Thursday, July 2, 2015

Tour: Sarina, Sweetheart



Sarina, Sweetheart by Megan Carney

Publication date: March 5th 2015
Genres: New Adult, Science Fiction
GoodreadsClick
Purchase: Amazon
Her name is Sarina Wocek. Her breath is poison. She was not born out of love.
Twenty-three years ago, government officials traced the budding epidemic of hemorrhagic fever HF186-2A in south Florida to the Wocek family and their adorable six-week-old daughter, Sarina. Her father, Gregory, admitted his role in genetically engineering a biological weapon with pride. She was taken to a lab hidden in a rural area of New Hampshire. She hasn’t left since.
Her government keepers could cure her, but they won’t. Genetically engineering a child to be a weapon of mass destruction, that’s unethical. Refining a weapon of mass destruction that someone else created? That’s just being clever.
After twenty-three years of captivity, she escapes. She crosses an ocean to put her father and the lab behind her, but it’s not enough. When she sees the first bleeding sore, she knows she didn’t leave the virus behind either.
The only way she’ll be free is by destroying every trace of the lab. She only has one advantage; she doesn’t care if she makes it out alive.
I don't even think I even read the description when I signed up for the tour to receive the book so I had no expectations or a clue what it was a bout. This book was a pleasant surprise. I loved how the book turned out. There was suspense of wondering what was going to happen on Sabrina's journey. I loved that this book didn't focus on romance, there was a bit but not the focus which is pretty much a breath of fresh air since most books I've read focused on just that. I loved that this book was unique thriller and interesting to read. This book was unpredictable which made this book all that much better. Overall a great read. I would recommend you lovely readers to check it out.

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Megan Carney is an author, geek and amateur photographer living in the Twin Cities. She has ten years of experience in the field of computer security. Her previous short story publications include: ‘Flighty Youth’ in the Raritan, ‘Modern Mayhem’ in the Wayfarer, ‘Swing By Close’ in the Wayfarer, ‘Directions’ in the Bell Tower. ‘Swing By Close’ and ‘Directions’ both won first prize in the fiction sections of that issue. The Christian Science Monitor dubbed her self-published photography book, ‘Signs of My Cities’ as having “youthful zest.”

Her non-literary creations include: a robot to clean the bathroom tub, Zim and Gir costumes, No-Dig tomato stakes, StickFriend the bear bag hanger, and a burning coal costume so she could be Katniss for a night.



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