Sunday Post (23) & Sunday Showcase (12)

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The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer.  It was inspired in part by the In My Mailbox meme. It’s a chance to share News. A post to recap the past week, showcase books and things we have received and share news about what is coming up for the week on our blog.

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This week has been both a better week, as I managed to be online more and get more stuff done with the blog, as well as a pretty “meh” week. I’ve got a chronic condition and it spent this week flaring, it was mostly partly my fault as I made some bad choices but yeah… :/ Still, onwards and upwards.

I came to the realisation this week that I’m going to have to treat reading in a more professional capacity if I plan to write a review here. Basically, I’m going to need to set aside a few hours a day to get through my reading pile before it eats me. I’ll let you know how it goes next week.

This Week on The Flutterby Room

Next Week on The Flutterby Room

  • 7th November – Loki’s Wolves (The Blackwell Pages #1) by K. L. Armstrong and M. A. Marr

Any New Books?

Showcase Sunday is a weekly meme hosted by Vicky at Books, Biscuits, and Tea. Its aim is to showcase our newest books or book related swag and to see what everyone else received for review, borrowed from libraries, bought in bookshops and downloaded onto eReaders each week.

Thanks to both Penguin Ireland, who sent me another copy of The Pleasures of Autumn, and to my Mum, who wanted to cheer me up, for the books this week.

  • The Pleasures of Autumn by Evie Hunter [BookLikes]
  • Allegiant (Divergent #3) by Veronica Roth [BookLikes]
  • Awaken (Abandon #3) by Meg Cabot [BookLikes]
  • After Dead by Charlaine Harris [BookLikes]
  • The Dream Thieves (The Raven Cycle #2) by Maggie Stiefvater [BookLikes]
  • Anigoddess (The Goddess War #1) by Kendare Blake [BookLikes]

That’s it from me this week. I hope you’ve had a good week; let me know how your week went in the comments below.

Merry Christmas, From The Flutterby Room – Giveaway

I know we’ve still got Bonfire Night and Remembrance Sunday still to go here in the UK, as well as the whole of November. So really, it is far too early to talk about Christmas… I do have a reason for bringing it up so early though!

Christmas is fast approaching (especially if you want to send things through the post) and I wanted to do something a little different this year as I didn’t celebrate my 2nd Blogoversary…

This year I thought I would offer you the chance to receive a Christmas gift from me. What exactly is in the gift will remain a surprise for the winner to open on Christmas Day (if they so wish), but I can promise that there will be some books and something Christmas-y included. The reason I’m hosting this giveaway so early is to ensure that international entrants have the chance to receive the gift (if they win) before Christmas Day.

So how do you enter? Simply read the rules bellow to check you are eligible to enter, then follow the link to the Rafflecopter form. Simple.

Rules

  • To enter this giveaway you must be 18 years or older (this is because I may include a book(s) which are aimed at an adult audience).
  • This competition is open INTERNATIONALLY (except where prohibited by law).
  • ONE winner will recieve a Christmas present from The Flutterby Room that will include at least one book.
  • The giveaway runs between November 1st 2013 and November 21st 2013. Any entries recieved outside these dates will not be eligable.
  • Only one entry per person is allowed.
  • The winner will be notified by email within 48 hours of the end of the giveaway.
  • The winner will need to respond to the email within 72 hours of recieving the email or a new winner will be chosen.
  • The Flutterby Room is not responsible for contacting or forwarding prizes to entrants who provide unclear or incomplete information or for entries lost, misdirected, delayed or destroyed.
  • The Flutterby Room is not responsible for any loss or damage of the prize in transit.
  • The Flutterby Room reserves the right to cancel this competition at any time without any prior warning.
  • The Flutterby Room reserves the right to disqualify any entry at any time.

PLEASE DO NOT LEAVE ANY IDENTIFYING DETAILS (SUCH AS FULL NAME, OR EMAIL ADDRESS)  IN THE COMMENT SECTION BELOW. ALL SUCH COMMENTS WILL BE DELETED AS SOON AS THEY ARE NOTICED.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Good Luck!

Review: Heart of Obsidian by Nalini Singh

Heart of Obsidian by Nalini Singh

Title: Heart of Obsidian (A Psy-Changeling Novel, #12)
Author: Nalini Singh
Genre: Paranormal Romance, Urban Fantasy
Publisher: Gollancz (6th June 2013)
Blurb:

STEP INTO NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER NALINI SINGH’S EXPLOSIVE AND SHOCKINGLY  PASSIONATE PSY-CHANGELING WORLD . . .

A dangerous, volatile rebel, hands stained blood red.

A woman whose very existence has been erased.

A love story so dark, it may shatter the world itself.

A deadly price that must be paid.

They day of reckoning is here.

From ‘the alpha author of paranormal romance’ (Booklist) comes the most highly anticipated novel of her career – one that blurs the line between madness and genius, between subjugation and liberation, between the living and the dead.

Rating: ***** (5 stars)
Review:

HEART OF OBSIDIAN is the twelfth book in Nalini Singh’s brilliant and exciting A PSY-CHANGELING NOVEL series. It is a game changer of a book, with the Psy-Changeling world hanging on a knife-edge. If you’ve kept up with the series so far, then you’ll know how volatile the world is. All that’s needed is a single spark to launch a firestorm. We’ve been on tenterhooks for the previous eleven novels, wondering when and if that is going to happen. As the blurb says, ‘The day of reckoning is here.’

Continue reading

Top Ten Tuesday (37)

Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. This feature was created because they are particularly fond of lists at The Broke and the Bookish. They’d love to share their lists with other bookish folks and would LOVE to see your top ten lists!

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This weeks Top Ten topic is …

Top Ten Best Books to Read for Hallowe’en

All Hallows’ Eve isn’t a holiday that’s celebrated much in the UK, at least where I live. The most that will happen is people will carve some pumpkins and maybe eat a toffee apple or two. So this was actually quite an interesting topic to do. You can probably tell from some of my picks what decade I grew up in. My picks include both Young Adult and Adult books. All book blurbs and covers are taken from Goodreads.com

Interview with the Vampire (The Vampire Chronicles #1) by Anne Rice

In a darkened room a young man sits telling the macabre and eerie story of his life – the story of a vampire, gifted with eternal life, cursed with an exquisite craving for human blood. Anne Rice’s compulsively readable novel is arguably the most celebrated work of vampire fiction since Bram Stoker’s Dracula was published in 1897. As the Washington Post said on its first publication, it is a ‘thrilling, strikingly original work of the imagination . . . sometimes horrible, sometimes beautiful, always unforgettable’.

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Book of Shadows (Wicca #1) by Cate Tiernan (YA)

Something is happening to me that I don’t understand. I see things, feel things in a new way. I can do things normal people can’t do. Powerful things. Magickal things. It scares me. I never chose to learn witchcraft. But now witchcraft is choosing me.

Sixteen-year-old Morgan is not who she thought she was. But in that case, who is she?

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The Blooding by Patricia Windsor (YA)

Maris’ summer job as an au pair in England starts out well. But when she discovers the truth about her employer, the truth about his transformations and his plans for her, Maris must make the most terrifying decision of her life.

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The Hunter (The Forbidden Game #1) by L. J. Smith (YA)

When Jenny Thorton and her friends open the mysterious white box given to her by Julian, they discover a mysterious game and enter a house of horrors full of their worst nightmares.

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Graveminder by Melissa Marr

Three sips to mind the dead . . .

Rebekkah Barrow never forgot the attention her grandmother Maylene bestowed upon the dead of Claysville, the small town where Bek spent her adolescence. There wasn’t a funeral that Maylene didn’t attend, and at each one Rebekkah watched as Maylene performed the same unusual ritual: She took three sips from a silver flask and spoke the words “Sleep well, and stay where I put you.”

Now Maylene is dead, and Bek must go back to the place she left a decade earlier. She soon discovers that Claysville is not just the sleepy town she remembers, and that Maylene had good reason for her odd traditions. It turns out that in Claysville the worlds of the living and the dead are dangerously connected; beneath the town lies a shadowy, lawless land ruled by the enigmatic Charles, aka Mr. D. If the dead are not properly cared for, they will come back to satiate themselves with food, drink, and stories from the land of the living. Only the Graveminder, by tradition a Barrow woman, and her Undertaker—in this case Byron Montgomery, with whom Bek shares a complicated past—can set things right once the dead begin to walk.

Although she is still grieving for Maylene, Rebekkah will soon find that she has more than a funeral to attend to in Claysville, and that what awaits her may be far worse: dark secrets, a centuries-old bargain, a romance that still haunts her, and a frightening new responsibility—to stop a monster and put the dead to rest where they belong.

Sabriel (Abhorsen #1) by Garth Nix (YA)

Sent to a boarding school in Ancelstierre as a young child, Sabriel has had little experience with the random power of Free Magic or the Dead who refuse to stay dead in the Old Kingdom. But during her final semester, her father, the Abhorsen, goes missing, and Sabriel knows she must enter the Old Kingdom to find him. She soon finds companions in Mogget, a cat whose aloof manner barely conceals its malevolent spirit, and Touchstone, a young Charter Mage long imprisoned by magic, now free in body but still trapped by painful memories. As the three travel deep into the Old Kingdom, threats mount on all sides. And every step brings them closer to a battle that will pit them against the true forces of life and death—and bring Sabriel face-to-face with her own destiny.

With Sabriel, the first installment in the Abhorsen trilogy, Garth Nix exploded onto the fantasy scene as a rising star, in a novel that takes readers to a world where the line between the living and the dead isn’t always clear—and sometimes disappears altogether.

Deadly Hemlock (Hemlock #1) by Kathleen Peacock (YA)

Mackenzie and Amy were best friends. Until Amy was brutally murdered.

Since then, Mac’s life has been turned upside down. She is being haunted by Amy in her dreams, and an extremist group called the Trackers has come to Mac’s hometown of Hemlock to hunt down Amy’s killer: A white werewolf.

Lupine syndrome—also known as the werewolf virus—is on the rise across the country. Many of the infected try to hide their symptoms, but bloodlust is not easy to control.

Wanting desperately to put an end to her nightmares, Mac decides to investigate Amy’s murder herself. She discovers secrets lurking in the shadows of Hemlock, secrets about Amy’s boyfriend, Jason, her good pal Kyle, and especially her late best friend. Mac is thrown into a maelstrom of violence and betrayal that puts her life at risk.

Kathleen Peacock’s thrilling novel is the first in the Hemlock trilogy, a spellbinding urban fantasy series filled with provocative questions about prejudice, trust, lies, and love.

Dead Witch Walking (The Hollows #1) by Kim Harrison

Forty years ago a genetically engineered virus killed half of the world’s human population and exposed creatures of dreams and nightmares that had, until then, lived in secret alongside humanity.

Rachel Morgan is a runner with the Inderland Runner Services, apprehending criminals through out modern-day Cincinnati. She is also a witch.

Used to confronting criminal vampires, dark witches and homicidal werewolves, Rachel’s latest assignments – apprehending cable-stealing magic students and tax-evading leprechauns – have prompted her to break her thirty-year contract with the I.S. and start her own runner agency.

But no one quits the I.S.

Marked for death, Rachel is a dead witch walking unless she can appease her former employers and pay off her contract by exposing the city’s most prominent citizen as a drug lord. But making an enemy of the ambiguous Trent Kalamack proves even more deadly than leaving the I.S.

The Raven Boys (The Raven Cycle #1) by Maggie Stiefvater (YA)

Blue has spent the majority of her sixteen years being told that if she kisses her true love, he will die. When Blue meets Gansey’s spirit on the corpse road she knows there is only one reason why – either he is her true love or she has killed him.

Determined to find out the truth, Blue becomes involved with the Raven Boys, four boys from the local private school (lead by Gansey) who are on a quest to discover Glendower – a lost ancient Welsh King who is buried somewhere along the Virginia ley line. Whoever finds him will be granted a supernatural favour.

Never before has Blue felt such magic around her. But is Gansey her true love? She can’t imagine a time she would feel like that, and she is adamant not to be the reason for his death. Where will fate lead them?

Dead Until Dark (A Sookie Stackhouse Vampire Mystery #1) by Charlaine Harris

Sookie Stackhouse is a small-time cocktail waitress in small-town Louisiana. She’s quiet, keeps to herself, and doesn’t get out much. Not because she’s not pretty. She is. It’s just that, well, Sookie has this sort of “disability.” She can read minds. And that doesn’t make her too dateable. And then along comes Bill. He’s tall, dark, handsome–and Sookie can’t hear a word he’s thinking. He’s exactly the type of guy she’s been waiting for all her life….

But Bill has a disability of his own: He’s a vampire with a bad reputation. He hangs with a seriously creepy crowd, all suspected of–big surprise–murder. And when one of Sookie’s coworkers is killed, she fears she’s next….

Those were my Top Ten Best Books to Read for Hallowe’en. What books do you read to get you in the Hallowe’en spirit? Let me know in the comments below, or link back to your Top Ten post so I can see what makes your list.

Sunday Post (22) & Sunday Showcase (11)

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The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer.  It was inspired in part by the In My Mailbox meme. It’s a chance to share News. A post to recap the past week, showcase books and things we have received and share news about what is coming up for the week on our blog.

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This week has been quiet on the blog. The only thing that went on the blog this week was a review I’d scheduled. Real life has been quite hectic this week, hence the silence on the blog and on Twitter and Facebook and Tumblr. I’m hoping next week will be better, but I will definitely be back the week after though.

This Week on The Flutterby Room

Next Week on The Flutterby Room

  • 31st October – Heart of Obsidian (A Psy-Changeling Novel #) by Nalini Singh

Any New Books?

Showcase Sunday is a weekly meme hosted by Vicky at Books, Biscuits, and Tea. Its aim is to showcase our newest books or book related swag and to see what everyone else received for review, borrowed from libraries, bought in bookshops and downloaded onto eReaders each week.

This week a book arrived from Penguin Ireland – so a huge thank you to them!

  • The Pleasures of Autumn by Evie Hunter (published by Penguin Ireland 31st October 2013) [BookLikes] [Goodreads]
    • This isn’t my usual read, but I think it sounds like it has a LOT of potential!! I cannot wait to start it 🙂

That’s it from me this week. I hope you’ve had a good week; let me know how your week went in the comments below.

Review: I Wished For You by Amy Huberman

I Wished For You by Amy Huberman

Title: I Wished For You
Author: Amy Huberman
Genre: Chick Lit, Contemporary
Publisher: Penguin (6th June 2013)
Source: Penguin Books
Format: Finished Copy
Blurb:

Grace and Robbie seem destined to be together for ever, but when he unexpectedly goes down on bended knee, Grace freaks out. Cue the mother of all meltdowns.

On top of that, Grace is not exactly fulfilled by her job – dressing well-to-do ladies with way more money than style. Cue – in her addled state – losing it at work, with disastrous consequences.

Into Grace’s train-wreck of a life comes Verity – ex-Hollywood costume lady and vintage-clothing queen. Verity has seen it all and done it all and her life makes Grace’s look about as exciting as Songs of Praise. Verity tells Grace that the secret of happiness is to discover her ‘heart wish’. If only Grace could work out what her heart’s greatest wish really is . . .

Rating: *** (3 stars)
Review:

I WISHED FOR YOU is the second novel by Amy Huberman. It tells the story of Grace Harte an almost thirty year-old who is in a comfortable relationship with her boyfriend Robbie, the only problem she has (apart from her job) is that well-meaning friends and family keep asking her when she and Robbie are going to get married. Grace is happy with the status quo, and when it looks like Robbie might actually propose she freaks out.

Continue reading

Sunday Post (21) & Sunday Showcase (10)

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The Sunday Post is a weekly meme hosted by Kimba the Caffeinated Book Reviewer.  It was inspired in part by the In My Mailbox meme. It’s a chance to share News. A post to recap the past week, showcase books and things we have received and share news about what is coming up for the week on our blog.

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This week has been relatively quiet, which has been nice. The next couple of weeks will be interesting. I won’t be around a lot to answer comments today as I’m having a family meal, but I will get back to you and visit your blog as soon as I can.

This Week on The Flutterby Room

Next Week on The Flutterby Room

  • 24th October – I Wished For You by Amy Huberman

Any New Books?

Showcase Sunday is a weekly meme hosted by Vicky at Books, Biscuits, and Tea. Its aim is to showcase our newest books or book related swag and to see what everyone else received for review, borrowed from libraries, bought in bookshops and downloaded onto eReaders each week.

I actually got these books last week when Mum got them to cheer me up, but as I didn’t do a post last week I thought I’d stick them up this week.

  • Angel’s Blood (A Guildhunter Novel #1) by Nalini Singh [BookLikes]
  • Archangel’s Kiss (A Guildhunter Novel #2) by Nalini Singh [BookLikes]
  • Archangel’s Consort (A Guildhunter Novel #3) by Nalini Singh [BookLikes]
  • Storm Glass (A Chronicles of Ixia Novel, #4) by Maria V. Snyder [BookLikes]
  • Sea Glass (A Chronicles of Ixia Novel, #5) by Maria V. Snyder [BookLikes]
  • Spy Glass (A Chronicles of Ixia Novel, #6) by Maria V. Snyder [BookLikes]

That’s it from me this week. I hope you’ve had a good week; let me know how your week went in the comments below.

Review: Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein

Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein (UK cover)

Title: Rose Under Fire
Author: Elizabeth Wein
Genre: War Novel, Young Adult
Publisher: Electric Monkey (3rd June 2013)
Blurb:

TELL THE WORLD

I can write again. Oh God! All those months of not being able to write! Of not being allowed to write. Knowing I’d be shot if I were caught. It seems like I have been a prisoner for so long.

Rose Justice is a young American ATA pilot, delivering planes and taxiing pilots for the RAF in the UK during the summer of 1944. A budding poet who feels vividly alive while flying, she is forced to confront the hidden atrocities of war – and the most fearsome.

An unforgettable journey from innocence to experience from the author of the best-selling Carnegie Award shortlisted Code Name Verity.

Rating: **** (4 stars)
Review:

ROSE UNDER FIRE is the companion novel to the fantastic CODE NAME VERITY (review). It tells the story of eighteen-year-old Rose Justice an American pilot and member of the Air Transport Auxiliary – or ATA. She has only recently arrived in Britain and is horrified by the devastation she finds and the reality of war.

Continue reading

Waiting on Wednesday (32)

Waiting On” Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we’re eagerly anticipating. The cover from this week’s book came from the author’s webside. All publishing dates are according to Amazon.co.uk The cover for Shadowplay is from the Amazon UK website, whilst the blurb and the cover and blurb for Feather Bound are from an email from the publisher.

This week I am “Waiting On”…

Shadowplay
by Laura Lam

Published: 7th January 2014.

For all fans of Robin Hobb and Tamora Pierce, this extraordinary crossover fantasy features a truly unique central character.

The circus lies behind Micah Grey in dust and ashes. He and the White Clown, Drystan, have taken refuge in the decaying Kymri Theatre, home to the once-great magician, Jasper Maske. Though no longer a circus performer, Micah must still conduct a balancing act between his past and his future, while both avoiding the renewed and embittered rivalry of the magicians of Ellada, and the Policiers who are convinced Micah played a part in the death of his old Ringmaster.

A tale of phantom wings, a clockwork hand, and the delicate unfurling of new love, Shadowplay continues Micah Grey’s extraordinary journey.

I have to admit that it was the cover I fell in love with, and then I read the blurb and I was intrigued. I’m not really a fan of Robin Hobb, but I love Tamora Pierce so I’m curious to see what this book is like.

Feather Bound
by Sarah Raughley

Published : 6th May 2014.

In contemporary New York, a swan girl must help her enemy destroy her best friend or risk being sold to the black market.

When Deanna’s missing friend Hyde turns up at his father’s funeral to claim his corporate empire and inheritance, she is swept into his glittering world of paparazzi and wealth.
But Deanna has a secret – and somebody knows. Someone who is out to get Hyde. And if she doesn’t play along, and help the enemy take Hyde down…she will be sold to the highest bidder in the black market for human swans.
Now Deanna is struggling to break free from the gilded cage that would trap her forever…

With this one I liked the cover, but the blurb was what sold it to me. I think it has a lot of potential, and I’m looking forward to getting my hands on this!

So those are the books I am looking forward to this week. Please let me know in the comments if you’re looking forward to them too, and what book you’re looking forward to this week.

Top Ten Tuesday (36)

Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. This feature was created because they are particularly fond of lists at The Broke and the Bookish. They’d love to share their lists with other bookish folks and would LOVE to see your top ten lists!

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This weeks Top Ten topic is …

Top Ten Books I Was “Forced” to Read

I’m going to do a list of books I was “forced” to read but ended up liking or thought was okay, or you’ll just end up with an essay about how much I despise ENDURING LOVE – and nobody wants that! Or how everyone lied, Shakespeare’s ROMEO & JULIET is NOT a love story!

Image taken from WallsOfText’s etsy post. You can buy the above image as a wall vinyl by clicking on the image above. Used without permission will remove on request.

*coughs* Anyway, on with my Top Ten…

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor

This is one of the books that was required reading for my English class during Secondary School (when I was between 12 and 16). I’m pretty sure it was one of the books I read around SATs year, so I was probably 14 when I read this in class. I thought I would absolutely loathe it, but I really enjoyed it. So much so that I borrowed the rest of the series from the school library.

To Kill A Mocking Bird by Harper Lee

I think this was a required reading book for my English class around the same time as ROLL OF THUNDER, maybe a year later. Again I really enjoyed this book, even if it did take us forever to get through it – I’m pretty sure we couldn’t take the book out of the classroom. The film was pretty good too.

The Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien

I read this right before THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING came out in cinemas. I’d heard of the book before because my Dad is a huge fan, but it looked like such a thick book I had no interest in reading it. Then I saw the trailer for the first film, and I had to go and watch it. Dad wouldn’t let me see the film unless I’d read the book, so I ended up reading the book and loving it.

The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins (YA)

As I’m sure you’ll remember this was BIG in the book blogger verse. It seemed like everyone had read it. I still wasn’t sold, but then I saw the film and had to give the book a go. I should have listened. It was brilliant.

Mortal Instruments by Philip Reeve (YA)

This was required reading for my Children’s Literature course which I took with the OU. Whilst I liked steampunk fashion, I wasn’t too sure about a steampunk book. Sci-Fi books aren’t really my cup of tea, and I thought this book might be like that. I was wrong. It was a fun read.

Regeneration by Pat Barker

This was required reading for my A-Level English Lit. We did War Poetry, and we also had to read some War books.  This was one of the books I had to read, and it was actually quite entertaining. Sad, but a brilliant read.

Little Women

Another book I was required reading for the Children’s Literature. I didn’t think I would like it, but I kinda did. I won’t be reading the next book, but this one was an enjoyable read.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green (YA)

Another book that blew up and everyone seemed to have read.

Guilty Pleasures by Laurell K. Hamilton

This book and series was actually recommended to me by a friend who was into vampire books. Totally glad I gave it a shot!

Dead Witch Walking by Kim Harrison

This book/series was gushed about by a friend on their blog, It sounded interesting, so I gave it a shot and it clicked. Really love this series.

Those were my Top Ten Books I Was “Forced” to Read. What books were you “forced” to read and ended up liking? Let me know in the comments below, or link back to your Top Ten post so I can see what makes your list.