Guile

Hi guys!  Welcome to my stop on the blog tour for Guile, by Constance Cooper, hosted by Rockstar Book Tours!  I’m so excited to be part of this tour!  Check out my review below, and enter to win a copy of this very original book!


guileGuile

Author: Constance Cooper

Publication Date: March 1st, 2016

Publisher: Clarion Books

Pages: 384

Formats: Hardcover, ebook

Find it: Amazon | Barnes & Noble | iBooks

Synopsis: Yonie Watereye lives in the bayou. The water there is full of guile, a power that changes people and objects. Yonie, 16, makes a living investigating objects affected by guile, but in fact it’s her talking cat, LaRue, who has the power to see guile.

Yonie becomes aware that someone is sending harmful guile-changed objects to certain people, including herself. Her investigation becomes entwined with her hunt for the secrets of her mother’s past and leads her to discover dangers hidden within her own family.

In the suspenseful adventure that follows, Yonie and her furry sidekick face challenges that could end their adventuring forever.

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Review
stars-4

Guile is one of the most original, thought provoking novels that I have read in a very long time.  It takes all the usual young adult cliches and throws them overboard, and it’s just great.  It isn’t the same book you’ve read at least 10 times – Guile is a breath of fresh air that will captivate you from the very first page.

I have to admit, when I started reading Guile, I was a little skeptical…it’s been a while since I’ve read anything that was even close to being in the same genre of books as this one.  I still don’t really know exactly how to classify this one, so instead of trying, let me tell you a little bit about this little gem.

Yonnie Watereye (not her real name, but the name she goes by), lives in the swampy area of Wicked Ford, where the water is full of guile, which is a substance that gives objects certain powers.  While she is sixteen and lives without any family, she has her cat, LaRue, who is not only her best friend, but like her sister.  Here’s the interesting thing about LaRue – she’s a cat who can talk.  Yep, this book is chock full of interesting dialogues between Yonnie and LaRue, and while at first the writing kind of irked me, I started to look at LaRue as being an older sister like figure to Yonnie, and I started to enjoy the conversations they have.  Since LaRue is essentially a slybeast (an animal who was affected by the guile), and the people in Wicked Ford and surrounding areas do not take kindly to slybeasts, Yonnie and LaRue try their best to keep the fact that LaRue can talk a secret.

Yonnie makes barely enough money to get by, and she manages this by offering her services as a pearly, which is an individual who can sense an object that has been touched by guile and has powers.  Only, Yonnie isn’t really a pearly…in fact, she has none of the talents it takes to perform these seeings.  But LaRue does, and the two of them find ways to make this work.  It’s complicated and kind of a struggle, but Yonnie does what she has to.

There is A LOT of stuff going on in this book.  For one, Yonnie is trying to find out who her father is, which is a complicated endeavor.  She’s also trying to track down a guile filled object for a girl she met, Justine, whose father is acting strangely, and she believes it has to do with something like this.  At the same time, Yonnie is also trying to live a somewhat normal life (aside from having a talking cat and an interesting profession), and she encounters all kinds of interesting people and situations on the way.

There are parts of this  book that make you laugh, and certain parts that make you cringe (such as all the horrible things Yonnie and LaRue have to endure), but they all just add to the awesome experience of this book.  I found myself referring to the map in the front of the book quite often (glad it was there), because it’s kind of hard to imagine without one.  The book itself is just so engaging and enjoyable to read – the story flows pretty smoothly and that makes it really easy to get engrossed in.  The characters are a little different that we’re used to seeing, but it makes the book even better, in my opinion.

I read through this quickly, because the story kind of just sucks you in and makes you keep reading to see how it all turns out.  There are some twists in here, and some parts that make you wondering “wait, what,” but I absolutely loved this book, and I loved how it deviated from the typical YA novels and really shook things up.  Guile was definitely a fun read, with a bit of fantasy and mystery, and it’s sure to put a smile on your face (did I mention it has a talking cat?).  So if you’re looking for something different than you’re used to, and you like adventure (which this book is full of!), then check this one out! 

Note: I received an ARC copy of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


About the Author

ConstanceConstance’s fantasy novel Guile will be published March 1, 2016 by Clarion Books, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Guile is set in the Bad Bayous, where the water makes strange and unpredictable changes to things (or animals, or people) that soak too long.

Constance’s short stories have appeared in Asimov’s, Strange Horizons, Lightspeed, and various other publications. Her work has been podcast, translated into Swedish and Hebrew, and included in “Best Of” anthologies. She also writes sf poetry, and has twice been nominated for the Rhysling Award.

Constance grew up mainly in the San Francisco Bay Area, with one year spent in Surrey, England and a chunk of another spent in Newfoundland, Canada. She studied journalism at UC Santa Cruz, where she hiked to class through redwood forest, explored secret caves, and helped edit the college newspaper. Later she earned an MA in Linguistics at the University of Pennsylvania, and stayed on in Philadelphia working on a linguistic research project before getting sucked into the brand-new world of website design.

After Constance met her husband, they moved to Edinburgh, Scotland for two years, where she morphed into a software engineer. Just as she’d acclimated to saying “beeta testing” and “proh-cessor,” she and her husband returned to the Bay Area to work for a natural language search company.

Now Constance lives in the Bay Area with her husband and two children, and is enjoying ever-increasing time to write the kind of stories she’s always loved. Her published science fiction so far has all been set on alien planets, and often told from alien viewpoints (including reptilian, mammalian, and crustacean analogues.) In writing fantasy, she’s attracted to inventive, nonstandard settings, light touches of humor, and just pure adventurous fun. Constance’s writing also shows the influence of her love for mysteries.

Author Links:
Website   |   Goodreads


Giveaway!

3 winners will receive a finished copy of GUILE, US only.

a Rafflecopter giveaway


Tour Schedule

Week 1:
2/22/2016- Seeing Double In Neverland– Interview
2/23/2016- Here’s to Happy Endings– Review
2/24/2016- Take Me Away To A Great Read– Guest Post
2/25/2016- 5 Girls Book Reviews– Review
2/26/2016- Curling Up With A Good Book– Interview

Week 2:
2/29/2016- A Dream Within A Dream– Review
3/1/2016- Twinning for Books– Guest Post
3/2/2016- Eli to the nth– Review
3/3/2016- Good Choice Reading – Interview
3/4/2016- Wandering Bark Books– Review

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