NAMELESS is in development for film by Benderspink! That’s the same company who optioned Victoria Aveyard’s Red Queen and produced the I AM NUMBER FOUR film!
Jennifer is also one of the co-founders of Teen Author Boot Camp, and works with amazing authors like James Dashner and Brandon Sanderson to help teens master the craft or writing.
Release Date: October 6th, 2015
Four clans have been at war for centuries:
the Kodiak, the Raven, the Wolf and the Ram. Through brutal war tactics, the
Ram have dominated the region, inflicting death and destruction on their
neighbors.
Seventeen-year-old Zo is a Wolf and a Healer who volunteers to infiltrate the Ram as a spy on behalf of the allied clans. She offers herself as a Ram slave, joining the people who are called the “nameless.” Hers is a suicide mission – Zo’s despair after losing her parents in a Ram raid has left her seeking both revenge and an end to her own misery. But after her younger sister follows her into Rams Gate, Zo must find a way to survive her dangerous mission and keep her sister safe.
Seventeen-year-old Zo is a Wolf and a Healer who volunteers to infiltrate the Ram as a spy on behalf of the allied clans. She offers herself as a Ram slave, joining the people who are called the “nameless.” Hers is a suicide mission – Zo’s despair after losing her parents in a Ram raid has left her seeking both revenge and an end to her own misery. But after her younger sister follows her into Rams Gate, Zo must find a way to survive her dangerous mission and keep her sister safe.
What she doesn’t expect to find is the friendship of a young Ram whose life she saves, the confusing feelings she develops for a Ram soldier, and an underground nameless insurrection. Zo learns that revenge, loyalty and love are more complicated than she ever imagined in the first installment of this two-book series.
New York Times bestselling author Jessica Day George read NAMELESS and loved it!: "Jenkins brings edge-of-your-seat adventure to this intriguing new world. I can’t wait to read more!”
EXCERPT
Chapter 1
Zo couldn’t remember a time when she
didn’t fear the Ram.
Even after the raid, when so much of her fear had turned to
hate, the fear still existed beneath. It was a foundation that she came to rely
upon. A constant.
Sleeping under a fir tree so close to Ram’s Gate went against
her very nature. While her body revolted, she couldn’t think of a more
appropriate place to be. Zo choked down the beastly fear clawing its way up her
throat and smiled like this was just another assignment. “It’s time, Gabe.”
Her guard, Gabe, rested on soggy pine needles beside her. His
hands were tucked behind his shaggy blond head, eyes closed in feigned sleep.
He used to lay like that, with his arms arrogantly thrown back and his chest
puffed out like he owned the world, when they were kids. The river would rush
by carrying rumors of starving clans and battles lost—heartache that pulled
tight strings of tension throughout Zo’s body— while Gabe just laid back and
chewed on a grass root.
Today, Gabe’s pretend-sleep didn’t fool Zo any more than it
ever had. They both knew he hadn’t slept soundly since they’d left the Allied
Camp a week ago. With eyes still closed, Gabe frowned as Zo left the protection
of his side to bundle her bedroll. She crawled out from under the skirt of the
enormous fir tree. Its sweeping limbs that kissed the uneven ground had kept
them as safe as one could be in this godforsaken region. Behind her, Gabe
growled impatiently as he gathered his things to follow.
“There’s no need to rush this.” He pushed the branch aside and
threw out his pack with more force than necessary. Zo flinched, not used to
seeing her childhood friend angry.
“You didn’t wake me for my watch again,” said Zo, unsurprised.
Ever since they’d left the Allies, Gabe had been insanely overprotective.
“You need your sleep.”
“And you don’t?”
Gabe sighed and scooped a blob of mud from the newly thawed
earth. He frowned and smeared it along the curved planes of Zo’s face and neck.
The cool mud felt surprisingly comforting, but it could have just been Gabe’s
touch. His capable hands shook while lines of worry deepened across his brow.
“This won’t work.” He stopped and cupped his muddy hand at
the base of her neck, his blue eyes pleading. “You’re too pretty. A little mud
can’t change that.”
Zo yanked on the sleeve of her shirt until the seam split
then ripped and frayed the cuff of her pant legs. Young, unarmed women just
didn’t go on casual strolls through the perilous hills of the Ram. Commander
Laden said she needed to look desperate if she wanted them to believe her
story. Her lie.
As if looking
desperate is hard, Zo
thought.
Gabe stood a full head taller than Zo. Despite his large frame,
he could outrun a jackrabbit and his mind was just as quick. A valuable weapon
for the Allies. But with all of his abilities, he was not the one walking into
the lion’s den this morning.
He untwisted the strap of Zo’s medical satchel and let out a
long breath before dropping his hands to his sides.
“I’ll miss you,” said Zo. Her voice carried the mechanical cadence
she’d adopted several years ago. A small part of her— the part that wasn’t
dead—hated disappointing Gabe. He’d done so much for her and her little sister,
Tess, since they’d journeyed from the Valley of Wolves to live with Commander Laden
and the Allies.
Thinking of her wild, eight-year-old sister brought a temporary
smile to Zo’s muddied face. She couldn’t think of Tess and not imagine her
tromping through the forest trying to catch squirrels and sneak up on rabbits.
It was her second favorite thing to do, next to following Zo around the Allied Camp.
The little tick wouldn’t take her absence well. Zo had left a note and arranged
for her care, but that didn’t mean the kid wouldn’t be furious.
Gabe pressed his cold hands to Zo’s face and forced her to look
at him. “Come back with me, Zo. Let Commander Laden send someone else. Someone
with less to lose.” “We’re not doing this again.” Zo pulled away. She had begged
for this mission, and she would see it through. No matter what the cost. The
Allies desperately needed information that only she could provide, if they
hoped to defeat the most powerful military force in the region.
Gabe’s hands curled into fists. His voice rose to carry over
the wind that whipped his unruly hair. “Entering Ram’s Gate is suicide! We
don’t even know if you can get the information Laden’s after.”
The truth was far worse than Gabe could possibly know. He
hadn’t heard what life would be like inside the Gate. They would eventually
discover her, and once they did, they’d kill her. Plain and simple.
There were worse things a person could endure.
She’d do anything for the Cause.
“Goodbye, Gabe.” She kissed his frozen, whiskered cheek.
His hand clamped down on Zo’s wrist and he yanked her into a
fierce embrace. “I’ll be close, waiting to help you escape the minute you send
word.” He smoothed down her wild, dark
hair. “I’ll find a way to keep you safe, Zo. I swear it.”Zo
forced a hollow smile, for Gabe’s sake. “Look after Tess. Tell her I’m doing
this for her. Tell her I’m doing it for our parents.”
She left Gabe standing frozen in the low light of morning. After
a hard climb, Zo reached the towering wall of Ram’s Gate. The wall was
comprised of redwood logs at least four feet in diameter and fifty feet tall,
bound together with heavy rope and shaved to a point at the top. Black tar and
broken glass glimmered along the high rim of the wall to discourage clans
foolish enough to attack, and souls brave enough to dare escape.
Zo looked right and left and saw no end to the wall through the
thick maze of aspen and evergreens. From her training with Commander Laden, she
knew the giant wall ran for miles in each direction until it reached the cliffs
that dropped off to the freezing ocean below. Inside the wall were hundreds of
acres of farmlands, mountainous forests, and enough homes to house thousands of
Ram and the slaves they called “Nameless.” Calmer than a sane person should be,
Zo dropped to her knees in the shadow of the ominous wall. Knowing these might
be the last free moments of her life, she allowed herself to think about things
that were normally buried deep within her. The memory of her mother’s soft
skin. The safety of her father’s smile. Tess’ dimples and her eagerness to
please, despite her stubborn ways.
The moment was as sweet as it was brief. But it was hers. Deep-voiced
drums boomed and the enormous gate rose inch by inch. Men shouted orders and
whips cracked. Through the gap of the slow-rising gate she saw at least forty
men in tattered animal hides with harnesses on their backs. They slipped
through mud while struggling to turn a giant wheel connected to a thick chain
to raise the gate.
The Nameless. The Ram had kept slaves for hundreds of years,
some were captured, others came willingly, while most were born into the lowly
title.
Instinct told her to run, but fear and determination kept
her frozen in place. She locked the people she loved back into the cage that
was her heart and prepared to face her enemy. Zo pressed her nose into the icy
mud in a show of submission. The drums ceased and the silence echoed in her chest
like a painful heartbeat.
The metal of short swords clinked against armor as men approached.
She peeked up to sight of a bald leader walking ahead of a wall of six
soldiers. His cold eyes seemed too big for his head, protuberant like those of
a frog.
“Get up,” the leader commanded.
Zo climbed to her feet but kept her gaze focused on the man’s
fur-lined boots.
“State your name and clan,” he ordered.
“I am from the family Shaw of the Kodiak Clan,” Zo said, hoping
her accent would pass. The Ram had raided one of the Kodiak settlements a few
weeks earlier. Many of the women and children whose husbands had died in the
raid would come to the Gate, choosing to offer themselves as slaves over watching
their children starve to death.
The leader circled her. “Age?”
“Seventeen.”
A few of the guards in the line exchanged words. One laughed
under his breath.
“You’re too thin to claim the Kodiak as your clan. Your jaw
is more square than round.”
The sound of a young girl’s scream saved Zo from having to
answer.
“Let me go! You’re hurting me!” the girl cried.
Zo froze. It
couldn’t be …
A guard dressed in full armor carried the kicking child up the
muddy hill and dropped her at the bald leader’s feet. Zo’s whole body went
rigid as her eight-year-old sister, Tess, scrambled up to hug her. “I’m so
sorry,” Tess cried. She must have secretly followed them from the Allies,
though how she survived the dangerous journey unnoticed was beyond Zo.
“Tess, I thought I’d lost you,” Zo stammered. She hoped her
shock registered as relief instead of panic. “Don’t say a word,” Zo whispered
in her ear as they embraced.
“Who is this child?” the frog-eyed leader asked.
“She is my sister, sir. We were separated. She found me.”
“Clearly.” He circled the girls once more then reached out and
grabbed Zo by the throat, forcing her to the ground on her back. His lips
brushed her cheek as he spoke. “How do I know you’re not a stinking Wolf? That
you’re not feeding me some story?” His breath reeked of stale cabbage and
rotten sausage. Zo’s heels dug small trenches in the mud as she struggled against
the hand tightening around her throat. Black dots invaded her vision.
The leader smiled and licked his lips as if she were his
next meal. “We don’t allow Wolves through the Gate.” A string of spittle
escaped his lips and landed on her cheek. “Ever.” He released his grip and Zo
gasped for air.
Tess rushed to Zo’s side, her eyes wet with tears.
“With all of the clans mixing, it’s getting harder and
harder to sort the wheat from the tares. I can’t take any chances …
” He shrugged and nodded to his guard. The men moved in, pulling
the sisters apart. Tess let out a shrill cry. A guard struck her tiny cheek.
“Please!” Zo fought against firm hands digging into her arms.
“I come from three generations of healers. My sister is learning too. We beg
the mercy of the Ram, and pledge our lives to your service!”
The Gate Master held up a hand, and his men threw Zo to the
ground. His round, glassy eyes stayed fixed on her as he grunted a soft command
to one of his men. The soldier nodded, bowed, and ran back through the Gate.
About the author:
With her degree in History and Secondary
Education, Jennifer had every intention of teaching teens to love George
Washington and appreciate the finer points of ancient battle stratagem.
(Seriously, she’s obsessed with ancient warfare.) However, life had different
plans in store when the writing began.
As a proud member of Writers Cubed, and
a co-founder of the Teen Author Boot Camp, she feels blessed to be able to
fulfill both her ambition to work with teens as well as write Young Adult
fiction.
Jennifer has three children who are experts
at naming her characters, one loving, supportive husband, a dog with little-man
syndrome, and three chickens (of whom she is secretly afraid).
Visit her online at:
1 comment:
quick keys don't always work when you don't hold down shift!
Sorry. I pasted 'v' instead of my twitter link
https://twitter.com/Arf2D2/status/622296696287023105
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