Tuesday, August 23, 2022

The Eastie Threat delivers a royal underdog you can root for

 Andrew Einspruch’s fifth book in The Western Lands and All that Really Matters pre-release became available to reviewers I couldn’t wait to read it. I’ve loved the first four books and the intrinsic way he embeds subtle humor throughout the storyline. The Eastie Threat delivers another action-packed fantasy plot with his beloved anthropomorphic characters fans have come to know well. 

The Eastie Threat

 

In The Eastie Threat, the story picks up with teenage Queen Eloise Hydra Gumball III on the throne facing challenges at every turn. Some are annoying challenges like adequate but not good food created by her new chef, but she is faced with big problems and puzzles that consume her thoughts as she tries to learn how to be the Queen.

She is still trying to figure out who killed her mother, and almost no one else seems interested. The advisors she depends on don’t seem to be serving her well or is that her imagination? Plus she has the distraction of a blurry eye and buzzing ear, a left-over side effect from her use of magic to help figure out what she needs to do. If that isn’t enough, the coup de grĂ¢ce is a threat from Eastern Lands Queen Aglandau when she takes the Western Lands town of Flatchburg. She even relocates the Adequate Wall of the Realms to create a new boundary.

Einspruch delivers another well-paced page-turner in the Eastie Threat. Young Queen Eloise is a royal underdog you can root for. Her army is not prepared to meet the threat. Her support staff is inadequate, and she finds out her realm isn’t financially ready to handle everything that needs to be done. While overwhelmed she doesn’t give up, and with each challenge and even her failures, the reader can see the young woman’s underlying strength and at times wisdom.

I recommend The Eastie Threat to anyone who enjoys YA fantasy filled with conundrums, a strong female protagonist, and a little levity (often when you least expect it). I enjoyed that Einspruch brought the original band of characters introduced in The Purple Haze back together for this adventure. The one thing that disappointed me with this book is that it wasn’t quite as funny as the others, but the fact he could fit humor into this book at all with the Queen facing so many problems is an incredible feat. I give this book 5 stars, and I am looking forward to reading book six.

Reviews for Western Lands and All that Really Matters Books

The PurpleHaze (#1)

The Star ofWhatever (#2)

The LightBearer (#3)

The CrownPlunked Queen (#4)

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As Book Hookup, I am a long-time book reviewer and I received this book as a free review copy and have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.

Andrew Einspruch


About Author Andrew Einspruch

Andrew Einspruch is the award-winning author of the humorous fantasy series The Western Lands and All That Really Matters. He's also had more than 120 children's books published, both fiction and non-fiction, that have sold around the world. Starting with the four-book "Dunkin' Dazza" series in the 1990s, Andrew's work has covered everything from basketball to DNA, biographies to histories to mysteries, outback heroes to Christmas Island red crabs, and from how the rides work at amusement parks to how the Australian Government works (perhaps the greatest mystery of all).

Andrew is the co-founder of the not-for-profit charity the Deep Peace Trust, which fosters deep peace for all species. Based in rural New South Wales, Andrew, his wife Billie, and their adult daughter Tamsin run the Trust's A Place of Peace, one of Australia's largest farm animal sanctuaries. The cows, sheep, horses, goats, dogs, cats, and geese, as well as local wildlife including kangaroos, wombats, and cockatoos, are a constant source of inspiration.

If you ask, he'll deny he ever programmed in COBOL for a bank.

 

 

 

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Contemporary, action-packed story of overcoming, healing, and growth

Climb (The Ashley Davies Trilogy Book 1) by Philip Barker takes place in rural Australia. Layers of red dust cover the cars, and fifteen-year-old Ashley Davies struggles to find purpose. She doesn’t care that she doesn’t fit in but longs for friends. As the youngest of two children she lives with her mum and an older brother who is wheelchair bound since “the accident.” But what accident? Why doesn’t anyone talk about what happened? And why did her Dad leave when she was so young?

Climb by Philip Barker

 

When a classmate, Jacob, says her handicapped brother deserves to be in his wheelchair, she challenges him to climb the old rusty water tower. Whoever climbs to the top first gets to let the other’s phone drop to the ground. Ashley is a born climber, and when she wins the climbing challenge, she drops Jacob's phone, and it crashes to pieces. In short order, she is called to the principal’s office along with her mum. 

After getting in trouble, Ashley tries to turn over a new leaf and be a better student. She makes a few friends, and life unfolds with a torrent of events that reveal bits and pieces of the past in her small-town clarifying details of the accident and why her Dad left. As she deals with emotional baggage, the school’s American janitor offers her a chance to enter a climbing contest in Sydney. At first, she dismisses the idea but changes her mind. She loves climbing. To her surprise, when she shows up for training Jacob is there to train for the qualifying contest. To make matters worse, he is to be her climbing partner.


 

When her brother, Cameron, learns she is training for a chance to go to Sydney he offers to help her. As the two work together, he admits he used to be “pretty good” at climbing and he gives her his dusty bag of climbing gear. He teaches her the clove hitch and says, “You don’t even need a partner to climb with you. The knot is your partner. And the only person that you ever need to trust is yourself.” She grabs onto that idea. This way, she will never let anyone down.

Climb is an inspiring YA story about overcoming emotional, physical, and psychological obstacles for all ages. Ashley faces one hurdle after another in her quest to compete in Sydney and prove something to herself and others. When she gets injured, the man training her meets her mum. Can she hide her plans? Or will this put a stop to her dreams to compete? Then she learns the secrets behind her brother’s accident. It drives her to want to prove herself. To show her family is better than what people in her small-town think. This is more than a coming-of-age story. It’s an overcoming story. A story of healing and growth. A contemporary, action-packed story that doesn’t stutter or stall. It’s a story of first loves and finding oneself amid the chaos of the world. In one word Climb is satisfying, and I recommend it to readers young and old. I give it 5 stars and look forward to the sequel, Climb Harder.

As BookHookup, I am a longtime book reviewer and I received Climb as a free review copy and have not been compensated for reviewing or recommending it. This review is posted in collaboration with #Blackberry Book Tours. Some links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to amazon.com and affiliate sites.  

 


Philip Barker

About author Philip Barker

Young adult literary fiction author Philip Barker believes it is important to do something every day that scares you, even if it’s only a little bit; it means you are pushing yourself to experience new things. Through his writing, he aspires to provide his young readers a different perspective, to put emotions into words so that they can hopefully feel a way that they normally wouldn’t, or even wouldn’t want to.

Philip realized in high school that he wanted to be a writer when he discovered that books have the capacity to make him think outside of the established way that was taught to him growing up in the suburbs of Sydney, Australia. He likes to ground his stories in reality and relate them to personal experiences. It is his opinion that life itself is amazing and story-worthy, and there are so many interesting people in the world, all things that he can harvest great writing from.

Philip believes a great story is one that has relatable and interesting characters. Everyone lives interesting lives, and getting to know people is the fun part, even with fictional characters. Having them leave their comfort zones becomes fascinating and often hilarious. To Philip, everyone has a story to tell, and he hopes his young readers learn from his own story that life is complicated and things occur that can often be out of their control. But how they overcome obstacles is what’s important and committing oneself to something with a goal and purpose, like rock climbing, can help ground you.  

When he isn’t writing thought-provoking fiction stories for young adults, Philip enjoys rock climbing, gardening, and watching B Grade movies. His wife, siblings, mother, and in-laws provided positive support and courage for his book and in his life. He lives in the Blue Mountains near Sydney, NSW, Australia with his wife, two dachshunds, Alfie and George, and a rabbit named Abby. Climb is his debut novel.

Author’s Social Media Links:

https://www.abbeydalecollective.com/

https://www.instagram.com/abbeydalecollective/

https://www.facebook.com/AbbeydaleCollective