Showing posts with label Sharon Cameron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sharon Cameron. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

Waiting on Wednesday (#225): The Knowing by Sharon Cameron


"Waiting On" Wednesday is a weekly event, hosted by Jill at Breaking the Spine, that spotlights upcoming releases that we're eagerly anticipating.


This week, I'm featuring:


The Knowing by Sharon Cameron
Book Two of The Forgetting series
Publisher: Scholastic
Publication Date: October 10, 2017

Summary (from Goodreads):

Sharon Cameron returns to the rich world of The Forgetting with a companion novel as thrilling and intricately crafted as the first.

Samara doesn't forget. And she isn't the only one. Safe underground in the city of New Canaan, she lives in a privileged world free from the Forgetting. Yet she wonders if she really is free, with the memories that plague her and secrets that surround her. Samara is determined to unearth the answers, even if she must escape to the old, cursed city of Canaan to find them.

Someone else is on their way to Canaan too . . . a spaceship from Earth is heading toward the planet, like a figment of the city's forgotten past. Beck is traveling with his parents, researchers tasked with finding the abandoned settlement effort. When Beck is stranded without communication, he will find more in Canaan than he was ever trained for. What will happen when worlds and memories, beliefs -- and truths -- collide?

This pulse-pounding, evocative companion to Cameron's highly acclaimed The Forgetting explores the truth and loss that lie within human memory, and the bonds that hold us together.




Can you tell that I love all of Sharon Cameron's books? Because I do. I can't wait to read this new one!

Saturday, August 20, 2016

Science in Fiction (#19): The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron


Welcome to this month's Science in Fiction feature! Science in Fiction is a meme I created to showcase the wonderful aspects of science in Young Adult fiction novels. For more information and previous feature, check out the "Science in Fiction" tag!

This month, I'm featuring The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron!




I love Cameron's books, and The Forgetting was no exception. I actually didn't know too much about the book before reading it - and I totally missed the fact that it's a sci-fi novel. When I read it, I was pleasantly surprised! I love sci-fi, and this heavily sci-fi story blew me away.

One of the aspects of science in this book is space colonization! Canaan, the setting of this story, is not on Earth.

So today, I'm going to talk about space colonization!

This is nothing new - we've seen the concept in fiction, movies, and TV often. Stars Wars, to name a big franchise, as well as Kaufman and Spooner's Starbound trilogy, are good examples. Space colonization is the permanent habitation of a planetary off Earth. For example, Mars, or the Moon.

Stephen Hawking says it'll be at least 100 years before space colonization becomes an actual successful thing. I believe it - we're nowhere near close to colonizing other entities (at least, that's what is made publicly known).

In recent times, NASA has proposed a self-contained space colony. While the goal is to colonize planetary bodies like Mars or the Moon, space stations might be the best step before space colonization. The Kalpana One program is the program proposed, and it would send a module into space to orbit the Earth. This module would hold 3,000 people indefinitely.

Elon Musk, founder of SpaceX, is urging the colonization of Mars. SpaceX has been building and testing reusable rockets for this purpose. However, the costs of the rockets alone are enormous. 

Genetic engineering and synthetic biology are vital to the space colonization efforts. The gases on other planets are toxic, and there is little oxygen. Scientists need to provide organisms that can, for example, break down those gases and use them as an energy source. Certain bacteria and organisms here on Earth convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, and this is something that scientists will have implement on other planets. Resource utilization is very important!

A final thing to consider - what's the point of space colonization? We are rapidly running out of room on Earth, as well as resources. There is a housing problem across the globe, and a little issue of where to store waste (landfills, dumping in a tiny town in China, and deep-sea injections are not permanent solutions), and the fact that there just isn't enough food being produced to feed everyone, especially with project population growth rates being what they are.


So! What are your thoughts on space colonization? The current state of affairs on Earth? Would you live on another planet (or an orbiting module), given the opportunity?

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Swoon Thursday (#185): The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron


- From the book you’re currently reading, or one you just finished, tell us what made you SWOON. What got your heart pounding, your skin tingling, and your stomach fluttering

- Try to make the swoon excerpt 140 characters (or less), if you are going to tweet about it. Use the hashtag #YABOUND when tweeting


This week, my swoon is from The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron!


I have no idea how to kiss someone. I lean down, and very gently touch my lip to his. I don't want to drown him. He is floating so still now, eyes closed, bobbing just a little in the waves from the waterfall. I bring one of my hands out of the water, put my palm on his chest like I did before, run my hand over the skin that is now water-slicked, up to his neck, thumb across his jaw to the back of his head. I hear his intake of breath, I lean down again, put my mouth on his.

This time he brings an arm up to hold me there, goes more vertical in the water while he pulls me in. I may not know how to kiss someone, but Gray does. His lips are soft and his mouth is warm, one hand keeping us afloat, the other twisted into my hair. I didn't know I could feel so sought after. Needed. He tugs on my hair to tilt up my chin, kisses my neck down to where the water meets my shoulder. I cradle his face and he kisses my mouth again, soft and then hard, and I hold his head, do not let him stop. I'm not sure that we can stop until he breaks from lips and puts his forehead on mine. We breathe each other's air.

- ARC, pages 186-187




I loved this book so much! I highly recommend everyone check it out. =)

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Review: The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron


The Forgetting by Sharon Cameron
Publisher: Scholastic
Publication Date: September 13, 2016
Rating: 5 stars
Source: ARC received from trade

Summary (from Goodreads):

What isn't written, isn't remembered. Even your crimes.

Nadia lives in the city of Canaan, where life is safe and structured, hemmed in by white stone walls and no memory of what came before. But every twelve years the city descends into the bloody chaos of the Forgetting, a day of no remorse, when each person's memories – of parents, children, love, life, and self – are lost. Unless they have been written.

In Canaan, your book is your truth and your identity, and Nadia knows exactly who hasn't written the truth. Because Nadia is the only person in Canaan who has never forgotten.

But when Nadia begins to use her memories to solve the mysteries of Canaan, she discovers truths about herself and Gray, the handsome glassblower, that will change her world forever. As the anarchy of the Forgetting approaches, Nadia and Gray must stop an unseen enemy that threatens both their city and their own existence – before the people can forget the truth. And before Gray can forget her.

What I Liked:

OH MY GOODNESS! I don't even know how I'm going to write a coherent review of this book! I'm no stranger to Cameron's books - I've been following her publications as they publish - and I feel like they get better and better as she writes more and more. This is quite possibly my favorite Cameron book! By rating, it must be (I've given her other three books four stars each), and I think I indeed like this one the most!

Every twelve years, the Forgetting occurs, in which one day, people forget everything. And so everyone must keep a book on them at all times, and write down everything, so that when the Forgetting occurs every twelve years, each person will know their lives by their memories. But Nadia the dyer's daughter remembers everything. She remembers when the last Forgetting occurred, when she was a little girl. She remembers the chaos that fell on Canaan. She remembers her life and she remembers that her book, after the Forgetting, was taken, and a forgery was left in its place. Now, on the eve of the next Forgetting, Nadia is determined to understand the Forgetting, and make this one different. She wants to know why Canaan is walled and no one is allowed out, why the Forgetting occurs, why her father left and her mother and sisters. She and Gray the glassblower's son uncover a history of truths that are nothing like what is told to the people of Canaan. Nadia only has so much time before everyone - including Gray - forgets everything.

What an incredible book! I'm going to be honest - I knew very little about this book before reading it. I didn't even read the synopsis. I saw that it was a Cameron book and I added it to my to-be-read list without a second thought. I loved The Dark Unwinding, A Spark Unseen, and Rook, and I knew I would like this book too. And I loved it!

Nadia is so different from the YA heroines of late! She's so quiet - literally. She just doesn't say much. When she and Gray first interact, you can see how it sometimes frustrates Gray, how Nadia is so tight-lipped. I love this quality of Nadia's. She has many secrets (because she remembers), and if she tells the wrong person, or misspeaks, she and her family would be in danger. Nadia is such a kickbutt girl, but not in a high-action way. She's a quiet rebel, who likes to climb the wall and go to the other side, and is never in bed before curfew. Nadia is inquisitive and intelligent, clever and determined. But she is subtle and quiet, a force you don't see coming until it's upon you. Nadia's character growth is subtle, but you can see the difference in her from start to finish. 

Gray is someone Nadia did not expect to catch her climbing back from the other side of the wall. He demands that she take him with her next time, or he'll turn her in. There is something about Gray that doesn't add up to Nadia. He's always had a way of getting everyone to love him, and Nadia is determined not to be one of those people. Gray is charming and funny, charismatic and just as stubborn as Nadia. He's also just as clever, and protective in a way that isn't over the top. Add Gray to the list of Cameron heroes I adore. All three of them are the perfect book boyfriends.

When I said I knew nothing about this book before reading it, I meant that! I only knew that it had a vibe similar to that of The Purge - or so I thought. This book is not fantasy or paranormal or whatever I thought it was - it's science fiction! I love science fiction! YA does not see nearly enough science fiction, in my opinion. 

I don't want to spoil things but guys, the science fiction aspect of the book (i.e. basically, the book) is SO cool. It's comes as a plot twist, hence why I don't want to spoil much, but it's awesome and a little mind-blowing. All of the answers are right in front of our faces and we don't know it! Neither did Nadia and Gray. Epic!

I love how Cameron weaves this story. There are so many sub-stories that tie back in to the main story, and everything meets at the climax. This book is told from Nadia's POV, in first person, but you get a clear sense of the subplots in this book. Nadia's older sister's dalliance, Nadia's crazy mother, Nadia's father's behavior, Rose's significance... there are so many little seeds that Cameron plants everywhere, that spring forth towards the climax of the book. Brilliant!

Have I said anything about the romance yet? In classic Cameron fashion, the romance is sweet and subtle, and yet powerful and strong. The romance was more present in this book than her other three - meaning, it has more of a presence, it impacts the story more. I didn't mind this! Gray and Nadia are great together. It's somewhat hate-to-love, with lots of banter (kind of? Nadia doesn't talk a ton, yet somehow, there is back-and-forth between her and Gray and it is great). And then the romance is also a tiny bit steamier than in Cameron's other books. Still not super steamy, but more so than her other books. I love the romance in this book!

Relationships are so important in this book, and not just the romance (which was lovely!). Nadia has two sisters, an older and a younger. The older sister suspects that Nadia is not her sister, since the last Forgetting jumbled everything (as they usually do). Nadia has a hard time connecting with that sister, even though she knows the truth (the sister doesn't). But Nadia has such a wonderful relationship with her younger sister. It's very positive and sisterly, and I loved seeing them interact! Nadia barely has one parent (her mother is a little lost in the brain), so her parental relationships aren't great. But Gray has a beautiful relationship with his parents. You'd have to read the book to see what I mean! It's very special and heart-warming.

The last one hundred pages or so seemed like truth after truth, reveal after reveal. I could not read fast enough! There was so much happening (not overwhelmingly so though), and several heartbreaking events occurred, and I was sure Cameron was going to break my heart. But then she didn't! I love how this book ended. It is an amazing ending and I could not have asked for more!

What I Did Not Like:

I don't think I have anything to say here!

Would I Recommend It:

I feel like I could gush about this book for days! And knowing me, I probably will. I highly recommend this book to science fiction fans, but I feel like anyone who likes YA books with a lot of depth would enjoy this story. Cameron has such great writing, and all of her stories are so perfectly woven and fashioned. I recommend all four books of Cameron's!

Rating:

5 stars. I rarely dish out the 5-star rating, but I couldn't not give this book 5 stars. How amazing was this? Very amazing! Definitely one of the most impressive YA books for the year.


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