Sara Raasch's Blog, page 453

September 1, 2014

*squee*

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on September 01, 2014 05:01

August 29, 2014

Every scene in this show was gold.









Every scene in this show was gold.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 29, 2014 15:49

Psst...



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 29, 2014 15:01

TRUST ME, I'M A NINJA released!

TRUST ME, I'M A NINJA released!:

nataliewhipple:




Book #2 in the I’m A Ninja series is officially available for purchase! Grab it quick, and I hope to see you at some of my upcoming events.

Oh happy day! All my books this year are officially released and now I’ll be taking the most epic nap ever. A much needed break from writing awaits me.



NINJAAAAAAAAAS

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 29, 2014 11:00

August 27, 2014

aelfethart:


There's nothing to fear. T r u s t m e

Thank...





aelfethart:




There's nothing to fear. T r u s t m e

Thank you so much for being 2k followers!! \(*T▽T*)/


I did not expect this response when I created my artblog, so have all my love in Jelsa fanart form! (◡‿◡✿)

[ Like it on IG! ]



1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 27, 2014 16:48

Photo



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 27, 2014 12:33

Kirkus! Review!

GUYS! 


Kirkus reviewed SLA! Behold!



A carefully crafted fantasy grapples with intense issues.


In Primoria, the world protagonist Meira inhabits, there are eight kingdoms: four Seasons, in a perpetual state of the season they’re named for, and four Rhythms that cycle through all four. Meira is one of the remaining eight free Winterians: Sixteen years prior to the opening of the book, King Angra of Spring attacked Winter, slaying its queen, destroying its Royal Conduit (a locket used by a female ruler to magically aid her country) and enslaving the surviving Winterians. Attempting to reclaim half the locket, Meira is captured but almost instantly escapes due to quick thinking and her military training—a feat that Raasch makes surprisingly believable. Her complicated relationship with Mather, heir to the Winterian throne, is put on hold when Spring scouts follow her to camp and the refugees must flee to the Rhythm of Cordell—where Meira meets the instantly likable Prince Theron and discovers she’s very much a pawn in a bigger game. The dramatic twist toward the end is impressive both in its believability and its unpredictability. Unfortunately, Raasch’s world is racialized, and the heroic Winterians are pale and beautiful. While the villain is also fair-skinned, the choice to valorize whiteness is perhaps ill-considered given the fraught history of racial stereotyping in high fantasy.


This heavy high fantasy manages moments of humor and beauty for a satisfying read. (Fantasy. 12 & up)



Firstly, I love that whoever did this review clearly has knowledge of the fantasy genre. SQUEE.


Secondly, they brought up an issue that I knew I’d run into eventually, especially with Book 1 — race. 


There are a lot of white people in SNOW LIKE ASHES. This is due in part to the fact that in Book 1 we only really deal with three of the eight kingdoms — Winter, Spring, and Cordell.


Winterians have WHITE WHITE skin. Like, comically white. Like quite literally ivory. They’re Winterians — it’s their kingdom, their culture, just as much as the Summerians have darker skin (which will come into play in Book 2 — diversity yay!). All of the Season Kingdoms are, in my head, progressively darker than the last — Winter is lightest, then Spring with slightly darker skin (more what we think of when we think caucasian), then Summer with much darker (more a tan/bronze color), then Autumn (the darkest, a really really deep, dark brown).


(And that’s not even touching on the other three Rhythms…)


We get a little glimpse into Autumn at the tail end of SLA (not nearly a long enough glimpse), but other than that, yeah, this book is super white. Which was a mistake on my part, and I apologize in advance for the sheer WHITEness of SLA. I did NOT intend for the literal whiteness of the Winterians’ skin to be anything but a trait of their heritage. They’re the Kingdom of Winter — it seemed natural, in my head, for them to have all white features, as a kind of camouflage-with-their-environment evolutionary (er, well, magical) result. But I can see how this might be construed badly, and I apologize.


But I swear up and down and all around that the next books will involve more of the other kingdoms, and the world will expand and depict an equal balance of diversity, as our world does. We get to meet some amazing characters who come to be hugely important to Meira/the story, like the princess of Summer, Ceridwen, and the heir of Autumn, Shazi, and I am so so so excited for you guys to get to know them. 


I’m severely jumping ahead, though — yes, so, Kirkus review! Valid points! Diversity yay!

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 27, 2014 06:20

August 26, 2014

I'm 40% through Snow Like Ashes!

readingperks:



Here are my reactions so far (if you’ve read it you can try to guess to what events):


When a certain girl kicks butt:


image


When a certain boy does a certain thing to a certain girl:


image


When that same boy does a certain upsetting thing to the same girl:


image


When a certain girl is surrounded by certain shirtless boys: image



THIS IS WONDERFUL.

1 like ·   •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on August 26, 2014 12:01