Veiled Intentions
by Eileen
Carr
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
BLURB:
When
a Muslim high school student is accused of a crime she didn’t commit, her
school counselor gets involved to clear her record in this
ripped-from-the-headlines novel.
When
Lily Simon finds cops in the lobby of the high school where she’s a guidance
counselor, she’s not surprised: cops and adolescents go together like sex,
drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll. But when the cops take Jamila, a Muslim student, into
custody for a crime she didn’t commit, Lily’s high school becomes a powder keg.
Police
think Jamila is responsible for a hit and run, and since she’s not talking,
they have no choice but to keep her as the main suspect. And since the victim—a
young soldier recently returned from Afghanistan—is lying unconscious in the
hospital, the whole town is taking sides on whether or not Jamila’s arrest is
religious persecution. Determined to find the truth, Lily teams up with a
reporter to uncover what really happened the night of the hit and run.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
EXCERPT:
Shelby went to her room, pulled the basket of old stuffed
animals out of her closet, and dug down under the teddy bears and bunnies and
puppy dogs until she found the bottle of vodka. She ran her hand up and down
the cool, clear glass already starting to feel how it would calm her, steady
her, heal her.
Maybe it didn’t have anything to do with her. Maybe it was
all a coincidence. Maybe Miss Perfect Princess Jamila had really done something
wrong and had to suffer the consequences like everyone else.
Yeah, right.
She got a juice glass from the cupboard, poured in a healthy
slug of vodka and added orange juice. Then she drained the whole thing in one
long gulp. She stashed the bottle of vodka, rinsed her glass and put it in the
dishwasher, and started watching the episode of Survivor she’d DVRed. She
floated on the couch, feeling warm and soft, like all the hard edges of the day
had been somehow sanded off.
“Hey, sweetheart, how was school?” Her mom bustled in the
front door, kicked off her shoes, and dumped her purse on the credenza by the
front door.
Every day. How was school? Did you have a good day? What did
you have for lunch? So many questions and none of them mattered. None of them
meant anything.
“Fine.” Shelby didn’t look up from the TV.
“That’s it? Fine?” She stood there, hands on her hips,
waiting.
“Yeah, Mom. Fine. That’s it.” Shelby felt her heart kick up
a little. It always did that when she lied. She hated it. She pulled the
blanket she was under up to her chin.
Her mother came over to the couch and sat down next to her.
“You feeling okay, honey?”
Thank God, she’d popped that piece of chewing gum in her
mouth five minutes before. No way would her mom smell the booze on her breath
over the blast of watermelon and lime. “I’m fine, Mom. Just tired.”
Her mother brushed her forehead with her hand. “You look a
little flushed. You sure you’re okay?”
Shelby rolled her eyes. “I’m fine, Mom.” If she only knew
how far that was from the truth. Shelby was so far from fine, she wouldn’t be
able to find it with a GPS.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Giveaway:
This post is part of a virtual book tour organized by Goddess Fish Promotions. Eileen will be awarding a $10 Amazon/BN GC to five randomly drawn winners via rafflecopter during the tour.
Author Interview :
Eileen, thanks for coming by Our Families Adventure. What kind of genre's and subjects do you write about?
Since I started publishing, I’ve written in at least three
different genres (four depending on how you count), in different points of view
and on a lot of different subjects, but Veiled Intentions was a huge departure
for me.
What is different about Veiled Intentions from your other works?
I really wanted to push myself with this book. I challenged
myself to write about a subject with which I was not comfortable. I really didn’t know much about Islam. I had
a lot to learn and what I learned was that I could spend a lifetime studying
Islam and still not understand it completely.
Tell us about your writing process?
All my previous novels had followed a pretty standard
structure. The books started where I thought the story started, moved through
the story going forward in time an ended where I thought the story ended.
Veiled Intentions begins several months after I think the story ended, pops
back in time, back forward again, back again and, well, you get the idea. It
was a much more challenging structure than I had attempted before.
I write a lot in first person. It’s a happy easy point of
view for me. It also means that there’s only one voice for that story. Even
when I’ve written in third person before, I haven’t had to face the variety of
voices I felt I needed to tell this story. There are teenagers in this story.
I’m pretty far from being a teenager unless you count being kind of immature,
but I really wanted to get those voices right. I did a lot of listening to the
various teenagers that were in and out of my house during the time I was
writing Veiled Intentions. I asked a lot of questions about what the kids were
calling stuff these days. I reread lines out loud.
Between the subject matter, the structure, and the voices
this has been a challenging book for me to write. It made it especially
satisfying as I was reading the galleys and really liked how it turned out. I
hope readers feel the same!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Eileen Carr
was born in Dayton, Ohio. She moved when she was four and only remembers that
she was born across the street from Baskin-Robbins. Eileen remembers anything
that has to do with ice cream. Or chocolate. Or champagne.
Eileen’s
alter ego, Eileen Rendahl, is the award-winning author of four Chick Lit novels
and the Messenger series.
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