Title: North Pole Reform School
Author: Jaimie Admans
Date of Publication: November 6, 2013
Genre: YA rom-com, fantasy
Blurb:
Mistletoe Bell hates Christmas. So would you if you had a name like hers. Her Christmas-mad parents make the festive season last all year, and with another Christmas looming, Mis doesn’t think she can take any more. After her carelessness causes an accident at school, it seems like things can’t get any worse.
Then she wakes up to find The Ghost of Christmases Ruined in her bedroom.
She is taken to the North Pole, to a reform school run by elves determined to make her love Christmas. Stuck in a misfit group of fellow Christmas-haters with a motley crew of the weird and even weirder, watched over by elves day and night, she doesn’t expect to meet cute and funny Luke, who is hiding a vulnerable side beneath his sarcastic exterior. She doesn’t expect to fall in love with him.
But all is not as it should be at the North Pole. A certain Mr Claus is making the elves’ lives a misery, and pretty soon Mistletoe and Luke are doing more than just learning to like Christmas.
A YA romantic comedy in which Santa is the bad guy, teaching reindeer to fly is on the curriculum, and zombies have a fondness for Christmas music.
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Suitable for older teens and upwards due to bad language.
Purchase link: Amazon
About Jaimie Admans
Jaimie is a 28-year-old English-sounding Welsh girl with an awkward-to-spell name. She lives in South Wales and enjoys writing, gardening, drinking tea and watching horror movies. She hates spiders and cheese & onion crisps. She has been writing for years but has never before plucked up the courage to tell people. Afterlife Academy is her third novel and she hopes you enjoy it. There are plenty more on the way!
Website: http://www.jaimieadmans.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/be_the_ spark
Facebook: http://facebook.com/ jaimieadmansbooks
Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/oDXZj
Excerpt!
When dinner is over, if you could call two
mince pies and a candy cane dinner, Tinsel and Navi start leading us back to
our quarters.
Luke falls into step beside me. “Hi.” His
green eyes sparkle under the Christmas lights.
“Hi,” I say shyly.
“So this place is messed up, right?”
“Yeah,” I say. “Really strange.”
“I feel like you’re the only normal one
here. Is that weird?”
I shrug. “I don’t know. Nothing has been
exactly normal today.”
“Tell me about it. I wish I could figure
out what’s going on.”
“Are you buying everything they’re telling
us?” I ask quietly.
He shrugs. “It’s too impossible to believe,
and yet I have no other explanation. The fact is I’m in a cold, snowy place,
surrounded by elves. You and I both know that shit like this doesn’t exist, but
somehow we’re looking at it, you know? I’m not a kid, I haven’t believed in
Santa since I was like, four years old, but I just met him. So either this is
for real or they’ve put a hell of a lot of time, money, and effort into a very
elaborate prank.”
“I’m leaning towards the prank angle,” I
admit. “Not that I know who would do it or why they’d want to, but none of this
makes sense to me.”
“Me neither, but these elves… they do remind me of my grandfather, and he wasn’t a prank,
and neither are my ears, sadly.”
“Your ears are cute,” I say, then blush
from head to toe when I realise what I’ve said.
Luke smiles. “Thank you. And for the
record, Mistletoe is a pretty name, but I can see why you dislike it.”
“Are you kidding? It’s got to be the worst
name in the world. I get nothing but insults in school.”
“Yeah, well, try having to hide these ears
from your friends. It’s not fun.”
“Bloody Christmas,” I say.
He laughs. “I don’t think you’re supposed
to say things like that here. It’s probably their equivalent of the F-bomb.”
I’ve been so distracted by Luke that I
don’t even realise we’ve taken another turn.
“This is a side of the dome,” Tinsel
announces.
I look up and in front of us is a wall of
curved glass. It stretches way above our heads, so far up into the night sky
that you can’t see where it ends. The side curves so far behind the trees that
you can’t see an end to that either.
Luke walks forwards and taps it a couple of
times. He shrugs. “Glass. Feels pretty solid.”
“It’s very solid,” Navidad says. “Don’t you
worry about that—nothing can get through it.”
Emily is peering out, her hands around her
eyes to block out reflections.
“You won’t see anything,” Tinsel tells her.
“Firstly, it’s too dark, and secondly the visibility is poor in this blizzard.”
“There might be ducks out there.”
I think it’s sweet that Hugo goes over and
takes hold of her hand. “Ducks would die in that weather.”
It seems to make her feel better. Until she
says, “But they might be inside the dome with us. They might have followed me
here.”
Joe bursts out laughing. “Paranoid much?”
Tinsel gives him an angry look.
“Hey, can you see any zombies?” I ask.
“The zombies don’t usually come this close
to the dome. Sometimes you see one wandering around if they come closer to hear
our music.”
“God knows why,” Luke mutters and if Tinsel
didn’t hear him then she probably wonders why I’m grinning.
“And this seriously goes all the way
around?” Emily asks.
“Indeed it does. There’s another visible
side behind the reindeer stables, but other than that the barriers are quite
far away in the forest. We might be elves, but we do need our space after all.”
We head back after that. Tinsel and Navidad
stop outside the door of the building we first woke up in.
“Elf Wenceslas will let you through,”
Navidad says. “Take it easy tonight. Get to know each other, watch some TV, and
have an early night. Talk to Wenceslas if you need anything, and don’t even
think about trying to sneak out in the night because you won’t get anywhere and
he will know. Wenceslas knows everything.”
“I thought he was too busy looking out on
the feast of Stephen,” Luke says and everybody laughs.
Everybody except Tinsel and Navidad.
“Don’t forget we’ll be here first thing in
the morning for an in-depth discussion of what you’ve all done to ruin
Christmas,” Tinsel says. “I suggest you spend some time tonight thinking about
it.”
“Remember not to judge a book by another
man’s fridge freezer,” Navidad says as they shoo us into the building.
I loved this book! It was so cute!
ReplyDelete~ Yvonne
I saw your review of it :) Glad you liked it.
Deletethx u for hosting ;)
ReplyDeleteYou are welcome :)
DeleteBeing a Gigi (Great-Grandmother) I don't think this is my cup of tea. Thanks for the visit today. Enjoy your reading this week.
ReplyDeleteLol GiGi, I think everyone could enjoy this. :)
DeleteI love this book I just finished it this weekend.
ReplyDeleteIts getting good reviews! :)
DeleteI love Christmas books and I love humour this sounds like the book for me
ReplyDeleteIt does sound really good! I must read a christmasy book myself!
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