Showing posts with label real life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label real life. Show all posts

Thursday, March 12, 2015

Blog Tour Review & Giveaway: Little Peach by Peggy Kern

Today on WinterHaven Books I am participating in the blog tour for Little Peach by Peggy Kern.  This book really broke my heart and I am very proud to be a part of something so real.  This blog tour is definitely about this incredible book, but also about the real life story enclosed within its pages.

Little PeachLittle Peach by Peggy Kern
Publisher: Balzar & Bray / HarperTeen
Release Date: March 10, 2015
Purchase: Amazon
What do you do if you're in trouble?

When Michelle runs away from her drug-addicted mother, she has just enough money to make it to New York City, where she hopes to move in with a friend. But once she arrives at the bustling Port Authority, she is confronted with the terrifying truth: she is alone and out of options.

Then she meets Devon, a good-looking, well-dressed guy who emerges from the crowd armed with a kind smile, a place for her to stay, and eyes that seem to understand exactly how she feels.

But Devon is not what he seems to be, and soon Michelle finds herself engulfed in the world of child prostitution where he becomes her “Daddy” and she his “Little Peach.” It is a world of impossible choices, where the line between love and abuse, captor and savior, is blurred beyond recognition.

This hauntingly vivid story illustrates the human spirit’s indomitable search for home, and one girl’s struggle to survive.
My Thoughts:
After reading this I sat in complete silence for about 2 hours.  I got up from my favorite reading spot and just sat outside and listened to the quiet.  This book was tough and I don't mean like normal tough.  I mean like slap you in the face tough.  Peggy Kern I bow before you and want to thank you for showing me what is really going on.

I thought this was going to be emotional, but I had no idea how much I would feel for Michelle. What she goes through is heartbreaking and knowing that this kind of stuff goes on everyday is just horrible.  I am honestly so broken over reading this.  The story is quite simple, young girl who has nobody ends up running right into the wrong kind of help.  That doesn't even do the story justice, but essentially that's what its about.  Michelle gets sold every night for sex and without anybody reaching out to help her she stays in this horrible life.  A lot of things happen to her and you just can't help but cry for her.  Nobody should have to go through what she went through especially a fourteen year old girl.

I think what makes this stand out so much is the last page by the author.  Ms.Kern gives us a glimpse into how she researched for this book and after reading just that simple blurb I had chills. Little Peach is a true story for a lot of women and my god what has the world come to.  I'm not naive I know these things happen, but I guess I just blocked it.  You go day to day and never really think beyond your bubble until someone says hey read this and then BAM you are thrown into the pit. I don't know what I want to do at the moment I just want to fight for these girls somehow.

Please read this.  Peggy Kern has written an amazing book that I promise will open your eyes and maybe if enough eyes are open things might start changing.

4 snowflakes


About the Author:
Peggy Kern was born and raised in Westbury, New York. There she attended the local public elementary and middle schools, where she was one of the few white students in a predominately black and Latino community. Peggy didn’t realize what a unique and valuable experience that was until she transferred to a private high school.

“I was miserable in high school,” she says. “I couldn’t understand why my classmates only hung out with people who looked just like they did. To me, that was a foreign concept.” Peggy worked a variety of jobs through her teenage years, including switchboard operator at a country club, cashier at a clothing store, and the night-shift in a bakery.

In 1992, Peggy enrolled at LaSalle University in Philadelphia, where she discovered her love of literature and writing. However, the financial stress of paying for college herself – coupled with the painful divorce of her parents – proved overwhelming. She moved back to New York and took a full-time job as a secretary. Determined to finish her degree, she began taking night classes at a local community college and eventually landed a partial scholarship at Long Island University. She continued working full-time and taking classes until she graduated in 1998 with a B.A. in English.

Though it took her almost seven years to obtain her college degree, Peggy says she would do it all again. “The adversity made me work even harder. I never forgot how lucky I was to have a chance at an education.”

In 2001, Peggy completed a Master’s degree in English and Writing at Southampton College. She also coordinated the Southampton Writers Conference, where she had the chance to meet some of her literary heroes and assist young students in pursing their dream of writing. While at Southampton, she taught English Composition, tutored undergraduate students and published several short stories.

For more information about human trafficking and how you can help stop this from happening to someone you may know please follow the links below:
http://www.raphahouse.org/

http://www.covenanthouse.org/

http://www.gems-girls.org/

http://www.polarisproject.org/


Giveaway!!  Thanks to the wonderful people at Harper we are giving away a copy of Little Peach to one lucky reader.  US only.
Good Luck!
a Rafflecopter giveaway



Monday, October 20, 2014

Blog Tour Review: Bleed Like Me by Christa Desir

Today on WinterHaven Books I am participating in the blog tour for Bleed Like Me by Christa Desir!

Bleed Like MeBleed Like Me by Christa Desir
Publisher: Simon Pulse
Release Date: October 7th, 2014
Purchase: Amazon / B&N
From the author of Fault Line comes an edgy and heartbreaking novel about two self-destructive teens in a Sid and Nancy-like romance full of passion, chaos, and dyed hair.

Seventeen-year-old Amelia Gannon (just "Gannon" to her friends) is invisible to almost everyone in her life. To her parents, to her teachers-even her best friend, who is more interested in bumming cigarettes than bonding. Some days the only way Gannon knows she is real is by carving bloody lines into the flesh of her stomach.

Then she meets Michael Brooks, and for the first time, she feels like she is being seen to the core of her being. Obnoxious, controlling, damaged, and addictive, he inserts himself into her life until all her scars are exposed. Each moment together is a passionate, painful relief.

But as the relationship deepens, Gannon starts to feel as if she's standing at the foot of a dam about to burst. She's given up everything and everyone in her life for him, but somehow nothing is enough for Brooks-until he poses the ultimate test.

Bleed Like Me is a piercing, intimate portrayal of the danger of a love so obsessive it becomes its own biggest threat.
My Thoughts:
This was a very tough read for me and not because of what you might think.  Yes it is sad and I hated that Gannon felt like she had to cut herself, but my issue was her parents and their lack of parenting.  I think this was a goal of the author, but for me this overshadowed Gannon and her own personal problems.

The story is tough like I said.  We have Gannon who cuts herself and then we have Brooks who becomes addicted to Gannon.  This is all a recipe for disaster with just those two simple characters, but then you throw in parents who haven't been their in five years, a foster kid who just doesn't know where he belongs, and a relationship that is built around hurt and you basically get an explosion.

Gannon wasn't tough for me to like.  She was really rough around the edges, but having to grow up with her parents I get why she was the way she was.  She didn't have anybody looking out for her because both her mom and her dad were too wrapped up in the three boys they adopted from Guatemala.  Yes that was a very heroic thing to do, but these boys were not disciplined at all and caused so much ruckus that both parents just basically forgot about Gannon unless they needed her to help wrangle the boys in.  When I say ruckus I mean down right mean, violent, and aggressive behavior.  They needed help and I was so irritated that her mom thought she could do it all on her own.  This whole adoption put a strain on her parents marriage and just made a happy home fall apart. I am not saying I wished the boys would have gone away, I am saying they needed help.

Gannon was left to figure life out on her own and when she meets Brooks her life turns upside down.  Their relationship was abusive in a different way then you would think and at first I thought Brooks would be good for her, but things happened and when a certain scene happened I knew she needed to get away.  Well as you would guess things went from bad to worse quickly and Gannon finds herself in a situation that she doesn't know how to get out of.  I was a little shocked at the lack of involvement from the adults around her, but I can see where the author was choosing to go with the story.  It wasn't pretty and sometimes people need to see what's beyond the rainbows and butterflies.

The ending left me with an unfinished feeling though.  I have a hard time grasping what happened and even though I know what happened was inevitable I just don't know how I feel about it.   I wish things could have been different for Gannon and even though I like the whole not wrapped up in a bow sometimes it is just hard for me to swallow and this is one of those times.  I wanted more for Gannon and I really wanted more from her parents.  With all that being said though I can accept where the story went and I can tie my own bow for Gannon in my heart.

3.5 snowflakes
 

About the Author
I’m Christa Desir and I write young adult novels. I am an avid reader and have been in love with YA books ever since reading Judy Blume’s FOREVER (while hiding between the stacks in the library).
My first success with writing came at the age of five when I wrote a story about my sister and our neighbor Andy “kissing in the dushes.” My parents were so proud of this work, they framed it and showed it to every visitor who came to our house. My sister still has not forgiven me.
I live outside of Chicago with my awesome husband, Julio, and our three children. When I'm not writing, I am an editor of romance novels. I am also a feminist, former rape victim advocate, lover of coffee and chocolate, and head of the PTA. It is a rare day when I don’t humiliate myself
somehow, and I frequently blog about my embarrassing life moments.

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