logo
Wrong email address or username
Wrong email address or username
Incorrect verification code
back to top
Search tags: Rebecca-Coleman
Load new posts () and activity
Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
review 2016-12-25 14:02
So, so cute!
Steven Universe Vol. 1 - Rebecca Sugar,Coleman Engle,Jeremy Sorese

This is adorable in the same way the show is.   Some of the art is more similar to the show than the rest, but ti's all gorgeous.   More importantly, to me, is that the characters are true to the show, and they are.   The characters, and the world, are written to perfection. 

 

There's just nothing nasty about Steven's universe: some characters get pedantic, or very specific, or grumpy, but they're all treated with kindness.   There's villains, sure, and they are treated with boots up, well, where boots go when you're fighting someone.   Some villains turns out to be simply confused, or lashing out in pain, and once this is made clear, they're again dealt with, but not in a way that would further traumatize them.   

 

Same here.   Adorable shorts that just work, in the world Sugar has created in general and as short little vignettes in Steven's life.   Love, love, love.  

Like Reblog Comment
show activity (+)
url 2015-03-20 02:28
The Cake House & Los Angeles (+ Giveaway)

A retelling of Hamlet in LA. Now, when you hear these words, do you get as excited and curious as I do? Today I have a special treat for y'all: Latifah Salom is here to explain the inspiration for her debut novel, The Cake House. I am currently running a giveaway for The Cake House; and I would urge you to enter if you like reading Latifah's response here today.

Release Date: March 3, 2015

Published by: Vintage
 
The Cake House - Latifah Salom | Goodreads

Part mystery, part compelling coming-of-age tale, The Cake House is a riveting debut novel that re-imagines the classic story of Hamlet amidst the hills of suburban Los Angeles.

Rosaura Douglas’s father shot himself after her mother left him . . . or at least that's the story everyone is telling. Now her mother has remarried and Rosie is trapped in “The Cake House,” a garish pink edifice in the hills of Los Angeles that's a far cry from the cramped apartment where she grew up. It’s also the house where her father died—a fact that everyone else who lives there, including her mother, Dahlia, and her mysteriously wealthy stepfather, Claude, want to forget.

Soon, however, her father’s ghost appears, sometimes in a dark window, sometimes in the house’s lush garden, but always with warnings that Claude is not to be trusted. And as the ghost becomes increasingly violent—and the secrets of her family’s past come to light—Rosie must finally face the truth behind the losses and lies that have torn her life apart.


The Cake House and Los Angeles
By Latifah Salom

What informs our choices when writing? What strange jumble of influences, the flotsam in our conscious or unconscious minds that leads a writer to chose not only plot and theme and genre, but also character traits, history, and of course, setting?

Like in chemistry, sometimes all you need is that right mixture of elements to start a chain reaction. Every writer starts somewhere – an idea, a theme, a small kernel of story, a line of text – whatever it is that sparks that impulse to sit down and start writing. For my novel THE CAKE HOUSE, it started with Hamlet. That was my base, stripped down to its bones: a murder, a ghost, heartbreak, revenge.

As I began writing, I asked the sort of questions most writers ask: What do I want to say with this story? Who are my characters and what are their wants and desires? Where do they live, and why?

I am fond of questions. The beauty of asking a question when writing is that it doesn’t always matter what the answer is, as long as you do answer it. Case in point: Why Los Angeles? Well, the quick and easy answer is I live in Los Angeles and grew up here. But, in truth, familiarity only goes so far.

I knew this story needed to be set in a real place and not in an imagined town or city, to balance against the heightened drama of the story and to give credence to the ghost.

Los Angeles is big and vast and even though there are actual city limits, the perception is that it stretches across Southern California like a blanket of smog, from ocean to desert. But even choosing Los Angeles, I was still faced with deciding where: Beverly Hills or Hollywood? Westside or the Valley?

When I was in junior high I knew someone who came from Canyon Country, a place that is actually located outside Los Angeles, and I remembered how she used to speak about it, like a far off kingdom. I wanted that sense of isolation, of loneliness and seclusion.

I called upon those years as a young girl, living outside of Los Angeles – the way the asphalt almost melted in the September, the way I felt surrounded by hills. These were the flavors I wanted for my novel.

As soon as I decided to write a story based on Hamlet, I turned my back on the play. I didn’t want to be overly influenced by it. It was there of course, but under the surface, like a ghost. There is universality to Shakespeare’ that make them infinitely adaptable to any culture or setting. This is like magic.
 
 
 
IF YOU LIKED Latifah's post and find yourself interested by The Cake House, don't forget to enter the giveaway for a copy of the book.

Also don't forget to read the PRAISE for The Cake House!

“Evocative . . . Salom’s writing is atmospheric, and her conjuring of the many shadows of Los Angeles provides the perfect backdrop.”—Kirkus Reviews

“Tense, shocking, and seductively dark, The Cake House is a brand-new twist on a classic story—an urban reinvention of a Shakespearean tale.” —Rebecca Coleman, bestselling author of The Kingdom of Childhood 

“Reading The Cake House, I vividly saw the whole edifice rising up before me, latticework covering a multitude of sins. A wonderful, chewy, complicated book that doesn't flinch from danger or pain but rejects despair.” —Naomi Novik, author of the bestselling Temeraire series
 
“The Cake House is a gem of a novel: a mystery wrapped in a cloak of family dysfunction with subtle Shakespearean trim. . . . Rosaura is a heroine with spunk and a vulnerability so endearing I missed her the second I closed the book. Salom has written a dazzling coming-of-age tale that will resonate long after you reach the end.” —Elizabeth Flock, New York Times bestselling author of Me & Emma and What Happened To My Sister

copyright: Shannon Keast

About the author:

Latifah Salom was born in Hollywood, California to parents of Peruvian and Mexican descent. As a teenager she attended the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts, and she holds degrees from Emerson College, Hunter College, and from the University of Southern California’s Masters of Professional Writing program. She currently lives in Los Angeles.

What do you think? Does the Los Angeles setting sound fascinating to you or what? I particularly love how Latifah described "the way the asphalt almost melted in the September, the way I felt surrounded by hills" as flavors for her novel. As someone who grew up in Los Angeles, I can definitely identify with this sentiment. The Cake House and Los Angeles
Like Reblog Comment
url 2015-03-17 12:11
Giveaway: The Cake House by Latifah Salom

I have something special for y'all today! A giveaway of The Cake House by Latifah Salom, a loose retelling of Hamlet in Los Angeles. Having lived in Los Angeles for the majority of my life and studied Hamlet in school for quite a bit, I naturally found myself really intrigued by Latifah Salom's debut. I can't wait to read it and I'm so happy to share the opportunity to win this book with you too.

THE CAKE HOUSE by Latifah Salom (being published as a Vintage Paperback Original on March 3): hailed by Janet Finch (White Oleander) as an “accomplished, mesmerizing debut,” THE CAKE HOUSE is a charged blend of coming-of-age and mystery.

 

[...]

 

Rafflecopter form at link!

Like Reblog Comment
review 2014-02-02 00:00
The Kingdom of Childhood
The Kingdom of Childhood - Rebecca Coleman It left me feeling...IDK. I couldn't quit reading it cause it was great storytelling even though I knew it wasn't going to end good. I don't know, everything in it was foreign to me. I couldn't put it down, and now I'm just sitting here zoned out like a zombie.
Like Reblog Comment
review 2014-01-09 22:10
Inside these walls
Inside These Walls - Rebecca Coleman

I first read this author as a buddy read, one of my first buddy reads in fact, and the book we read was the author's first as well, The Kingdom of Childhood. It was a very controversial book about a taboo subject and I was amazed at how sensitively and brilliantly the author handled the subject matter. 

 

This is her third and once again she has taken a character that the reader should immediately disdain for the horrible acts she has participated in, willingly or not. Yet, somehow this doesn't happen, instead we meet a character who has made wrong decisions, regrets them and takes responsibility for them. Coleman uncovers the little things that lie underneath everyone's exterior. The mistakes people make, how one wrong decision and their whole life changes.t made me think back to my own past, how some of the things I did could have gone so wrong,. In this book Clare does something much worse than I ever did of course, but the author unveils exactly how she came to be in this position and maybe garners a little sympathy for the person she could have been, the person she was.

 

The ending I thought 

was the weakest part of the book, but despite that I really admire this author's talent.

 

ARC from NetGalley.

 

 

More posts
Your Dashboard view:
Need help?