Sunday, February 28, 2010

(16) The Girl Who Chased the Moon by Sarah Addison Allen


The Girl Who Chased the Moon
By: Sarah Addison Allen

Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: Bantam (March 16, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0553807218
ISBN-13: 978-0553807219


Mystical and magical, like spun sugar shimmering in the sunshine. The Girl Who Chased the Moon is a superb addition to the works of Sarah Addison Allen, which include The Sugar Queen and Garden Spells. When asked to list my favorite authors, this is one that instantly comes to mind.

In her newest release, The Girl Who Chased the Moon, Sarah Addison Allen weaves a delightful spell of forgiveness, open-mindedness and the belief that even the seemingly impossible is possible. After the death of her mother, Dulcie, Emily Benedict is sent to live with a grandfather that she never knew even existed. The awkwardness of moving to a new town, knowing no one, and feeling lost are bad enough, but then to come to the realization that your mother was greatly disliked, was cruel and moved away suddenly, leaving behind heartbreak and anger, life just becomes increasingly more difficult for Emily.

Emily is a strong-minded, kind and intelligent young girl who quickly becomes friends with her new neighbor, Julia, who was one of Emily's mother's victims in high school. Julia, however, has long since forgiven Dulcie, and holds no grudges against Emily, as other town members do. Julia has her own issues to come to terms with and work out. The relationship that quickly forms between Emily and Julia was one of my favorite parts of the book and incredibly wonderful.

Another issue that Emily must learn to deal with, in this new town of Mullaby, North Carolina, is the fact that Julia has a literal magic touch with cakes, Julia's high school crush is gifted with the talent to "see" the scents of cakes baking, wallpaper in Emily's room changes all on its own, ghost lights make an appearance during the late nights, her grandfather is a giant (really and truly), and that's just a touch of the uniqueness of Mullaby. As Emily is learning to adjust to all of the newness of her life, she meets Win Coffey, a boy her age who is handsome, intelligent, fun and off limits - according to Win's family. Win's uncle was the the tragedy to end all tragedies as family secrets were unleashed and the family faults Dulcie for his suicide, thereby causing an instant hatred for Emily. Win, however, sees Emily as the delightful girl that she is and a plan soon forms in his mind - a way to possibly bring peace and let harshness die away.

Readers will quickly and instantly fall in love with the characters in The Girl Who Chased the Moon. The plot and storyline are delightful, characterization perfectly developed and dialog wonderfully portrayed in southern style. Honestly, I cannot think of a single aspect or thing that I disliked about this book. I fell in love with Sarah Addison Allen's work with Garden Spells, her first release, and continue to be thrillingly blown away by her writing. The touches of the supernatural perfectly blended with the multiple dimensions of human nature are interwoven in a way that is simply irresistible.

Will Emily be able to find her place within Mullaby and will the townspeople accept her for who she is, not as her mother's daughter? Will Julia's baking magic bring her her heart's desire and will the mystery of the ghost lights be solved? These questions and so many other delights await within the pages of The Girl Who Chased the Moon - so be sure to get your hands on a copy as soon as possible! You will be thrilled you did!

*overall rating 5/5

About The Girl Who Chased the Moon:

In her latest enchanting novel, New York Times bestselling author Sarah Addison Allen invites you to a quirky little Southern town with more magic than a full Carolina moon. Here two very different women discover how to find their place in the world—no matter how out of place they feel.

Emily Benedict came to Mullaby, North Carolina, hoping to solve at least some of the riddles surrounding her mother’s life. Such as, why did Dulcie Shelby leave her hometown so suddenly? And why did she vow never to return? But the moment Emily enters the house where her mother grew up and meets the grandfather she never knew—a reclusive, real-life gentle giant—she realizes that mysteries aren’t solved in Mullaby, they’re a way of life: Here are rooms where the wallpaper changes to suit your mood. Unexplained lights skip across the yard at midnight. And a neighbor bakes hope in the form of cakes.

Everyone in Mullaby adores Julia Winterson’s cakes—which is a good thing, because Julia can’t seem to stop baking them. She offers them to satisfy the town’s sweet tooth but also in the hope of rekindling the love she fears might be lost forever. Flour, eggs, milk, and sugar . . . Baking is the only language the proud but vulnerable Julia has to communicate what is truly in her heart. But is it enough to call back to her those she’s hurt in the past?

Can a hummingbird cake really bring back a lost love? Is there really a ghost dancing in Emily’s backyard? The answers are never what you expect. But in this town of lovable misfits, the unexpected fits right in.

Excerpt:

Chapter One

It took a moment for Emily to realize the car had come to a stop. She looked up from her charm bracelet, which she’d been worrying in slow circles around her wrist, and stared out the window. The two giant oaks in the front yard looked like flustered ladies caught mid-curtsy, their starched green leaf-dresses swaying in the wind.

“This is it?” she asked the taxi driver.

“Six Shelby Road. Mullaby. This is it.”

Emily hesitated, then paid him and got out. The air outside was tomato-sweet and hickory-smoked, all at once delicious and strange. It automatically made her touch her tongue to her lips. It was dusk, but the streetlights weren’t on yet. She was taken aback by how quiet everything was. It suddenly made her head feel light. No street sounds. No kids playing. No music or television. There was this sensation of otherworldliness, like she’d traveled some impossible distance.

She looked around the neighborhood while the taxi driver took her two overstuffed duffel bags out of the trunk. The street consisted of large old homes, most of which were showpieces in true old-movie Southern fashion with their elaborate trim work and painted porches.

The driver set her bags on the sidewalk beside her, nodded, then got behind the wheel and drove off.

Emily watched him disappear. She tucked back some hair that had fallen out of her short ponytail, then grabbed the handles of the duffel bags. She dragged them behind her as she followed the walkway from the sidewalk, through the yard and under the canopy of fat trees. It grew dark and cold under the trees, so she picked up her pace. But when she emerged from under the canopy on the other side, she stopped short at the sight before her.

The house looked nothing like the rest of the houses in the neighborhood.

It had probably been an opulent white at one time, but now it was gray, and its Gothic Revival pointed-arch windows were dusty and opaque. It was outrageously flaunting its age, spitting paint chips and old roofing shingles into the yard. There was a large wraparound porch on the first floor, the roof of which served as a balcony for the second floor, and years of crumbling oak leaves were covering both. If not for the single clear path formed by use up the center of the steps, it would have looked like no one lived there.

This was where her mother grew up?

She could feel her arms trembling, which she told herself was from the weight of the bags. She walked up the steps to the porch, dragging the duffel bags and a good many leaves with her. She set the bags down and walked to the door, then knocked once.

No answer.

She tried again.

Nothing.

She tucked her hair back again, then looked behind her as if to find an answer. She turned back and opened the rusty screen door and called into the house, “Hello?” The space sounded hollow.

No answer.

She entered cautiously. No lights were on, but the last sunlight of the day was coughing through the dining room windows, directly to her left. The dining room furniture was dark and rich and ornate, but it seemed incredibly large to her, as if made for a giant. To her right was obviously another room, but there was an accordion door closing off the archway. Straight in front of her was a hallway leading to the kitchen and a wide staircase leading to the second story. She went to the base of the stairs and called up, “Hello?”

At that moment, the accordion door flew open and Emily jumped back. An elderly man with coin-silver hair walked out, ducking under the archway to avoid hitting his head. He was fantastically tall and walked with a rigid gait, his legs like stilts. He seemed badly constructed, like a skyscraper made of soft wood instead of concrete. He looked like he could splinter at any moment.

“You’re finally here. I was getting worried.” His fluid Southern voice was what she remembered from their first and only phone conversation a week ago, but he was nothing like she expected.

She craned her neck back to look up at him. “Vance Shelby?”

He nodded. He seemed afraid of her. It flustered her that someone this tall would be afraid of anything, and she suddenly found herself monitoring her movements, not wanting to do anything to startle him.

She slowly held out her hand. “Hi, I’m Emily.”

He smiled. Then his smile turned into a laugh, which was an ashy roar, like a large fire. Her hand completely disappeared in his when he shook it. “I know who you are, child. You look just like your mother when she was your age.” His smile faded as quickly as it had appeared. He dropped his hand, then looked around awkwardly. “Where are your suitcases?”

“I left them on the porch.”

There was a short silence. Neither of them had known the other existed until recently. How could they have run out of things to say already? There was so much she wanted to know. “Well,” he finally said, “you can do what you want upstairs—it’s all yours. I can’t get up there anymore. Arthritis in my hips and knees. This is my room now.” He pointed to the accordion door. “You can choose any room you want, but your mother’s old room was the last one on the right. Tell me what the wallpaper looks like when you walk in. I’d like to know.”

“Thank you. I will,” she said as he turned and walked away from her, toward the kitchen, his steps loud in his wondrously large shoes.

Emily watched him go, confused. That was it?

She went to the porch and dragged her bags in. Upstairs, she found a long hallway that smelled woolly and tight. There were six doors. She walked down the hall, the scraping of her duffel bags magnified in the hardwood silence.

Once she reached the last door on the right, she dropped her duffel bags and reached to the inside wall for the light switch. The first thing she noticed when the light popped on was that the wallpaper had rows and rows of tiny lilacs on it, like scratch-and-sniff paper, and the room actually smelled a little like lilacs. There was a four-poster bed against the wall, the torn, gauzy remnants of what had once been a canopy now hanging off the posts like maypoles.

There was a white trunk at the foot of the bed. The name Dulcie, Emily’s mother’s name, was carved in it in swirly letters. As she walked by it, she ran her hand over the top of the trunk and her fingertips came away with puffs of dust. Underneath the age, like looking though a layer of ice, there was a distinct impression of privilege to this room.

It made no sense. This room looked nothing like her mother.

She opened the set of French doors and stepped out onto the balcony, crunching into dried oak leaves that were ankle-deep. Everything had felt so precarious since her mother’s death, like she was walking on a bridge made of paper. When she’d left Boston, it had been with a sense of hope, like coming here was going to make everything okay. She’d actually been comforted by the thought of falling back into a cradle of her mother’s youth, of bonding with the grandfather she hadn’t known she had.

Instead, the lonely strangeness of this place mocked her.

This didn’t feel like home.

She reached to touch her charm bracelet for comfort, but felt only bare skin. She lifted her wrist, startled.

The bracelet was gone.

She looked down, then around. She frantically kicked the leaves on the balcony, trying to find it. She rushed back into the room and dragged her bags in, thinking maybe the bracelet had caught on one of them and slipped inside. She tossed her clothes out of them and accidentally dropped her laptop, which she’d wrapped in her white winter coat.

But it wasn’t anywhere. She ran out of the room and down the stairs, then she banged out of the front door. It was so dark under the canopy of trees now that she had to slow down until the light from the streetlights penetrated, then she ran to the sidewalk.

After ten minutes of searching, she realized that either she had dropped it on the sidewalk and someone had already taken it, or it had fallen out in the cab when she was toying with it and it was now on its way back to Raleigh—where the cab had picked her up at the bus station.

The bracelet had belonged to her mother. Dulcie had loved it—loved the crescent moon charm in particular. That charm had been worn thin by the many times Dulcie had rubbed it while in one of her faraway moods.

Emily walked slowly back into the house. She couldn’t believe she’d lost it.

She heard what sounded like a clothes dryer door slam, then her grandfather came out of the kitchen. “Lilacs,” she said when he met her in the foyer, where she had stopped and waited for him to notice her so she wouldn’t startle him. How odd that he was the giant, yet she was the one who felt out of place.

He gave her a cautious look, like she was out to trick him. “Lilacs?”

“You asked what the wallpaper was in Mom’s old room. It’s lilacs.”

“Ah. It was always flowers, usually roses, when she was a little girl. It changed a lot as she got older. I remember once it was lightning bolts on a tar-black background. And then another time it was this scaly blue color, like a dragon’s belly. She hated that one, but couldn’t seem to change it.”

That made Emily smile. “That doesn’t sound like her at all. I remember once . . .” She stopped when Vance looked away. He didn’t want to know. The last time he saw his daughter was twenty years ago. Wasn’t he even curious? Stung, Emily turned away from him. “I guess I’ll go to bed now.”

“Are you hungry?” he asked as he followed her at a distance. “I went to the grocery store this morning. I bought some teenager food.”

She reached the first step on the staircase and turned, which made him step back suddenly. “Thank you. But I really am tired.”

He nodded. “All right. Tomorrow, maybe.”

She went back to the bedroom and fell onto the bed. Mustiness exploded from the mattress. She stared at the ceiling. Moths had come in, attracted to the light, and they were hopping around the cobwebby chandelier. Her mother had grown up with a chandelier in her bedroom? This from the same woman who would lecture Emily if she left a light on in a room she wasn’t using.

She reached over and pulled some of her clothes from the floor and buried her face in them. They smelled familiar, like her mother’s incense. She squeezed her eyes shut, trying not to cry. It was too early to say this was a bad decision. And even if it was, there was nothing she could do about it. She could survive a year here, surely.

She heard the wind skittering dried leaves around the balcony, something she realized sounded remarkably like someone walking around out there. She moved the clothes from her face and turned her head to look out the open balcony doors.

The light from the bedroom illuminated the closest treetops in the backyard, but their limbs weren’t swaying. She sat up and crawled off the bed. Once outside, she looked around carefully. “Is anyone here?” she called, not knowing what she would do if someone actually answered.

Something suddenly caught her eye. She quickly stepped to the balustrade. She thought she saw something in the woodline beyond the gazebo in the overgrown backyard.

There! There it was again. It was a bright white light—a quick, zippy flash—darting between the trees. Gradually, the light faded, moving back into the darkness of the woods until it disappeared completely.

Welcome to Mullaby, North Carolina, she thought. Home of ghost lights, giants, and jewelry thieves.

She turned to go back in and froze.

There, on the old metal patio table, sitting on top of a layer of dried leaves, was her mother’s charm bracelet.

Where it hadn’t been just minutes ago.



Click here to continue reading Chapter One!



About Sarah Addison Allen:


Sarah Addison Allen is the New York Times bestselling author of Garden Spells and The Sugar Queen. She was born and raised in Asheville, North Carolina, where she is currently at work on her next novel. You can visit Sarah Addison Allen’s website at www.sarahaddisonallen.com.




(15) Mia the Magnificent by Eileen Boggess


Mia the Magnificent
By: Eileenn Boggess

Hardcover: 161 pages
Publisher: Bancroft Press; 1 edition (January 4, 2010)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1890862673
ISBN-13: 978-1890862671


Mia the Magnificent - first of all, I have to say that I absolutely love the title! If the title doesn't grab you, the cover is sure to, with its vibrancy and visual appeal!

Mia the Magnificent is the third in the Mia Fullerton series by Eileen Boggess, a delightfully fun story collection geared toward young adults. The first is Mia the Meek and the second is Mia the Melodramatic. Even though I did not read the first two in this great series, I had absolutely no trouble coming in on the third installment. It is because of this that I feel that each book could easily be read as a stand-alone, though I do sincerely hope to go back and read the first two.

Being a teen is difficult - being a teen girl is even more difficult! Eileen Boggess does a superb job tapping into the teen girl psyche and creating a wonderful, fun and easy to relate to story. Mia is a typical girl, dealing with boys, getting her driver's license and trying to find out just who she is. Mia's character is awesome, as are all of the characters. Such as in society, today, Ms. Boggess brings together very different teen personalities and brings each one to life. There is the goth friend of Mia, Zoe, the "perfect girl next door" Lisa, the mega-slang-talking ex-boyfriend, Jake, the "God's gift to woman" ex-boyfriend, Tim, and the possible future boyfriend, Eric, who is wonderful in every way.

As if dealing with every day life isn't enough, the very first day that Mia receives her driver's license, she is transfixed by the "evil" ex-boyfriend, Tim, who is riding beside her, as they make their way back from the movies (Mia just happened to lose a bet and had to chauffeur him around). Faces inch closer and closer for an unplanned kiss, there is a nerve jolting jarring and then darkness. What a heck of a kiss, right?! Well, no, not exactly from the kiss, but it turns out from a car crashing into Mia's driver side, as she cruises right through a stop sign. Oh, how is she going to explain this to her parents?!

Filled with humor, humanity and real life, Mia the Magnificent is an engaging, delightful and wonderful book for pre-teens through adults. This is a can't miss series that will bring smiles to faces and relief to hearts, knowing that Mia is just like them, an average ordinary teen, dealing with anything but average ordinary problems.

*overall rating 5/5


About Mia the Magnificent:

After one summer at the Little Tykes Theatre, Mia Fullerton is meek no more, but that doesn't make her life any easier not in her sophomore year at St. Hilary's, when her best friend Lisa forces her into a dangerously big part in The Music Man. Not when her ex-boyfriend, Tim, is teaching her little brother Chris to treat women like objects. And not when she learns to drive with serious repercussions. Who is Mia? Is she an independent girl like Zoe's, her acerbic goth friend from Little Tykes? She d like to be that s why she's volunteering to be onstage for the first time, in a show populated by her first ex and childhood crush Jake, her arch-nemesis Cassie, and new girl in town Alyssa. That s why it's so important she overcome the bizarre driving instruction of St. Hilary's janitor Mr. Corrigan to earn her driver s license, and therefore her freedom. Or is she the girl who misses Tim, even after the way he betrayed her? Tim is smart, funny, and likable in a distinctly obnoxious way, and he s determined to win Mia back even if he has a funny way of doing so, dating both Cassie and Alyssa at the same time, behind both their backs. Can Mia forgive Tim? Should she instead choose Eric, Zoe's cousin, a nicer and more respectful choice in every way? Or would either choice defeat her goals of independence? And when the worst-case scenarios rear their heads when Mia is forced into the lead in The Music Man, when her first night out on the road goes horribly, when Chris appears headed entirely to the dark side does Mia on her own have what it takes to set things right? Between dog costumes and stage costumes, big embarrassments and bigger chickens, bad singing and worse crashes, and everything else that could possibly go wrong, Mia the Magnificent is a hilarious, clever, and endlessly fun novel, and the best installment yet of the Mia Fullerton series.


About Eileen Boggess:

Born and educated in Iowa, Eileen Boggess earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education from the University of Northern Iowa in Cedar Falls, IA. As an undergraduate, she minored in English and Language Arts.

Her first job after college was as a teacher for St. John/St. Nicholas Catholic School in Waterloo, Iowa, where she taught a combined class of fifth and sixth graders. She later moved to Urbandale, IA, where she taught middle school language arts and gifted education for St. Pius X School. While there, she coached Mock Trial, Future Problem Solvers, Destination Imagination, and speech and debate, and started a quarterly newspaper written and designed by students.

In 2002, she branched out as a freelance writer, covering, among other things, education and business for the Press Citizen newspaper. In 2003, she won a writing contest sponsored by Writer’s Digest Magazine.

She is an adjunct faculty member for Upper Iowa University and currently teaches a children’s literature course. She also supervises student teachers for the university.

She is a member of the Society of Children’s Book Writers & Illustrators and an enthusiastic participant in the Iowa chapter’s activities.


Friday, February 26, 2010

Interview + Giveaway: Sneed B. Collard III, Author of Double Eagle

I recently had the honor of reading and reviewing Double Eagle by Sneed B. Collard III and was hooked. Prior to this book, I had honestly never even heard of Mr. Collard III and now I am biting at the bit to read more of his books. As a matter of fact, I checked out three of his non-fiction children's books from our library and will be chatting about those next week. If you missed my review of Double Eagle, please be sure to (click here) to check it out. I am completely thrilled to share with readers, my interview with Sneed and hope you enjoy it as much as I did. Be sure to read all the way to the bottom to find out how to enter to win your very own copy of the fabulous Double Eagle!! Also, please be sure to leave any comments or questions that you would like. Sneed has promised to pop in once in a while to chat and answer questions, so lets give him a HUGE warm welcome!!

First of all, could you please tell us a bit about Double Eagle?

Double Eagle is the story of two boys—a Yankee and a Southerner—who sneak into a Civil War fort in southern Alabama. There, they accidentally discover a twenty-dollar gold piece, or “double eagle.” They are astonished enough by the find, but one of the boys is also a coin collector. When he flips the double eagle over, he makes an even more astounding discovery: the coin was not minted by the United States of America, but by the Confederate States of America. The boy quickly realizes that this coin is not even supposed to exist, but if it is genuine, it’s going to be worth a fortune. Unfortunately, while the boys are researching the coin, a professional treasure hunter gets wind of their discovery. As a Category Four hurricane bears down on the island, the race to find the rest of the Confederate treasure builds to a deadly climax.


Do you have a favorite excerpt from Double Eagle? Could you share that with us, please?

Pp. 178-182, when the boys decide to search for the rest of the gold treasure in one of the fort’s cisterns.

“I ain’t goin’ in there, Mike. You know me and water moccasins.”

“Well, don’t look at me,” I objected. “I bet it’s full of rats.”

“Or maybe the skeletons of soldiers who got thrown down there.”

We both stared into the dark water.

“So what’re we gonna do?” Kyle finally asked.

I sighed. “I’ll go.” Kyle looked at me. “You sure?”

“For a million bucks in gold, yeah, I’m sure.”

I swung my legs into the cistern hole and sat on the edge.

“You gonna keep your sandals on?”

“Yeah. Who knows what I might step on? Hand me one of the flashlights when I get down there.”

With one arm on each side of the hole I lowered myself like I was doing dips on the parallel bars at school. I shivered as my feet touched the water, but not because it was cold—the water wasn’t much cooler than it was out in the Gulf. Finally I let go, dropping the final foot with a splash. My feet sank into a thick layer of mud and the water reached almost to my crotch. I suppressed the impulse to leap back up and out of there and forced myself to breathe deeply.

“You okay, Big Mike?”

My head was now just about even with the level of the hole cover.

“Yeah. Give me the flashlight.” I took it and turned it on, then lowered my head down into the darkness. Hunched over, I swung the flashlight wildly around at first, making sure there were no rats or skeletons about to sneak up and give me a heart attack. I expected the chamber to smell like rotting corpses or raw sewage, but only a faint swampy odor reached my nose.

“What’s it look like?” Kyle called down.

“It’s big,” I said, my words bouncing eerily off the walls.

The cistern—as much as I could see of it—looked huge. The chamber where I stood was walled in by brick partitions that apparently held up the flagstone floor above. Each partition, though, had an arched passageway that led into other chambers, and it looked like the cistern probably covered the entire area under the floor of the bastion. Along the walls, I also observed a smooth, reddish surface—some kind of film that must have covered the lead lining they’d installed during construction. I was amazed the lining was still intact or even that the cistern still held water after more than a hundred years. I continued to shine the light around, double-checking that no rats or snakes were about, but fortunately all I saw were a few spiderwebs. Still bent over, I cautiously moved my feet forward in the mud. My sandal touched something hard.

“Hand me down a shovel,” I said. A wooden handle appeared overhead and I took it. I reached down with the blade and scooped up the thing in front of me.

“Ya got anythin’?” I pulled out a thick, coiled spring and handed it up to Kyle.

“Looks like part of a car suspension,” he said.

I kept feeling around and found more junk along with several dozen bricks, which I dropped back into the water. As I moved away from the overhead opening, though, the junk disappeared and I was left with just the layer of muck on the cistern bottom. Using the shovel handle and my feet, I explored the entire chamber for any little bumps in the mud layer, but found none. Then, nervously counting my teeth with my tongue, I waded to one of the arches that led to adjoining chambers. The arch was low and only cleared the water by about a foot. To get through it I was going to have to lower myself down into the water to my neck. Don’t think about it, I told myself. Holding the flashlight over my head, I quickly dunked myself down and through into the next chamber.

“You okay?” Kyle’s voice sounded far away.

“Yeah,” I called back, though I’d never been so unsure of anything in my life.

Dripping now, I started shuffling and poking along methodically as I’d done in the first chamber. Suddenly something cold and slimy brushed my leg. I hollered, dropping the flashlight and shovel into the water. Darkness smothered me. Panicked, I lunged back toward the arch but couldn’t see where I was going. My head smacked into the brick partition and, ears ringing, I fell gasping back into the water.

Another long, slimy thing swept across my chest and I let out a second yell. “Mike!”

Kyle shouted and I saw a dim light through the archway. As fast as I could, I scrambled toward it.

“What happened?” Kyle said as I pulled myself back up through the cistern hole.

“Something’s down there!” I panted, shaking badly.

“What? What’s down there?”

“I-I don’t know!” Kyle bent down into the hole and shined his flashlight into the water while I sat shivering, trying to get a hold of myself.

After a moment, I heard Kyle’s muffled voice say, “I’ll be danged! Eels!”

“What?” His head popped back up. “There’s eels in there, Mike. A swarm of ’em!”

“No way.”

“I swear.”

I took the flashlight and looked for myself. Sure enough, a long slender body slithered underneath the light. A moment later I saw smaller fish—minnows.

“How the hell did they get in there?”

“Don’t know,” said Kyle. “There’s gotta be some kind of passage to the sea.”

“Geez!” I gasped. “I thought I was a goner.”

Kyle chuckled and a moment later we were both laughing hard, breathless laughs.

“So what do you wanna do?” Kyle asked. “Should we beat it outta here?”

The thought strongly appealed to me, but I shook my head. “No. We’ve come this far. Let me explore the rest.”

Kyle whistled. “You’re braver than me.”

I knew that wasn’t true, but it made me feel bolder to hear it. I lowered myself back down into the water, and Kyle handed me his flashlight. I ducked back into the second chamber and, shuffling my feet, found both the shovel and the ruined first flashlight, which I returned to Kyle. Then, forcing myself to take long, regular breaths, I continued my search. Altogether there were about a dozen chambers, but I explored each one carefully. At any moment I expected to stumble across a wooden chest or a pile of coins, especially in the chambers farthest from the cistern opening. I found nothing. By the time I returned to the opening and Kyle helped me back up onto the sand, I was again shaking—from cold this time.

“It’s n-not in there,” I said.

“You sure?” he asked.

“I’m sure. I c-covered every square inch of that place. The gold isn’t there.”

Kyle lit a cigarette and offered it to me. I shook my head.

He sighed. “Well, I guess we could go check the other cisterns, see if that historian guy overlooked somethin’.”

“No. If it isn’t in this one, it isn’t in any of them. Let’s get out of here.”

Kyle stood up and stubbed out his cigarette. “You don’t have to tell me twice.”




What do you want readers to take away from reading Double Eagle?

Mostly, I want them to feel they’ve enjoyed a fun, satisfying read. If they also have a new appreciation for history and/or coin collecting, I’ll feel doubly satisfied.

What was the most fun about writing Double Eagle?

Definitely the research. In addition to consulting with several experts on the Civil War, gold coins, and the New Orleans Mint, I took my family to Dauphin Island, Alabama for a month. Thanks to the generosity of the Dauphin Island Sea Lab, we stayed right at the marine lab and spent many memorable days exploring historic Fort Gaines, the city of Mobile, and many other places. This research gave me new ideas and added great depth to the descriptions in the book.

What was the hardest part about writing Double Eagle?

The editing process is almost always the most difficult part of writing a novel. So many people weigh in on one’s work that it can get very frustrating. In the end, you just take in the helpful comments and filter out the rest.

If you could actually meet any character from your story, who would it be and why?

Actually, I feel as though I did meet many of the characters in the book. Although the plot revolves around a mysterious gold coin, Double Eagle really arose from my friendship with a native Alabama boy during my thirteenth summer. After that summer, I lost touch with my friend, but I never forgot our time together.

Could you please tell us about your writing process?

In my fiction, I am fairly intuitive. I try to get the big pieces and characters balanced in my mind before sitting down to write. Once I begin, though, I try to let the scenes unfold naturally with only loose direction. The best part of writing is when delightful surprises just seem to spring from my fingers. I think it’s why most writers keep at it.

Do you ever put yourself within your characters?


I think almost all main characters stem from the author’s own personality and experience. My own sensibilities are certainly similar to those of the main characters in Dog Sense, Flash Point, and Double Eagle.

Do you have any particular habits that you take part in while writing?By that I mean certain music you like to listen to, foods you like to eat, environment that helps you write better, etc.

Eating chocolate—too much!

Where do you get your ideas and inspirations?

Ideas are simply everywhere for a writer. I will always have ten times more ideas than I have time to pursue. I think the key is to really listen to my inner desires. If an idea keeps coming back to me over and over, that’s probably one I need to write.

How did you decide you wanted to be a writer?


I came to a crossroads where I had to decide if I wanted to pursue biology, and I just had this sudden realization that I wanted to be a writer instead. I was under no illusion that this would be easy, so I earned a degree in computers. I ended up working as a computer consultant to biologists while building my writing career.

Was there any authors or books that made you think "Wow, that's what I want to do - craft stories of my own for others to read"?

No, but I was a ravenous reader from the age of eight or nine, so story-telling was an integral part of my inner make-up.

What make you take that leap from "wanting" to be a writer, as opposed to "becoming" a writer?

I really never thought about wanting to be a writer before deciding to do it. At some level, though, I must have realized writing would be a large part of my life.

How do you come up with the names of your characters?


Often, I pick the names of people I can associate with those characters. This helps me remember their names and get to know them. Sometimes, I’ll just flip through a baby book of names, or look up the names of mythological or religious characters, and name my characters based on their “classical” characteristics.

Were you an avid reader as a child?

Definitely. I clearly remember picking up a copy of The Hobbit at age nine, and just devouring it. I never looked back after that, but almost all the books I read were adult books. My favorites were high dramas by authors such as Leon Uris, Mario Puzo, and Michael Crichton.

If you had to summarize your life and give it a book title, what would that title be?

For this, I will have to plagiarize from a T-shirt my friends made me when I left home. The shirt had a picture of Betty Boop on it, and the question What’s a Sneed?

What are you working on right now? Could you give us a taste/teaser (aka excerpt) from your current WIP?

I’m actually working on the first in a series of mysteries for grades 3-6 that will focus on Montana settings, history, and situations. The first is tentatively titled The Governor’s Dog is Missing, and was inspired by our current governor’s famous Border collie Jag. To research the book, my son and I went to the capital, Helena, a couple of weeks ago and met the governor, Jag, the lieutenant-governor, and the secretary of state. We got a great tour of the Capitol itself, a spectacular building full of literary possibilities.

Montana Mysteries #1:
The Governor’s Dog is Missing!
By
Sneed B. Collard III

One

Half a dozen partially-digested Nutty Nuts spew out of my mouth. They splatter against the newspaper in front of me and begin slowly sliding down like milk-covered slugs.

“No way!” I exclaim.

There, right above the slime-coated Nutty Nuts, today’s Helena Gazette headline shouts:

Governor’s Dog Missing!

I quickly scan the story’s first few paragraphs and glance at my sister across the table from me.

“Lily,” I say. “Someone took Governor Rickson’s dog!”

My sister looks up from a three-inch plastic figure of Donald Duck. She smiles and says, “I pooped yesterday.”
Did I mention Lily is only three years old? The age at which life revolves around candy, Disney, and “the potty”?

I don’t bother replying. Instead, I shove one last spoonful of cereal into my mouth and, clutching the newspaper, rush up to my bedroom. I shed my pajamas, throw on shorts, shoes, and a T-shirt, and gallop back down the stairs—almost bowling over my mom ahead of me.

“Hey! What’s the hurry?” she shouts as I shove past her and vault the last four steps to the first floor landing.

“I’m going to Daphne’s!”

“Don’t forget your science class at—“

But the screen door has already slammed shut behind me.


Two

I race up the block to Daphne’s house and bound up onto her porch. It is a gorgeous summer day, but I hardly notice the sun and endless blue sky above me. Instead, I rap my knuckles hard against the door.

From inside the house, violin music is playing, but it suddenly stops and I hear adult footsteps approach. The door swings open and Daphne’s mom Theresa stands before me, still holding her bow.

She smiles. “Good morning, Slate.”

Sigh.

As much as I want to get on with this story, I suppose I have to pause here and explain about the name. And you did hear it right. Slate. S-L-A-T-E. Like the heavy, flat rock used for chalkboards, pool tables, fancy flooring—and yes—tombstones.

Since I can remember, I have complained to my parents for slabbing me with the name. My mom insists she named me for my “handsome slate-gray eyes.” I know the truth. It was Dad’s doing, pure and simple. And guess what he does?
Yep. Geologist.

I’ve noticed this about scientists: they always feel they have to give their kids, their pets—even their houses and cars—ridiculous names related to their field of study.

When Mom can no longer keep up the story about my “slate-blue eyes,” she says, “You’re lucky we didn’t name you Pleistocene or Continental Drift. Your father pushed for those names before we settled on Slate.”

“But you gave Lily a normal name!” I protest.

“Well, she’s a girl for one thing. And when she came along, well, let’s just say I told Dad it was my turn to choose.”

“And he was okay with that?”

“He didn’t want to end up living alone. Just be grateful he’s not a parasitologist or someone who studies tropical fungi.”

So that’s the story. Slate is the name I’ve been buried with for every one of my twelve years—including this morning.

“What are you up to today?” Theresa asks me as I stand panting in front of her.

“Sorry I interrupted you. Is Daphne in?”

“It’s okay,” Theresa says. “I’m just rehearsing for the summer concert this weekend.” Then, she turns and yells up the stairs, “DAAA-PHneee! Slate is here!”

“Send him up,” I hear Daphne’s voice call down.

Her mom steps aside and points her bow. “You know the way.”

“Thanks.” I gallop up the stairs and burst in to the first room on the right. I find Daphne hanging upside down from a bar attached to her closet doorframe.

I halt. “What are you doing?”

She yanks her shirt up to cover her belly button. “I’m getting more oxygen to my brain.”

“By hanging upside down?”

“It sends the blood to my head.”

She tries to pull herself back up to the bar, but can’t do that and keep her shirt up at the same time.

“Turn around!” she commands, her face the color of an organically-grown grape.

I obey and hear a thump on the floor. Then, I spin around and shove the newspaper in her face.

“Have you seen this?”


Three

Daphne focuses on the paper. “Let’s see…Grizzlies Tear Up Glacier Park Campground…Legislators Grumble Over Special Session…”

“Not those stories.” I seize the newspaper and flip it around to the top half. “That!”

“Oh.”

I pace the room while Daphne reads the lead story. Before she’s even finished, I blurt, “Can you believe someone stole Cat?”

And yes, you heard me right. My father isn’t the only person who likes stupid names. Before going into politics, our governor farmed wheat and raised sheep outside of Fort Benton. He’s also known to have a passion for buying heavy equipment. Newspaper photos always show him racing around on his latest bulldozer or super-charged tractor. Apparently, he named his Border collie “Cat” after his favorite Caterpillar brand backhoe.

I mean, who wouldn’t, right?

In any case, Cat has easily become the most famous dog in Montana. Governor Rickson takes him everywhere. You can hardly find a photograph or watch a T.V. news story about the governor without seeing Cat in it, too. Last year, my teacher had our entire class write letters to Cat as an assignment. We got a letter back, along with a poster of Governor Rickson and Cat posing on a John Deere tractor.

Daphne finally lowers the newspaper. “It doesn’t say Cat was stolen,” she tells me. “It just says that he disappeared yesterday afternoon.”

She pauses to pick at the newspaper with her fingernail. “Are these pieces of Nutty Nuts cereal?”

I ignore her question. “So,” I say, “if the dog wasn’t stolen, what could’ve happened to him?”

Daphne plops down on her bed. By this time her face has returned to its normal color, and she sweeps a strand of her black hair over her ear. Something about the way she does it makes my heart do a little skip. This isn’t the first time that’s happened lately, but I tell myself that I’m just excited from running over here.

“Cat could be missing for a lot of reasons,” Daphne says. “Dogs often get lost.”

“A Border collie? I don’t think so. Border collie’s are one-person dogs. Cat would have never drifted far enough away from Governor Rickson to get lost. And even if he did, he would have come back.”

Daphne frowns. “Okay then. He could have gotten run over by a car.”

“Wouldn’t someone have found the body by now?”

Daphne gives me her impatient look—the one where she draws her lips back like an irritated frog.

“Well, Mr. Genius,” she says. “Instead of just shooting down my ideas, why don’t you try coming up with your own? And don’t give some big conspiracy theory. No one would have kidnapped the cat—uh, I mean, Cat the dog.”

“Why not? People take dogs and cats all the time. I read online about people who steal dogs and cats to teach them to communicate telepathically. They use them to spy on terrorists.”

“Oh, come on! What website were you reading, www.stories-for-idiots.com?"

“Noooo,” I say, defensively. I don’t want to tell her I found it on a website called “PseudoScience.”

“Just shows you can’t believe everything on the web,” Daphne tells me.

“Hmph.”

We sit there in silence for a few seconds. Then, Daphne turns to me. “What if Cat is lying injured in a ditch where no one can see him? What if he’s trapped somewhere?”

I nod, imagining a dog of mine lying hurt and alone. A sense of urgency fills me. “We should go see if we can help find him.”

Copyright Sneed B. Collard III
website: www.sneedbcollardiii.com




What are you reading right now?

With my son, I’m reading Hatchet. I’m also reading Among the Believers: An Islamic Journey by Nobel Prize winner V.S. Naipaul. With all the craziness in the world, I wanted to feel like I understood some of the people we are waging war against and vice-versa.

Who are some of your favorite authors?

If I had to pick one, it would be Mark Twain. Others include John Steinbeck, Carl Hiassen, Graham Greene, Lois Lowry, Jon Krakauer, and Nelson DeMille.

If you could have lunch and chat with any author, dead or alive, who would it be and why?

I’d like to talk to Mark Twain. He had such an amazing gift to write about anything with humor and insight, I’d hope some of it rubbed off on me!

What do you hope to accomplish within the next five years?

I’d like to continue to write both novels and nonfiction books. I am also very excited to be starting my own publishing company. Like many authors, I’ve grown weary of the greed that dominates big publishing today. Especially in nonfiction, but also in fiction, if a book isn’t guaranteed to be a Big Hit, it has very little chance of getting published. With that in mind, I decided to start Bucking Horse Books, a small company focusing on quality nonfiction and fiction with special relevance to Montana and the West. Our first book will be The World Famous Miles City Bucking Horse Sale, a book that introduces one of the most well-known livestock/rodeo events in the West. It will be released this summer. I will continue to write for other publishers, but am excited about this opportunity to produce quality books that would otherwise never see the light of day.

Is there anything that you would like to add? That you would like readers to know about you or your writing?

Mostly just how important it is to follow your heart AND make a contribution to improving the state of the world. There are so many of us and so much needs to be done, it’s vital for the future that each of us picks some thing—any thing—that we can work on for all of our benefit.

Where can readers get in touch with you?

The best way is to post to my Facebook Fan Page (not my personal page),
or look up my full name “Sneed B. Collard III”.

Readers can also get my latest news at my website:
www.sneedbcollardiii.com

Okay, now for the exciting surprise! Erin Deedy from Peachtree Publishers was kind enough to send me an extra copy of Double Eagle to give to one lucky winner! To enter, simple leave a comment below along with your email address and please let me know about what piqued your interest from my review (click here) to read Double Eagle or want someone you know to read it. Also, please leave a question or comment for Sneed. Contest will remain open until Midnight, March 15th, with the winner being drawn shortly thereafter by randomizer. U.S. addresses only please.

(14) Connect the Dots by Denise Robbins + Giveaway


Connect the Dots
By: Denise Robbins

Paperback: 280 pages
Publisher: L & L Dreamspell (December 10, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1603181644
ISBN-13: 978-1603181648


The queen of techno thrillers, Denise Robbins, once again graces readers with her clever talent in Connect the Dots. This time it is the government, cover-ups, torture, secrets, terrorists and an intelligent woman who knows just how to connect the dots to find answers - answers to questions that were never meant to be answered.

There are secret "black sites" that are used to torture answers from terrorists, or anyone who gets in the way. Water boarding, shackling, sensory deprivation, beatings are just the beginning. These sites were once ordered to close down, however they never were and CIA Human Intelligence Operator Charley Duston soon is thrust into the center of it all.

When Charley comes home to find it deeply invested with "bugs" and a picture of her ex-boyfriend murdered, she is sent into hiding in a cabin in the middle of nowhere. A place that is thought to be safe and enable Charley to put together clues and use her tried and true method of connecting the dots to find and solve disturbing questions. It is at this secluded area that she meets Jake Frisbie, a secretive neighbor who is not all bad on the eyes - though perhaps bad on the heart.

It doesn't take long for sparks to fly between Charley and Jake and a whole lot of sizzle to ensue. While Jake tries to figure out just who this beautiful lady is and where she goes when she disappears in fancy limos, Charley is discovering new and unsettling information and comes home, to the cabin, to find a death threat. When she is not being shot at, her cabin is being torched. Time is running out and Charley's life is on the line. Can she connect the dots before it is too late or will making the connections cost her her life?

Connect the Dots is a wonderfully intense novel of suspense, thrills and some mega doses of sizzle added in. There truly is never a dull moment throughout the entire book, as Charley is constantly having her life attacked or her body ravaged. This is a book that will keep the reader reading long into the night with heart-pounding action and excitement. Connect the Dots also brings up the question of "what-if". What if this truly was going on in today's world, and chances are it is. As a matter of fact, Denise includes a list of "black sites" in the back of the book, which I found incredibly interesting and heart wrenching. The research that went into Connect the Dots is apparent and makes for an even deeper and engrossing read. As far as characterization goes, I truly have to say that Charley and Jake are one of my favorite couples. They quickly become life-like and jump right off the page, as you read and get to know them. Their chemistry is staggering and will send more than a few hearts pounding. In addition, Charley is strong, sassy and immensely likable.

To show the humor mixed in with the suspense, I wanted to share one of the laugh-out-loud excerpts that I loved:

Taken from page 32:
“You…you scared the daylights out of me,” she accused, waving the little white cloth in front of her face.

He opened his mouth, shut it, and then with great restraint, spoke. “I scared you? Lady, your screams nearly shaved ten years off my life. Definitely shrunk my gonads so high I’ll never get to use them again.”
Intensity and suspense is also in high gear throughout and here are a couple of excerpts that I thought captured those aspects well:

Taken from page 72:
After completing her interview reports, the hard job started. Charley followed up that information with wiring diagrams, or as she liked to refer to them as ‘connect-the-dots’ diagrams. Unlike children’s connect-the-dots pictures, which include numbers, human intelligence did not. Wiring diagrams linked events, places, and people to each other. Unfortunately, the information is not stored in a central terrorist database. It is widespread and poorly documented. Sitting with her feet propped up on her desk, fingering her plastic ‘Connect the Dots’ game, she focused on the research of open source data in order to complete her network operational wiring diagram on Vladimir Gerritt. Open source data came from the internet, newspaper reports, social networking sites, and magazine articles, anything that was readily available to everyone. The challenge was the ability to extract reliable information that aided in intelligence assumptions and plans.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Taken from pages 110 - 111:

“Please, please.”

Charley looked up and her gaze locked with the gray-eyed driver before metal banged against metal and she careened over the edge of the road. As the Jeep pitched forward, the seatbelt cut off her circulation and interfered with her breathing. She struggled to get the webbing unhooked. Pleaded for the material to give and fought the blackness that swam in her eyes.

“Not like this. Please, not like this.”

The Jeep shifted and she heard trees crack and the next thing Charley knew, she tumbled down, over, and down again. Then black.

For those who love a great suspense book with great added sizzle, Connect the Dots is definitely a book not to miss!! I loved it and can't wait for Denise Robbins' next release Don't Tempt Danger to be released!

*overall rating 5/5

About Connect the Dots:
When a CIA Operator tries to connect the dots she winds up at the center of an international crisis... CIA Human Intelligence Operator, Charley Duston, gets the shock of her life when she opens her freezer to find the picture of her murdered ex-lover. Worse is the implied message: She is next. Not one to give in to intimidation tactics, Charley is determined to uncover the truth behind her ex's death and bring the culprits to justice. Not knowing whom she can trust, she moves to an undisclosed location where she can covertly investigate the death threats. Here she meets her new neighbor Jake Frisbie at gunpoint when she mistakes him for a carjacker. Attracted to the handsome, easy-going hunk, Charley knows her relationship with Jake would only put him in danger. She tries to fight off her feelings but finally gives in just before her world crashes and she is kidnapped. The beautiful, new neighbor entrances Jake but he can make no sense of her secretive nocturnal disappearances. As a Special Agent, he investigates her and is shocked to learn she is at the center of an international crisis. Despite common sense, he becomes involved with the young woman and when she disappears, he vows to find her. Risking his life, Jake ventures into the world of black sites and international intrigue to save the woman he loves and expose the responsible criminals, no matter how high up in the government they sit.

Excerpt:

Tiny hairs danced on the back of Charley’s neck. Heart thrumming the ‘La Bamba’ inside her chest, she retrieved her Sig-Sauer from her case and set the bag noiselessly on the floor. Easing the door open wider with the toe of her shoe, she aimed the loaded 9-millimeter to the left then swept right covering the rest of the living and dining room. Nothing.

Holding her breath, Charley listened for any sign of an intruder. She didn’t hear anything. Exhaling, she inched her way to the hall and peered around the corner. Nothing.

She slipped off her shoes not wanting her heels to clack against the wood floor and alert whoever might be in her condo then headed toward the back of the house. Her first stop was the kitchen. It was empty. After checking the hall bath and the spare bedroom, Charley moved toward her room.

Outside the door, she stopped in her tracks. It was shut. She never shut the door. Growing up, all doors were always left open all the time, including the bathroom. Her father had taught her that leaving the doors open would be an easily recognizable sign of disturbance. Thieves and worse did not usually pay close attention to such things. She never shut doors. But this one was closed.


About Denise Robbins:

Denise Robbins, born and raised in the Midwest, migrated to Florida, and finally settled down to her home in New Hampshire that she shares with her kittens Mischief and Mayhem.

From her back deck, she sits outside, listens as the old roller coaster from the local amusement park inches its way up the wooden structure on its clanking chains, and waits to hear the kids scream in terror and delight. The best mental therapy a girl could ask for. The long, cold winter nights in New Hampshire provide the serenity and motivation to write excitement into the night.

After twenty years in the computer technology industry, Denise decided to use that experience and her passion for mysteries and thrillers to write her first techno-romantic thriller novel, IT HAPPENS IN THREES. Her latest novel, KILLER BUNNY HILL is available now, and CONNECT THE DOTS is right on its trail for a December 2009 release date. In 2010, readers can expect to see Denise's fourth novel, NEVER TEMPT DANGER.

In addition to writing, Denise enjoys scuba diving (only in warm water), snowboarding, and playing in her garden.

Be sure to check out Denise's website for tons of awesome things - including recipes from her books!!



Okay, you now know how much I adore Denise and her writing! Well, being the generous and wonderful lady that she is, Ms. Robbins has sent me an extra signed copy of her book Connect the Dots!! This, my friends, is going to be up for grabs and reach the hands of one lucky winner! All you have to do to enter is comment below as well as leave your email address. This is open to US address only, please. Contest will end midnight, March 19th with the winner being drawn randomly shortly thereafter.

Good luck, everyone and please spread the word!


Thursday, February 25, 2010

(13) Double Eagle by Sneed B. Collard III


Double Eagle
By: Sneed B. Collard III

Reading level: Ages 9-12
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Peachtree Publishers; 1 edition (April 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 156145480X
ISBN-13: 978-1561454808


Double Eagle is a delightful, fun and educational (without knowing it is educational, lol) historical fiction book, geared toward young adults. Based loosely on historical facts taken from the Civil War time period, in the location of the Alabama Coast, readers are taken back in time, to April 24th, 1862 when a Confederate ship, called the Skink is attacked by Union forces and sinks. It is believed that gold coins were being carried upon the Skink and have been much sought after, since it's demise.

Fast forward to the summer of 1973 when fourteen-year-old Mike is sent to stay with his dad for summer break. Living the "divorce shuffle", as Mike calls it, is difficult enough and though he loves staying with his Dad, it is an adjustment. That adjustment is being blown out of the water when he finds out that his Dad has taken a summer job teaching, at a new marine lab on Shipwreck Island, bear Mobile Bay.

Not sure what to expect, Mike is naturally nervous and hesitant, until he becomes friends with another boy, Kyle, who is a year older than him and whose Dad also is working at the lab. It doesn't take long for the two of them to forge a close bond, exploring, hanging out and once they learn of the missing treasure of double eagle coins, their treasure hunting excursions.

Sneed Collard III does an excellent job of intertwining fact with fiction, to quickly and easily draw the readers into the story. Double Eagle is the perfect book to engage any age, particularly young adults, girls and boys alike. Another wonderful aspect of Mr. Collard III's writing is his ability to cross generational information. One such instance, that sticks in my mind, is when Mike meets some of the other people at the lab and one was wearing a ZZ Top shirt, but he had no idea who ZZ Top was. I had to chuckle at this. What a perfect way for young adults and adults to be able to relate to the same book and story. Of course this is just one small example, as there are several throughout the story.

Mike, Kyle, Mike's father and all of the characters are brought to life effortlessly, complete with little idiosyncrasies such as Mike's habit of counting his teeth with his tongue when he is nervous or bored. I also loved the way the author brought the past to life, through Mike's thoughts and ponderings. Here is a small excerpt from page 37:

I used to hold an old coin in my hands and wonder about all the people who had held it since it was minted. A Standing Liberty quarter might have been in the pocket of a soldier at Pearl Harbor. An Indian head penny could have been spent to see Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show.

I have often done the same thing with material objects, or just looking around at my surroundings, be it a building or outdoor area.

Another aspect of Mr. Collard III's writing, that I greatly enjoyed, was his amazing talent at bringing visual aspects to life with his words. The following excerpt from page 49 is a perfect example of this talent:

Our heads whipped around to see a tall man with white, wispy hair standing behind us. He wore a faded red fishing cap, and his pale blue eyes peered out from beneath bristling eyebrows. The skin on his face was the texture of ancient brown leather, and an unlit pipe dangled from the corner of his mouth. Despite his age he stood straight as a piling in his long-sleeved button-down shirt and faded blue seaman's pants.
I can't stress enough what a wonderful and delightful book Double Eagle is. It is a story rich with educational lessons and openings to the desire to learn more about the Civil War, coin collecting, and so much more. Do keep in mind that the author is rather sneaky about adding in these educational and historical facts within the story - enabling the reader to learn without even knowing they are doing so! I truly feel that Double Eagle is a story that even the most hesitant and picky of reader will dive into and love. Though Double Eagle is the first work by this author that I have read, I am incredibly anxious to read more!

*overall rating 5/5

*Please stop back by tomorrow when I will share an interview with author Sneed B. Collard III and have an extra special surprise!!! You don't want to miss it!

About Double Eagle:

The year is 1862. The Skink, a Confederate ship, is attacked by Union forces and sinks off the Alabama coast in the Gulf of Mexico. Although the ship was rumored to be carrying newly minted gold coins, no trace of the wreck and not even a single piece of Confederate gold is ever found.

Fast forward to 1973. Mike is prepared for another routine summer in Pensacola with his marine biologist father. But plans suddenly change and Mike finds himself on Shipwreck Island—near the site where the Skink went down and right in the middle of a century-old mystery!

Mike and his new friend Kyle are intrigued by a salvage ship anchored just offshore. Some say it was brought in by fortune hunters searching for the long-lost Confederate ship and its treasure. But when the boys scale a fence at the fort on the island and explore a section closed off to the public, they realize that the fortune hunters may be looking in the wrong place. There in the sand-covered floor of an abandoned chamber they spot something shiny: an old double-eagle gold coin. Mike and Kyle agree to keep their discovery a secret and start their own investigation into the shipwreck and the missing gold.



Excerpt:

The Alabama coast—April 24, 1862

Even in the darkness of the pilothouse, the knuckles of
the captain’s hands gleamed bone white. He gripped
the wheel of the Skink and peered out at the dim silhouette
of Fort Morgan, one of two forts guarding the
mouth of Mobile Bay. Both forts were in Confederate hands,
and while the captain kept his boat within the protective
reach of their cannon, he knew he was safe. But now, following
the directions of his pilot, the captain steered the
Skink past the forts and out into the Gulf of Mexico—Federal
gunboat territory. With each chuff of the paddle wheel
steamer’s engines, he could feel the blood thicken inside his
veins.

It had been a harrowing week for the captain, and
indeed for all sons and daughters of the Confederacy. For
months, rumors of a Union attack on New Orleans had
swirled all along the Gulf Coast. Finally, a few days earlier,
Confederate spies had confirmed the news: an attack was
imminent. Throughout the Crescent City civilians and soldiers
scrambled to defend and, in many cases, flee the
South’s most important port. Several local businessmen had
hired the Skink to whisk both personal and commercial
freight to the safety of Havana, Cuba. But as the steamer
was preparing to leave, a Confederate major had unexpectedly
arrived with an additional cargo chest. The major
ordered the chest taken not to Havana, but to Fort Henry
at the mouth of Mobile Bay.

“But that’s well out of our way!” the captain had
protested. “It will put us in added danger from Union warships!”

The major showed little sympathy. “Agree now or I will
commandeer this vessel for military duty.”

The captain’s mouth opened, then closed again. His
choice was made. And in case the captain had any second
thoughts, the major left two soldiers on the vessel to make
sure his orders were executed.

As the Union Fleet assembled to begin shelling the
defenses that protected New Orleans, the Skink slipped out
into the Gulf of Mexico under cover of darkness. That night
the captain cursed his fortune. If it weren’t for the lastminute
command to deliver the mysterious chest, he would
already be running through open water toward Havana.

Instead he was forced to hug the coastline, on constant
alert for fickle currents, shifting sandbars, and Union gunboats.
But throughout the rest of the night and the next day,
his luck held. The Union blockade was still in its infancy and
posed only a modest threat to Confederate shipping.

Besides, the captain reasoned, the Union navy undoubtedly
had its hands full with the attack on New Orleans. As
they passed from New Orleans to Pascagoula, Mississippi,
the captain didn’t spot a single Union vessel. Even better, a
new moon and thick cloud cover helped obscure the Skink
from enemy eyes. Twenty-four hours after leaving New
Orleans, just after sunset, the Skink steamed safely through
the western access channel to Mobile Bay and docked at
the pier of Fort Henry.

Following the major’s instructions, the captain handed
over the mystery chest to the fort’s commander. Brigadier
General Josiah Buckford seemed surprised by the delivery.

“What are its contents?” he asked the captain.

The captain looked at the two soldiers who had accompanied
him. They shrugged and one responded, “Ain’t no
one told us, sir.”

“I also do not know,” the captain told General Buckford.

“Very well.” Turning to several soldiers on the pier, the
general barked, “Take the chest to my quarters. Do not
open it.” Then, returning his attention to the captain, he
said, “Allow us to offer you refreshment after your journey.
I would like to hear your observations on the situation in
N’Orleans.”

“Thank you, sir,” the captain replied, looking up at the
cloud-covered night sky, “but if it’s all the same to you, I’d
like to get underway while we still have concealment of
darkness and the tide runs high.”

The general nodded. “I understand.”

After taking on more coal, the Skink chugged away from
the dock. Instead of heading out of Mobile Bay’s main
entrance, the captain chose the preferred route of blockaderunners
and made his way to the easternmost channel, the
one protected by the guns of Fort Morgan. The fort slipped
by to the port side without incident, and after running
along the coast for another mile the captain spun the
wheel starboard, turning the Skink south toward open
waters. Two miles from shore the captain began to breathe
more deeply. Finally they were safe.

Then, without warning, the pilot shouted, “Captain! A
Union warship!”

“Full steam!” the captain ordered, but even as the words
left his mouth, he saw the warship’s outline less than half a
mile away. He knew that their situation was dire.

“Perhaps they do not see us,” the pilot said.

A warning shot from the Union vessel erased any
doubts.

“Raise sails!” the captain ordered his crew. “We need
every breath of speed we can muster.”

“Shouldn’t we surrender?” the pilot asked. “We don’t
stand a chance against their cannon.”

“Silence! I will not spend the rest of the war rotting in a
Yankee prison or turn over my boat to the Union cause!”

But the warship was already bearing down. Another
warning shot rent the night air.

“More steam, man!” the captain shouted at his engineer.

“The boilers will overheat!”

Just then the captain looked out to see the warship turning
to a full broadside position. His throat filled with bile
and before he could give another order, the Union gunboat’s
deadly cannon opened fire.

JUNE 1973

Chapter 1

The Divorce Shuffle stinks. I knew from firsthand
experience: It was my fourth summer flying across
the country from California to Florida to visit my
dad. It wasn’t that I didn’t want to see him. In fact, the
opposite was true. I missed my father all year long and
couldn’t wait to be with him again. But the transition,
well, that was tough.

Life with my mom and stepdad in California followed
a comfortable routine. On school days we got up at sixthirty,
ate toast and eggs for breakfast, and left the house
by eight. After school, if it was cross-country or track season,
I stayed for practice. If not, I caught the bus home,
changed my clothes, and took off riding bikes with the
other guys in the neighborhood. Dinner at six o’clock
sharp. Homework. Then my favorite time of the day. I dug
out my coin collection and spread it out on my desk. I
powered up my new Pioneer SX-454 receiver, put on the
headphones, and dialed in the latest tracks from Led Zeppelin,
the Rolling Stones, and the Who on the world’s
greatest radio station, KMET-FM in Los Angeles. After an
hour or two rocking out and poring over my latest coin
finds, I flopped into bed to rest up for another, almost
identical day.

Okay, so it wasn’t the most thrilling existence, but it
was comfortable. I knew what to expect.

Not so with my dad.

Unlike my mom, my dad hadn’t remarried. He’d had
girlfriends now and then, but nothing had stuck. No surprise.
My dad…well, he did what he wanted to—a habit
that didn’t exactly nurture long-term relationships. After
finishing his PhD at the University of California at Santa
Barbara, he’d landed a job as a biology professor at the
University of West Florida in Pensacola. During my six to
eight weeks with him each summer, the days were as
unpredictable as the Gulf Coast’s turbulent weather.

Some days my dad would shake me awake and
announce an expedition to look for turtles or snakes or
pitcher plants. Other days he’d take me out to his lab and
put me to work inhaling formaldehyde fumes while I
sorted samples of sargassum weed he’d collected in the
Gulf of Mexico. Many days, while he worked on a grant
proposal or scientific paper, I’d read adventure novels or
look for alligators down at the campus bayou. To my
friends back home, this all sounded groovy, and I have to
admit that except for the formaldehyde, I liked it pretty
well.

But it was also a big adjustment. That first week my
dad always managed to tick me off somehow—by accident
or on purpose, I could never be sure. Only after we
got into a big fight or two did things settle down enough
for me to embrace the new routine, or lack of it.

This year, though, my dad decided to throw something
entirely new at me—something that caused me more than
my usual level of “arrival anxiety.” As soon as he picked
me up at the Pensacola Airport, he whisked me across the
Alabama state line in his beige VW Squareback. He drove
us under the city of Mobile through the Bankhead Tunnel.
Then, we rattled down the west side of Mobile Bay toward
a place called Shipwreck Island, where he had taken a
summer job teaching invertebrate zoology at a brand-new
marine lab. It was there, not Pensacola, where I would be
spending the next two months.

As our beige beast bumped onto the three-mile-long
drawbridge that reached out from the mainland, I saw the
long silhouette of Shipwreck Island looming dark and
mysterious across the sun-splattered surface of the Intracoastal
Waterway. My stomach knotted and I began counting
my teeth with the tip of my tongue, something I always
did when I was nervous. What will our living quarters
there be like? I worried. How many new people will I have
to meet? What am I going to do all summer while Dad is
teaching? Why can’t he just stay in one place like a normal
parent?

I would soon learn the answers—at least to my first
three questions.

* * *

After crossing the drawbridge we passed through a little
village, if you could call it that. A large marina with about
a hundred boats filled the protected inlet to our left. On the
right sat a gas station, a restaurant, a couple of houses, and
a store called “Bait ’n Stuff.” The Bait ’n Stuff looked like
the main game on the island for shopping of any kind, and
it featured a hand-painted sign that read “Best Tamales
This Side ’a Pascagoula.”

I laughed, momentarily forgetting my anxiety.

“Did I miss something?” my dad asked.

I pointed to the sign. “Are there any other tamales this
side of Pascagoula?”

My dad grinned. “I see your point.”

At a T intersection we turned left and rumbled down
a long, straight road through a forest of pine, oak, and
palmetto. Here and there another road opened up on
either side, and I glimpsed a few houses tucked among
the trees. Two miles later, we reached a treeless expanse
that seemed to encompass the entire eastern tip of the
island.

A sign read “South Coast University Marine Laboratories.”

My dad slowed and turned right through an open
chain-link gate. I squinted at a collection of bleached cinder-
block buildings that looked more like a prison than a
place of higher learning. We parked in front of a long, twostory,
whitewashed building that sat squat and permanent,
as though it had been carved from a single, massive block
of concrete.

“Welcome to SCUM-Lab,” my father said, using the
nickname the place had acquired during its first year of
operation. “Whaddya think?”

“It’s not the Holiday Inn,” I observed.

My dad chuckled. “You’re right. At Holiday Inns, the
roaches don’t eat nearly as well. Let’s go check out our
accommodations.”

My dad had already told me that until recently the lab
had been a United States Air Force radar base. The base
had been constructed to withstand a nuclear attack, which
explained the bleak, durable construction of the dormitory
and other buildings. When the base closed, Alabama’s
major universities had petitioned Congress to turn it over
to the university system for a marine biology lab. It was
obvious that they’d forgotten to ask for any money to fix
the place up.

I trailed my dad up the front staircase to the secondfloor
hallway of the monolithic whitewashed building.

“This was the base barracks for enlisted men,” my dad
said. “Now it’s Home Sweet Home.”

He stopped outside of Room 208, inserted a key, and
opened the door. I entered to find a cell-block room inhabited
by a sagging double bed, a dresser with peeling
veneer, and a desk with enough coffee cup rings on it to
make a dozen Olympic flags.

I studied the bed. “We’re sharing that?” I asked, already
dreading the prospect of sleeping next to my dad’s chainsaw
snore.

“It’s not quite as grim as it looks,” he said. “We’re
lucky. We got a deluxe suite.”

I followed him into the walk-through bathroom and out
the other side to a second bedroom. “See?” he said. “You
get a room all to yourself.”

The relief must have showed on my face. My dad
laughed and punched me on the shoulder. “Don’t look so
glum. You’re going to like it here,” he told me.

How would you know? I wanted to say, but I kept my
mouth shut.

“Come on,” he said. “I’ll give you the grand tour.”

* * *

Leaving our “deluxe suite,” we clattered down the rear
metal fire escape of the barracks. Even before we reached
the bottom I heard the lightning crack of billiard balls
smashing together.

“Sounds like someone’s in the rec room,” my dad said.

We walked through an open door to find three men
clustered around a pool table. One guy was leaning forward
over the table, cue poised for a shot, but he straightened
up when he saw us. “Hey, Doc!”

“Hey, Doc yourself,” my dad said. “Professor Robert
Halsted, this is my son Michael.”

“Call me Bob,” the man told me. Professor Halsted
looked about my dad’s age—in his midthirties or so—and
was also my dad’s height of about five foot ten. His
medium-length brown hair hung down his neck and a
scruffy, untrimmed beard wrapped around his chin. “Welcome
to Alabama,” he said, his handshake warm and
friendly.

My dad turned to the second man. “Rod, my son
Michael.” At six foot three or so, Rod towered over everyone
else in the room. Younger than Professor Halsted—in
his early twenties, I guessed—Rod had a deeply tanned
face and a full head of curly hair that poofed out like a
sun-bleached sea sponge. He wore a string of beads
around his neck, but I guessed they were there to look
cool, not to promote peace, love, and understanding.
“Rod’s in my invert class,” my dad explained.

I expected Rod to shake hands with me too, or at least
show some interest. Instead he just mumbled, “Hey, kid”
and returned his attention to the pool table.

Finally my dad turned to the last person in the room.

“And Mike, this is the boy I’ve been telling you about,
Kyle Daniels.”

My dad used the word “boy,” but Kyle Daniels looked
well on his way to becoming a man. He stood only an inch
or so taller than I did, but in that yellow tank top his shoulders
looked half again as wide as mine. His almost-white
hair hung straight and shaggy over his sunburned ears, and
his blue eyes glinted even before he said anything.

Kyle stepped forward and stuck out his hand. “How ya
doin’, Michael?” He flashed me a smile so bright my
pupils groaned.

“I’m okay,” I muttered.

“I’ve been telling Kyle you were coming,” my dad
said.

Kyle nodded. “Yeah. Glad to have you around. This
place can get a little dead.”

“Mmm-hmm.” You’d think I’d also be glad to have
Kyle around, especially marooned out on an island at the
very tip of Alabama.

I wasn’t.

Kyle’s presence was just one more uncertainty I had to
deal with. One more relationship I had to work out. Worse,
I realized, he represented something I usually didn’t have
to deal with in the summers—competition. My dad had
already told me that Kyle was a year older than me—
fifteen to my fourteen. What my father hadn’t mentioned
was that Kyle was also stronger and better-looking than
me. And his annoyingly cheery smile probably meant that
he had a great personality. If that wasn’t enough, Kyle had
gotten here before me and had a chance to get in good with
everyone before I arrived. Didn’t my dad’s student Rod
blow me off just the moment before?

No, I wasn’t happy about Kyle Daniels. Sixty seconds
after meeting him, I wished a tornado would roar down on
Shipwreck Island and blow him away.





About Sneed B. Collard III:


Since 1983 Sneed B. Collard III has been a biologist, computer scientist, and author. He began writing after graduating with honors in marine biology from the University of California at Berkeley. After earning his master’s in scientific instrumentation at the University of California at Santa Barbara, he continued to hone his craft while serving as a computer consultant for biologists.

The main focus of Sneed’s work has always been nature, science, and the environment. The son of biologists, he fell in love with the natural world at an early age, watching whales with his mother and catching snakes, turtles, and fish with his father. In his writing, he draws from both his formal education, as well as from extensive travels to the Middle East, Asia, Australia, Central America, and other parts of the world. His articles have appeared in The Humanist, Environmental Action, Florida Wildlife, Islands, Cricket, and Highlights for Children.

Author of more than 50 books for young people, Sneed seeks not only to educate, entertain, and inspire children, but also to empower them to effect positive change. In addition to writing, he is also an active speaker. He has won many speaking awards and addresses thousands of students and educators each year about writing and the environment. Sneed was recently awarded the Washington Post Children's Book Guild Nonfiction Award for 2006.

Sneed lives in Montana where he continues to write books and articles for young people.

Additional Young Adult Titles by Sneed B. Collard III:

Dog Sense

Flash Point

Awards
* 2004 Dog Writers of America Writing competition, children's book category (finalist)
* 2005 ASPCA Henry Bergh Children's Book Award
* 2005-2006 Pennsylvania Young Adult Top Forty List
* 2006-2007 Flicker Tale Children's Book Award (ND)
* Special Recognition, 2006 Paterson Prize for Books for Young People (NJ)
* Nominee, 2006-2007 KSRA Young Adult Book Award (PA)
* Nominee, 2007-2008 Texas Lone Star Awards
* Nominee, 2008 Charlotte Award (intermediate list) (NY)




*Above pictures:
~Admiral David G. Farragut
~Present time Fort Morgan
~Confederate States of America coins similar to coinage time in Double Eagle
~Mobile Bay during Civil War
~Mobile Bay at present with Dauphin Island (place Shipwreck Island was loosely based upon)


*Thanks, so much, to Erin Deedy of Peachtree Publishers for allowing me to join in on this tour and providing Double Eagle for me to read, enjoy and review!