Once Every Never (Once Every Never #1) by Lesley Livingston (Penguin Canada 7/14/2011)
Love Story by Jennifer Echols (MTV Books 7/19/2011)
Pearl by Jo Knowles (Henry Holt and Co. 7/19/2011)
The Summer I Learned to Fly by Dana Reinhardt (Wendy Lamb Books 7/19/2011)
Small Town Sinners by Melissa Walker (Bloomsbury 7/19/2011)
Ripple by Mandy Hubbard (Razorbill/Penguin 7/21/2011)
Touch of Frost (Mythos Academy #1) by Jennifer Estep (Kensington Publishing Corp. 7/26/2011)
Supernaturally (Paranormalcy #2) by Kiersten White (HarperTeen 7/26/2011)
Everblue (Mer Tales #1) by Brenda Pandos (Obsidian Mountain Publishing 7/31/2011)
Wolfsbane (Nightshade #2) by Andrea Cremer (Philomel 7/26/2011)
Wildefire (Wildefire #1) by Karsten Knight (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers 7/26/2011)
If you know of any other new releases for July 14th- 31st feel free to add them in the comments so others will know about them!





















I CAN'T WAIT for Ripple!!! YAY!!!
ReplyDeleteI almost got a copy of Small Town Sinners at a book conference in May, but they had just ran out. =/ I really wanted it! It sounds pretty good.
ReplyDeleteI've heard lots of good things about Wildfire too. That's another one I want to get my hands on. =)
FANTASTIC haul this week!
Touch of Frost looks awesome! I'm looking forward to that one. Oh, and of course Wolfsbane ;)
ReplyDeleteAngeline Kace
I'm hoping to finish reading Touch of Frost this week. Hopefully I will have my review up later this week.
ReplyDeleteThese books look awesome! My To Read List is piling up already. Once Every Never has a captivating cover, and I am excited for Ripple too! Bdw, I love your site! it's lovely!
ReplyDeleteThe Hangman in the Mirror
ReplyDeleteby Kate Cayley. release date July 26
synopsis:A strong-willed 16-year-old girl fights for survival in 18th-century North America.
A strong-willed 16-year-old girl fights for survival in 18th-century North America.
Françoise Laurent has never had an easy life. The only surviving child of a destitute washerwoman and wayward soldier, she must rely only on herself to get by. When her parents die suddenly from the smallpox ravishing New France, Françoise sees it as a chance to escape the life she thought she was trapped in.
Seizing her newfound opportunity, Françoise takes a job as an aide to the wife of a wealthy fur trader. The poverty-ridden world she knew transforms into a strange new world full of privilege and fine things -- and of never having to beg for food. But Françoise's relationships with the other servants in Madame Pommereau's house are tenuous, and Madame Pommereau isn't an easy woman to work for. When Françoise is caught stealing a pair of her mistress's beautiful gloves, she faces a future even worse than she could have imagined: thrown in jail, she is sentenced to death by hanging. Once again, Françoise is left to her own devices to survive . . . Is she cunning enough to convince the prisoner in the cell beside her to become the hangman and marry her, which, by law, is the only thing that could save her life?
Based on an actual story and filled with illuminating historical detail, The Hangman in the Mirror transports readers to the harsh landscape of a new land that is filled with even harsher class divisions and injustices.
for those who are going to be in NYC. you should stop by Karsten Knight's book release party. July 30 at 4:00pm at 18west 18th street. books of wonder. :)
ReplyDeleteI'm really looking forward to The Summer I Learned How to Fly! The premise just sounds really good.
ReplyDelete