Date to be
Published: ebook Release June 2012
Synopsis:
Mormon
girl Leesie has life figured out until devastated Michael lands in her small
town high school. He needs her like no one has before. A rare journey
into a faithful LDS teen’s intimate struggle.
Links
to Buy:
"[Morrison]
handles the topics of religion and premarital sex gracefully without passing
judgment. The message has less to do with religion than learning to
respect and cherish others while staying true to one’s own beliefs.” –
Publisher’s Weekly, starred review
Brand new paperback and reformatted ebook with fully scalable fonts. Includes bonus, never-before-published scene, "Airport Good-bye!"
Brand new paperback and reformatted ebook with fully scalable fonts. Includes bonus, never-before-published scene, "Airport Good-bye!"
Angela Morrison is the award-winning YA author of Taken by Storm (Books 1-3) and Sing me to Sleep. She graduated from Brigham Young University and holds an MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts. She grew up in Eastern Washington on the wheat farm where Taken by Storm is set. She's an advanced NAUI, Nitrox certified scuba diver. The hurricane that kills Michael's parents was inspired by a real-life diving accident.
After over a decade in Canada, Switzerland, and Singapore, Angela and her family are happily settled in Mesa, Arizona. She enjoys speaking to writers and readers of all ages about her craft. She has four children--mostly grown up--and the most remarkable grandson in the universe.
10
Year Anniversary
Ten years ago
this week, Taken by Storm's scuba-diving hero, Michael, swam
out of Angela's brain and onto her page. Join the anniversary
celebration! Win your own copy of the brand new paperback!
Snag Taken by Storm's Kindleebook for only $ .99! Unbroken Connection (Book 2) and Cayman Summer (Book
3) are free on Kindle! Hurry. The promotion ends Friday, July
20th. Don't own a Kindle? Download free Kindle apps for your
laptop, tablet, iTouch, or phone.
Meet Michael:
from Michael's Dive Log,
Chapter 1, Taken by Storm,
"Before"
The
dive starts perfect. Perfect water. Perfect sky. Perfect wall. The ocean,
warm, flat, perfect. I leave my wetsuit drying on
the Festiva’s dive deck. Saltwater slips silky over my skin like
Carolina’s caress.
Jeez,
I miss her. Caroleena. She insisted on Spanish pronunciation. I
thought this trip would help, but I can’t forget lying in the sun,
curled together, my face lost in her thick black hair, holding on. Three
months. Every day. More when she felt like it. I always felt like it,
but I didn’t want to use her.
She
dumped me on my butt when I took off to dive all summer at the condo. I
wanted to bring her to Florida. Keep her close. Keep her safe. But
she had to stay in Phoenix and work. Her family’s got nothing. And Mom
flipped when I mentioned it was a shame the sofa bed in the living
room would be empty. Dad was cool with it. He’s cool with
everything. It should have been Carolina and me all summer, diving.
The
creep b-ball jock she’s with now is after one thing, as much as he can
get. Possessive, too. Freaked when I called her from the Keys. And
when we were all back at school, she wouldn’t even look at me. Dad knew
something was up, let me cut a week for the club’s annual “hot deal”
hurricane season trip. So, I’m scuba diving my brains out, free
diving whenever I can get a spotter, trying not to think about that
jock pawing my Carolina.
Love.
Makes me crazy. All of it. You get so close, like she’s part of you. And
then she’s gone. You ogle the smiling waitress on the boat, who has
your girl’s hair and wears a loaded bikini top and a sarong slung
dangerously low. You appreciate the view while she serves you a
virgin pina colada, but you still ache inside because now you’ve got a
hole in your ribcage that won’t fill, a gash that heals way too slow.
Salt
water’s my therapy of choice. [cut excerpt here for shorter post . . .but
feel free to use the entire dive log]
I
swim my makeshift free-dive raft, Dad’s old scuba vest packed with
everything we’ll need, out to the wall. Mom’s late.
Lame.
I know. Diving with Mommy. But she’s missing her scuba dive with Dad this
a.m. to lie face down on the water all morning watching a
breath-holding fanatic sink head first into the ocean. I got to give her
props for that.
Spread
out, Dad’s BC, the scuba vest, makes a decent place to hang between dives.
I blow air into it until it bounces on top of the water and wonder if
I’ll get that dive kayak I want for Christmas. I tie my diver-down flag to
the BC raft and hook it all up to the buoy marking the edge of the
reef. The ocean floor drops off hundreds of feet here forming
a sheer coral wall. Still no scary pink slashed shark bait wetsuit
jumping off the Festiva and finning toward me. It’s okay.
We’ve got all morning.
Good
old Mandy in Florida used to spot me. That was in no way lame. I faked
shallow-water blackout all the time so she’d have to swim down, wrap
her sexy body behind mine, pull me to the surface, and resuscitate me.
Mandy. Another hole in my guts.
I’m tired
of waiting. I sling my weight belt around my hips and cinch it tight. A
few more pounds of muscle mass to my core and I won’t need the
weights. I’ve got my body taught and toned. I can hold my breath forever.
My heartbeat even goes slow-mo when I free dive. Total
control.
I pop a quick sixty-footer down to the reef, bop with the juvie fish—yellow and black, blue, purple. Wish I could shrink down to their size and dart in and out of a coral mound happy, careless, flitting, free. Easy to be a fish. I wouldn’t make a freak of myself like yesterday when I finally talked to that waitress. She looks eighteen, twenty tops.
I took my drink
to the bar for a refill. “You want to hang out with me on your break?”
Chicks
usually say, “Yes.” Babes hit on me way more than I hit on them. Even the
older ones. I think it’s the hair. Boring brown, but it went wavy
post-manhood. I keep it long. Girls can’t resist. I don’t take up their
offers as much as I could. Mom’s got this thing about respect.
But
my waitress didn’t say, “Yes.” She pushed her own thick, black, sexy hair
that whispered, “Carolina,” out of her eyes and smiled to let me down
easy. “I don’t think so.”
“Come
on. There’s nobody up on the bow. You could work on your tan.”
“Tan?”
She’s Hispanic, gorgeous golden all over.
“Pretend.”
I ran my finger down her arm. We both felt it. That charge when it’s
right.
She
didn’t get uptight and jerk away from me. I was getting to her. “And what
will you do?” She blinked slow. Her mouth opened slightly as she
exhaled.
I
traced her fingers. “I’m pretty good with lotion.”
She
laughed again, throaty, teasing. “Sorry.” She pulled away then. “Next
break the Captain lets me call my kids.”
No
lie. She handed me a picture. Three brown faces tumbling over each other.
They stay with her mom up in Belize City. She misses them pretty bad.
I felt sorry for her. Wanted to do something. I mean here’s this young,
beautiful girl stuck serving drinks to creeps like me until her looks
go. I wish I could get Dad to hire her, but I don’t think she types. I
laughed it off, hung out with her while my drink melted. The whole
thing made me feel useless.
So
much easier to be a fish.
I
leave the juvies playing hide-and-seek in the coral’s tiniest caves and
swim over to the wall for a look. Nice. Steepest one we’ve been on.
Blue, deepening to bluer, deepening to a thousand feet of blue. Perfect. I
know I can break a hundred.
Today.
Every
time I tried at the condo last summer, either the waves were too high or
the currents too strong. That’s the Keys. None of that here. I turn
away from the promising depths and swim toward sunshine.
When
I break the surface, Mom’s all over me. “Dammit, Michael, you supposed—”
“Just
warming up. Not a real dive.” I suck up. “Never without a buddy.” I duck
under the BC raft, grab the weight belt I brought for her from the
vest’s pocket, and surface.
“It
looked like a real dive to me.” Mom fastens the belt, kicking slow to stay
afloat.
I
grin and give her a saltwater kiss on the cheek before I move out along
the line stretched between the buoy and raft, positioned so I can
dive straight down the wall. I float on my stomach, blow through my nose
to clear my mask, shoot a spout of water out of my snorkel, and
inhale—fill my gut, hold it a few beats, then blow it out nice and slow,
expelling CO2, the waitress, Carolina, Mandy, even Mom, through that
handy tube stuck in my mouth.
“Take
it easy, this morning.” Mom treads water instead of taking up her spotting
position. “Don’t go too deep.”
I
keep venting, soaking up the blue world under me, eager to immerse myself
in it again.
“No
blackout today, right?” She says that every dive. I was ten that one time.
Get over it.
A
pair of painted angels drift over the top of the wall, their fins waving
in time to my slowing heartbeat. I blow up my chest and gut, nine
more mesmerizing cycles.
Mom
maneuvers into position, face down on the other side of the line.
I
advance to super-vents, stretch my head back so I can drive air into every
chamber of my skull and torso, filling my throat and nasal passages,
again and again until my fingers tingle perfect breathe-down. O2 maxed,
totally zoned.
I
inhale one last time, packing every crevice, and then pack more air, and
more. Mom bumps my leg. Doesn’t matter. I’m Mr. Zen of the Deep.
Nothing can penetrate this lean mean free-diving machine.
I
slip the snorkel out of my mouth, bend at the waist, kick my massive
free-dive fins skyward and shoot down through the water. One kick,
two. My buoyancy slides negative at fifteen feet. I streamline it,
conserving my hoard of O2. Don’t need to kick now. Pinch my nose and
clear my ears—easy. I zoom past the top of the wall, equalize my mask,
glance at the dive computer strapped to my wrist, seventy feet, clear
again, eighty. The deeper I go, the faster I fall. I blow past ninety. Hit
a hundred before I know it. The water’s so kicking clear.
I
pull up hard, flip so my head points skyward, and work my fins to stop
sinking. I want to celebrate. Kind of a deadly idea. A massive crab,
all blued out, sits in a crevice sliced into the wall. He waves his claws
in my direction. It took less than a minute to get down there. I have
plenty of oxygen packed in my body, but I need it all for the ascent. No
time for underwater fans.
I
begin kicking for real, powering my giant fins back and forth. Don’t go
anywhere. Freak. Ditch my weights? No way. Dive won’t count. My depth
gauge reads 99 feet. Good. I’m moving—just doesn’t seem like it. I paste
my eyes to the blaring pink triangle that is Mom and kick harder.
Ninety feet, eighty.
I make the top
of the wall with upward momentum. Acid scalds my leg muscles. My lungs
weep for air. Still, I don’t chuck the weights. I keep eye contact
with Mom so she won’t think she has to save me and wreck this dive. My
chest vibrates with the effort of holding onto the last dredge of
O2.
My
legs get stiff. I force them to keep wafting my heavy fins back and
forth.
The
drowsy warmth of blackout creeps over me at fifteen feet, but I don’t give
it any room. I blow my CO2. Positive buoyancy propels me to the
surface. I blast through, plastering Mom. She squeals.
My
starving lungs kick back mounds of fresh salt air.
“Your
lips are blue, baby.” Her eyebrows draw together.
I
suck O2 to my brain and stick my computer-strapped wrist in her face.
107
feet. Perfect.
“Whoa.”
She doesn’t yell it and give me skin like Dad would have. “From now on
you’re going to need a lot better spotter than me.” Mom starts
untying the diver-down flag from the buoy. “Let’s head back.”
“We’ve
still got tons of time.” I fin over to her. “I’m going again in a few
minutes.”
“No
way.” She struggles with my knots.
“Yes.
Way.” My mask fogs up. I rip it off my head. A few strands of wavy brown
chick-bait hair come with it.
Mom
gets the rope loose. “You need to work on your knots.”
“I
just got started.” I hock a ball of slime into my mask and rub it around
with my finger. “What am I going to do back on the boat?”
“You’ve
got yesterday’s dives to log.”
“I’m
staying.” I swish my mask around in the water.
“Not
without a spotter.” She winds up the rope and hands it to me.
I hook the
scuba vest raft with an elbow. “Then spot me.” I put my mask back on, mess
around clearing it of my wild hair, remembering how
Carolina
tore at it the last time we were together.
Mom
turns her back on me. “You’re diving way out of my league.” She unlatches
her weight belt, lifts it out of the water by one end, and sets it on
the BC raft. “You know I’m lucky if I free dive to thirty.”
“This
is stupid. You always spot me.”
“Not
anymore.”
“One
more dive. Just to the reef. A baby could make that dive.”
“Can
I trust you?”
How
can I answer? We both know I’ll be down that wall
again—freaking should be down that wall again.
“I’m not going
to lie there and watch you drown. End of story.” She pulls her still
pretty face into a crease. “You’re not free diving unless you’ve got
a qualified spotter at the surface and a scuba spotter at depth.”
“Give
me a break.” Nobody does that for a hundred feet. “It’s not like I’m
riding a sled to 450.”
“Don’t give me nightmares.”
Right
on cue, like Mom foresaw all and paid off the captain to get her way, the
horn on the Festiva blares, over and over.
Mom
frowns back at the boat. “Let’s go.” She starts swimming.
I
hang back.
“Get a move on,” she
yells. “They don’t blow that thing for nothing.”
|
I'm not a Mormon but this one seems good enough to read it. And the cover is gorgeous! :)
What do you think?
xoxo,
disincentive
Hello Disincentive! Thanks for helping me celebrate today. Most of my readers aren't Mormons. Michael's POV will give you someone to relate to, and Leesie offers a peak into a Mormon girls psyche. It's unique.
ReplyDeleteI know your not supposed to judge a book by its cover but WOW !! Thanks for popping over the Weekly Book Blog Hop xx
ReplyDeleteI'm not a Mormon either, but I agree that it looks pretty good! I always think it's interesting getting a little insight in other religions through books like these too. :)
ReplyDeleteAlso, this cover is super pretty! Gives me a nice summery feel!
I really like the cover of this and while I usually avoid religious YA, I might give this a try!
ReplyDelete