Book Blitz: Carry Me Home by Jessica Therrien

CarryMeHomeBlitzBanner

The spotlight today is on Carry Me Home by Jessica Therrien, an exciting novel inspired by the true story of a teenage girl’s involvement in several Mexican gangs in San Jose and Los Angeles. You can read an extract from the book below.

WinPlus there’s a giveaway (INTL) with a chance to win one of the following prizes:

  • 5 prize bundles of 10 books each (ebooks and at least 1 paperback per bundle)
  • Signed Hardcover of Carry Me Home by Jessica Therrien
  • Signed Hardcover of Oppression (Children of the Gods #1) by Jessica Therrien

To enter the giveaway, click here.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


CarryMeHomeEbookCoverAbout the Book

Lucy and Ruth are country girls from a broken home. When they move to the city with their mother, leaving behind their family ranch and dead-beat father, Lucy unravels. They run to their grandparents’ place, a trailer park mobile home in the barrio of San Jose. Lucy’s barrio friends have changed since her last visit. They’ve joined a gang called VC. They teach her to fight, to shank, to beat a person unconscious and play with guns. When things get too heavy, and lives are at stake, the three girls head for LA seeking a better life. But trouble always follows Lucy. She befriends the wrong people, members of another gang, and every bad choice she makes drags the family into her dangerous world. Told from three points of view, the story follows Lucy down the rabbit hole, along with her mother and sister as they sacrifice dreams and happiness, friendships and futures. Love is waiting for all of them in LA, but pursuing a life without Lucy could mean losing her forever. Ultimately it’s their bond with each other that holds them together, in a true test of love, loss and survival.

Praise for Carry Me Home

‘A riveting page-turner…Jessica Therrien broke my heart into a million pieces – and then put it back together again. This book will haunt and uplift readers long after they turn the last page.’ (Kat Ross, best-selling author of The Midnight Sea)

Format: ebook (356 pp.)                           Publisher: Acorn Publishing
Published: 26th September 2017             Genre: YA, Contemporary, Thriller

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

Find Carry Me Home on Goodreads

 


Extract: Carry Me Home by Jessica Therrien

“You ready for this, Guera?” he asks.

It’s a test, Guera. Only thing I can say is you’re allowed to fight back. Take ‘em out with everything you got.

I’d heard of people being jumped into a gang before, maybe it was Rosa who told me about it. As the girls start to descend from their spots around the room, slowly closing in like encircling wolves, I know what’s about to happen.

The realization takes hold in my chest, a quick plunge of the heart into an icy lake of fear. I back away slowly out of instinct, ready to run, but there’s nowhere to go. The sound of their skittering feet is the first thing I hear before they come at me. Me against all of them. Me against Rose Tattoo and Cigarette Twins. Me against the jealous novias. Ten sets of eyes glinting with the thrill of a fight. I flinch and turn my back to avoid the fists, but they’re all around me. One of them catches me by the shoulders, holding me in place as the other girls hit the back of my skull. My head flies forward, chin to chest.

At first I don’t know whether to swing or cover. I reach up to protect myself, but there are too many points of contact. The rush of adrenaline is intense. It blocks the pain, but there is a fiery need in me to get away. I try and kick or punch, feeling one or two connect, but the girls are everywhere. An elbow slams against my temple. My head splits and my ears ring. I go down.

Every infinite minute of being the enemy feels like it’ll never end.

Someone’s shoe stomps my thigh. Others strike my ribs. I heave and gag until I can’t breathe. But that kind of terror turns me into a resilient kind of crazy. The kind of rabid mad that is born of desperation. I scrape and flail until I’m on my feet, pulling hair and swinging my fists, making contact with whatever I can. I don’t realize I’m screaming until Toño calls them to a stop.

It ceases the moment the girls hear his voice, and I’m left there shaking and crazed, my breath dragging in and out of my lungs in a feverish effort to return to its normal rhythm. I pant and cry, as softly as I can, but it’s hard to deny my body the relief of all-out sobbing. My head hurts. My brain smashes against my skull with the pulse of too much pressure. I taste blood in my mouth, though no one has touched my face. Now that it’s over, the pain of it all rushes to the surface and makes me want to vomit. I feel like I could die.

Why am I here? Why am I doing this?

“She’s in,” Toño says, and the cheers of the group shock my senses and make me tense up.

They all rush me, and at first I’m terrified it’s about to start again, but instead they hug me and pat me on the shoulder all at once. Each hand on my back or squeeze around the shoulders rocks me with pain, but they’re so happy. Their laughter and cheering is contagious, it flows into me, filling me with a strange sense of pride and belonging. I can’t help my smile when I see their encouraging faces. I even start to laugh.


JessicaTherrienAbout the Author

Jessica Therrien is the author of the young adult series Children of the Gods. Book one in the series, Oppression, became a Barnes & Noble best-seller shortly after its release. Her trilogy has been translated and sold through major publishers around the world, such as Editions AdA (Canada), EditionsMilan (France), and SharpPoint Press (China). Aside from her Children of the Gods series, Jessica is the author of a kid’s picture book called The Loneliest Whale. Her award-winning stories can also be found in a published anthology of flash fiction.  Jessica currently lives in Irvine with her husband and two young sons. She is working on a YA suspense thriller series and a middle grade fantasy series.

Connect with Jessica

Website ǀ Facebook ǀ Twitter ǀ Goodreads

buttonxbt

 

Blog Tour: The Winner by Erin Bomboy

The Winner by Erin Bomboy

As a fan of Strictly Come Dancing, I’m thrilled to host today’s stop on the blog tour for The Winner: A Ballroom Dance Novel by Erin Bomboy. If you’ve ever wondered what it’s like behind the scenes of competitive ballroom dancing, then this is the book for you!

WinIf you’re based in the United States, I can give you the chance to dance away with your own copy of The Winner. Just tap on the link below to enter the giveaway. The giveaway closes on 6th October.

https://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/defcd44e303/


The Winner by Erin BomboyAbout the Book

The most prestigious ballroom dance competition in the United States. Two dancers need to win. Only one can.

Nina Fortunova wasn’t supposed to end up almost thirty, divorced, with her dreams of winning shattered. When she teams up with Jorge Gonzalez, a Latin dancer, to reinvent the flashy Smooth style, Nina must decide how far she will go to win – even if it means losing Jorge. Carly Martindale is doing everything she’s been taught not to do – placing her happiness first by dancing with Trey Devereux, the former three-time champion who’s returned to competition for mysterious reasons. How far will Carly sacrifice herself, so Trey and she can win? Co-workers, then friends, and now arch competitors, Nina and Carly face off to determine who will be the winner.

Format: ebook (328 pp.), Paperback (353 pp.)      Publisher: Curtain Call Press
Published: 20th Dec 2016                                           Genre: Fiction

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

Find The Winner on Goodreads


My Review

I’m a huge fan of Strictly Come Dancing (the format known as Dancing With The Stars in the US) but watching it on TV gives you little indication of the real life drama, the graft, and the travelling that is integral to the competitive ballroom dancing circuit. The Winner lifts the lid on this and gives you privileged access to the lives of the dancers, and to what goes on before and during competitions.  As well as being a fascinating story about ballroom dancing, The Winner is also a terrifically engaging story about two really interesting female characters.

Nina is disappointed in love, thwarted in her dance ambitions, starting to feel the physical effects of her dancing career but conscious of all her mother has sacrificed to enable her to chase her dream of winning. Carly is a perfectionist, seeking escape from a home dominated by the needs of her brother who is low-level autistic, all the time battling her guilt at pursuing her dream when she is needed at home. Nina and Carly, may be at different points in their careers but they are equally in love with dancing – and equally determined to win the top prize in ballroom dancing.

Then there are the men: Jorge – driven, passionate but too finding his body starting to let him down; Trey – handsome, enigmatic, self-contained, guarded, on the comeback trail for reasons of his own.

The author does a great job of conveying the fierce competition, the hard work and the economic realities of competitive ballroom dancing. It’s an environment where winning can bring great financial rewards and an illustrious career in coaching or judging but losing brings nothing.

‘Competition was what was happening right now, right here. It was Darwinian, survival of the fittest, the fleetest, the fastest thinker.’

I really admired how the author managed to communicate the intricacies of dancing and those small elements of technique that separate the good from the great. What comes across is her admiration for the craft of dancing when done really well – the musicality, timing, connection between the couples and the artistry displayed in the various dances.

‘I spotted the winners in the first round…Their technique was strong, but that wasn’t enough to win. This couple had brilliant musicality…This couple toyed with the music, two frisky mice that teased the old tomcat. Holding here, hastening there, they arrived everywhere almost, but not quite, late. They used their bodies the way award-winning actors use speech – meaning forged through pacing.’

I really enjoyed The Winner although, for me, the ending slightly let it down because it covered a period of years in a few chapters and I missed the intensity of earlier in the book. I felt happy for how things turned out for Nina but less so for Carly, although this just proves how much the author managed to engage me in their stories!

I received a review copy courtesy of the author and iRead Book Tours in return for an honest and unbiased review.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin

In three words: Compelling, realistic, dramatic


Erin Bomboy Head ShotAbout the Author

A native of Richmond, Virginia, Erin Bomboy trained as a classical ballet dancer before spending a decade as a professional competitive ballroom dancer. She holds an MFA in Dance Performance and Choreography from New York University Tisch School of the Arts. She lives in New York City with her husband and daughter where she works as a writer, editor, and teacher in the dance field. In her free time, Erin enjoys bacon, books, cats, and wine.

She is the author of The Piece: A Contemporary Ballet Novel and The Winner: A Ballroom Dance Novel. Her next novel, tentatively titled The Pas de Deux: A Classical Ballet Novel, will explore the relationship between a ballerina at the end of her career and the much-younger dancer with whom she falls in love. Taking the shape of a traditional pas de deux, it will premiere in 2018.

Connect with Erin

Website ǀ Twitter ǀ Goodreads 

iRead Website new logo