out. I needed more. More Tim. I loved Tim. 


TIM <3











 

Overall I enjoyed the book. It was a quick, light read with refreshing content and interesting characters. I would have liked more in depth exploration of some side characters and less political rally, but that's just me.




So what did you think of this book? Love it? Loathe it? How about my review? Agree? Let me know in the comments and link me to your reviews of My Life Next Door!


 


Thursday 18 July 2013

Thursday Teaser

When trying to decide what to make a Thursday feature I came up with the - temporary - idea of teaser Thursdays. Each Thursday I will share a teaser of something I have written that week, and hope you guys will do the same and comment me the links!

(Also: if anyone knows of any blogs that run daily features, specifically YA blogs I would love to be linked to them!)


Okay, here goes. This week I've mainly been working on The Imperium. Here is your Thursday teaser.



"The distorted sunlight coming through the painted window to my left causes prisms of colour in sporadic patches across the wooden flooring. It's a splintered sight, but it always makes me smile. We don't see much colour in our Division.
“You up there, Reed?” Birte calls from the doorway.
“Yes, I'm here,” I reply. “Am I late?”
“What? No, no. It's just after sunrise,” he explains, his voice sounding... off."



If you wold like a teaser of something you are writing, or of your favourite book to be included in next weeks teaser Thursday then comment here and let me know!

Tuesday 16 July 2013

Top Ten Authors Who Deserve More Recognition

Hey, guys. Today I thought I would try something new. I've recently become aware of a feature over on brokeandbookish that occurs every Tuesday known as Top Ten Tuesday. The concept behind it is simple: every Tuesday a blogger over on B&B will answer a specific top ten list and then other bloggers, such as myself, will do the same and link back to their blog.

Simples, right?

The title behind this weeks Top Ten is: Top Ten Authors Who Deserve More Recognition.

First off, I would like to point out that in my every day friendship group I am the only one of my friends who proudly lists reading as a hobby. Usually my friends will not take notice of a book I have begged, and begged them to read until they see a movie trailer. And by then it's too late. (If you've ever heard the phrase 'But I don't need to read the book, I've seen the film' before then know that I feel your pain.)

Anyway, my point was that even though the authors on my list may be popular in the 'everybody in the freaking world has heard of them' sense, I'm going off the basis of authors I would love my bookphopic friends to recognise.

1) Tabitha Suzuma -If only my friends would read a book by Tabitha Suzuma, I would be so happy! After completing a Suzuma novel you sort of find yourself questioning everything: your life, your morales, your emotions, your capability of love - and just how far you would go for love. I'm not really sure what love is, but I do know that it stems from the brain, and not the heart, and Suzuma does a great job of unpeeling the complex nature of the brain.

2) John Green - You can't read a John Green novel without wanting to tell the world about it. He's genius at conveying the most intimate of emotions, the most complexing of thoughts in raw, honest and original ways.

3) Khaled Hosseini - If you've ever read The Kite Runner, then you will know exactly why Hosseini is on the list. Some novels offer you escapism, The Kite Runner offers you a slice of uncomfortable, anguish filled truth. It's beautiful in its brutality.

4) Jay Asher - I don't believe I've ever read a book that has made me as angry as Thirteen Reasons Why. Not at the plot or characters specifically, but at the reality in which they force you to face. The issues dealt with in TRW are provoking, and for that Jay Asher makes my list.

5)Stephen Chbosky - Whilst this author most definitely does not fly under the popular radar, he is barely even a blip on my friends. In fact, when I dragged four of my closest friends to the cinema to watch the movie adaptation of Perks of Being a Wallflower, only one knew it originated as a book, and none had any desire to read said book. I'd love to change that, which is why he is on the list.

6) Simone Elkeles - This author makes the list simply because, as a YA romance fan, her kissing scenes make me swoon. You know that line that snatches your breath, and you just have to read it again, and again, and again before moving forward? Elkeles is genius at that!

7) Suzanne Collins - Okay, OKAY, I know what you're thinking... EVERYONE has read the Hunger Games. EVERYONE has heard of this author, and you're right. Even my clueless friends have. BUT, for an author with as much success as Collins has, why do we know so little about her? By now I think I could tell you the decoration in Stephenie Meyer's bedroom the night she dreamed up Twilight, but I couldn't even tell you what nationality Collins was. I need to know more. Granted, her anonymity might be through choice, and I respect that, but it doesn't make me stop wishing she had the spotlight. So I'm giving it to her. Right here on my list. You're welcome.

8) Augusten Burroughs - I wish my friends knew of this man. I wish they knew of his great work. I live in hope that one day they will. Welcome to the list.

9) Maggie Stiefvater - As a Pagan it isn't often I come across a book that makes me fall in love with magic, especially the way it is portrayed in popular culture today. However, with The Raven Boys this author achieved that. And then some.

10) Christopher Rice - Last, but by no means least, we have the magnificence that brought us A Density of Souls. As the child of Anne Rice you expect great things, and he does not disappoint.

There you have it, my very first Top Ten Tuesday. Tune in next week, folks!














Thursday 23 May 2013

Judgment Chapter One - second rough draft

Judgment - Chapter One

A luminous glow dilutes the sky as Clay and I make our way into town. The dawning air is thick with heat. Blades of grass catch between my toes as I walk, and a few grains of dirt catch between my sandals and the base of my feet. The field below me holds the bodies of thousands of citizens. We live in Vita: A country split into divisions and built above its dead.
“I'd sell my mother for a cool breeze,” Clay says, breaking the silence.
“Your mother's dead,” I remind him.
“Fine.” He knocks his shoulder into mine. “I'd sell you.”
“You wouldn't dare.”
“Believe me I would. I'd sell my father right now for a bottle of water.”
“Your father's dead.” I quickly fan my face, then tuck my blonde curly hair behind my ear.
Clay Laughs. “Us orphans can't catch a break, ey?”
“You're not an orphan. You have Birte.”
“You have Birte, too.”
I smile. Birte's raised me my entire life. He took me in when no one else would, even when every other citizen in our Division turned their backs on him for it. I owe Birte my life. “True, but he's your grandfather.”
“That doesn't mean anything, Reed. He loves you just as much as he loves me.”
I don't reply. Clay would say anything to make me happy. He's sacrificed just as much as Birte over the years because of his association with me.
A familiar guilt tugs at my stomach as the concrete skyline of our Division appears over the hill. We've been walking for twenty minutes, but at a good pace we can reach the edge of town in fifteen. It's the insufferable heat slowing us.
“You okay?”
No. On the first day of every month Clay and I make the journey into Town to collect our rations. It's not a trip I look forward too, but Clay insists I accompany him. “I'm used to the glares now. And it's been weeks since anyone felt the need to stop and tell me how much they hate me. I'd call that progress.”
He smiles, a lazy half grin. His eyes look like a starless night sky in the early light. Right now, with the birthing sun reflecting off his face, he looks almost radiant. If it wasn't for the purple hues under his eyes, and sharp cheek bones he would look healthy. And if it wasn't for my parents he would be.
I take a deep breath as we reach the top of the hill. Ahead of us is nothing but concrete. Grey buildings; Grey pavements; Grey roads; Grey clothes; Even the citizens have ashen skin: Another legacy of my parents.
As we weave our way through the maze of high rise buildings, Clay takes hold of my hand. I'm thankful for the heat as it disguises my sweaty palms and hides my nerves. There are more Citizens on the streets than usual.
“Probably woken by the heat,” Clay whispers, hurrying his pace and taking me along right beside him. I hope he's right. The only other time the streets are busy this early are Judgement days, but we haven't had one of those for months.
Other Divisions are more advanced than ours, or so they say. No one in our Division can afford the train fares to travel. Samon Tana, the leader of our Division and one seventh of The Imperium that rule Vita, made sure of that sixteen years ago to punish the citizens of the Division he was supposed to lead. We are under fed, under paid and under valued on Saman Tana's orders. Of course no one blames our great leader. It isn't his fault. He's a good man, a great leader. Our Division was once one of the most thriving in the whole of Vita. Our simple way of living was envied for it's results. Now we're mocked.
And it's all my parents fault.
We snake our way through the market traders, keeping our heads lowered. The faster we can get in and out the better chance I won't anger anyone. Once Citizens collect their rations, some trade each other at the market. Experienced traders hold their own stalls, trading anything from food and clothing to furniture. No one ever has enough of anything, but most manage to balance and trade their rations enough to sustain themselves.
Rations are usually delivered to families in the high rise buildings by runners made up of mostly school leavers, but no one was willing to be a runner out to where Birte, Clay and I lived.
I'm not even sure if that's because of me or because we live in the cemetery. I guessed it was a mixture of the two.
Birte had made an arrangement with a friendly Guardian (The officers of The Imperium who make sure their laws are followed) years earlier for us to collect our rations from him at the back of his wife’s trading stall. Unluckily for me her stall is on the north side of the market, furthest away from where we enter.
The unmistakable stench of poverty is overwhelming in the compact market square - body sweat, dirt and decay – it clogs the air . The back of my neck is damp with perspiration but I can't move my hair to wipe it away until we are out of town. My thick curls are the only good inheritance I have from my mother, they shield my face from others as we rush through the crowd.
Clay releases my hand and grabs hold of me by the wrist, pulling me through the crowd still. I concentrate on where I place my feet, careful not to step on anyone or knock into anything. The dust from the ground whips up into my eyes occasionally, but there is nothing I can do but keep my head lowered and squint.
The last time I'd walked through the market with my head held high (during my one attempt at rebellion) a female citizen had spat in my face. I was thirteen.
“Clay!” It's Lirit, the Guardian who Birte struck our ration deal with. “Hurry along now before the market becomes busier.”
As Clay guides us around the back of Lirit's wooden stall, I raise my head. He greets me with a curt nod, just as he always has. Even though he will not directly speak to me he at least acknowledges me. I understand the position he is in, and the risks he takes to even hold our ration for us, and I'm grateful.
“What's going on? Why is everyone market bound so early? It's barely past dawn,” Clay asks as Lirit pulls a sack containing our rations out from behind some empty boxes.
I sit cross legged on the concrete, enjoying a small rest from the gruelling heat.
“You shouldn't be here today.” He tightens the tie at the top of the sack.
“Why?”
Lirit straightens his back, his brown shirt – part of his all brown Guardian Uniform – not tucked in. It's rare to see a Guardian in anything other than full uniform. It's seen as a Judgeable offence for a Guardian to incorrectly represent the Imperium, this includes not showing loyalty through your presentation.
“Um, your shirt, Sir,” I say. It's the first time I've ever directly addressed Lirit, and his eyes widen. Even Clay has his eyebrows raised. “Sorry,” I say quickly, lowering my head.
“No it's fine. It's just... you can speak? I always thought you were a mute,” Lirit says. I lift my head to see his eyes are still wide. “ Why have you never spoken before?”
His attention is on me and it makes me nervous. I can hear the many loud voices coming from over the other side of the wooden shack. What if someone out there heard me speak? What if they recognised my voice? If I was caught here they would accuse me of disrespecting a Guardian and I would be judged. The citizens would be angry, outraged, and Lirit wouldn't defend me. He'd be foolish to publicly defend the daughter of Rootz and Cotton Rousey. But I can't ignore a direct question from a Guardian either.
“I know my place in our Division,” I tell him and he nods.
“You're a citizen just like the rest of us, Reed,” Clay says. “You've done nothing wrong.” His voice is strong but there are some things he can't protect me from. There are some things I wouldn't let him risk his life over, and there are some things that it wouldn't make a difference if he did.
“Dad?” A girls voice calls from the front of the stall, causing all three of us to whip our heads in that direction, and cutting Lirit off before he can finish. “Dad are you here?”
When I look back to Lirit his expression is one I'm all too familiar with. Fear. He might risk himself to speak with me but he wouldn't risk his daughter.
“Dad, what are you...oh.” May Pitcher, Lirit's daughter, is two years younger than me at fourteen, but you wouldn't know it. She's the only other girl I’ve ever seen with hair as long, thick and curly as my own. She's also the only other girl I know who is openly shunned by citizens. When May was younger everyone would comment on how much slower she developed than the other children and as she grew older the differences between her and others her age were undeniable. Parents began to warn their children to keep their distance from her. Still, she isn't hated.
Clay and I see her from time to time at the lake that stretches from Town to the Cemetery. She ventures closer to where we live than anyone else. Occasionally she will join us for a swim or a few hours of cloud watching.
“Hello,” she says. “I didn't know you two were friends with my dad too.”
I chance a look at Lirit and regret it immediately. His face is flushed, his eyes narrowed. “May, honey. Go and keep an eye on the stall for me, please.”
May crosses her arms across her chest petulantly, but she turns and goes.
Sensing we have outstayed our welcome, Clay says goodbye to Lirit. “I'll go make sure it's okay to leave.” He walks around the front of the stall with the heavy sack on his strong shoulders.
I climb back to my feet and wipe the dust from my skirt, aware of Lirit's intense stare. “He's right you know,” he says quietly. “The way you are treated isn't right. You should know that.”
I offer him a small smile of thanks before turning to leave.
“Reed?” I turn back to Lirit. “Stay away from my daughter.”



Judgment - Chapter One (Rough Draft)

Chapter One

Monday schedules are my favourite of the week: they keep me busy from dawn till dusk. Aside from the usual morning announcements in the Courtyard, I spend my Monday's working on Roots farm. Last year I'd only been able to help out sporadically as I'd had school and commitments, not any more. I loved the farm, I loved the animals, the earth, the crops, and I loved the sense of serenity I only seemed to find amongst Roots fields.
As the lazy sun drifts slowly behind the far off mountains, I run against the wind hoping to beat Clay to the Lake. Today I was on spread duty and I still have bits of the Imperium supplied crop fertiliser stuck in-between my fingers; It feels rough like the grain at the edge of the lake. The air is still warm from the high sun we'd had all day, warming me even as the wind cools me. The sensation alights my senses.
I hitch my full-length peach skirt up a little more, exposing my ankles to the wind. Blades of grass stick in-between my toes as I move, my sandals leaving me exposed to the elements and the earth. The texture of the grass reminds me of where I am racing too, and I run a little faster. I have to beat Clay, I have to.
Ducking under a few low-hanging branches that belong to the tree's separating the farm and the lake, I smell the fresh water before I see it. The familiar break in the browns and greens of the small woods becomes clear so I slow to a jog before settling at a hurried walk. I don't want Clay to know I ran in an attempt to beat him. He'd tease me to no end.
“What took you so long?” Clay asks, sitting on a rock beside the edge of the biggest lake in our Division. “I've been waiting forever.”
“How...I...How?” I asked, stopping still in my tracks. There was no way he could have beat me. I'd seen him talking to Roots near the animal pen before I'd taken off running and the pen was on the other side of the house, a good five minute walk away from where I had started.
“I could beat you running backwards, Reed. You're fast, but I'm faster.” He smiled triumphantly.
The setting sun is behind him silhouetting his frame, giving his brown hair an amber glow. The grey hand-knitted jumper he wears matches mine except Clay's is a few sizes larger and has snags in different places to mine. Roots had traded for the jumpers only a few months prior - once we had turned sixteen and finished schooling. He'd said at the time that we needed new clothes to work the farm, but we'd soon figured out that our old clothes would have sufficed; he'd done it out of kindness; a gift to each of us. Roots is the kindest man I know, he proves it time and time again.
“You gonna stand there all day, or ya gonna come join me?” Clay asks, bringing me back out of my revelry.
“I'm coming, hold your haystack. I just wanna wipe this fertiliser off my hands.” I rub my hands backwards and forwards over my ankle length yellow skirt – made from a pair of Roots old curtains – until the residue is gone. Flexing my fingers, I join Clay sitting on the rocks. We'd learned whilst we were schooling about all the life that exists in the lake: some dangerous, some not. My favourite is Water Skitters, tiny little bugs that skim over the surface of the water. Sometimes, during our personal time, Clay and I would lie still by the edge of the lake for hours looking at the surface of the water, hoping to see a Water Skitter. We'd seen a fly seemingly skim the surface once but the Water Skitter has so far eluded our hunts.
“Is it a new batch of fertiliser? My granddad mentioned something about the Imperium changing the chemicals, I think.”
“Yeah, Roots said it arrived this morning.”
“Are your hands sore?” he asks, concern lacing his voice. Sometimes the Imperium send batches of fertiliser that leave your hands raw, even bleeding. Roots, Clay's granddad has the worn hands to prove it. From the little we learned in schooling I knew that the Imperium had to change fertilisers and things as developments came about. Apparently yesterday's batch is no longer sufficient in helping our farming and so tomorrow Clay and I would spend the morning filling the back of Roots cart with the remaining old sacks of fertiliser, ready for Roots to take into the courtyard's shipment building.
I turn my hands over in-between mine and Clay's faces. “No, not sore, just tired.”
With careful, precise movements, Clay places his hands over mine, skimming his skin softly against my fingers. Barely touching me, the sensation relaxes my tired muscles. “You should have let me do it,” he says, his voice low.
“You had pen duty, right?”
Awareness lights up his eyes as he realises just why I much prefer spread duty. He moves his hand massage lower onto the backs of my palms, almost apologetically. “It wasn't so bad today,” he lies. I know it was bad; it's always bad.
Pen duty consists of working inside the animal pen and its the one job me and Clay would argue about doing when I first came to live on the farm. Eventually he had taken over the role completely, after I was found huddled in the pen corner, screaming and white with terror. I just couldn't handle it. Thankfully Clay had volunteered once he saw just how badly it effected me: he and Roots had been scared half to death. I'd never been more embarrassed in my life, but I just couldn't help it. The pen, as Roots explained to me after my screaming episode, is a completely necessary part of our Divisions survival. There has to be someone to watch the animals; There has to be someone to feed the animals; There has to be someone to take the animals to the shipping building, ready to be transferred to the butchers. I know this, I understand this, however after living beside the Courtyard for most of my life and only moving to the farm aged twelve after my mother passed away, I wasn't used to the.. the...carnage of what lay inside the pen. It is the animals, they weren't like they were in the diagrams in school, they were...different.
“Liar,” I say, pulling my hands from his and thanking him with a smile. Clay returns the smile, but he hesitates first and I know why.
“Are you okay?” I ask him. I understand our predicament just as well as he does.
“I'm fine, Reed.” His tone has changed, and I know he is not fine. He pulls at the sleeve of his left arm, thawing more of the threads around the cuff.
“Clay, I -”
“- Don't, alright. I'm fine,” he interrupts, climbing from the rock and walking down towards the waters edge. He's ten yards from the lake before I'm even off the rock.
I follow him down the small slope, the gravel I'd longed to feel gathering between the soles of my feet and my sandals, mixing with grass. This is why I had wanted to beat Clay to the lake, I'd wanted us to go for a swim as an early celebration of Clay's birthday tomorrow. That is impossible now of course, I couldn't strip off with Clay already here. I had planned to beat him here and be in the water before he arrived; problem solved. I'm sure if he'd known Clay would have let me arrive first, but it is too late for that. There is no way I am even suggesting the idea now. I know where this conversation is leading. We've been here before, more and more of late.
I watch him as he stares out across the still, dark waters. The surface is smooth: a black mirror. I take him in from head to toe, relishing in the opportunity which is so rarely given. Clay likes to keep eye-contact so I never get a chance to look at him without restraint. He is barefoot, his slip-on shoes most likely left back up the slope. He's wearing the same loose fitting sky blue pants - made from another of Roots old cloths – that he wears everyday. His jumper has a new hole at the centre of his back, and I see his skin through the gap. From the position I know it is around the spot that Clay's birthmark is, but I can't see it in the dying light. His dark hair no longer appears amber, it's darker now and in a disarray, sticking up at odd angles due to his long day of labour.
He's a man of seventeen now, as I'm a woman of sixteen. That's the problem.
“Do something for me, Reed,” he asks as I reach his side.
“Anything,” I reply, hoping to cheer him up, hoping to let him know that it pains me too.
“Bubbles.”
Bubbles? It's been so long since he requested bubbles that I'm taken aback at first. Only for a moment though, before the idea overtakes my mind. It's always been the same way. Ever since I started doing... it. Any time the idea came into my mind it was near impossible to ignore.
Closing my eyes, I focus on my breathing. In. Out. In. Out. In. out. In. The smell of the water overtakes my senses, and I feel my fingers twitch by my side. A familiar feeling courses through my veins - as though replacing my blood – and then I know that it's time. I want it, I will it.
Opening my eyes, I smile when I see the bubbles floating above the surface of the lake. Small, delicate and different sizes, they slowly rise higher, floating around Clay and I. Small, perfect spheres of water, no longer black as it appeared under the blanket of the lake's surface; the water of the bubbles is translucent.
“You're amazing,” Clay says, sounding happier. At one of our Lake side Water Skitter hunts, years before I'd moved onto the farm, Clay and I had been laughing about something neither of us remembers. What we do remember is that the more I laughed the more these tiny bubbles crept up from the lake. At the time there had only been a couple, but it had amazed us both. I wasn't ever really sure how I could do it, Clay couldn't. That first time we'd agreed to never tell anyone, fearing the Imperium would not be happy with my... ability. However, occasionally whist at the lake I'd manipulate the water. I never dared attempt it on the farm, or back at my old house, both were far too close to other people.
The snapping of twigs and rustling leaves breaks my concentration, and the bubbles pop simultaneously.
“Who was that?” I ask, spinning to face the tree line, panic overtaking me.
“My granddad?”
“He never comes by the lake, Clay.”
“Maybe he's looking for us,” Clay says. “Who else could it have been? Relax, Reed, whoever it was they were too far away to see anything anyway. Besides, it could have just been an animal.” He pauses. “In fact I'm sure that's what it was, an animal.”
Unsure, I stare at the trees expecting at any moment for a Guardian to jump out and arrest me.
“Come on,” Clay says, offering me his hand. “It's getting late and we have announcements in the morning. We should head back.”
Silently I grab his hand, allowing him to lead me home to the farm. My heart races as we walk but it's not caused by the heat radiating from Clay as he stands close as it sometimes is. This time it races through fear. If a Guardian saw what I just did, or if someone else saw and reported me to a Guardian then I'm in trouble. I broke one of the top rules of all the Divisions: keeping a secret from the Imperium. An unstable secret. A secret that marks me as different. A secret that marks me as a threat.
I swallow back a heavy lump that forms in my throat as the word threat echoes around my head.
There's only one thing that would happen to me if the Imperium discovered my ability: I'd be judged.