I don't exercise the whole post-book hangover thing well.

I finished this volume last year and stared off into infinite for a proficient 30 minutes before I could process that information technology was over. I kept thinking almost information technology 24-hour interval after day, looking up from my computer screen to think a funny line and laughing like a lunatic to myself. I started request friends and family unit if they'd ever heard of Guernsey, and wouldn't information technology be nice to take a family vacation there?

I likewise seriously considered taking up alphabetic character-writing and then that my future grandkids would take something concrete to hold of my daily life. ("Dear Time to come Grandkids, Today I got upwardly and went to work. I had a coffee while I answered emails." Tin can't y'all just hear the snoozing!?)

Merely I was just so gut-wrenched that I couldn't live in the world of that book anymore.

Heartbreak over lost book worlds is real, and I know I'g non the but one who roams the business firm, kicking the pillows, glaring at the plants, and feeling annoyed that I'grand non, in fact, living a magical grapheme'southward life in a magical place.

I know a lot of people felt this way after they read John Greenish's The Error in Your Stars–has in that location ever been such a heartbreaking and collective volume hangover? And the bad news is, we even so have to wait two more months for Turtles All the Way Downward, John Greenish's first volume after The Fault in Your Stars phenomenon.

Two. Whole. Months.

Is eternity stretching earlier you yet?

Luckily, I came upwardly with a handy coping mechanism for you: Step 1: lock self in house. Step 2: couch into bed. Step iii: have a nap for the adjacent 1,440 hours.

OR.

Just in case you're more of a read-to-laissez passer-the-time type (and something tells me you lot are), I accept a back-up plan. It goes similar this:

Wouldn't it be nice if there were a way to fill the next two months with books that would bring us back to the glory days of start reading The Error in Our Stars? Books that would remind us of the thrill and heartbreak we felt when nosotros get-go met Augustus and Hazel? Books that would reignite our John Light-green fandom and fill The Fault in Our Stars sized hole in our hearts?

If merely there were V such books. Because subsequently all, two months is a long time, and our adjacent John Green inspired YA reads are going to whiz right by.

IF ONLY.

You lot know I've got your back, right? Well, more specifically, our wonderful Stonesong intern, Lydia DuBois, has our backs! Hither's Lydia with the YA book recommendations you need to tide you over until Turtles All the Fashion Downwardly releases:

5 YA books to read if you lot dear John Green

books to read if you love John Green

(By the mode, we merely recommend books we've read or that nosotros're genuinely excited about reading ourselves. Life'southward too short to read mediocre books. But if you do feel like picking upward one of these, information technology'd be neat if yous bought them through one of the Amazon Acquaintance links below. It supports the many hours of piece of work this team of two put into this little corner of the web!)

past Lydia DuBois

Turtles All the Way Down, scheduled to exist released on October 10, is generating about palpable fizz—the kind most writers would practice annihilation for. And the hype is more a picayune contagious—I've already said yes to pre-ordering the book, and based on its superlative x ranking on Amazon, I'm not the only one.

But ii months is a long fourth dimension to wait for Turtles All the Way Downwards. And so if you're bounce-upwardly-and-downwardly excited for some other read like The Mistake in Our Stars, only you're not sure how to venture exterior John Green territory, let me pave the path. I had my Hazel and Augustus kick iii years ago and have since added 100+ titles to my Goodreads. Here are 5 books I've carefully selected every bit perfect next books for fans of John Green.

five YA books you'll dear if y'all're a John Green fan

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl review

Me and Earl and the Dying Daughter

by Jesse Andrews

Thematically speaking, this is the most similar The Fault in Our Stars. Me and Earl and the Dying Daughter by Jesse Andrews is an upper YA contemporary novel, featuring teens with cancer, an honest and comical phonation, and unexpected shenanigans. But while the centre-wrenching beloved story of Hazel and Augustus generates all the girly feels, Greg and Rachel'southward relationship steers away from romance to platonic friendship feels. Equally Greg puts it succinctly: "This isn't a touching romantic story."

Jesse Andrews' male person-driven narration will also sense of taste differently than John Green's female-driven narration, and Greg is more of an oddball than Hazel, specially with his preference for bizarre filmmaking with Earl instead of the intellectual book banter of The Fault in Our Stars. In many respects, Me and Earl and the Dying Daughter is even more than raw and realistic about teen tragedy and angst than The Fault in Our Stars.

Disclaimer: The language is too more explicit, so if that's non your thing—although it pains me to say it—yous could skip the book and sentry the movie (here's the motion-picture show trailer for Me and Early on and the Dying Daughter).

Before I fall by Lauren Oliver book review

Before I Fall

by Lauren Oliver

Imagine that a single day in your life—the day of your decease—is stuck on repeat. For popular loftier school senior Samantha, that becomes her tragic reality in Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver. Y'all won't find teens with cancer in this story but you will detect teens in car crashes pondering catholic questions that echo those in The Fault in Our Stars.

Notwithstanding Before I Fall has a mystical layer that stirs end-of-life amende into the existential mix—think Beastly by Alex Flinn just with spurts of romance rather than a romantic nucleus. The setting is also tethered to loftier school and doesn't constitutional as broadly as Amsterdam or church basements like The Fault in Our Stars does.

Before I Fall is a trivial lengthy, but the pages will flip past in a thrilling bleep. And like John Green and Jesse Andrews, Lauren Oliver likewise scored a movie accommodation for her novel (lookout the moving-picture show trailer for Before I Fall here).

Just One Wish Janette Rallison Book review

Just One Wish

by Janette Rallison

No matter how one-time I get, this volume will remain one of my favorites. Janette Rallison isn't one of the most known authors, merely But One Wish is a gem. It skews slightly younger than The Mistake in Our Stars, but Rallison has a knack for creating relatable, witty, and bold YA female characters, and Annika is no exception. She bravely sets out on a quest to Hollywood to grant the wish of her younger brother who has cancer: He wishes for a visit from his teen telly idol, Robin Hood, and Annika won't caput dwelling house without the actor in tow.

Aye, the concept of this novel is non the virtually realistic. Yes, information technology feels about silly at points. And yep, the romance angle is too-goodhoped-for-true, totally girly-teen, but I love Rallison'due south combination of fairytale and tragedy. This novel is lighter than The Error in Our Stars, but if John Green yanked the tears out of you (like he did to me), Only One Wish past Janette Rallison will do the aforementioned.

Just Listen Sarah Dessen book reviewThe truth about forever sarah dessen book review

Just Listen & The Truth Most Forever

past Sarah Dessen

I grappled with which Sarah Dessen novel would win a spot on this list, simply when information technology came downwards to But Mind and The Truth About Forever, I but couldn't choose. So here'south both:The Truth Most Forever deals with decease, so it'southward well-nigh similar to The Fault in Our Stars, but I as well remember you'll dearest Annabel and Owen's story in Merely Listen.

Annabel and Owen'southward story in Merely Listenvolition resonate with fans of Hazel and Augustus's story in The Fault in Our Stars. Neither human relationship is perfect, and all 4 characters are pensive young adults searching for how to honey a flawed life, love each other, and love themselves.

Although cancer and teenage decease are not among the threads woven into Just Heed, Sarah Dessen covers a lot of ground in the land of heavy topics, from eating disorders to social ostracism to anger management. Annabel'southward desire to continue everyone at a safe distance from her issues is very like to Hazel'south instincts in The Mistake in Our Stars, and Augustus and Owen share a liking of philosophical deliberations and tough-dearest truths. Simply while books dominate Hazel and Augustus discussions in The Error in Our Stars, music governs Annabel and Owen conversations in But Heed.

If you are itching for a novel with a stronger dose of the romance seen in The Fault in Our Stars, Just Mind (or whatsoever Sarah Dessen book, really) would brand a perfect side by side read.

Bonus John Green trivia: What does Turtles All the Mode Down mean?

Wondering what is the pregnant of Turtles All the Style Downwards? Well, Turtles All the Fashion Down seems to exist named past John Green afterwards an expression in cosmology that's similar to the chicken-or-the-egg trouble.

One possible explanation of the "Turtles all the way downward" meaning is thought to come from Harvard psychologist and philosopher William James. The story goes like this:

After a lecture on cosmology and the construction of the solar arrangement, William James was accosted by a little old lady.

"Your theory that the sun is the eye of the solar organization, and the earth is a brawl which rotates effectually it has a very convincing band to it, Mr. James, but it's wrong. I've got a ameliorate theory," said the little old lady.

"And what is that, madam?" Inquired James politely.

"That we live on a crust of world which is on the back of a behemothic turtle,"

Not wishing to demolish this absurd piddling theory by bringing to behave the masses of scientific evidence he had at his control, James decided to gently dissuade his opponent by making her run across some of the inadequacies of her position.

"If your theory is right, madam," he asked, "what does this turtle stand on?"

"You're a very clever human, Mr. James, and that's a very good question," replied the little one-time lady, "but I have an respond to it. And it is this: The first turtle stands on the back of a 2d, far larger, turtle, who stands direct under him."

"But what does this second turtle stand on?" persisted James patiently.

To this the picayune former lady crowed triumphantly. "It's no utilise, Mr. James – it'southward turtles all the style down."


Do you love books? Utilise to exist a Stonesong intern!

what kind of reader are you

If you lot (or someone you lot know) loves books, writing, and learning nearly the publishing industry, apply to be a Stonesong intern! The internship runs for the Fall 2017 semester, with the potential to extend into Bound 2018 or Summer 2018. We have a not bad batch of interns every year, and many accept gone on to positions at literary agencies, publishers, and other academic jobs.

This position, in item, would be working closely with me and would requite the candidate experience in digital marketing and online writing by as well working backside-the-scenes hither at cooks & books. The hourly commitment is flexible–we've had interns work 6 hours or 16 hours in semester, and 20 to 35 hours in the summer. Working remotely is encouraged in semester, with the possibility of working in our NYC offices in the summer.

English or journalism majors preferred; candidates must receive college credit for the internship from their university in order to qualify. Please ship your resume and cover letter to maria @ cooksplusbooks . com earlier August 16th.


What I'thou reading this week

Here (with 2 Years of Exhausting Photographic Item) Is How To Write A Book (Ryan Holiday on Medium): Ryan Vacation is a bestselling writer and counselor to other bestselling authors, and here he lays out, in infinitesimal detail, exactly how he wrote his newest volume, Perennial Seller. Yep, information technology's less glamorous than you'd recollect, and yes, actually doing the work is the only way forward.

The Reader'due south Platonic Coffee Den (Celine Depression on Book Riot): Hither are the 7 things readers need in a good java store–did they cover your must-haves?

iv Resources for Women Interested in Travel Writing (Allison Yates on The Write Life): Practise you dream of traveling and writing about it? Here's a great place to start for making it happen!

Some of the newest cookbooks look like comics. Just does that piece of work for readers? (Charlotte Druckman for The Washington Mail service): "Some of these books adopt the visual structure of graphic novels, while others include sketched guides to working with ingredients, and withal others utilise colorful pictographs. They all fuse words and images and deviate from the standard format. Just specially for readers unaccustomed to the unconventional layout, how usable are they?"

Using Amazon Ads to Sell a YA Novel: A Detailed Analysis (Deanna Cabinian on JaneFriedman.com): I beloved when authors open upwardly and share the details and numbers behind their volume marketing efforts. There only isn't a better manner to effigy out if something like ownership ads would work for you, and it saves you a whole ton of trial-and-error.


What we're eating this calendar week

We're out at the subcontract in Ann Arbor this week, and let me tell you lot, we have been eating SO incredibly well. And so well, in fact, that Jarrett was seriously because going on some sort of fasting diet when nosotros get home to recalibrate himself. You know it'southward bad (and and so worth it) when the hungriest person y'all know threatens to quit nutrient. Here'southward how it happened:

Sat: A smorgasbord of minor plates at Mikette in Ann Arbor, and since every one of them was then good, nosotros couldn't get out a scrap of food behind. Try the housemade fennel sasuage if you're ever in that location!

Sunday: I cooked a Turmeric and Yogurt Roasted Craven from my author Nik Sharma'south manuscript, and it was heavenly. It'due south this bang-up recipe where you marinate the chicken in a turmeric yogurt sauce before roasting, which tenderizes the meat, adds extra well-baked to the pare, and turns the whole affair a rich, golden color. Picket for his cookbook next fall from Chronicle Books!

nik sharma cookbook a brown table

Monday: Out to Spencer with some of Jarrett'south loftier schoolhouse friends, where we ate an unspeakable amount of stracciatella (the cheese, not the gelato or the soup) and tempura-battered chickpeas with sumac. Take me back.

Tuesday: The about wonderful backyard barbecue! What's better than having friends over in the middle of the calendar week and eating exterior together? We had such a summery spread, also: fresh corn, burgers, brats, roasted broccoli, roasted beets from a neighbor's garden, bootleg pickles, deviled eggs, Zingerman's cheeses, fruit salad, key lime pies, wine, wine, wine. Actually, accept me back to Tuesday dark instead!

best book blog

Midweek:Bigalora, which for some reason is 1 of those restaurants that puts me at ease. (It could be the pizza, but let's pretend I'thousand deeper than that.)

Th: We're on the road from Ann Arbor to Alexandria, and I shall not speak of the deplorable road dinner that will exist had.

Friday: Pasta! Tossed together pasta with garden vegetables that is. A very generous farm neighbor gave us the biggest, most glorious basket of vegetables you lot've ever seen, and I can't even put into words how happy that makes me. I spend well-nigh 20% of my existence lament about how expensive/bad most tomatoes are, and then now that I accept about a calendar week's worth of tomatoes-so-good-you-can't-buy-them, I'll demand to find something else to do with that 20% of my time. Acme contenders are: eating pasta, eating tomatoes, talking virtually eating pasta and eating tomatoes, and finding a new hubby considering Jarrett is sick of my single topic conversations.

Cheers!