Showing posts with label Alex Marestaing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alex Marestaing. Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2017

"Fifteen Seconds of Normal" by Alex Marestaing

REVIEW and EXCERPT
Fifteen Seconds of Normal
by Alex Marestaing



I'm so glad I got the chance to read Fifteen Seconds of Normal by Alex Marestaing. Don't miss this one! This review opportunity is brought to you by YA Bound Book Tours.



For another book by this author, please check out my blog post on I’m Nobody.

Description
Step 1: Transfer high schools
Step 2: Hide your Tourette’s
Step 3: Find your fifteen seconds of normal
Kaeya Garay has a plan. And it seems to be working. But when a curious interruption named Thatcher Kelly stumbles upon her "safe" place in the school’s abandoned art gallery, her grand plans for normalcy are suddenly derailed.
Set over the course of three weeks, Fifteen Seconds of Normal is the quirky saga of a literature obsessed teen on the edge of a meltdown and the hope driven heroine who begins to pull him back. Fans of Eleanor and Park be warned. You won’t be able to put this one down.
A Breakfast Club for a new generation from EPIC Award finalist Alex Marestaing, author of I’m Nobody: The Lost Pages.



Excerpt
Click below to read an excerpt.


Praise for the Book
"All the characters leaped from the pages and came alive. I laughed, cried, pondered, and was inspired. I could not put it down and was so sad when I finished reading it. This book will inspire teens and adults alike." ~ iwilkinson
"It's worth noting the story isn't always easy but that there are real moments of joy mixed in with the more difficult ones. The synopsis and cover may have initially drawn me to Fifteen Seconds of Normal, but the tone and characters kept me reading this interesting YA contemporary story." ~ Zili Robins
"I thought that the author did an extraordinary job with her character development and I instantly connected with both Kaeya Garay and Thatcher Kelly! [...] Overall, I thought that this book was well worth my time and I strongly urge everyone to give it a try." ~ Aurora Hale
"I cannot even begin to say how great this book is. A story that shines a bit of light on so many things that happen in life. I think the characters were great. Kaeya's TS and how she is choosing to deal with it is touching. The dynamics of how the story falls into place is different from what I've read. I love how clean the story is. No vulgar suggestive topics, languages is completely rated-G. This is instantly a favorite for me, because something a character does reminds me of someone I cherish. The author's writing style is definitely a change. I like how the characters share the spotlight. Really so good." ~ Hadassah H.
"Alex Marestaing is a gifted speaker and incredible young adult novelist, and this most recent novel is a great representation of his talent. A mixture of hope, disappointment, love, and fear, Fifteen Seconds of Normal is a story of becomings and beginnings in a very modern, very real world." ~ Marc Ellens



My Review
For sixteen-year-old Thatcher Kelly, "talking to dead authors was an inescapable habit of his, a tribute to the books that had embedded themselves in his soul" and "collecting more beautiful words from more beautiful books [was] another obsessive habit of his." A recent transfer to Glen Canyon High, Kaeya Garay tries to maintain a low profile and keep her Tourette's Syndrome hidden. But an altercation at their school throws Thatcher and Kaeya together, along with film buff Sam, and their lives will never be the same again.
The author's writing is full of beautiful turns of phrase and delightful metaphors and similes that turn the ordinary into the extraordinary. My only complaint is the similarity of the characters' names: Kaeya, Kieran, Quentin. When Thatcher and Kaeya initially bond over Hemingway, you can see that these two are meant to be together. How they get there is the fun part. Sam plays an integral role as a kind of matchmaker, and his movie quotes are a good foil for Thatcher's book quotes. Everything comes together so well. There's even a reference to the school's Emily Dickinson club, no doubt a nod to the author's previous book, I'm Nobody. But I was disappointed that we never find out the story behind Mrs DeGeau.
On a par with John Green, with a similar feel to The Fault in Our Stars, this is my favorite book of the year so far.



Favorite Lines
As my homage to Thatcher ("I collect lines, from books and stuff"), here are my favorite bookish lines from the book:
"...the words were birds locked in a box and flapping furiously. They needed to come out."
"...his words were rusty and stuck, like an old gate, and neither he nor Thatcher had the strength to pry it loose."
"Dad patted Thatcher's shoulder, as if he were a dog, not a son, then walked away...with millions of unspoken words buried deep in the pockets of his cheap suit."
"...the entire gallery was bizarre, surreal, like a Kafka novel...and Thatcher liked Kafka."
"She regretted the words—I've met someone—the second they fell out of her mouth. Now they were all over the floor, and her father was sifting through them like a crazed archeologist."
"After sixteen years, Kaeya could read him like the Jane Austen novels she'd practically memorized."
"Kaeya was a new novel, and he wanted to discover every line."
"Kaeya was figurative language come to life, and every time he thought of her, he remembered why he loved poetry."
"It was anger, and inspiration, and an insatiable desire to rewrite the narrative and become something better."
"...isn't love, real love, supposed to be more than just words on a poster?"
"He could feel her trying to read him, as if he were the novel."
"She was the book he'd never finish...and it was time to turn the page."
"He'd looked so defeated, as if joy was no longer a word in the dictionary."
"That feeling of hope she'd had since transferring—that life could be normal, that love was a tangible possibility, that happy endings existed beyond the pages of fairy tales—had vanished in a feeble puff of smoke."
"Thatcher looked different. Gone was the tragic expression, and in its place, strength. He'd rewritten the narrative."



About the Author
Once upon a time, author Alex Marestaing wrote a random letter to the Walt Disney Company asking if they needed any creative help. Fortunately, Disney had mercy on his embarrassing attempt to break into the publishing scene and gave him his first writing job. A lot has happened since then, including four novels, a beautiful wife, three kids, two cats, an extremely mellow dog, an honorable mention at the London Book Festival, a stint covering soccer in Europe and the US, and fun freelance work for companies such as Lego, Thomas Nelson/Harper Collins and The Los Angeles Times. Oh yeah, he also speaks at conferences around the country giving writers advice such as "Writing letters to random companies isn’t always such a bad idea".



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Wednesday, January 1, 2014

"I'm Nobody: The Lost Pages" by Alex Marestaing

NEW RELEASE and REVIEW
I'm Nobody:
The Lost Pages
by Alex Marestaing


I came across I'm Nobody as a member of the Lovers of Paranormal group on Goodreads. This book is suitable for middle grade to young adult readers. It has won an honorable mention at the 2013 London Book Festival, which honors the best in international literature. I'm Nobody is also a finalist in the Young Adult category of the 2014 Electronic Publishing Industry Coalition (EPIC) Book Awards.
Join Alex's Facebook event for announcements on the book's release through other retail outlets. You can also enter the Goodreads giveaway to win a paperback copy of I'm Nobody (US only, ends 28 January).

Description
Caleb Reed is losing his mind, at least that's what his father thinks.
If it were only the show - America's Funniest Home Videos - the same taped episode he's watched every night for the last six years - then perhaps his parental unit wouldn't worry so much. But there's far more to the thirteen-year-old's manic daily regimen that makes even Caleb himself question his mental health.
For starters, there's his obsessive worry about the abandoned mansion across the street, and then there's that curious note someone left on his doorstep. It's neatly folded, black ribbon wrapped, and signed by a stranger named Emily Dickinson.
"I'm nobody. Who are you?" it reads. "Are you nobody too?"
In time, more of these strange, poetic messages arrive, silently beckoning the agoraphobic seventh grader to venture further and further from the safety of his home in order to retrieve them. Are the notes from Iris, the YouTube obsessed eighth grader who has begun filming an indie film on his street? Has his deceased older sister returned from the grave to deliver some sort of message? Or are the pages actually from the pen of Emily Dickinson, the reclusive and long dead 19th century poet?
With his sanity in question, Caleb Reed's entire existence depends on finding an answer.

Book Trailer


Review


By Lynda Dickson
Thirteen-year-old Caleb's sister Anneliese died six years ago and nothing has been the same since. Except that Caleb watches the same episode of America's Funniest Home Videos at 7 pm every night, an episode he can never finish watching. And he constantly stares out his bedroom window at the dilapidated mansion across the road. Suffering from OCD and agoraphobia and having been home-schooled since his sister's death, Caleb obsesses about the mansion. But now something about it has changed. When Caleb starts getting notes signed by Emily Dickinson and realizes they are coming from the mansion, Caleb starts to wonder if he is going crazy. Is a voice talking to him from beyond the grave? And if so, whose is it, Emily's or Anneliese's?
Enter loner Iris Elliott and her trusty video camera. Iris sets out to get some footage of the mansion for a music video she is making. When she encounters Caleb, whom she has not seen since second grade, Iris decides to make a documentary about him instead. So, two unlikely youngsters become friends, and things start happening that force Caleb to overcome his fear of leaving the house and help him come to terms with the loss of his sister. Do you believe in magic? After reading I'm Nobody, you just might.
This story is told alternately from Caleb's and Iris' points-of-view, a very effective story-telling device. The author has some lovely turns of phrase, e.g., "the truth fell like melancholy rain." And I loved this quote on books: "Surrounded by stacks of worn and cozy books, the voracious reader loved the safety of his upstairs hideaway. The Three Musketeers, Harry Potter, and a zillion other characters, all randomly piled in front of a space model filled bookshelf, were his only friends in a friendless world." My only complaint is the author's annoying use of expressions such as "the teen" and "the younger Reed" instead of simply "Caleb", and "parental unit" instead of "mom" or "dad". But, with a flawed hero, a kooky girl side-kick, a dead poet, and a satisfying ending, what's not to love?

Guest Post by Alex Marestaing
(originally posted on
alexmarestaing.com)
You’ll have to forgive me as I get academic on my blog today. It’s just that – while researching for my latest novel, I’m Nobody - I learned some interesting things from the life of a very interesting lady … Emily Dickinson.
Emily Dickinson struggled, with a lot of things. She wrestled God and faith and definitely fear. As a teen and even into her early twenties, she rejoiced in the faith of her youth. Thrilled by the magic of revival spinning in the Amherst air, she breathed in each word of the sermons she fervently listened to, her excitement evident in a letter she sent to her brother Austin after one particular service:
“I never heard anything like it, and don’t expect to again, till we stand at the great white throne…”
But time passed and pain came, and Emily began the spiritual struggle many of us face as childhood unexpectedly dawns into adulthood – the struggle between faith and fear. Her closest childhood friend passed away, with a young Emily at her bedside during those final hours. Then the Civil War rained down on the nation with a toll of lives incomprehensible to anyone alive at the time. At the same time, a group of scientists, led by none other than Charles Darwin, were telling her that man was more animal than angel, and that life was little more than a scientific process. And that’s when the magic, so evident during her youth, began to fade.
I’m ceded–I’ve stopped being Theirs–
The name They dropped upon my face
With water, in the country church
Is finished using, now,
And They can put it with my Dolls,
My childhood, and the string of spools,
I’ve finished threading–too—
With the magic fading, powerlessness set in. The dragons of this world so easily slain in the halls of faith, seemed insurmountable in the open fields of pessimism, and fear began its march. In the face of this terror, she began to retreat. She stayed home, stayed in her room, for the rest of her life, never leaving, an agoraphobic lost in the swirling mists of anxiety.
But faith is not a whisper that fades in the wind. It is a seed that, once planted, can find its way through the toughest soil as it reaches towards the light. And Emily Dickinson’s story had not seen its last chapter. Within the walls of her room, Emily wrote some of the most beautiful poetry our world has ever seen, words of celebration, of beauty, and of hope. Words like ...
Baptized, before, without the choice,
But this time, consciously, of Grace–
Unto supremest name–
Called to my full–The Crescent dropped–
Existence’s whole Arc, filled up,
With one small Diadem.


We live in Emily Dickinson’s world today, a world of pain, of doubt, and of fear. But as Emily found, it is also a world where faith can overcome and hope and love can make a difference.
This is the message I wanted to get across in I’m Nobody, my latest middle grade/YA novel. In the book, we find agoraphobic teen Caleb Reed struggling with this same fear. After the death of a sister who was his only friend, his life had taken on a hopeless, pale gray hue. That is until he gets a visit from a mysterious stranger, a stranger who asks:
"Caleb Reed, how long has it been since you believed in magic?"

About the Author
Author Alex Marestaing has worked on creative projects for The Walt Disney Company, Lego, Thomas Nelson and The Los Angeles Times. In addition, he's written freelance for various faith-based publications and has covered soccer in Europe and the U.S. for Sports Spectrum Magazine and Yanks Abroad. Alex's latest project, I'm Nobody, is a suspense driven YA/Middle Grade tale about an agoraphobic teen who begins receiving strange, poetic notes from someone claiming to be reclusive, and long dead, poet Emily Dickinson.

Links