Liar by Justine Larbalestier – after the bruhaha over the cover this week, it got me even more interested in this book than I was. Only conflict, do I buy the US or the Australian editions? (the American is pictured at left and is the one at the source of all the trouble)
Micah freely admits that she’s a compulsive liar. And that may be the one honest thing he’ll ever tell you. Over the years she’s duped her classmates, her teachers, and even her parents. But when her boyfriend, Zach, dies under brutal circumstances, the shock might be enough to set her straight. Or maybe not. Especially when lying comes as naturally to her as breathing. Was Micah dating Zach? Or was Sarah his real girlfriend? And are the stories Micah tells about inheriting a “family gene” real or are they something that only exists in her mind?
Breathtaking in its plotting, and narrated by one of the most psychologically complex young women to emerge since Sybil, Liar is a roller-coaster that will have listeners grasping for the truth. Honestly.
Ghost Town by Richard Jennings – It just sounds good!
Spencer Adams Honesty may be the last best hope for Paisley, Kansas—and for lonely kids everywhere.
Spencer Honesty and his mom are the last people left in Paisley, except for Chief Leopard Frog, Spence’s imaginary friend. One lonely day, Chief Leopard Frog’s carved rabbit talisman tells Spence to take his photo, so Spence digs up his late father’s camera and starts shooting photographs all around his ghost town. When the photos come back developed, he does not expect to see his old neighbor Maureen Balderson in her bedroom. Or Ma Puttering clearing weeds in her yard. They aren’t in Paisley anymore. Yet there they are.
What happens to Spence next is unexpected. It involves a catalog called Uncle Milton’s Thousand Things You Thought You’d Never Find, a poetry deal gone awry, and a ghost camera that promises to take pictures of the past (just be sure not to photograph yourself).
Mare’s War by Tanita S. Davis - I love books like this. Family history fascinates me anyway. And I love road trip books.
Meet Mare, a grandmother with flair and a fascinating past.
Octavia and Tali are dreading the road trip their parents are forcing them to take with their grandmother over the summer. After all, Mare isn’t your typical grandmother. She drives a red sports car, wears stiletto shoes, flippy wigs, and push-up bras, and insists that she’s too young to be called Grandma. But somewhere on the road, Octavia and Tali discover there’s more to Mare than what you see. She was once a willful teenager who escaped her less-than-perfect life in the deep South and lied about her age to join the African American battalion of the Women’s Army Corps during World War II.
Told in alternating chapters, half of which follow Mare through her experiences as a WAC member and half of which follow Mare and her granddaughters on the road in the present day, this novel introduces a larger-than-life character who will stay with readers long after they finish reading.
In Ashes Lie by Marie Brennan – Just read the description. It sounds SO GOOD.
The year is 1666. The King and Parliament vie for power, fighting one another with politics and armies alike. Below, the faerie court has enemies of its own. The old ways are breaking down, and no one knows what will rise in their place.
But now, a greater threat has come, one that could destroy everything. In the house of a sleeping baker, a spark leaps free of the oven — and ignites a blaze that will burn London to the ground. While the humans struggle to halt the conflagration that is devouring the city street by street, the fae pit themselves against a less tangible foe: the spirit of the fire itself, powerful enough to annihilate everything in its path.
Mortal and fae will have to lay aside the differences that divide them, and fight together for the survival of London itself . . .
So there you have it, the books I’ve been coveting this week. What have you been coveting for your own shelves?


Let's hope The Book Depository listens about getting the Australian edition of Liar! Mare’s War sounds amazing too.
I hope so. I really want to read it, but don't want to support that cover. I'd much rather support the cover the author liked, which is a better reflection of the book, and isn't racist. The whole situation just makes me so sad.
I was out of town and missed all the controversy on the cover of Liar. I got a copy at BEA and now I'm really curious about it. Mare's War looks great!
Mare's War looks so good! I hope I can get the library to order me a copy. I'm trying my BEST not to buy any books for awhile.
I'll be interested in your thoughts on Liar.
There was a bruhaha!? I missed it! I always miss it!
These all look good. Thanks for bringing them to my attention!
I already was interested in Liar, but with all the controversy, I'm really thinking about getting the Australian cover – only, that might come with a cost :-/
I've read Warrior and Witch by Marie Brennan and loved it, so I'm definitely interested in "In Ashes Lie", too! I haven't read the first one yet though (Midnight never came, I think?)
Oh, eck. Troublemaker!!!! I just added Ghost Town to my wish list. As to Liar . . . I'm thinking it's a good thing to wait and see if we can acquire the Australian cover via the Book Depository. Yeah, the noisy protest piqued my interest, too. It sounds like a great book that I might have overlooked, otherwise. Oddly, aside from the fact that it's all wrong, I don't even like the cover. I'm surprised they thought that would be a selling cover because it's kind of bland.
I'd say "get the Australian version". It might be the best way to get through to the publisher that a cover like that is not acceptable to the people who matter – the people who want to read the book. (Although to be perfectly honest, I'm not a fan of either cover.)
Mare's War is on my wishlist too. ^-^