Anyway, my teaser for this week comes from a seriously AWESOME NOVEL! You wanna know? Read on!
When they walked back through the graveyard, Violet let all the echoes, including Brooke's, fall back into one harmonious static hum, filling her with tranquility once again.
They were bodies at peace, ripped from this world before their time, but laid to rest by those who loved them most.
~p. 153, "The Body Finder" by Kimberly Derting
I dunno about you but that teaser just gave me goosebumps! Scary, huh? But this is an awesome novel!
By the way, I have good news! I AM GIVING AWAY A COPY OF THE BODY FINDER! YES I AM! :) When, you ask? We have a super awesome blog event from December 13th until Christmas, and one of the books you can win is THE BODY FINDER, and TONS of AWESOME SWAG from Kim herself! I just got the package yesterday, and they're all pretty!
Help us spread the word! Click on the button below for more details about the very first blog event I am hosting!
Very sad yet beautiful prose. My TT: http://www.rundpinne.com/2010/12/teaser-tuesdays-queen-hereafter.html
ReplyDeleteSounds like it'd be something I'd love to read. Need to put it on my TBR list. Enjoy your week!
ReplyDeleteHere's my teaser
It definitely gave me the shivers. Interesting.
ReplyDeleteHere's mine
With a title like Bodyfinder, good thing some of them are at rest.
ReplyDeleteMy teaser is here
Sounds good to me!
ReplyDeleteTeaser Tuesady: Miss Hildreth Wore Brown by Olivia deBelle Byrd
Just the title is enough to interest me, but that teaser really makes me want to read it.
ReplyDeleteMy teaser's here.
Great teaser. I loved the Body Finder and I can't wait for the next one! My teaser is Here
ReplyDeleteHere is my teaser from Witchgrass: A Pipe Dream by Dave Wilkinson (Page 1):
ReplyDeleteMost gardeners hate witchgrass. Of all weeds it is one of the most persistent and adaptable. Any small piece of rhizome left in the soil can become an aggressive plant ready to take over the plot. Witchgrass is hard to pull. Roots are deep, and break off easily. Any part left in the ground will grow again. Farmers say the species isn't even good as hay, not as good as timothy or alfalfa. Some call it quickgrass.
Early New England colonists blamed evil people for this garden invader. In the seventeenth century villagers would speak this way:
"The surly woman living alone on her dead husband's estate. She goes into the woods and consorts with the Devil. Signs his book. Fornicates with him. Eats mushrooms. She and the Devil send witchgrass to harass the virtuous and the Godly. Let us hang this witch and seize her rich farm."
Ooohhhh I really want to read this!! Great teaser :)
ReplyDeleteMine is from Crescendo, you can check it out here