Tuesday, February 3, 2015

Blog Tour, Review, & Giveaway: Shutter (Courtney Alameda)

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Shutter
Horror has a new name: introducing Courtney Alameda.
Micheline Helsing is a tetrachromat—a girl who sees the auras of the undead in a prismatic spectrum. As one of the last descendants of the Van Helsing lineage, she has trained since childhood to destroy monsters both corporeal and spiritual: the corporeal undead go down by the bullet, the spiritual undead by the lens. With an analog SLR camera as her best weapon, Micheline exorcises ghosts by capturing their spiritual energy on film. She's aided by her crew: Oliver, a techno-whiz and the boy who developed her camera's technology; Jude, who can predict death; and Ryder, the boy Micheline has known and loved forever.
When a routine ghost hunt goes awry, Micheline and the boys are infected with a curse known as a soulchain. As the ghostly chains spread through their bodies, Micheline learns that if she doesn't exorcise her entity in seven days or less, she and her friends will die. Now pursued as a renegade agent by her monster-hunting father, Leonard Helsing, she must track and destroy an entity more powerful than anything she's faced before . . . or die trying.
Lock, stock, and lens, she’s in for one hell of a week.

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Courtney Alameda
Courtney Alameda's spent her entire career trying to con and cajole people into reading great books. A veteran of the big-box bookstore trenches, Courtney now works as a librarian for the prettiest library you've ever seen, where she spends her time ordering large stacks of YA books, doing readers' advisory, and dressing up as various mythical creatures for a variety of library events. 
Courtney has an affinity for brightly colored lipstick, urban exploration, cosplay, video games, and Twitter. If she's listening to music, it's usually Florence + the Machine, Marina and the Diamonds, Rodrigo y Gabriela, or Jason Graves. Her addiction to Dr. Pepper is legendary.

Courtney holds a B.A. in English Literature with an emphasis in Creative Writing from Brigham Young University. She is represented by the amazing and talented John M. Cusick of Greenhouse Literary. A Northern California native, she now resides in Utah with a legion of books and a tiny, five pound cat who possesses a giant personality.


What gave you the inspiration to write this book? 
Action scenes are constantly racing across the big screen in my head. For Shutter, I saw a girl fighting a massive ultraviolet ghost, armed only with a camera. She piqued my curiosity, and the more I followed her around on the page, the more I came to know about her world of tetrachromats, necrotic monsters, and ghosts. And since I hadn’t seen a world quite like Micheline’s in YA, I knew I needed to put it down on the page.

Who is your favorite character in the book? 
Ooh, definitely Luca! (But I can’t say why, since that’s a spoiler!)

Which came first, the title or the novel? 
Micheline’s character came first, actually! Then the title, then the novel.

What scene in the book are you most proud of, and why? 
This is a hard question for me, because I’m not sure I’m exactly “proud” of any one scene over another. I can tell you, though, that the most difficult scene for me to write was the explosive confrontation between Micheline and her father. The scene leaned heavily on some personal experiences in my past (not with my own father, who is wonderful), so I suppose putting those emotions on the page was cathartic for me. I’ve also liked hearing that the scene has been the emotional “buy-in” point for so many readers, too.

 Thinking way back to the beginning, what’s the most important thing you’ve learned as a writer from then to now? 
What a question! I think the most important thing I’ve learned is to not to want anyone else’s career but my own—not in terms of what I write, how it sells, how it’s received, et cetera. In the last year especially, I’ve learned Oscar Wilde’s is as true of the writing life as it is of our personal ones: “Be yourself. Everyone else is already taken.”

 What do you like most about the cover of the book? 
Probably the colors! But the design is also fantastic from the artwork to the layout to the fonts, and I’ve heard a lot of people gush over it—I’m grateful for that!

 What new release book are you looking most forward to in 2015? 
I feel like I’ll be betraying half a million friends if I don’t mention their books, but I have to say that Dawn Kurtagich’s THE DEAD HOUSE is pretty high on my list. I really wanted to read THE WINNER’S CRIME by Marie Rutkoski until I heard it had a cliffhanger ending, so I’m now going to wait until 2016 and the release of the third book to read it!

 What was your favorite book in 2014? 
Definitely Marie Rutkoski’s THE WINNER’S CURSE, but I’d say that Steve Brezenoff’s GUY IN REAL LIFE was a very close second!

 What’s up next for you? 
2015’s going to be a big year for me, and I hope to be able to make some big announcements very soon! For the moment, suffice to say that I’m working on more projects that blend horror with genres like science fiction, urban fantasy, and classic literature and film, and hope to bring readers more action, chills, and of course, monsters in 2016 and 2017!

 Is there anything that you would like to add? 
It’s release day, so I want t say a big THANK YOU to everyone who’s thrown their weight behind SHUTTER and supported me before the book’s release! I appreciate all of you, and am humbled by your support. Thank you, thank you, thank you!





"Horror has a new name. 
Introducing Courtney Alameda."


"CALL IT REAPER'S INSOMNIA, but the dead wouldn't let me sleep at night. Every time the sun went down, I swore I sensed them stirring, starving. 
Killing."

The first thing that drew me to want to read Shutter was the incredibly creepy cover of the book. I mean it is SERIOUSLY CREEPY. I am not even sure how to describe the creature that is portrayed. I can tell you that it is most likely an evil entity because nothing that looks like that could be anywhere remotely defined as good. 

In Shutter the characters live in a "future" world where ghosts and the supernatural are a common occurrence and there are even specially trained people who fight to keep the ghosts in the spirit world and away from humans. The main character is named Micheline Helsing. She is a tetrachromat--a girl who sees the auras of the undead in a prismatic spectrum. Micheline is a kick-ass heroine who uses her skills to locate and hunt down the supernatural and uses her camera to exorcise the ghosts and capture their spiritual energy on film. Micheline is so strong and determined and yet so vulnerable. I love this about her character. This makes her seem so real and readers can really relate to her. 

Micheline works with a specific group of people that each have certain skills that help them to track down supernatural beings and send them back to where they belong. Oliver is a techo-whiz who also helped to create the camera that Micheline uses to capture the spirits, Jude can predict when death is about to occur by touching someone, and Ryder is the young man that Micheline has loved for as long as she has been alive. Together they make the perfect team to fight the supernatural and keep the balance between good and evil. 

While on one of their ghost hunts, Micheline encounters a truly evil spirit that refuses to enter the camera. This spirit places a curse on Micheline called "soulchain curse" that gives her and her companions seven days to defeat the spirit or they will die themselves. Micheline and her companions then begin a journey to discover the truth behind this curse and the mystery of why she and her friends were chosen for this curse.

I am completely and utterly obsessed with horror stories so I knew that I had to read Shutter. Everyone was raving about how intense and incredibly scary the entire book was.....WOW...Let me just tell you that EVERYONE WAS RIGHT....From the very first chapter to the very last chapter I had chills running up and down my spine...The descriptions that Courtney Alameda uses when she is writing about an encounter with a ghost are just so intense and makes you feel as though you are in the room experiencing everything the character is experiencing.. I WAS TOTALLY FREAKED OUT. 

"A scorpion.
Made of pressed-together corpses. It crawled on four sets mis-matched arms. Human legs fused together to make a stinger that curled over the necro's back--I'd never seen anything like it, not in anatomy class or Helsing's bestiaries or even in stories. Hyper necrotic mutations didn't generally involve corpses fusing together into one huge nightmare."

Another aspect that I really enjoyed was how Courtney Alameda references classic horror stories within the story. I won't give away which ones she references because that would take away from some pretty special moments......

Shutter is full of blood-chilling situations, evil -killer ghosts, death-defying suspense, and the answer to the mystery that no one will see coming.....

I would recommend Shutter to anyone who who reads horror, suspense, or mystery novels because this book has it all. It has some pretty graphic scenes at certain moments in the book so it is definitely not for the faint of heart....but this is what makes it so memorable...Courtney Alameda is absolutely going on my "Authors To Read in 2015" list....She entered the YA scene with this incredible debut novel and "hit it out of the park." Shutter is one book that will stay with me for many, many nights to come....




**The quotes from this book have been taken from an Advanced Reading Copy and are subject to change when the final book is printed. Please refer to the final, finished copy for exact quotes!**

**I want to say Thank You to Feiwel & Friends/MacMillian for the opportunity to review this book!!**









Shutter Blog Tour Schedule


Monday February 2

Tuesday February 3

Wednesday February 4

Thursday February 5

Friday February 6

Monday February 9

Tuesday February 10

Wednesday February 11

Thursday February 12

Friday February 13



4 comments:

  1. I don't usually read in the horror genre, but this book looks GOOD!
    Cheers, Courtney!
    Thanks, Beth!
    Your pal, ~Icky.

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  2. I'm looking forward to THE WINDS OF WINTER.

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  3. I'm most looking forward to Illusionarium by Heather Dixon :)

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  4. I am very much looking forward ti The Wrath and The Dawn also Silver in the Blood!
    ❤️Britt

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