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Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Amazon Gift Card or Paypal Cash Giveaway!


$25. 00 Amazon Gift Card Or PayPal Cash Giveaway!

December 17 - January 15

Entering my holiday Giveaway is easy! 
Visit as many blog stops as you like and enter the Rafflecopter.
You can start with the host blog, http://www.iamareader.com/

Along the way you'll discover author interviews, excerpts, book trailers,
and reviews for Spell for Sophia.

Happy Reading and Good Luck!



Spell For Sophia
Kidnapped by her lawless parents, Sophia Perez-Hidalgo resorts to thievery to escape. Her survival depends on her mastering magic and the supernatural, and guarding her heart against Breaux, a voodoo queen’s grandson. When magic hurls the teens through time, Sophia’s friend Ainslie crosses the Void to find them. All land in New Orleans where Fate and ghosts await, and conjuring always exacts a price.

To Purchase Spell for Sophia


Read more about the Teen Wytche Saga at http://www.AriellaMoon.com

Monday, December 15, 2014

Maria Ann Green on Self-harm, Depression, and Overcoming Obstacles

Last week author Maria Ann Green was in the spotlight with her new Young Adult novel, In the Rearview. The subject matter - self-harm and depression - is so important, I asked Maria to write a follow-up post on why she wrote the book.


Why I wrote REARVIEW: 
I had the idea for In the Rearview as far back as when I was in middle and high school. I knew people going through the same issues that take place in the book. Depression, self-harm, and issues like these are surprisingly common in adolescence. I wanted to tell the story so many suffer through in a way that shed some light on the pain while also giving hope to those who can relate.  I also wanted to do something completely different than anything else I’ve read before, and I love poetry, so I told a lot of the story in that way. I started it over ten years ago, and it was just published in 2014. I began with writing the poetry, then I added Meagan's (the main character) diary entries, and finally I wove in the narrative parts. Eventually, when it was all combined, IN THE REARVIEW told a story of heartbreak, healing, and hope. It's a story I was familiar with, and one I genuinely hope will help some readers. It's a unique version of a universal story about struggling, and learning to overcome obstacles to come out the other side of those problems a bit stronger. 



Connect with Maria Ann Green at:
You can purchase In The Rearview :
Barnes & Noble http://bit.ly/1pG2CRk
And where other ebooks are sold (Kobo, iTunes, Smashwords, etc)!

Tuesday, December 9, 2014

In the Rearview: A Young Adult Novel About Self-harm and Hope


Heartbreak, Healing, Hope

Blurb: When Meagan’s secret is found out, and she realizes there is no way to outrun her habit of cutting, she tries to work through it, and her depression, before she cuts too deep, making a mistake that can never be undone.

Meagan's problems aren't like every other adolescent's no matter how much she wishes they could be. Hers are worse. They've pulled her down into the depths of a depression that is anything but normal. She begins her pattern of self-harm as her depression threatens to drown her. She starts with one cut that leads to the next, and the next. After starting, it's apparent that there's no stopping, and Meagan spirals into a dark and cruel world she doesn't understand. Meagan cuts to feel better, but that comfort doesn't last long enough, and soon life is worse than it ever was before.

While learning to quit cutting Meagan faces life-altering obstacles and grows up in the process. IN THE REARVIEW is a story of pain, loss, confusion, and hope told through Meagan’s poems, journal entries, and a splash of narrative.

Excerpt:
Meagan stared down at her desk. Her focus moved beyond the assignment in front of her without actually seeing what she was looking toward. There were lines, spaces of white, and blobs of writing, but nothing seemed important enough to consider closely. Truthfully she didn’t care.
She didn’t feel the need to focus.
Her gaze slowly moved up to the front of the classroom, and again she fixated on a point past what was before her. She did not concentrate on the teacher. There was a face, a moving mouth, but she didn’t connect it with the sounds struggling slowly, like sticky sludge past her ears. She didn’t hear the instructions being uttered; each word fell on deaf ears as she mindlessly doodled.
Twisting her hair around her finger, she thought about how nice it would be to be at home, in bed, with the curtains closed instead of in this loud and hyper school. It seemed her classmates had recently started caring too much about what was going on around them. There was too much drama, too much noise, too much concern jumping all around her. It was all so taxing.
It was such a bother.
Meagan, in contrast, was usually in a world of her own. Her head felt fuzzy most of the time, and unless she used a lot of energy, most conversations sounded muffled, like there was cotton in her ears. She didn’t feel the need to engage anymore. Her desire to try so hard just to do what had once come easily had dwindled to nothing. At first she’d tried, but not now. Not anymore. It had become too difficult to care.
And that was her biggest problem. Meagan didn’t care much about any of these changes. She was fine walking through school without any effort. Her feet felt a little heavier as each day passed, and her head felt a little more under pressure of a crushing fog that numbed her, but she pushed through it all. She didn’t mind neglecting what used to bring her excitement. In fact, it was just easier not to give a crap.
Everything was distinctly lackluster these days.




And so she wrote
About me: Maria Green currently lives in Minnesota, despite its bitter winters, with her husband. She graduated with a degree in Psychology and a minor in English. When she isn’t writing, Maria loves to read with a cup of strong coffee or a glass of sweet wine, craft, and spend time with her family. This is her first published novel. 

My favorite YA Contemporary books:

Thirteen Reasons Why,
Cut,
You Remind Me of You,
The Catcher in the Rye




Books I still want to read in this genre:
Uses For Boys,
Perks of Being a Wallflower,
Speak


Fun facts about me: My favorite color is pink, yes still. My lucky number is 13. I love coffee, sweet white wine, and anything chocolate. I love having painted toenails. Scarves are my favorite Accessory. My favorite season is fall, and we have beautiful ones in Minnesota. I have a cat named Riley who was named after the character in National Treasure. My favorite place on earth is Paris, and I hope to go back someday. 

Fun facts about the book: Meagan (the main character) went almost ten years without a name. For the longest time she was just "she" or "her" or "me." The narrative was the last part to be written. The poems were the first. So far it is the only YA book I've written. Also, my husband came up with the title.


Top Songs for Rearview: 
1) Heavy In Your Arms - Florence & The Machine
2) Breakdown More - Eric Hutchinson
3) Perfect - Simple Plan
4) The River - Missy Higgins
5) Better Than Me - Hinder
6) Never Too Late - Three Days Grace
7) Decode - Paramore
8) Closer To The Edge - 30 Seconds to Mars
9) It Ends Tonight - All American Rejects
10) Flaws - Bastille
11) You Found Me - The Fray
12) Superheroes - The Script
13) I Wish I Didn't Care - Lovesick Radio




My links:
*My websitewww.mariaanngreen.com

** BUY LINKS:
*Also available where other ebooks are sold (iTunes, Smashwords, etc!)