"To find out what a story's really about,' the Librarian said,

'you don't ask the writer. You ask the reader."


- SNOW & ROSE by Emily Winfield Martin


Showing posts with label Excerpt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Excerpt. Show all posts

Monday, December 11, 2017

Book Excerpt: FLOWER MOON by Gina Linko (MG)


Hello, friends! 

I am so over the moon to be able to share with you an excerpt of one of my most anticipated middle-grade books for 2018 called FLOWER MOON... it is about "sisterhood, carnivals, and summer magic!" Once you read this excerpt you will agree with me that this is definitely a book to keep an eye out and read as soon as it is released!


by Gina Linko
Expected release date: January 2nd, 2018
Published by: Sky Pony Press
Genre: Middle-Grade Magical Realism/Fantasy
Format: Hardcover, eBook


SUMMARY

Tempest and Tally Jo Trimble are mirror twins - so alike they were almost born the same person - and they've been inseparable since birth. But it's the summer they turn thirteen, and it seems like everyone can tell something is changing between them.

Pa Charlie, whose traveling carnival is the best part of every summer, is watching them closer than ever. 
Digger, who sneaks poor kids onto the carnival rides for free and smiles faster than anyone, seems to be fixing for a fight.
Even Mama is acting different, refusing to travel with the carnival this year even though her own twin, who she hasn't seen since childhood, will be there.

And Tally and Tempest are the most different of all. There's a strangeness between them, a thickness to the air, an unseen push and pull, and it's getting stronger. It starts with a feeling, but soon it's sputtering and sparking, hurling them backward, threatening to explode.

When Tally learns that she and Tempest may not be the first twins in their family to be separated by whatever this force is, she realizes she'll have to find a way to stop it - or she might lose not only her sister but everyone she loves. 



EXCERPT OF FLOWER MOON

The light show was really something. Purples and reds, blues and whites, and a couple of umbrella-shaped oranges and yellows. The sparks erupted in the sky, dazzling. They dangled there for a moment before tapering off into nothingness.
I found myself wishing Tempest was with us. She would love this, I thought.
Or would she? She would’ve last summer. But now, she spent more and more time on her own, with her box of bolts and her trips to the junkyard for parts.
I shook the thought away, the smile fading from my face, and I knew Digger’s eyes were on me.
“You’re different,” he said. He lit a bottle rocket and tossed it away from us.
“No, I’m not,” I said, scowling. “You’re different.”
“I guess I am,” he said, and I could hear something in his voice, something new. I didn’t like it. “Playing on the eighth-grade baseball team next fall,” he boasted. “My curveball is the best in three counties.” He sort of stuck his chest out when he said this.
“You’re still a pain in the butt to me.”
And with that, he laughed, his car-engine laugh, and he sounded like my Digger again.
That’s when Tempest appeared out of nowhere, scaring me half to death. “Why’d you leave me behind?” she said, folding her arms over her chest.
I shrugged.
“We didn’t know where you were,” Digger said.
“Fat Sam let me look through his old bicycle parts.”
“Find anything good?” I asked. I was trying to be interested in Tempest’s quest for gadgets galore.
Tempest nodded. “A vintage speedometer. Some cogs and ball bearings.” She shrugged and started to root around in the bag of fireworks. Digger took off across the field to set up a line of bottle rockets.
“Here, let me light that for you,” I said, striking a match for Tempest, who had chosen a big chrysanthemum.
But when I got close to her, there it was. That strange something again, just like that day in the science lab.
But stronger. It exploded between us, pushed me back from her in a jolt of energy, a hissing whoosh of air. I nearly fell back on my behind. I scuttled backward three steps, four, and the force still brushed my hair back. The match went out, and I stopped dead still.
“What in the world is this?” I asked. “You got some invention brushing me back, Tally? You pulling some kind of prank?”
“No . . .”
Digger’s bottle-rocket succession exploded and the noise jolted me.
Tempest and I stood about two feet away from each other, and I took another step closer. It wasn’t like I couldn’t do it; I could. But it was hard, like trying to propel myself through a wind tunnel. The air between Tempest and me, it was thick and fairly pulsing.
I ripped out another match and worked to strike it on the matchbook cover while Tempest eyed me all suspicious-like. I couldn’t get the darn match to strike.
“Let me try,” Tempest said, and then she reached out for the book in my hand. And I could see her struggle, see her eyes widen at how hard it was to push through the space toward me.
“What the heck is—”
            But I didn’t finish my sentence because as she reached toward me, and even before her hand grasped the matchbook, I watched one of the matches spark a weird, blue-purple color. In a blink, the whole book caught fire, every single match in one big hot flame.
“Whoa,” Digger yelped from where he stood nearby.
I hurled the fiery matchbook away, and it landed in a patch of brush near Tempest. The dried grass and brush crackled and caught fire. Tempest took several steps away from me, eyeing me closely.
“You better cut this out,” I said. “You’re—”
“It’s not me.” She busied herself stomping out the fire, and Digger joined in, muttering to himself.
I stared at them, scared to get too close.
When the flames were out, Digger turned his attention back to me. “What was that? You forget how to light a match?”
“I . . . um . . .” I let my voice trail off as I backed even farther away from Tempest, needing to lessen the pressure on my lungs. I snatched my inhaler from my pocket, took two long pulls. It was still there, coming at me in waves, settling between my eyes like a bad case of brain freeze. I didn’t know what to do. I couldn’t get a breath. “You got a drink of water?” I squeaked.
“Yeah,” Digger said, digging into his bag.
Tempest looked at me all funny. “I just remembered, I gotta go back . . .” she stammered. “I promised Pa Charlie . . .” She turned back for camp, and my breathing came easier with each bit of distance Tempest put between us.
Digger’s eyes were full of questions. “Here.” He gave me a bottle of water, and I took a pull. I felt better already, though.
Digger watched me, but I just ignored him like it was my job, draining the bottle of water.
Instead of peppering me with the twenty questions I was sure he wanted to ask, Digger let it drop.
Wonders never cease.
He took off toward the Spanish oak near the base of the hill. I watched Digger’s silhouette as he climbed up into its massive, kudzu-covered branches.
“Come on, Tally, you’re missing the view!” he yelled.
“Uh-huh,” I called. I ran toward the tree, but when I got up into the branches of that old oak, it wasn’t the view that drew my attention. Not the bright sickle moon in the sky or the lit-up constellations in the wide-open country sky. No, it was the tiny, disappearing figure of my sister running back to camp, small and alone, a silhouette against the lights of the carnival and flame of the campfire, her pigtails bouncing with each step she took.






ABOUT THE AUTHOR - Gina Linko

Author of the middle-grade novel, FLOWER MOON, coming in January 2018 from Sky Pony Press.

YA author of INDIGO and FLUTTER, both from Random House Books for Young Readers.



Thursday, September 7, 2017

Cover Reveal and Excerpt: TEN THOUSAND POINTS OF LIGHT by Michelle Warren (Adult)


I am so very excited to be able to share with you the cover reveal to Michelle Warren's next release - TEN THOUSAND POINTS OF LIGHT!!!

See the gorgeous cover and read the first chapter... 
don't forget to pre-order!!!



by Michelle Warren
Expected release date: October 18th, 2017
Published by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Genre: Adult Contemporary Romance
Format: eBook


SUMMARY

Five years ago an unthinkable slashed Cait London's life into two parts:
before she had amnesia and after.
Determined to keep her past hidden and start over, she moves to Chicago and plunges into a new job - all while keeping a walled distance from everyone she meets.

It's not long before Cait reconsiders her solitary existence, and soon she's stepping beyond her boundaries and taking unthinkable chances, like crushing on her impossibly sexy landlord, Evan Wade. He's flirty, annoying, and with him living in the same apartment building, she can't stop thinking about him. If she can sleep with him once, perhaps she can get him out of her system. The problem is, Evan seems bulletproof to her advances. As the two develop a connection, it becomes clear Cait may not succeed before her heart remembers what it feels like to love.

Ten Thousand Points of Light is an immersive contemporary romance about the intensity of first loves, the heartache of loss, and the power of forgiveness. 


PRE-ORDER LINKS

Free in Kindle Unlimited


EXCERPT - Chapter 1

Aggie's everything I'm not. Short. Blonde. Adorable. Outgoing. She knows who she is in every fiber of her being. Whereas I'm a tall brunette with a serious case of high-functioning depression. And let's not forget the identity issues. But I remind myself retrograde amnesia will do that to a girl.

This, at least, is one thing I'm sure of.

Tonight we're drinking. A lot.

I'd like to say it's not a normal thing, but that would be a lie. At least this time there's a reason - a breakup. Hers, not mine. I try to care, but I despise the guy. When I consider her ex-boyfriend Brad's weasel face and condescending personality, my lips draw tight at the corners. 

Still, I'm doing what I sense is my part, being a good friend and helping her forget "that bastard." He is one, no doubt about it. But I'm not drinking to forget their existence as a couple. I drink to do things I wouldn't normally. Like hanging out in a park after hours when there's clearly a sign stating this section closes at dark, or worse, sitting on the hood of a car that doesn't belong to either of us. Nothing too crazy. But under normal conditions, breaking these little rules would make me nervous, give me anxiety, and make my shoulder twitch, twitch, twitch. 

And then there's my highly irrational sense of hope. No matter how small, its dangerous whispers suggest alcohol might have a revealing effect, releasing my lost memories from a black hole of intoxication. 

Aggie doesn't know about my past. No one in Chicago does, which is how I'd like to keep things. Five years ago I woke up in a hospital, scared and near death. When I opened my eyes that terrible day, a line was drawn. The violent slash divided my life into two part.

Before. 

After.

Everything in the before was severed. The life I had was erased, leaving a nearly blank slate. I was a twenty-one-year-old newborn starting over in the after. But it's been a long time since before, and I'm reading to move on. I think.

I blame Aggie. After knowing her, she's changed something in me. I long to be like her. Worry free. Anxiety free. Just... free. She pinwheels through life with her arms spread wide and chin lifted skyward. Even after suffering a breakup she exudes happiness. She can't help it. She's unrelenting luminous sunshine, and I'm just rain. Dark, cold, pelting rain. That's how I know she'll be okay. Me? I'm not so sure. 

Tonight we're at North Avenue Beach at my favorite spot. From this vantage point across a wide cove, we view the spectacular, long-reaching Chicago skyline. Window lights shimmer and sparkle, reflecting on the waters of Lake Michigan.

Aggie trekked here from her condo in Lincoln Park after another disastrous texting marathon with Brad. I supplied the two bottles of champagne we're inhaling, but only after Aggie decided her breakup was cause for celebration, rather than the pout festival she hosted the prior seven days. if it were anyone else, I think there would have been some crying involved, but I'm honestly unsure if the word crying exists in her vocabulary. 

"I need Mr. Right Now." Aggie takes a deep chug from the champagne bottle, winces, and hands it to me.

"Maybe you only need you for now." I take a swig and finish it off with a shiver. I balance the empty bottle on the roof of the car.

"Gross, no. I get bored with me." She flinches. "I need to find a new someone to forget the old someone. It's better to line them up, one right after another."

She hoists her petite frame onto the car's hood. She lies down with her back angled against the windshield, hands settled in her lap. I do the same, gaze pointing skyward, searching for one twinkling star to wish upon. But this is an impossible task with all the light pollution from the city. Not that it matters. All my wishes after seem impossible. My arms settle heavy at my sides. 

"That's crazy talk. you only need you," I say.

"You're so right. I need to get out and sow my wild womanly oats." Her arms flail. It doesn't take much to animate her melodrama. And when she drinks, her cute Southern twang emerges. But the crazy? That's twenty-four seven.

"That's not what I said. Not at all. Pay attention." The sound of my own laughter surprises me. She makes me smile, though she's never given me much choice in the matter.

"I didn't know women had oats to sow," I confess.

"Of course we do. I need to explore more. Bypass all the relationship bullshit for the main event, you know?" She winds herself up and kicks the air with her foot before sliding off the car's hood to the ground. "And you should too."

"Not likely." It's been a long time since I had a relationship. Before. Back in high school or so I've been told. I twist the hem of my shirt. 

"You can, Cait!" Aggie continues ranting about her new plan. "We'll both do it. We'll march right up to hot guys and tell them we want them. We'll write a blog about our adventures, start a YouTube channel, host our own talk show and get famous. The usual stuff."

"Isn't there already an app for that?"

Aggie's incoherent declaration continues without answering. "We've been programmed to fit into this stupid virginal-Suzy-Homemaker mold where guys sleep around and people call them studs, but when girls do it they're called sluts. It's an epidemic. No, it's bigger. It's an international crisis of double fucking standards."

She does a cheerleading jump, arms and legs spread wide. Her blonde hair bounces and hangs midair before she surprisingly nails a solid landing. She gracelessly hikes her leggings around her waist. 

"It's an intergalactic injustice." I punch my fist into the air to egg her on.

"Don't be ridiculous. The point I'm trying to make is there's nothing wrong with sampling the goods. I could say we should explore our sexuality or some politically correct bullshit, but what I'm saying is we need to have fun."

She giggle-snorts with a drunk sway, stumbling to the car's hood. The car catches her fall, and her waves spill over her jean jacket dotted with artsy enamel pins. With a squeak she lifts herself, joining me again. The weight of the alcohol makes her slump heavy at my side. She's winding down. Even the sun needs to sleep.

She continues, her words slowing. "With your job at the agency, you meet a ton of hot, eligible men. I've seen you parade them around the office. They can't help but flirt with you."

"They can't?" I can't recall any man ever flirting with me.

"Don't act like you don't know. And if you don't, start paying attention." She pokes my arm as if to drive in the demand. "The point is, why not have a little naughty time with them in those empty properties you're trying to lease?"

"Because I could lose my broker license."

"It would be consensual sex."

"In a client's property." 

"Making it even hottterr," she slurs. Even though I helped her land a job as our new office assistant, she's been quick to make her own rules.

In my recollection, I hadn't noticed a guy in, well, ever. Not in that way. Not after. Since I arrived I'd been slammed at my job and recently preparing to land an important client. There's been no time for a guy in any capacity, not that I would want one. 

"How do you get over a guy so fast?" I ask. 

"Sometimes I don't think you know anything. How did you make it this far in life, looking like you do, and have no experience with guys?" She gives me a suspicious glare.

I give her my standard answer, the one I always use when I can't make sense of social dating conventions. Ones I probably understood before. "I don't know. Late bloomer?" 

Aggie's face scrunches like she's unconvinced, but always unwilling to leave me unschooled on important issues such as these, she continues with her fast-talk. "There are basic rules to romance universe every woman should know. Brad and I dated for three months. The acceptable equation for getting over a breakup is two days for every month we were together. I should have been over him by day six and it's already day eight. So see, I'm behind schedule and wasting precious flirting time."

"Makes sense. I think." I pause and my thoughts find their way back to where this conversation started. "Aggs, there's someone amazing out there for you, but in the meantime, maybe you should enjoy time by yourself?"

This seems like the reasonable game plan. The safe plan. That's my plan.

"What's that app called again?" She slides her finger across a list of icons on her phone.

"You should download it too."

"I'll think about it," I say, hoping she'll drop the subject.

Seconds pass before Aggie's arms loosen in her lap with her fingers easing off her phone. Her heavy breathing simmers into a purring snore. With her losing consciousness, I rest my head against hers and exhale.

What would it be like to let loose and be different - be like Aggie? I may not want to be serious with someone but why not take Aggie's suggestion? Bypass the crap and have a little fun. 

My lip quirks and I soften at the hazy thought. Under the influence, the word fun sounds nice.

"Hey! Get off my car!" The command pierces the silence. Now alert, I whip my head to the voice and spot a chubby man charging in our direction. I suck in a sharp breath and jab Aggie with my elbow.

"What?" She jolts awake with a grunt and looks around with an annoyed expression.

She rubs her eyes and yawns.

She's moving at sloth-speed, so I hook my arm with hers and drag her from the car's hood. 

When my feet hit the ground, Aggie stumbles at my side. Every distasteful name she growls fades into the background when the approaching man steps under a street lamp and a beam of light catches the gleam of his police badge. Pure fear shoots through my veins as the terrifying thought of breaking the law sobers me. 

"Run!" Aggie yells, finally comprehending my urgency.

My heart beats rapid-fire as I fall into step, sprinting behind her. Mr. Police follows in pursuit, but when I glance back a few minutes into our chase, the poor guy's doubled over with his hands leveraged on his knees, heaving. Aggie spots the same and pumps her arms and yowls with a victorious whoop. She seeks my hand for a high five but misses and smacks my face instead. I blanch at the pain and rub my burning cheek. Clumsiness ignites her raucous laughter. Nervousness releases mine. Like bumbling idiots, we weave beneath Lincoln Park's canopy of green trees. 

Outside Aggie's condo building with the late summer air hugging us, I thank her for cheering me up. I'm relieved and exhilarated by our escape.

"I thought I was the one who needed cheering," she says.

"You know you're down in the dumps is equivalent to my happy."

"Aww, my poor Princess of Darkness. Try to put on a happy face." She pats my arm.

"You sure you don't want me to stay?"

"Nah, running will help burn off the alcohol."

"Or make you throw up." She makes a barfing gesture.

"You're such a child." I wave her off with a conspiratorial grin. When she vanishes into her building, I jog into the darkness of the tree-lined street.

My apartment sits a mile south near the city center. It's a restored six-story brick walk-up in River North. When I reach the top floor out of breath, I stop at the landing and zero in on my apartment door. It's cracked open. 

My entire body stands alert, and I glance around to confirm I'm alone. I didn't leave it open. In fact, I remember locking it before I left. At least I think I did. I rub my head. With champagne bubbles floating through my mind, my recollection's blurry.

Holding my breath, I step forward with caution. Standing two feet away from the door, I press one finger to the wood, easing it wider. It whines, and I freeze at the sound, half expecting someone to jump me. When nothing happens, I continue my visual inspection of the living room. The room is tidy. Quiet. Nothing seems out of place. My purse sits untouched on the coffee table. I exhale and inch one step closer. 

"Hello?" My voice shakes. I'm poised to run back down the stairs if need be. When there's no response, I become bold and say it louder, "Hello?"

Silence.

I step over the threshold, and the floorboards creak beneath my weight. My gaze swings from the kitchen to the living area and down the hall to my darkened bedroom. On tiptoes, I step further inside. 

A loud clanking noise causes me to jerk back with a startled heart. My shoulder hits the wall before I stumble backward through the door and into the hall with a tight scream lodged in my throat. 

"Back here!" someone yells. I placed my hand over my hammering heart when I recognize the husky voice. I immediately want to kill that voice. I roll my eyes and exhale to calm my useless alarm. After gathering my wits, I follow the continued ruckus.

In my bathroom, a man kneels on the floor inspecting a gigantic hole of exposed pipes with the roaming beam of a flashlight. I fold my arms and lean into the doorframe.

When I left to meet Aggie everything was functioning. My gaze examines the small room, picking out details: my expensive towels soak up a deluge of water pooling on the tiled floor, there's a large pile of powdery, crumbled drywall, and then there's the issue of ass crack - in my face. It is toned and tight, but still, it's connected to my landlord, Evan Wade.

"Pipes burst, leaking a damn waterfall into 5A," he says, not bothering to glance my direction.

"Did you have to use my good towels?" I purse my lips.

"I thought about using your sexy lingerie." He eyes the laundry basket of delicates now sitting on top of the sink. "But the fancy towels seemed like a better option."

"Thanks, appreciate it." I sidestep him, snatch the basket, and carry it to my bedroom, hiding it in my closet. If he scrutinized it closer, which he probably did, he would have found an embarrassing amount of granny panties and more sports bras than a Lululemon.

"How long before it's fixed?" How long before I can get rid of you?

"A week," his muffled voice answers.

"What?" I race back only to find his sharky grin. Two vertical dimples slice beneath a permanent, mocha-colored five o'clock shadow. They punctuate his bronzy sun-kissed skin, making his caramel eyes gleam with amused delight. My gaze intensifies.

"Just kidding. And you forgot this one." Evan tosses me a ball of fabric. I catch it and glance at it. My mouth drops open. A smiling kitten stares back from the crotch of a pair of panties. Pu--y panties. My cheek temperature flickers between sweaty hot and icy cold. 

"Meow." He chuckles. 

I shove Aggie's gag gift into the pocket of my running pants. "Funny." I deadpan to appear unaffected.

Still, Evan seems thrilled for tormenting me. It's something he's excelled at since the day we met. It may be I'm still tipsy from drinking, but at recalling his history of irritating jokes, I pause. I cock my head and stare at him in confusion when a doubtful revelation hits me. Is this what Aggie was talking about? Is Evan flirting with me? Has he been flirting all this time?

I shake my head. Impossible. 

"It's too late to get the parts I need. So tomorrow." He wipes his dirty hands on one of my towels, leaving a dark streak. I bite the inside of my cheek to stop from scolding him.

"That;s not going to work. I have an appointment first thing in the morning and I need a shower." I gesture to my sweaty T-shirt.

"No kidding, Cat, I can smell you from here."

"It's Cait, you ass." I kick off my loose sneaker, tossing it with my toe in his direction. I aim to nail him in the head but he dodges away. The shoe ricochets off the wall, tumbling to the floor.

His grin widens. "I'm kidding, Miss London. You smell like roses, as always."

"Seriously, what am I going to do?"

"Can't you use Gusterson's shower?" He quirks a surly lip because he already knows the answer - no. Mr. Gusterson lives across the hall, but I've never seen the man. I'm unsure anyone has. 

For this comment, I kick my other shoe in his direction.

"Ow!" This one smacks his sizable bicep, protecting his handsome face. I suppress a triumphant smile. 

Evan crouches and stands in one fluid motion of sinewy muscle. He meets my gaze and then rakes a hand through his tousled chestnut-colored hair. "Fine. You don't have to beg, Kitty Cat, you can use mine." He puffs his chest and flashes his brilliant white grin.

Definitely flirting. Though I shouldn't be surprised. How many times in the last year had I seen him at Mr. Moon's Coffee House, sitting at a table and flirting with some girl? There were too many times and too many girls to count. 

Evan takes his time sliding past, I think, purposely brushing the heat of his body near me. I pin myself against the wall, unwilling to allow our skin to touch. When will he grasp how annoying I find him?

"I'll pass." I latch my hands on my hips. This is me sending a clear message.

I'm not flirting. 

"Suit yourself." Unswayed, he lumbers for the door.

"What about these tools?" I gesture to his mess.

"I'll be back tomorrow." He turns, arms wide, palms skyward and strolls backward with a confident teeter. He's hitting me with his smile again and those damn dimples like they'll make this situation better. 

My teeth clench. If I had something else to throw at him I would. When he disappears, I remove my cell from my pocket and text Aggie.

ME: Coming back.

AGGS: Did u barf? I knew u would.

ME: No, but I want 2.

Thinking of Evan, I glance at my front door, which he left wide open. His footfalls descend the stairs to his apartment on the first floor. 


ABOUT THE AUTHOR - Michelle Warren


If Michelle Warren had a spirit animal, it would be a tiger in a pink tutu, riding a Harley through a ring of fire. She lives in Chicago, dreams of California but hails from Baltimore. She has a slight obsession with travel, sunshine, Double Chocolate Milano cookies and writing novels. She didn't travel the road to writer immediately. She spent over a decade as a professional illustrator and designer. Her artistic creativity combined with her love of science fiction, paranormal and fantasy led her to write her first novel.

LINKS


Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Book Spotlight Blog Tour (Excerpt and Giveaway): CHARMED (Fairy Tale Reform School #2) by Jen Calonita (MG)


Welcome to today's book spotlight!


Fairy Tale Reform School #2
by Jen Calonita
Release date: March 3rd, 2016
Published by Sourcebooks Jabberwocky
Genre: Middle Grade 


SUMMARY

Charmed is the exciting sequel to the wildly popular Flunked -- second in the brand new Fairy Tale Reform School series where the teachers are (former) villains. "Charming fairy-tale fun." -Sarah Mlynowski, author of the New York Times bestselling Whatever After series.

It takes a (mostly) reformed thief to catch a spy. Which is why Gilly Cobbler, Enchantasia’s most notorious pickpocket, volunteers to stay locked up at Fairy Tale Reform School…indefinitely. Gilly and her friends may have defeated the Evil Queen and become reluctant heroes, but the battle for Enchantasia has just begun.

Alva, aka The Wicked One who cursed Sleeping Beauty, has declared war on the Princesses, and she wants the students of Fairy Tale Reform School to join her. As her criminal classmates give in to temptation, Gilly goes undercover as a Royal Lady in Waiting (don’t laugh) to unmask a spy…before the mole can hand Alva the keys to the kingdom. 

Her parents think Gilly the Hero is completely reformed, but sometimes you have to get your hands dirty. Sometimes it’s good to be bad…


BUY LINKS




EXCERPT

The Magic Mirror’s voice crackles throughout the school, “Let the first annual Fairy Tale Reform School WAND WHAT YOU WANT hour begin!”
            I hear students cheer and wands begin popping up in kids’ hands as we walk through the halls. POP! My wand arrives in my hand; long, dark-gray and nicked like its seen a few battles. What to try first… I’m just about test the wand out, when I feel the hair on the back of my neck stand up. I dive out of the way just as a classmate casts a spell on the girl next to me, turning her into an ice sculpture.
            POP! POP! POP! Kids begin casting all around me. The crowded hallways is suddenly full of talking woodland creatures, toads, fireworks, and a pretty impressive cloud raining licorice. Kids are cheering, fighting, and the sound of all those wands working is enough to give me a headache.
            SLURP!
            The chaotic hallway disappears and a new empty hall arrives in its place. The magic hallways are always changing for security reasons, but I happen to know this hall leads to the school courtyard. More students appear and new spells begin zapping around me. I run out into the quiet school courtyard to test out my wand in peace. The warm sun is shining bright high above the castle walls, making me wistful for adventure. I can never sit still for long.
            “We hope you enjoy your wand experience, but remember, all wands disappear at the hour mark so choose your magic wisely,” I hear Miri continue. I’m relieved to find no mirror in the courtyard, which means she can’t see what I’m up to. That magic mirror is forever tattling on students for bad behavior. “Flying is not advised.”
            “Not advised, but she didn’t say it was against the rules,” I say to myself. I flick the wand over my stuffy, uncomfortable pale blue uniform and turn it into a comfy peasant shirt and pants. I get rid of my ugly school shoes and swap them out for my beloved high-lace up boots. Now that I’m comfortable, I get to the task at hand. I’m sure an actual spell would work better, but since I don’t know one, I just imagine myself flying and bam! I’m slowly floating up, up, up in the air. Score!
            A Pegasus flies by pulling a coach with four students in it.
            “HI GILLY!” they shout and wave.
            When you save your school from a wicked fairy, people tend to remember your name. Even if you don’t remember theirs.
            “Hi!” I say, lying back like I’m floating on a cloud. Wow, this is relaxing. I stretch my arms wide and -- oops!
            My wand falls from my grasp. Uh oh. I begin to plummet, spinning, faster and faster with no sign of stopping. Before I can even think of a way to break my fall, WHOOSH! I feel my body hit a blanket, bounce up, then land again on a magic carpet being steered by my friend Jax.
            “Ten minutes into WAND WHAT YOU WANT and you’ve already had a near death experience?” Jax says, a glint in his violet eyes. His curly blond hair looks white in the bright sunlight. “You’re getting sloppy.”
            “I’m not getting sloppy!” I’m seriously offended by that statement. “How’d you even know where to find me?”
            “I thought to myself, ‘What would Gilly do with wand access for an hour?’ and I knew right away you’d try to sneak home for a bit,” Jax says.
            My usual partner in crime steers our magic carpet over the castle walls and across the vast school grounds. Below I can see students fanned out on castle rooftops, in the garden mazes, near the lake, all casting away with various results. Jax flies the carpet faster, the wind whipping our hair and making it hard to see. I push the hair away from my eyes and strain to see home. There, beyond the gleaming pillars of Royal Court, where the princesses who rule our kingdom live, is my small village of Enchantasia. Somewhere down there, my family is working, playing and hopefully missing me as much as I miss them. The carpet is nearing the Hollow Woods which separates us and the village--CRACKLE! Our magic carpet is stopped by an invisible wall that keeps us from escaping school grounds. Clever of Flora to put the barricade up during wand training. Oh well. Leaving was a long-shot, but maybe I could wave my wand and at least see what my family was up to. “My wand! I realize. “I need to go get it.”


Also by Jen Calonita... 

Fairy Tale Reform School, Book One
Release date: March 3rd, 2015
Published by Sourcebooks Jabberwocky 
Genre: Middle Grade 

SUMMARY

Would you send a villain to do a hero's job? An exciting new twisted fairy tale series from award-winning author Jen Calonita.

Full of regret, Cinderella's wicked stepmother, Flora, has founded the Fairy Tale Reform School with the mission of turning the wicked and criminally mischievous into upstanding members of Enchantasia.

Impish, sassy 12-year-old Gilly has a history of petty theft and she's not too sorry about it. When she lifts a hair clip, she gets tossed in reform school-for at least three months. But when she meets fellow students Jax and Kayla, she learns there's more to this school than its sweet mission. There's a battle brewing and she starts to wonder: can a villain really change?



BUY LINKS




GIVEAWAY
- TWO winners will receive ONE set of Fairy Tale Reform books!
- Giveaway starts on March 1st, and will end on March 31st, 2016.
- U.S. and Canada only, sorry.

(Bumbles and Fairy-Tales will not be held responsible for any lost, damaged, unclaimed, etc. prizes.)


ABOUT THE AUTHOR - Jen Calonita


Jen Calonita is the author of the Secrets of My Hollywood Life series and other books like Sleepaway Girls and Summer State of Mind, but Fairy Tale Reform School is her first middle-grade series. 

She rules Long Island, New York, with her husband Mike, princes Tyler and Dylan, and Chihuahua Captain Jack Sparrow, but the only castle she’d ever want to live in is Cinderella’s at Disney World. 

She’d love for you to visit her at jencalonitaonline.com and keep the fairy-tale fun going at happilyeverafterscrolls.net 




 
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