About the
Book:
Title:
The Avalon Relics: Lilith Links (Volume 1)
Author: J.L. Clark
Publisher: Createspace
Pages: 315
Genre: YA Fantasy
Format: Paperback/Kindle/Nook
Author: J.L. Clark
Publisher: Createspace
Pages: 315
Genre: YA Fantasy
Format: Paperback/Kindle/Nook
Sophia Bennett is looking
forward to celebrating her eighteenth birthday with her best friend
Angie. After graduating high school and enjoying the last days of
her summer vacation the most important things on her mind are getting
ready for college and catching the eye of her high school crush
Jake...at least, until the night of her birthday party.
Suddenly, Sophia is thrust into a world that she never knew existed and finds herself in the middle of an ancient struggle between good and evil. Time is against her as she and her new friends struggle to take possession of a powerful magic before it falls into the wrong hands.
Suddenly, Sophia is thrust into a world that she never knew existed and finds herself in the middle of an ancient struggle between good and evil. Time is against her as she and her new friends struggle to take possession of a powerful magic before it falls into the wrong hands.
Can Sophia solve the mystery
of the Lilith links in time to save her loved ones, or will the enemy
triumph and destroy all that she holds dear?
The Avalon Relics
trilogy is a fast-paced read taking the reader into the magical world
of fairies and of good versus evil. It blends references of
mythology and tales of old in a very real way in that it takes place
in two worlds simultaneously: the world that Sophia and her friends
physically live in and the fairy realm.
For More Information
- The Avalon Relics: Lilith Links is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Book Excerpt:
“You’ve got to be kidding
me.”
“What’s wrong with it?”
Angie asks as Sophia walks out of the bathroom, a dismayed look on
her face.
Sophia waves her arms over
her body. “All of it! I can’t wear this to the party!”
“Soph, you’ve got a great
body! You need to stop hiding behind all those baggy clothes you like
to wear.”
Angie gestures for her to
come over by the full length mirror. “Take a look…you look
amazing!”
Sophia reluctantly walks over
and stares at the tall, thin brunette girl in front of her, wearing a
skin-tight mid-thigh length black bandage dress. She shakes her head.
“It’s too tight…and
it’s too short. I can’t even sit down in this! I’m going to
flash the entire party.”
“Fine,” Angie says with a
dramatic sigh. She grabs a sparkling lace dress off her bed.
“Try this one.”
Sophia looks at the dress
doubtfully, but says nothing as she takes it with her into the
bathroom to change. As she slips the dress on, she feels a familiar
tingle run through her body, and finds that her bracelets seem to be
shimmering once again. She blinks, but when she looks at them again,
nothing seems out of the ordinary. As she pulls the dress into place,
she calls out to her friend.
“Hey, how did the date with
Jeremy go? You never did call or text me, so I assumed you didn’t
need rescuing.”
“Actually, I had a really
good time,” Angie replies. “We actually have a few things in
common.”
“Are you going to go out
with him again?”
“Yeah, I think I might.”
“Good for you,” Sophia
encourages. She looks down at herself and gives the hem of the dress
one quick tug downwards.
“Okay, here I come,” she
announces before walking out to show Angie.
“Oh. My. God. That’s it!
That’s the dress!”
Angie’s excitement stirs
Sophia’s curiosity, and she steps over to take a look for herself.
She is shocked at the
reflection in the mirror. The dress is sleeveless, with twin
Vnecklines on the front and the back. The dress itself is light, the
material almost sheer in color, with hundreds of luminescent silver
sequins sewn in a floral pattern over the dress.
The dress ends right above
her knees, and seems to glitter from every direction.
“Wow,” Sophia says,
stunned. “This is a gorgeous dress.”
“That’s so strange,”
Angie states. “I could have sworn I gave you a different dress just
now.”
“What do you mean?”
Sophia replies. “I saw you hand it to me.”
“I know,” Angie says,
looking confused, “but I don’t even own a dress like this.”
Sophia raises an eyebrow and
meets her friend’s gaze in the mirror.
“Are you sure? You do have
a lot of clothes, Ang.”
She seems to ponder that for
a moment, then shrugs lightly.
“Maybe you’re right. It
does look like something I would buy. I probably just haven’t worn
it in a while.”
“Oh, by the way,” Angie
says suddenly, looking over at Sophia’s head. “Did you dye your
hair this week without telling me?”
“No…” Sophia answers.
“What makes you say that?”
“Look,” her friend
states, pointing at her hair in the mirror. “Your hair is usually a
dark brown. Now it looks almost…honey brown.”
“Honey brown?” Sophia
asks, a smile on her lips.
However, the smile fades when
she stares at herself hard in the mirror. Her hair
definitely looks like it has
lightened several shades within the last few minutes. When she had
put on the black dress, it looked like it had always looked, a dark,
unremarkable brown, but now that she is in the sequined dress, her
hair has taken on soft golden hues.
“That is so weird…”
Sophia tilts her head back and forth, and then starts taking a step
back and forth away and towards the mirror, trying to make sense of
it. “Maybe it’s the lighting?”
Angie gives her a skeptical
look, but still nods in agreement.
“Maybe. I have been meaning
to tell Dad that the light in my room isn’t the right
wavelength for my
well-being.”
Hair color forgotten, Sophia
laughs out loud. “There’s a wavelength for well-being?”
“Of course there is, Sophia
Bennett! You should know…I read it online…something about how
natural light helps your mood.”
“Ah, right, I forgot about
that,” she replies. “That explains your…sunny personality.”
Angie groans loudly. “Don’t
ever say that again. That was terrible!”
Sophia chuckles. “Okay, I
promise.”
Angie walks over to her
closet again, and starts rummaging through the bottom shelves.
“Now all we have to do is
find you a pair of hot heels!”
About the
Author
Dr.
Jennifer Yen Clark, or J.L. Clark, began her writing career in the
fourth grade, when her teacher took the detective story she wrote and
turned it into a short printed book as a gift to her. The
encouragement of her teacher, as well as her love for reading and
telling stories, kept her writing about the worlds that existed in
her imagination. In her young adult years, J.L. began writing short
stories, poetry, and fan-fiction starring strong and intelligent
girls and women. J.L. was recently inspired to write The Avalon
Relics after being introduced to several young adult series that
depicted weak heroines and unhealthy relationships. Recalling her own
young adult reading experience and the dearth of relatable heroines,
she set out to create a series of books that would not only engage
and entertain, but offer a refreshing and empowering take on
fictional heroines.
J.L.
Clark resides in Houston, Texas with her family. She splits her time
between academia and private practice, specializing in child and
adolescent psychiatry. She is an assistant professor of psychiatry at
UT Health Medical School, and a clinical assistant professor at
Baylor College of Medicine. Outside of work, she is continually
contributing to her body of work, posting short stories and
fan-fiction on social media outlets for enjoyment.
For More
Information
- Visit J.L. Clark’s website.
- Find out more about J.L. at Goodreads.
- Visit J.L.’s blog.
- More books by J.L. Clark.
- Contact J.L.
"The Avalon Relics Lilith Links" by author J.L. Clark is a great story. On the evening of her eighteenth birthday Sophia Bennett finds herself facing a struggle that has been going on for years and years. Good and evil have been constantly at war. Sophia and her new friends do not have a lot of time to figure out what they should do. They have to make sure that the side of good always gets to keep the magic. Even though it says that it is a young adult fantasy series I think that it will appeal to other ages. I give this book a 5/5. I was give this book for the purpose of a review and all opinions are my own.
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