In 13 ON HALLOWEEN, book
1, Roxie invites all the eighth grade peacocks (code word : popular
kids) to her first ever thirteenth birthday party on Halloween, they all
come and give her a gift that’s literally out of this world. Roxie astral
projects to Planet Popular where she becomes seventeen instantly and gets
everything she’s always wanted, but nothing is as it seems. In SHADOW SLAYER,
book 2, Roxie is one year older and discovers Planet Popular was just the
beginning––part of a bigger world, the shadow world, where all our alter egos
live. Shadows want to become human more
than anything. When the shadow invasion begins at Roxie’s high
school, she’ll not only fight for her life but the lives of her family and
friends, when she discovers she’s the Shadow Slayer, the one human who can save
Earth from the shadow onslaught. But, Roxie can’t even kill a spider. 13 ON
HALLOWEEN, is now available as an audiobook on iTunes,
Audible
or Amazon.
Here’s a blurb about Shadow Slayer (Shadow
Series #2):
Shadows will do anything to become human.
You see their influence everyday.
You say things you don’t mean or do things that
aren’t like you.
You look, different.
Friends you’ve known forever suddenly never call.
As a freshman, Roxie just
wants to fit in which is impossible because she barely runs into her friends at
her huge high school. Adrianne’s disappearance and Hayden’s attention rock
Roxie’s world. But nothing rocks it like the most gorgeous guy at school, Drew.
And nothing is more important to Roxie than astral projecting back to Planet
Popular to solve the mystery of the map. But that changes when Drew invites
Roxie to homecoming. Hayden warns her that something’s wrong. Why would a guy
like Drew like Roxie anyway? Drew must want something. Hayden’s right. Drew
is…different. Planet Popular was just the beginning. Part of a bigger world,
the Shadow World. There’s a war brewing between the world of humans and the
world of shadows. When the shadow invasion begins at Roxie’s high school,
she’ll not only fight for her life but the lives of her family and friends,
when she discovers she’s the Shadow Slayer, the one human who can save Earth
from the shadow onslaught. But, Roxie can’t even kill a spider. Oh yeah,
there’s an evil English teacher, an enchanted play, a sword of Sandonian steel,
a homecoming of horrors, and seven magic words too.
Tempest
Teaser:
I pull some blush and mascara out of my makeup bag. I’m
late, as usual. No one else is in here with me and it’s too quiet, too quiet
for opening night. I try extra hard to keep the makeup off my dress, wedging
scratchy brown paper towels all along my shoulder strap to protect it.
I glance over at one of the open, empty lockers. My sword
hides in locker number 316, a row away from me. I thought about slaying every
one of the shadows that had invaded in dress rehearsal but there was no way for
me to ride the bus and sneak my sword in to school without a million eyes on
me. Without getting noticed by some teacher who’d confiscate it and expel me
for bringing a weapon to school. I had so much stuff to take for the play that
Mom offered to give me a ride at the crack of dawn this morning. I hid my sword
under my dress. Mom was so scattered because of her big meeting she didn’t
notice anything and since it was so early no one was in the halls to give me a
second look when I hid my sword in my locker. Note to self: early morning is a
good time to hide stuff at school.
I stroke one cheek and then the other with blush and
remember standing with Drew at the bonfire. The last night we went out as
boyfriend and girlfriend. The last night he was human.
On your 13th birthday,
you get the call. By your 14th birthday you find out what the call is.
Everyone I know is in the audience tonight. Ally, Mom, Dad,
Brian, even Mitch because he came home for my birthday. We’re having our family dinner tomorrow night since
tonight the cast party’s at Drew’s house, unless I decapitate him first.
“Roxie five minutes!” Hayden yells into the girl’s locker
room. As usual I’m the last one out. I sweep my hair up to the side and try to
remember my first line. For some reason it’s the one I always forget.
All hail, great
master! grave sir, hail! I come
To answer thy best
pleasure...
I open locker 316, grab my sword and just as I step outside
of the locker room Wanda runs up to me and starts talking non-stop about her
nerves and how they’re getting worse and worse.
“What’s that?” she asks. I stop cold in my tracks at the
backstage door.
“There are lots of words for things that don’t exist––the
unseen. Like monsters and aliens and dragons and vampires and ghosts,” I say
sort of in a trance.
“Yeah, so?” Wanda says, wringing her hands.
“If they don’t exist, why are there words for them? All the
stuff I thought was crazy really isn’t crazy at all,” I say, finally getting
what Drew was trying to tell me at the bonfire at the estate at homecoming.
What the human Drew said before I danced with his shadow. My role in the
unseen, the shadow world. Still, I don’t know so many things. Like, what
happens to a shadow once I slay it? And where do humans go when their shadows
invade? How can I save my human friends?
“Roxie, I caught you! I was so late because Brian’s car got
a flat. He fixed it so great, I couldn’t believe it. It’s like he went to bad
ass school or something,” Ally says, laughing.
“Ally. Finally!” We hug. I swallow hard. Brian. Fixed. A.
Flat. I mean it’s not brain surgery but believe me, if it doesn’t have an LCD
screen Brian doesn’t think it exists. He doesn’t know how to fix a flat. O.M.G.
Brian is probably a shadow too.
Zombie
Teaser:
I turn another corner in the labyrinth. Every leaf, every
twig, and the grass changes colors. Unnatural colors. I startle at a huge
rustle beside me and bite my nails.
Two disembodied arms stick out of the bush next to me. My
heart beats hard against my chest. I try to wriggle out of his grip but
whoeveritis clamps down on my arms making it hard for me to get any leverage.
“AAAAAHhhhhh!” I scream, writhing back and forth. I fight to
free my arms but he’s already wrestled them to my sides. I can’t move. He lifts
me a few inches off the ground. I kick and stare at my useless hands and spot
the long nails with black nail polish that begin to dig into my skin. There’s a
tattoo on each finger. All the same. Stars, I think.
“I want to suck your blood!” he says laughing, lowering me
to the ground. As soon as my feet get a little traction I kick and try to run
away.
“Ouch! Drew, control your woman!” One of the guys says, a
familiar voice. A football player steps out of the bushes. He loosens his grip
and places an arm, the size of my thigh, over my shoulders. He marches us out
of the labyrinth. I twist around, searching the maze. There’s no sign of the
sword, my sword.
Drew doubles over, laughing and the prankster takes my hand
and places it in Drew’s. My gaze falls on the spot of fabric where Drew’s
boutonniere isn’t. We’re surrounded by a bunch of homecoming zombies.
Sixteen-year-old zombies. Their tuxedo coats all ripped and fake-aged with
chalk or something. The black make-up around their eyes smudge into their white
make up, their faces so pale they kind of glow in the moonlight.
“Zombies don’t suck blood!” Drew says between laughs.
“I know it just sounds so much better than I’d like to eat
your brains,” the guy says. “Who’s this tasty morsel?”
“Roxie, this is everyone,” Drew says. In the middle of a
circle of homecoming zombies, I immediately breathe easier. “Everyone, this is
Roxie,” Drew gives my hand a little squeeze. I sink into his hug, floating my
fingers over the spot where his boutonniere should be.
“Finally. Hey, I’m Franklin.” A large guy, the guy who had
me in his grip and the size of a line backer, exactly the size of a line
backer, pulls me away from Drew and buries me in a bear hug.
“That’s enough,” Drew says, taking a hand to Franklin’s
shoulder, separating us.
“This is the one, huh?” another guy, smaller than the rest,
says. “I’m CeCe.” He kind of scowls as he puts his hands in his pockets and
rubs his chin with his shoulder. A little of his undead makeup rubs off on his
brown suit coat.
“Hey,” I say. “What’s with the whole Halloween homecoming
get up?” It’s all I can manage. I get super shy when I’m around people I don’t
know, let alone football players who are years older than me who I barely know.
Guys who just tricked me.
“She totally fell for it guys!” Another of the guys says.
“This is Randy,” Drew says, using his whole arm to point him
out.
Randy makes like he’s going to run into me and dodges me at
the last minute. “May I have this dance?” he says in a made-up English accent.
He doesn’t wait for an answer and twirls me around then dips me and says, “I am
you know... randy....” with a mischievous smile.
I turn to face Drew. “So what? All that was a joke?”
Drew gazes at the ground before he walks over and wraps me
in his arms. His lips meet mine in a forceful kiss. “All of that,” he says. It’s
like the best date ever, aside from the fact he made me believe I’m a Shadow
Slayer and have to save the world.
Homecoming teaser:
The band’s taken a break and we’re dancing slow to a song I’ve never
heard before. It’s perfect for right now. My first dance at my first homecoming
on Earth. I place my head on Drew’s chest and breathe easy for what seems like
the very first time all night. He sighs, stroking my thumb with his. I could
stay here forever.
“Sorry about that,” Drew says.
“Old girlfriend?” I ask, straightening up just a little, leaning my head
back. I catch Drew staring down at me with his golden eyes and forget all about
the way he tricked me at the labyrinth. One look at him and I melt.
“Very old.”
“Am I your girlfriend?” I can’t help it. The words just leave my lips,
and in the silence after, I wish I had some sort of filter. A boyfriend filter
that would stop me from asking lame questions like am I your girlfriend? I can’t help but think
that Adrianne would never ask a question like that. And girls that do can’t
help but sound kind of psycho. I can’t believe no one has heard from Adrianne.
It’s been months.
“What do you think?”
I think I might be too young to feel the way I do about Drew, but it’s
been hard coming back as a younger girl after I lived a day as a
seventeen-year-old high school homecoming queen in the shadow world. Some
things I can’t forget. Some things I can’t change. I’m older now. Even though I
don’t look like it.
Drew slides his hands over my hips then they travel up, inch-by-inch,
along my ribs. He grabs a hold of my hands and unwraps them from around his
neck. We stand toe-to-toe facing each other. Drew spins me in a circle. The
reflections from the disco ball shower us and make it seem like we’re dancing
in a dream world. He spins me again then pulls me close. I bury my head in his
chest and stare at our shadows on the floor. But I only see one. Mine.
Stuff
for Tweets / FB posts :D
As a freshman, Roxie just wanted to
fit in...SHADOW SLAYER (Shadow Series #2) Just released! #ya #paranormal
#fantasy http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Slayer-The-Series-ebook/dp/B009CJ5DXE
13 on Halloween (Shadow Series #1)
FREE! http://www.amazon.com/Halloween-The-Shadow-Series-ebook/dp/B005NFPDL8 #ya
#romance #fantasy SHADOW SLAYER book 2, just released!
Laura
A. H. Elliott BIO:
I love writing about
enchanted road trips, shadow worlds, and alien romance while eating lots of
popcorn. I live with my hubby and Oso, our aussie shepherd, in our tree house
on the central California coast. After twenty-plus years as a freelance graphic
designer/animator with clients including E! Entertainment Television and The
Los Angeles Times, I crossed over into the world of publishing non-fiction and
followed my heart to the world of fiction. Check
out my other books at Laurasmagicday.wordpress.com
or find me on Facebook or @Laurawriting!
Finally my Review:
This book was unlike the first book, if anything it got better though. I say the author defiantly threw in some unexpected twists and kept the reader interested. I would say this was a nice quick read that hooked into the supernatural world but stayed relateable to the average YA reader.
Now check out the giveaway
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Finally my Review:
This book was unlike the first book, if anything it got better though. I say the author defiantly threw in some unexpected twists and kept the reader interested. I would say this was a nice quick read that hooked into the supernatural world but stayed relateable to the average YA reader.
Now check out the giveaway
