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Showing posts with label Katy Cannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katy Cannon. Show all posts

Monday, 9 February 2015

{Blog Tour} Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines (Love, Lies and Lemon Pies #2) by Katy Cannon

21797284Posted by Donna
Release Date: February 2nd, 2015
Finished Date: January 2nd, 2015
Publishers: Stripes Publishing
Genre: YA, Contemporary, Romance
Source: For Review
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
Grace: This was supposed to be Grace’s starring year, until she opened the door to a family secret that changed everything. Now she’s stuck making costumes in Sewing Club and watching someone else play the lead role – unless she can find a way to win it back.

Connor: Far from home and exiled to a new school, all Connor wants is to keep a low profile and get through the year. But agreeing to help his step-dad out with the school play means he’s soon caught up in Grace’s schemes.

Grace had a plan for this year – and it didn’t involve learning to sew. But being out of the spotlight isn’t the disaster she imagined, even if Connor is convinced she’s still a diva extraordinaire. Can Grace prove she’s really changed and save the play from the sidelines, even though her family is coming apart at the seams?

The Review: Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines is a cute and fun read with a sweet romance that all readers will root for. 

This year Grace was supposed to be given the lead in the school’s new play, Much Ado about Nothing but when a family issue leaves her missing the auditions, Grace is stuck running the costume department for the play instead. Determined to get her role back, Grace knows it’s only a matter of time before the play director realises she’s the best person for the job, so in the meantime, Grace focuses on making the costumes. But what Grace didn’t count on is how much she enjoys making them and more so, it gives her time to spend with the new guy and stage manager Connor. But Grace and Connor didn’t have the best start and now it appears Connor hates her. With her family issues, the play and now Connor, this year just went from bad to worse. Can Grace turn her year around and show people she’s serious about making the play a success? 

Going into this book, I certainly had high hopes because of how much I loved Katy Cannon’s Love, Lies and Lemon Pies and I just couldn’t wait to see what she would come up with next and revisit some of my favourite characters. Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines is great follow up and although it could be read as a standalone, I’d recommend you read Love, Lies and Lemon Pies first because you can familiarise yourself with the characters. Not only that it has that added extra touch of some sewing patterns at the start of each chapter. I didn't quite connect to the sewing aspect as much as I would have liked - not as much as baking - but it was still interesting to read. 

For me, Grace’s continued growth as a character just shows how much of a great character she is and that’s something you don’t want to miss. She’s come a long way since Love, Lies and Lemon Pies and she’s really turned herself around. No longer is it all about her. She’s happy helping others and going about things the right way. Yes, she’s still very determined to reach the goals she wants but she soon realises that there is always good things from anything you do. And Connor was an interesting character as the love interest. You can see there is something between Grace and him from the moment they met but, it’s all tangled up with their own personal issues that it takes a while for either to realise they like the other. I liked Connor. I couldn’t always agree with his reasoning’s for some things but like Grace, he’s learning new things every day. 

The plot of the story was enjoyable. It had so good laugh out loud moments but it also had it’s harder times with the serious topics the characters had to deal with. And it was interesting to see Katy Cannon focus the story around sewing instead of baking. 

In all, I didn’t quite enjoy Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines as much as Love, Lies and Lemon Pies but it’s still full of friendship, romance, and of course drama and it’s a read that many will enjoy. 

3.5 flowers!

Thank you to Stripes Publishing for giving me the opportunity to review this book in exchange for an honest review. 

How To Sew A Story

In lots of ways (okay, some ways) writing a book is a lot like making a patchwork quilt. Sort of.

Bear with me here.

Choose your pattern.
The first thing you need to do when making a patchwork quilt is to choose your pattern. This will tell you how many patches you need, out of how many fabrics and what shapes they need to be. For the sake of simplicity, let’s say you’re making a simple patchwork with 56 squares in 7 different fabrics. Okay?

Now, for a story, you can also start with your pattern. What genre is your story – sci fi, contemporary, fantasy, historical, romance… what’s it about? And who is your audience – young adult, middle grade, picture book? Knowing these things will give you some idea of how long and complicated your book will be.

Say you decide you want to write a YA novel, around 60,000 words, with a few subplots and several supporting characters.

Choose your fabrics.
You already know you need 7 different fabrics from your pattern, but choosing them is the fun part. Do you want them to all be shades of the same colour, or complementary colour groups – or vivid, bright clashing colours? It’s entirely up to you.

It’s the same with your story. Imagine your 56 squares are each pieces of your story – scenes even. Each different fabric represents a different story strand – perhaps your main character and plot get your favourite pattern, and you have more squares of that fabric than any other. Your second favourite might go to the love interest and romance story thread, the third the best friend and their subplot, and so on until you have all seven fabrics cut into the right number of squares.

Lay out your squares.
Now it’s time to lay your squares of fabric out into the order you want them to appear on your blanket – you decide you want a good mix, so that it looks random, but actually is very carefully planned to ensure that no two squares next to each other are the same, and that the fabrics you have fewer squares of are spread evenly throughout the quilt. (It’s harder than it sounds.)

And so it goes with your story. You want your main plot squares, or scenes, to span the whole book, with the subplots and supporting characters slipped in between, adding extra depth and meaning to the story. (Of course, in a book, one scene can cover several plot threads, but let’s not complicate things too much…) Basically, you want to weave all your plots and characters together into a logical order, making sure that the action and emotion rises and falls, and that the different plots are spread out through the story.

Stitch your squares together.
Once you’re happy with your layout, it’s time to stitch the squares together, one row at a time, then to join all the rows together to form the quilt top.

Or, in other words, it’s time to write the book – one scene, one chapter at a time, until you have a finished draft.

This is also harder than it sounds.
  
Choose your stuffing and backing and sew the layers together.
But a finished quilt top isn’t a finished quilt, and a finished first draft isn’t a finished book.

For the quilt, you need to choose your wadding or stuffing and a backing fabric, to make it deeper, softer and cosier. You lay them out, right sides of the quilt top and backing fabric facing, with the wadding on top, then sew all the way around the edges, leaving a gap on one end. At this point, it looks rather like a disaster.

For your book, you need to revise it, also to make it deeper – and more meaningful and better written. You tear the whole thing apart before putting it back together again. This also looks disastrous.


Turn the right way out and overstitch.
But then you turn your quilt the right way out, stitch up the gap, and realise you actually made a quilt. A beautiful quilt. You add the finishing touches – overstitching along all the joins to give it more texture – and you’re done!

Hopefully, when you turn your book the right way out again – or come back to it after a short break – it’s beautiful too. Like with your quilt, you go through touching it up – fixing an awkward phrase, adding a better description, that sort of thing. And finally, it’s done. Hooray!

Give away, or curl up under on a cold night.
Patchwork quilts make beautiful gifts – as do books. But whether you keep your quilt and book for yourself to enjoy, or whether you give them away – sending them out into the wide world of publishing for instance – the important thing is that you made it, all by yourself. And nobody else in the world has one like it.


Katy CannonAUTHOR BIO

Katy Cannon was born in the United Arab Emirates, grew up in North Wales and now lives in Hertfordshire, which is rather flat and green by comparison.

She recently discovered that her great grandmother, Louisa, was one of the first women in India to earn her degree, back in 1916, which makes Katy’s own reading-in-the-bath method of getting an English Literature degree from Lancaster University in the 21st century a little less impressive.

It didn’t take her long to realise that writing stories was much more fun than analysing ones that other people had written. It also meant that she could write the sort of stories she actually loved to read, rather than the ones she was supposed to want to read.

Katy has an unending passion for castles and the seaside, which means she spends a lot of holidays dragging her husband, small daughter and Teddy around the country to look at crumbling piles of rocks, or going paddling (but she does always buy them fish and chips afterwards).

Katy loves animals, and grew up with a cat, lots of fish and a variety of gerbils, and her daughter has recently decided she wants to be a vet. Katy is hoping that the publication of her series, Pooch Palace coming from Stripes Publishing in March 2014, will finally convince her husband to let her get a dog!

Katy is represented by Gemma Cooper of The Bent Agency.

Friday, 2 January 2015

{Review} Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines (Love, Lies and Lemon Pies #2) by Katy Cannon

21797284Posted by Donna
Release Date: February 2nd, 2015
Finished Date: January 2nd, 2015
Publishers: Stripes Publishing
Genre: YA, Contemporary, Romance
Source: For Review
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
Grace: This was supposed to be Grace’s starring year, until she opened the door to a family secret that changed everything. Now she’s stuck making costumes in Sewing Club and watching someone else play the lead role – unless she can find a way to win it back.

Connor: Far from home and exiled to a new school, all Connor wants is to keep a low profile and get through the year. But agreeing to help his step-dad out with the school play means he’s soon caught up in Grace’s schemes.

Grace had a plan for this year – and it didn’t involve learning to sew. But being out of the spotlight isn’t the disaster she imagined, even if Connor is convinced she’s still a diva extraordinaire. Can Grace prove she’s really changed and save the play from the sidelines, even though her family is coming apart at the seams?

The Review: Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines is a cute and fun read with a sweet romance that all readers will root for. 

This year Grace was supposed to be given the lead in the school’s new play, Much Ado about Nothing but when a family issue leaves her missing the auditions, Grace is stuck running the costume department for the play instead. Determined to get her role back, Grace knows it’s only a matter of time before the play director realises she’s the best person for the job, so in the meantime, Grace focuses on making the costumes. But what Grace didn’t count on is how much she enjoys making them and more so, it gives her time to spend with the new guy and stage manager Connor. But Grace and Connor didn’t have the best start and now it appears Connor hates her. With her family issues, the play and now Connor, this year just went from bad to worse. Can Grace turn her year around and show people she’s serious about making the play a success? 

Going into this book, I certainly had high hopes because of how much I loved Katy Cannon’s Love, Lies and Lemon Pies and I just couldn’t wait to see what she would come up with next and revisit some of my favourite characters. Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines is great follow up and although it could be read as a standalone, I’d recommend you read Love, Lies and Lemon Pies first because you can familiarise yourself with the characters. Not only that it has that added extra touch of some sewing patterns at the start of each chapter. I didn't quite connect to the sewing aspect as much as I would have liked - not as much as baking - but it was still interesting to read. 

For me, Grace’s continued growth as a character just shows how much of a great character she is and that’s something you don’t want to miss. She’s come a long way since Love, Lies and Lemon Pies and she’s really turned herself around. No longer is it all about her. She’s happy helping others and going about things the right way. Yes, she’s still very determined to reach the goals she wants but she soon realises that there is always good things from anything you do. And Connor was an interesting character as the love interest. You can see there is something between Grace and him from the moment they met but, it’s all tangled up with their own personal issues that it takes a while for either to realise they like the other. I liked Connor. I couldn’t always agree with his reasoning’s for some things but like Grace, he’s learning new things every day. 

The plot of the story was enjoyable. It had so good laugh out loud moments but it also had it’s harder times with the serious topics the characters had to deal with. And it was interesting to see Katy Cannon focus the story around sewing instead of baking. 

In all, I didn’t quite enjoy Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines as much as Love, Lies and Lemon Pies but it’s still full of friendship, romance, and of course drama and it’s a read that many will enjoy. 

3.5 flowers!

Thank you to Stripes Publishing for giving me the opportunity to review this book in exchange for an honest review. 

Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Blog Tour for Love, Lies and Lemon Pies by Katy Cannon; Excerpt + Chocolate Chip Cookies!

18774729Love, Lies and Lemon Pies
By Katy Cannon
Release Date: May 5th, 2014
Publishers: Stripes Publishing
Genre: YA, Contemporary Romance
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Love, Lies and Lemon Pies, the debut YA novel from Katy Cannon, is the perfect summer read for fans of Sarah Dessen and Louise Rennison. With a Bake Club recipe at the start of each chapter, this book perfectly captures the current appetite for all things baking! Lottie, our narrator, captures the experience of a young teenage girl navigating the world of school cliques, difficult teachers and new romance, creating a world that young readers are sure to recognize. Since her dad died, life hasn't been the same for Lottie - it was easier to push her friends away than cope with their awkwardness. But when the school suggest she joins Bake Club to get her back on track, Lottie reluctantly agrees. But Lottie's uncertainty about Bake Club melts away as she rekindles her love of baking and gets caught up with Mac, the school rebel and another unwilling Bake Club member. Both Lottie and Mac have secrets to keep, and as Bake Club progresses towards an end-of-year competition, the tension rises between the Bake Club members. Can Lottie keep up the facade of her perfect life without the others finding out what's really going on at home? Can Mac keep his demanding, heavy-handed father off his back - not to mention the school counsellor who's written him off as a no-hoper? And can their bubbling romance survive the pressure?
Love, Lies and Lemon Pies Chapter 1

Chocolate Chip Cookies......

As apart of the stop on the blog tour today, I made chocolate chip cookies which was taken from Love, Lies and Lemon Pies. They came out delicious and were so simple to make. Here's how I did it. 

Ingredients 
125g of unsalted butter
225g of soft brown sugar
1 tsp of vanilla extract 
1 egg
200g of plain flour
1/2 tsp of baking powder 
pinch of salt
200g of chocolate chips 

1. Cream together the butter and soft brown sugar in bowl with a wooden spoon or mixer
2. Mix in 1tsp of vanilla extract and lightly beaten egg
3. Add in plain flour, 1/2 tsp of baking powder and a pinch of salt
4. Stir until combined, then fold in the chocolate chips
5. Place spoonfuls of cookie mixture on a greased and lined baking tray, leaving room for spreading
6. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes at 180c until they turn pale gold. 

If you want more recipes, make sure you pick up a copy of Love, Lies and Lemon Pies because it has a ton of fantastic recipes, but not only that, it's also a fantastic YA contemporary read too! 

Katy CannonAUTHOR BIO

Katy Cannon was born in the United Arab Emirates, grew up in North Wales and now lives in Hertfordshire, which is rather flat and green by comparison.

She recently discovered that her great grandmother, Louisa, was one of the first women in India to earn her degree, back in 1916, which makes Katy’s own reading-in-the-bath method of getting an English Literature degree from Lancaster University in the 21st century a little less impressive.

It didn’t take her long to realise that writing stories was much more fun than analysing ones that other people had written. It also meant that she could write the sort of stories she actually loved to read, rather than the ones she was supposed to want to read.

Katy has an unending passion for castles and the seaside, which means she spends a lot of holidays dragging her husband, small daughter and Teddy around the country to look at crumbling piles of rocks, or going paddling (but she does always buy them fish and chips afterwards).

Katy loves animals, and grew up with a cat, lots of fish and a variety of gerbils, and her daughter has recently decided she wants to be a vet. Katy is hoping that the publication of her series, Pooch Palace coming from Stripes Publishing in March 2014, will finally convince her husband to let her get a dog!

Katy is represented by Gemma Cooper of The Bent Agency.

Tuesday, 8 April 2014

A Review for Love, Lies and Lemon Pies by Katy Cannon

18774729Posted by Donna
Release Date: May 5th, 2014
Finished Date: March 25th, 2014
Publishers: Stripes Publishing
Genre: YA, Contemporary Romance
Source: For Review
Format: Paperback
Pages: 336
Love, Lies and Lemon Pies, the debut YA novel from Katy Cannon, is the perfect summer read for fans of Sarah Dessen and Louise Rennison. With a Bake Club recipe at the start of each chapter, this book perfectly captures the current appetite for all things baking! Lottie, our narrator, captures the experience of a young teenage girl navigating the world of school cliques, difficult teachers and new romance, creating a world that young readers are sure to recognize. Since her dad died, life hasn't been the same for Lottie - it was easier to push her friends away than cope with their awkwardness. But when the school suggest she joins Bake Club to get her back on track, Lottie reluctantly agrees. But Lottie's uncertainty about Bake Club melts away as she rekindles her love of baking and gets caught up with Mac, the school rebel and another unwilling Bake Club member. Both Lottie and Mac have secrets to keep, and as Bake Club progresses towards an end-of-year competition, the tension rises between the Bake Club members. Can Lottie keep up the facade of her perfect life without the others finding out what's really going on at home? Can Mac keep his demanding, heavy-handed father off his back - not to mention the school counsellor who's written him off as a no-hoper? And can their bubbling romance survive the pressure?

The Review: Thoroughly entertaining and filled with many heart-warming moments Love, Lies and Lemon Pies delivers in every way!  

After the death of her father, Lottie’s life hasn’t been the same. Her mother has become a hoarder and rather than trying to deal with her mother’s issues, Lottie finds it easier to push everyone around her away including her friends, so she doesn’t have to deal with the embarrassment that her life has become. When her school principal tells her to start involving herself in more school activities, Lottie has no choice but to join the only club that has any appeal to her – the school bake club. She loved baking with her father so surely this can’t be any different? What Lottie isn’t prepared for are the other people who have also joined the club, suddenly Lottie has people around her that care about her – especially the school bad boy Mac. But with Lottie telling more lies than she can count to try and keep her home life private, she finding it’s harder and harder to keep up the act when the people around her are trying there hardest to get close to her. 

This was such a super cute read that left a great impression. If you know me, then you know I love baking. I love being able to make cupcakes or cakes for people to eat, and of course I love reading too. Combine both reading and baking and honestly, this was a perfect read for me. What made it so unique were the recipes at the start of each chapter. I found it very inspiring especially for anyone who wants to start baking, or even if you already know how to bake. The recipes are simply mouth-watering and sound so delicious. I came away from this book knowing I definitely need to try one of the recipes from the book, and also feeling inspired to try something new myself. I also loved that this book is based around a British school. Being British myself, I found the school experience very relatable. I’m so used to reading about characters based around American schools, so this was very refreshing for me. 

The story was absolutely fantastic. It’s fun and made me smile a lot, but then it also deals with some serious issues – like the loss of a parent, teenage struggles like expectations from parents or an ill family member. I really felt for a lot of the characters, not just Lottie because there is more than one character suffering with their own issues. It made it all the more realistic to believe that a lot of teenagers nowadays are struggling with everyday life and hopefully, they have help at hand. 

Lottie is a great main character. She wasn’t perfect but I liked that she had some flaws. She’s dealing with a lot and suddenly, her only outlet is Bake Club. She loves baking. She’s made new friends – even though she didn’t want too. She’s opening up again. Bake Club did wonders for her character. Then there is Mac. He’s Lottie's love interest. Local bad boy who is always getting himself in trouble, but deep down, he’s just a misunderstood teenager. I loved that he wasn’t what he seems and I really enjoyed how his and Lottie’s relationship developed. And of course this story wouldn’t be the same without the secondary characters, and who else is excited Grace will get her own story in Secrets, Schemes and Sewing Machines. The release seriously can’t come quick enough. 

In all, Love, Lies and Lemon Pies is an inspiring YA contemporary romance story that hits all the right spots and I cannot wait for more from Katy Cannon. 

Favourite Quote:He leaned forward and kissed me again, long and sweet. “You know that I want to be with you too.” 
And I did. He’d shown me, through cake, through every moment we spent together and every lie he never told me – even when he told them to everyone else. Will Macintyre wanted to be with me – just me. And I felt like the luckiest girl in the world."

Thank you to Stripe Publishing for giving me the opportunity to review this book, in exchange for an honest review. 
 
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Graphics by Octopus Artis