Cover Reveal and Giveaway!
Today, Shelly Arkon is doing another cover reveal to Secondhand Shoes.
She’s also giving away three books from the Twilight Series and eight books from the House of Night Series.
In order for your name to be put in the drawing you must promise to Tweet, Facebook, and Google +1 this and leave a comment in the box that you did so along with your email, which series you would like, and what you borrowed on your wedding day to wear down the aisle. And I hope they weren’t secondhand bridal shoes that didn’t fit like my MC, Lila.
There will be no rafflecoptors or anything like that. She’s pretty much a self-admitted-techno-moron. Next Friday, October 19th, she will reveal two winners over at http://secondhandshoesnovel.blogspot.com/.
* * * * * * *
THE BLURB
The shoes didn’t fit. It was an omen.
Eighteen year old psychic-medium-germ-a-phobe Lila should have listened to ghostly Gram’s advice the morning of her wedding, “Take off that dress and those shoes. And run.”
En route to the honeymoon, she decides to listen after too many disagreements with her groom. It doesn’t pay to go along to make everyone happy.
Still in her wedding dress and shoes, she escapes out a diner’s bathroom window into the Florida woods despite her fear of snakes and germs with her dead Gram’s direction.
So she begins a journey of finding her inner strength that puts her on a deadly run from her psychotic groom and his deranged friends.
Will she ever get past her fear of germs and snakes? Will she survive her honeymoon?
* * * * * * *
EXCERPT
A screen stood between me and my freedom. I pushed it. Nothing. I pushed it again. It was one stubborn screen. I took off a shoe, scraping a blister. “Ow, ow, ow, ow, ow,” I muttered.
I held my spiked heel like an ice-pick and punched a hole in the screen, ripping the rest with my other hand.
I didn’t want to, but I had to put my shoe back on and get it over with. I jammed my foot into it and stepped. “Ouch, ooh, ooh, ouch.”
The ledge was tummy high. I slung one leg over it, held onto the bottom of the window, got my other leg up and over and shimmied my way out.
There were woods beyond the alley holding the diner’s dumpsters, trees all the way to the interstate’s on-ramp to my right and on down behind the gas station to my left and beyond.
A light wind blew my hair across my face. I looked at the sky. Dark clouds coming up I-75. I looked at the woods. Probably a million snakes in there, I thought.
“Don’t be afraid, Lila,” Gram said.
A half-dozen sparrows flew from around the front of the diner, low to the ground, and into the woods. I followed them in through the ferns bordering the pavement and into the trees. My lacey arm caught on a cypress branch ripping a portion of my sleeve from me.
I walked for at least a half hour. When Max and I left the wedding, it must’ve been mid-eighty degrees. It warmed up since then like twenty more. That was a Florida July for you. The humidity made it almost unbearable. I was sweating, my bodice soaked. The money inside my bra stuck to my skin. It itched. The lace on my one arm and back itched more. I smelled no better than Max did when he got home from work and every winged insect buzzed around me. I smacked at them. A big, black horsefly really liked me. It wouldn’t go away. I thought of Max.
My blisters and toes screamed pre-, mid-, and post-step. The balls of my feet, too. The three inchers got caught in vines, branches, and mole holes. It took a lot to stay upright in the deep leaves. I considered taking my shoes off, but there might be hook worms or some jungle ameoba waiting to feast on my leg muscles, and I needed my legs to get me out of this mess. Mom scared me out of going shoeless when I was little, and I’d never gone barefoot except on Mom’s clean carpets and disinfected floors. I wore shoes or slippers at Cynthia’s. Her mother didn’t vacuum every day. Nor did I taste Pine Sol in the back of my throat at her house.
A hawk flew down out of nowhere and landed on the ground in front of me, tilted its head, and blinked its eyes at me.
The hawk jumped up and down, flitting its wings. He turned and squawked.
“You want me to follow you?”
It hopped onward, looking back at me every third or fourth bounce.
From not too far behind me a male voice bellowed, “Lila!”
Max.
* * * * * * *
CONGRATULATIONS SHELLY! EVERYTHING OF THE BEST WITH THE NOVEL!
Congratulations, Shelly!
Thank you, Alex. And thank you, Michelle for helping me.
I have to work later, but I'll be back to check on things.
I love the excerpt! When does this come out?
Carol:
It's in formatting right now. Soon. I will keep everyone posted.
Congrats to Shelly – sounds like a fun story!!! 🙂
Shelly,
Very cool story, hon. 🙂 I like it.
Michelle,
Cool blog post. By the way, very cool blog. 🙂 Like the setup.
Thank you, April.
Congratulations to Shelly!
Great excerpt. I love that there's a helpful raptor in it. 🙂
Thank you, Golden.
Congrats, it sounds like a great story!
Thanks S.P. 🙂
Big congrats, Shely! Thanks for sharing an excerpt. 🙂
SheLLy. Grr, darn Autocorrect. 😉
Again, CONGRATS!
Thanks Emily! 🙂
THANKS TO EVERYBODY WHO DROPPED BY. SHELLY WILL KEEP US POSTED ABOUT THE LATEST DEVELOPMENTS.
Fun excerpt! "Germs and snakes" are quite a combination! I borrowed my mom's earrings at our wedding. I can't wait for your book to come out Shelly! BTW, I'm also a "techno-moron!" Thanks Michelle!
Thanks Julie! Shelly has worked long (many, many years) and hard to get to this stage!
Great piece and that blurb is so intriguing.
It IS a great blurb! Thanks Medeia!