Blog Tour: A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars by Yaba Badoe

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I’m thrilled to host today’s stop on the blog tour for A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars by Yaba Badoe. Yaba is an award-winning Ghanaian-British filmmaker and her novel is described as a ‘powerful, haunting, contemporary debut that steps seamlessly from the horrors of people-trafficking to the magic of African folklore’.  The gorgeous cover is the work of illustrator, Leo Nickolls.

I’m delighted to say you can find an extract from this magical book below.

Plus, I can offer two lucky people the chance to own a SIGNED copy of A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars:

1) How to enter: Like and leave the comment “A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars”’ on the pinned post on What Cathy Read Next’s Facebook page – click here for link.
2) Winners: Two winners will be chosen at random and contacted via Facebook to provide name and address details. Prizes will be despatched direct from the publisher.

3) Eligibility: UK & Republic of Ireland postal addresses only.
4) Closing date: Entries must be submitted by 11.59pm GMT on 18th September.

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Badoe_A JIGSAW OF FIRE AND STARS_illus Leo NickollsAbout the Book

Sante was a baby when she was washed ashore in a sea-chest laden with treasure. It seems she is the sole survivor of the tragic sinking of a ship carrying migrants and refugees. Her people. Fourteen years on she’s a member of Mama Rose’s unique and dazzling circus. But, from their watery grave, the unquiet dead are calling Sante to avenge them: A bamboo flute. A golden bangle. A ripening mango which must not fall . . . if Sante is to tell their story and her own. Rich in the rhythms and colours of Africa and glittering circus days. Unflinching in its dark revelations about life. Yaba Badoe’s novel is beautiful and cruel and will linger long in the memory.

Praise for A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars:

‘The dark magic of African folklore meets the horror of modern-day people-trafficking in a powerful YA debut told in dazzling style with rich, seductive language.’ (Fiona Noble, The Bookseller)

Format: Hardback (278 pp.)        Publisher: Zephyr     Published: 7th September 2017
Genre: YA, Fantasy

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ Publisher ǀ Kobo
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars on Goodreads


Extract: A Jigsaw of Fire and Stars by Yaba Badoe

There’s only one thing makes any sense when I wake from my dream. I’m a stranger and shouldn’t be here. Should my luck run out, a black-booted someone could step on me and crush me, as if I’m worth less than an ant. This I know for a fact. And yet once or twice a week, the dream seizes me and shakes me about:

‘Kill ’em! Kill ’em! Take their treasure!’ The order goes out and a dilapidated trawler in a stormy sea shudders. An iron-grey vessel, lights blazing, rams it a second time. The iron monster backs away, then with engines at full throttle, lunges again.

Faces contort. Old ones, young ones, men and women, brown and black faces. Screams punch through the air. Fishing nets tangle, spill over. A fuel tank explodes and the sea glows, roiling with blood and oil.

Below deck, a stench like an over-ripe mango oozes from a crouched woman. She shrieks: ‘My baby! My baby! Save my baby!’

A tall man responds with a command: ‘The sea-chest. Fetch our treasure. Quickly. For the child’s sake. Move.’

A figure tumbles into the sea. Then an old man, a girl in his arms, leaps. A deafening jumble of sound and sea swallows the cries of the drowning. The slip-slip-patter of bare feet on galley stairs ascend. Anxious eyes flit in faces bright with fear in the flame-light. The hand of the tall man pummels a pillow of yellow dust, then a footrest filled with glittering stones for the baby’s feet. Someone folds a cloth, a fine tapestry of blue and green, into a blanket.

‘Give her this,’ says a burly, bald-headed man. ‘My dagger to help her in battle. May the child be a princess, a true warrior, valiant in the face of danger yet merciful to those she defeats.’

‘May your spear arm be strong, my daughter,’ the tall man adds. ‘Your legs swift as a gazelle’s, and your heart the mighty heart of a lioness protecting her cubs.’

The petrified woman scribbles a note and hides it beneath the pillow, whispering a prayer. ‘May our ancestors watch over you, my child. May the creator of all life guide you and make you wily in the ways of the world we are sending you to.’      

The grey vessel, a trail of carnage in its wake, surges forwards with a splutter of gunfire. Bullets splinter the deck, tearing it open, and the trawler erupts in flames.

The tall man grabs the baby and bundles her into the chest. He holds it aloft and flings it into the sea. It lurches and almost capsizes. The baby gurgles, entranced by the rough play of water as a wave steadies her boat. She smiles, a jigsaw of fire and stars reflected in her eyes, and she stretches a dimpled hand to touch the moon.

Burning timber from the trawler’s bow crashes and splashes the baby’s face. Enchanted by flying embers, she coos. But when the sobs of the dying reach her, and waves stifle their gasps, she begins to whimper.

And, flung to and fro, bobs up and down, crying in the night.


Yaba Badoe photoAbout the Author

Yaba Badoe is an award-winning Ghanaian-British documentary filmmaker and writer. In 2014 Yaba was nominated for the Distinguished Woman of African Cinema award. She lives in London.

Connect with Yaba

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Extract: Choose to Rise by M N Mekaelian

One of the reasons I love reading historical fiction is that, not only does it entertain, but quite often it educates as well. The book written by today’s guest on What Cathy Read Next is a case in point. Author M N Mekaelian’s book, Choose to Rise: The Victory Within, takes as its subject the Armenian Genocide. I know very little about that period of history – other than the fact that, for political reasons, the UK government is yet to officially recognise it as a genocide.  So I was intrigued enough to accept the author’s offer to read the book. Unfortunately, that won’t be for a little while yet but, in the meantime, I’m delighted to bring you two extracts from the book.

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ChoosetoRiseAbout the Book

Choose to Rise begins in 1971, when Professor Vartan Hagopian has a stroke. With the family around Vartan, now comatose in a hospital bed, the doctor mentions a name Vartan called out prior to the attack – Nadia. The mention of her name prompts Armen, Vartan’s younger brother, to tell the haunting story of their youth. Choose to Rise then opens in 1913, two years before the Armenian Genocide. The sultan has been overthrown and a new government – the Young Turks – has taken control. They rule with a promising hand, yet overtax and subjugate the Armenians who just want equal rights. Then, as World War One breaks out in 1914, the situation changes and conditions worsen. When 1915 approaches, the government’s plan for the Armenians becomes quite clear, forcing Vartan and Armen to find the courage and inner strength necessary to overcome the brutality.

Format: ebook (437 pp.), paperback (436 pp.) Published: 4th March 2017 Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Amazon.co.uk ǀ Amazon.com ǀ Barnes & Noble
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find Choose to Rise: The Victory Within on Goodreads

 


Extract: Choose to Rise by M N Mekaelian

I didn’t respond. If that was the best he could do, I decided to abandon our lazy argument. Now uncaring and distracted, I occupied myself at the back of the cart and watched as the dirt road to the church lengthened as we crawled over it, creating a small trail of dust that would eventually settle over the rolling green pastures. Like a net, the natural scenery around it captured my fullest attention. Something about the beauty mesmerized me: the soft, dancing slopes, the green grass, the dark-blue sky above. The peace of it all. For that moment, as the uplifting and warm breeze moved around my body, I closed my eyes and listened as the wooden wheels turned and felt each rock we passed over.

Simplicity. I had found it.

Once I opened my eyes, I faced forward and watched as we neared the landmark of the area – an old bare tree, uniformly thick that, long ago, bore fruit. Stocky and twisted, it stood alone near the edge of a pasture where a herd of sheep flocked with their shepherds – five Turkish boys that I knew.

I stood up, keeping my balance, and waved to them. From atop their donkeys, with their long, thin sticks in hand, they waved back, smiling, happy to see us once again.

As Armenians who spoke the Armenian language, ate Armenian food, partook in Armenian culture, and lived in our own granted state of Armenia, it was still common for us to also speak the Ottoman Turkish language and adopt parts of the Turkish culture. This came as a direct result of the Moslem Turks and Christian Armenians readily intertwining their everyday lives within the Ottoman Empire.

Thrilled to have seen my Turkish friends once again, I sat back down with satisfaction as we continued to crawl over the scattered stones of the road until we arrived at the edge of the churchyard, to Soorp Asdvadzadzin, our church.

*******

“Armen, listen to me. We have one chance to get out of here, and we have to do it right now. Are you ready?”

His heart beat rapidly. He was scared. I heard it in his voice. I nodded my head.

Immediately, Vartan sprung up and so did I. I sprung up so fast, in fact, that my foot slipped and I lost traction. I threw my arms out and tried to catch myself but fell backwards and hit my forearm on the windowsill. The adrenaline in my body was too great for me to care, so I pushed myself off and plowed through the door after my brother. It flung open, making a hollow woody sound and quickly rocked back to equilibrium. I then jumped off the porch and onto the frosty ground. Everything about our escape was rough; it was loud, hastily arranged, and anything but covert. Upon seeing us, the soldiers snapped their reins high and whistled. They kicked their heels into their horses and started a swift gallop towards us. With one leap from behind, Vartan mounted the horse and I grabbed his hand from the side. With a swinging motion, he pulled me up and we began our escape.

Lowering his chin to the back of the horse’s neck, Vartan reached behind him and pointed to the ground.

“Keep your head down!” he exclaimed. “We’ll go faster!”

As I lowered my head as close to the horse as I could, we increased our speed and I felt the hair of the horse cut through the cold wind as the steady beat of her breath froze in the air. My eyes quickly began to water and I blinked hard to get rid of the tears just so I could see. I then turned to look behind us and the soldiers in the lead took out their pistols and aimed them at us

“Gun!” I screamed. “Vartan! Gun!”

At that moment, a blast went off, and I felt a bullet whiz by so close to my head that I felt it inside my ear. The horse neighed at the disruption as the bullet struck the ground in front of us. Waking up to the realization that all this was, indeed, my living reality, I immediately raised my hand and touched the side of my head to see if I’d been struck. Vartan, too, turned and checked.

“I’m fine!” I screamed. “Go!”

One after the other, and sometimes two at a time, the bullets screamed past us as we rode away. The dirt around us jumped up as my body twisted and turned with the horse as we followed a curved path. The only thing on my mind was to escape. I had no time to think about anything else. Vartan had done a great job of making a getaway, and thus far, it was working.


MNMekaelianAbout the Author

M N Mekaelian is of Armenian heritage. Choose to Rise is the author’s first book, inspired by family history and is the product of extensive historical research.

Connect with M N Mekaelian

Instagram ǀ Goodreads