Description: 16+
A struggling psychic girl steps out into the big, wide world amidst the murky depths of racial segregation in England, 1961.
As a teenage psychic, Josephine Fontaine knows what it’s like to be different. At Peregrine Place, a school full of youngsters with gifts just like hers, sixteen-year-old Josie is growing tired of her life and looking for excitement beyond the grand manor house’s walls. When an opportunity arises to work in a local music bar, she jumps at the chance, learning to balance her new job with the pressures of studying the ways of the Synsk.
There she meets the charming Tommy Asher, a fellow psychic with a talent for music, and Jake Bolton, a handsome, surly stranger with coffee-coloured skin. Throw in the return of her old crush Dai Bickerstaff, and Josie finds herself embroiled in a drama much bigger than she could have imagined, especially when certain parties take issue to her developing a friendship with a boy who isn’t white-skinned. When a mysterious record mogul offers Josie help to improve her psychic gifts, her world turns totally upside down, and she begins to question everything she thought she knew about the world, her family, and even herself.
Coming of age was never so intense as it will be for Josie in the winter of 1961.
EXCERPT
“When
you’ve quite finished mumbling, young man,” Miss Cartwright said in her clipped
tone.
A
few people giggled as the boy sank into the seat beside me. He was smaller with
the guitar absent from his back, and he seemed much less sure of himself here
than when he’d been trying to convince Frost to let him play at Halfway. I
reasoned that he must have recently come to the village ready to start school
here and spotted the club on the side of the lane just like us. Miss Cartwright
cleared her throat, commanding utter silence from the assembled kids.
“Answer
me when I call your name,” she instructed. “Let’s make sure we have no dunces
who have come to the wrong room.”
The
boy looked down at his desk skittishly.
“Thomas
Asher,” Miss Cartwright said.
The
boy suddenly looked up again, eyes widening. “Oh, um. Yes, Miss,” he replied,
“I mean, here, Miss.”
Miss
Cartwright gave him her best glare, but said nothing more on the matter. She
began to move across the room as she called out names, studying every face in
the rows before her.
It’s Tommy actually,
a voice suddenly said in my head. Only my
nanna calls me Thomas.
I
took a deep breath, pushing my mind towards his. Did I give you permission to speak in my head? I asked him.
Although
I was tuning out of the room to speak with him, I could still see the outline
of his face as he smiled at me; I was caught somewhere partway between reality
and full psychic concentration.
Sorry,
Tommy answered, but I certainly wasn’t
going to whisper out loud with her staring at me. Scary woman, that one.
I
tried my best not to giggle. You have no
idea, I answered. She’s been teaching
me for six years.
Not cool,
Tommy replied.
A
book suddenly slammed down on my desk. I leapt in my seat, my old, wooden chair
rattling as I looked up into the thunderous face of my teacher. “Josephine
Fontaine,” she said, her teeth gritted. “Are we in such a state of distraction
that we can’t answer our own name on the register nowadays?”
I
gave Tommy a withering glare, watching him bite his lip to hold back a laugh.
“Sorry,
Miss,” I answered. “But you do know I’m here. I mean, it’s not as though we’re
strangers.” I regretted adding the bit after the apology immediately.
“Oh
no, we know each other very well,” she answered primly. “I suspect you’re going
to be repeating this class until we’re both white-haired and wrinkled.”
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About the author:
Born in South Wales to Raymond and Jennifer Finn, Kimberley Charlotte Elisabeth Finn (known to readers as K.C., otherwise it’d be too much of a mouthful) was one of those corny little kids who always wanted to be a writer. She was also incredibly stubborn, and so has finally achieved that dream in 2013 with the release of her first three novellas in the four-part Caecilius Rex saga, the time travel adventure The Secret Star and her new urban fantasy epic The Book Of Shade.
As a sufferer with the medical condition M.E./C.F.S., Kim works part time as a private tutor and a teacher of creative writing, devoting the remainder of her time to writing novels and studying for an MA in Education and Linguistics.
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2 comments:
Thank you for this fab feature!
Thank for the giveaway. I really like the time setting of this book, so much changed during that decade.
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