Drawn
Chris
Ledbetter
Released: June
5, 2015
215
pages
Caught between the
sweltering fall landscape of Wilmington, NC beaches and southern
illusions and expectations, all sixteen year-old Cameron Shade thinks
about is art. That, and for Farrah Spangled to view him as more than
just a friend. Cameron longs to win her heart through art.
After several warm
interactions with Farrah, including painting together at the beach,
Cameron discovers just how complex Farrah’s life is with her
boyfriend and her family. Following a tense run-in with Farrah’s
father, she forbids Cameron to ever speak to her again, but Cameron’s
convinced there’s more behind the request.
To impress Farrah with a
last-ditch effort, Cameron sketches her portrait. But the sketchbook
he uses hides a dark secret. Farrah’s now in grave danger because
the sketch he drew of her siphons her real-life’s soul into the
sketchbook. Cameron now has twenty days to extract Farrah. To save
her, he must draw himself into the book.
If he fails… they both
die.
Buy Links:
Evernight
Teen Amazon
Print
ARe
Excerpt
I climb the tin can
sounding bleachers to the press box. A barrel-chested rival school
coach blocks the doorway to the room at the high ridge of the
stadium.
“I’m from Seaview
High, covering the game,” I tell him.
He rotates his body
enough for me to peek past him. My heart jumps at the sight of
Farrah, dressed in a sky blue and navy sweatshirt with two crossed
battle-axes, our helmet logo. Her perfectly tussled auburn hair is
pulled back in a ponytail. She beams and waves me in. “He’s with
me.”
A smile radiates from my
core at hearing those words. I step over the threshold into a din of
fingers rattling over keyboards, papers shuffling, and people yelling
commands into microphones, I reach Farrah’s position at a long
table facing the field.
She smiles up from her
laptop again. “Glad you made it okay.”
“I didn’t miss much,
did I? Are we winning?” I ask before even looking at the
scoreboard.
She darts glances around
the room before leaning in close. “Pretty much a blowout already.
It’s only first quarter.” She points to the scoreboard. Her
perfume engulfs me. “So, you ready to get inspired? I figure, just
kinda do what you do, you know? I mean, you’re the artsy guy,
right? Pick a player. Maybe one of our stars.” She stops cold. Her
blue-eyed gaze intensifies as it pins me to the chair. “It doesn’t
have to be Chace, just so you know. Um, but I was thinking, you know
how in big newspapers there’ll be sort of this,” she waves her
hands around grandly, “…promotional page for the local team,
that’ll have maybe a picture of the stadium and one or two star
players superimposed––sort of larger than life style, know what
I’m talking about?”
I’m still trying to
process that Farrah is speaking the most words she’s ever spoken to
me. Ever. I nod. “I totally get what you’re saying.” I flip
open my sketchpad and then stare onto the field for a bit. Chace
intercepts a pass and runs it back for a score. Our sideline goes
bananas. The home crowd grumbles, none too pleased.
I watch for a while
longer, familiarizing my eyes with the shapes and images related to
football. If not for this assignment, I couldn’t care less about
the sport. My attention returns to the sketchpad and I scratch out a
few stylized broad strokes. I close my eyes for a moment to picture
our stadium’s front elevation. Then I continue drawing a wide
receiver leaning out of the stadium with a ball in his hands and on
the other side, a quarterback, poised to throw.
It takes a few minutes.
In the meantime, Farrah’s scribbling notes, banging on keys, and
talking with the head sports reporter to her left. When I finish, I
tap her shoulder. She whips her head around, in slow motion, like in
the movies.
“What do you think
about this idea?” I slide my sketchpad toward her.
She takes the paper and
bites her lip in pensive thought. After a few deep breaths she turns
to me. “This is good.” She takes a breath. “But what if you
switch the players so that they’re both facing the same direction,
right? I know that’s a lot to ask.” She frowns flirtatiously.
“And then since we’re
the Vikings…” She continues and bites her lip again. “What if
we could have, I don’t know, like lightning striking the area
between the players. Like Thor or something. Is that even possible?”
I look into her eyes.
“That’s the great thing about art. Anything is possible.” I
swear sometimes I open my mouth and Mr. Cassisi comes out. “Wait…
what do you know about Thor?”
“I read comics.” She
scoffs. “In fact, I only took journalism because at first I wanted
to make comics. But since I still couldn’t draw a straight line
after my intro to art class, I figured I could be an editor instead.”
“Excuse me while I
swoon over here.” I quickly flip to the next page before my broad
smile betrays any semblance of trying to play it cool. I sketch out
the elements again, taking into account her suggestions. Several long
minutes pass. When I’m done I slide the paper back to her.
She finishes pecking her
thoughts on her laptop and then glances over. A smile creeps across
her face as she turns a sidelong glance at me. Her lips part. “How
do you do this? And fast too. I couldn’t draw like this if you gave
me a year and some art classes.”
I shrug. “I’ve been
drawing since I could hold a pencil.”
She gazes at the sketch
again and then touches my forearm. “This is fabulous.” Her warmth
runs up my arm and spreads. “I wish I could do anything like this.”
I see my opening. “I
can teach you.”
There’s a visual pause
in her entire presence. Nothing moves until her eyes narrow.
“There’s an art
studio in Carolina Beach,” I continue. “I know the owner.”
She remains silent and
takes a deep breath.
“The studio overlooks
the beach,” I say, gaining confidence. “And it’s right near the
boardwalk, so you know what that means… hot Britt’s Donuts.” I
see the wheels turning.
She sighs. “I better
not.”
“It’s because of
Chace, isn’t it?”
She nods.
“Wouldn’t he want you
to live a little… try new things?”
“Probably not.
Especially not with some other guy.” She chuckles. “Besides, to
his family, art is to be possessed, not to be practiced.”
“What the hell, Farrah?
Seriously?”
“Excuse me?” She
crosses her arms.
“I’m sorry.” I
cover my mouth with my fist. “I overstepped.” I want to continue
the conversation thread, but I may have played my hand too
aggressively. I play on anyway. Damn the torpedoes. “But really,
Farrah, I’m not asking you to do drugs. It’s just art.”
Author Bio:
Christopher
S. Ledbetter grew up in Durham, NC before moving to Charlottesville,
VA in 11th grade. After graduating high school, he attended Hampton
University, where he promptly joined the best marching band on the
east coast, without having one shred of experience.
He taught high school and coached football for six years in Culpeper, VA. He enjoys the occasional Spartan Race, and is working toward a triathlon.
As a self-described, young reluctant reader, he writes young adult stories specifically to reach other reluctant readers. As a participant in the prestigious Nevada SCBWI Mentor Program, he was blessed to be mentored by Suzanne Morgan Williams, 2012 SCBWI member of the year.
He now lives in Wilmington, NC with his family.
He taught high school and coached football for six years in Culpeper, VA. He enjoys the occasional Spartan Race, and is working toward a triathlon.
As a self-described, young reluctant reader, he writes young adult stories specifically to reach other reluctant readers. As a participant in the prestigious Nevada SCBWI Mentor Program, he was blessed to be mentored by Suzanne Morgan Williams, 2012 SCBWI member of the year.
He now lives in Wilmington, NC with his family.
Website: http://www.csledbetter.com
Giveaway: $30 Amazon Gift Card
a Rafflecopter giveaway
thank you for the giveaway!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by!
DeleteThanks for this giveaway.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by!
Deletethanks for the chance!
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by!
DeleteThanks for stopping by!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for hosting my book!!
ReplyDeletesounds like a great book! Thanks for the giveaway.
ReplyDeleterounder9834 @yahoo.com
Oh this sounds like a book my reluctant reader nephew would LOVE! I love how he describes himself as a young reluctant reader....and tries now to write books that reluctant readers would enjoy! What a beautiful gift!
ReplyDelete