Monday 2 November 2015

A Distant Voice by Bridie Blake Blog Tour and Giveaway!




A Distant Voice
Bridie Blake
Evernight Teen
Contemporary Young Adult
72,000 words

In life you don’t find your voice. It finds you. 
Violet Hayes knows how to survive the year living with her grandmother in the small town of Wandorah, Tennessee. 
• Make Rose happy • Don’t sing or play guitar • Avoid Sally Shaw • Ignore Carter Jenkins 
It seems simple enough, right? Wrong. 
• How do you keep a depressed sister happy? • How do you deny yourself your dream? • How do you avoid a friendship? • And how do you ignore a boy when he’s everywhere you turn? 
Violet’s to-do list just became a whole lot harder. 
14+ due to adult situations

Buy Links:       Evernight Teen    Amazon   ARe    Bookstrand
Add A Distant Voice to your Goodreads page HERE

book trailer:


Excerpt:

He smiled and reached out to pull the guitar toward him. He strummed his fingers over the strings and played a few chords before glancing over at me proudly.

“Impressive.”

He offered me the guitar. “Your turn.”

“And what makes you think I can play?”

“Your bloodlines.”

I snorted out a laugh and clapped my hand over my mouth in horror.
“Play away,” he said, ignoring my snort, and pushed the guitar into my hands.

I stared down at it with my mouth hanging open. The way my heart raced you’d think he’d pulled the pin on a grenade and handed it to me. Relax Violet. It’s an instrument. It can’t hurt you. Unless I tripped over it and broke my neck. And that could happen. Probably not entirely realistic while I’m holding it, but if I dropped it and then got up and tripped, it … oh dear god, what is wrong with me?

His mom called out his name and he gave me an apologetic shrug. “I’ll be right back.”

He left the room and I remained where I was, the guitar still burning my hands. It had been months since I’d played. Months since I’d felt that wave of joy I got whenever my fingers ran over the strings.

A yearning, so strong it sent butterflies fluttering in my stomach, washed over me and my fingers moved. They ran over the strings, playing whatever came to mind. I closed my eyes and let myself be swallowed up by it all. I allowed myself to forget and be something else. Someone else.

I didn’t know how long I stayed like that but a shuffle behind me forced me back to reality. I opened my eyes and twisted around. Carter stood in the doorway, a look of wonder on his face and it made me squirm. I dropped my hands, rested the guitar on his bed, and scrambled to my feet. “I should go.”

He moved toward me slowly, as though scared a sudden movement would startle me. “What’s wrong?”

“Nothing,” I mumbled and folded my arms across my chest, tucking my hands into my armpits where they’d be safe and wouldn’t stray towards anymore strings.

His brow creased and I saw him trying to work out what had happened but I didn’t want to talk about it. I tried to duck out of his room before he asked me anything. He gripped my arm, stopping my quick exit. “It’s okay,” he said. “You’re allowed to enjoy things. You’re not betraying your sister by having fun or doing the things you want to do.” His voice, filled with sincerity and kindness, caused a lump to take up residence in my throat.

His hand ran along my arm and towards my hidden hand. He tugged on it until he freed it and he squeezed my fingers gently. I shook my head because he’s right, but he’s wrong at the same time. It was guilt over Rose that stopped me doing things but when it came to music, there was so much more to it.

Music destroyed Gran’s life. It ruined Mom’s childhood. I couldn’t love something like that because if I did, I’d open myself up to the same hurt. And I’m not anywhere near as strong as Gran. It would destroy me. It would be my trigger.

I wanted to tell him that. I wanted him to understand. But the words wouldn’t come out of me.


Ten Tips for Plotting
I’m a big plotter when it comes to writing. I work out where my characters are going, what’s going to happen to them and how it’s all going to end. I’ve tried writing on the fly and it’s always ended badly for me so I came to the realisation that I am definitely a plotter, not a pantser. Below are ten tips that I swear by.
  • Think on your initial idea before you start plotting. I’ve jumped straight from idea to the plotting stage many times and it’s been a disaster. I get stuck halfway through and then get confused. Let your idea really sink in before you try anything.
  • Try to condense your story into one or two sentences so you have a clear picture of the main story and something to keep you on track.
  • Get to know your characters inside and out. I write down the important things I need to know about my characters. For my main character, this normally takes up a page or two, for smaller characters it could just be a paragraph. I list their physical attributes, their likes and dislikes, hobbies, friends and family members, personality traits. Everything. Even if it won’t appear in the book, write it down. Trust me, it helps.
  • Ask yourself questions about your characters. Why doesn’t my main character like this person? What is the one thing my main character can’t live without? I write YA so a question I always ask about my characters is what they want to do when they leave school.
  • Write an outline.
  • When writing your outline, include points about how your character is feeling when things happen. Really flesh it out. Don’t just have ‘Sally goes to school and sees her boyfriend flirting with Paula.’ Jot down how that makes Sally feel. Is she angry? Or doesn’t care? If she doesn’t care, why?
  • Put every little idea you have in your outline. Don’t leave it in your head because you’ll forget it. Even something as simple as ‘Carter gives Violet a CD’. If I don’t write that down, I forget.
  • You can stray from your outline. Just because you’ve written out your plot it doesn’t mean it won’t change as you progress in your draft. I use mine as a guide. If I’m getting too far off track I use my outline to steer me back.
  • Try handwriting your outline. Seems like a strange tip, I know, but for some reason I struggle doing an outline in Word. I find handwriting easier to plot. I end up with arrows pointing here, there and everywhere but it works for me.
  • I also work with a storyboard. I’m a very visual person so I like to see things as I’m going. My storyboard isn’t overly detailed, it’s just the key plot elements in chronological order. I can move them around as need be, changing the order of the key plot points without having to re-write my entire outline

Author Bio:
Bridie lives, daydreams and writes in Melbourne, Australia. She’s happiest at her computer, coffee in hand, Tim Tams on standby and her furry companion Poppy at her feet. When not writing she’s usually found with a book in her hand or playing with her tribe of nieces and nephews.
Discover more about her at www.bridieblake.com, https://www.facebook.com/AuthorBridieBlake or @BridieBlake on Twitter!

Giveaway:  $25 Amazon GC

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3 comments:

  1. Do you have another book that will be coming out next year?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'm hoping too! I'm halfway through the second draft of my current WIP and plan to start outlining a potential sequel to A Distant Voice over Christmas.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm hoping too! I'm halfway through the second draft of my current WIP and plan to start outlining a potential sequel to A Distant Voice over Christmas.

    ReplyDelete