Thanks for checking out my stop for the All the Little Lights by Jamie McGuire Feature. When I found out that Jamie McGuire was releasing a new book, I was very excited to find out what it was about. I loved her Beautiful series as well as The Maddox Brothers series. And this new book does not disappoint! Down below you will find a message from Elliott (one of the characters in the book), a little sneak peek, AND a giveaway!!
Happy Reading đ.
Message from Elliott
My name is Elliott. You donât know my story yet, but you will. I spent my summers with my aunt and uncle just down the street from Catherine. She lives in a looming, rickety bed and breakfast called the Juniper, and spends most of her time outside, away from the memories that live between the Juniperâs walls amidst more tangible dangers that I never knew existed until now.
Itâs not so much that I fell in love or even that I fought for it, but that a war is waging inside Catherineâs homeâone I canât fight for her. It doesnât matter how strong I am, or how determined I am to stay. I can only get close enough to observe her pain in detail. And, so I stay, and wait, and help her the only way I know how; to do what I couldnât for her before.
I hope youâll understand.
Excerpt: All the Little Lights by Jamie McGuire
Elliott began to speak, but a small group of girls approached our table.
âAw,â Presley said, dramatically touching her chest. âCatherine got herself a boyfriend. I feel so bad that all this time we thought you were lying about him being from out of town.â
Three carbon copies of PresleyâTara and Tatum Martin and Brie Burnsâall giggled and tossed their bleached-blonde tresses. Tara and Tatum were identical twins, but they all strived to look like Presley.
âMaybe just outside of town,â Brie said. âLike a reservation, maybe?â
âOklahoma doesnât have reservations,â I said, appalled by her stupidity.
âYeah, they do,â Brie argued.
âYouâre thinking of tribal land,â Elliott said, unfazed.
âIâm Presley,â she said to Elliott, smug.
I looked away, not wanting to witness their introduction, but Elliott didnât move or speak, so I turned to see what was holding up their exchange. Elliott offered me a small grin, ignoring Presleyâs outstretched hand.
She made a face and crossed her arms. âIs Brie right? Do you live in White Eagle?â
Elliott raised an eyebrow. âThatâs the headquarters for the Ponca tribe.â
âAnd?â Presley sniped.
Elliott sighed, seeming bored. âIâm Cherokee.â
âSo thatâs an Indian, right? Isnât White Eagle for Indians?â she asked.
âJust go away, Presley,â I pleaded, worried she would say something even more offensive.
Excitement sparked in Presleyâs eyes. âWow, Kit-Cat. Are we getting a little big for our britches?â
I looked up at her, anger blazing in my eyes. âItâs Catherine.â
Presley led them to a booth across the room, continuing to tease Elliott and me from afar.
âIâm so sorry,â I whispered. âTheyâre just doing it because youâre with me.â
âBecause Iâm with you?â
âThey hate me,â I grumbled.
He turned his spoon upside down and stuck it in his mouth, seeming unaffected. âItâs not hard to see why.â
I wondered what about my outward appearance made it so obvious. Maybe thatâs why the town hadnât stopped blaming Mama and me for my grandparentsâ mistakes. Maybe I looked like someone they should hate.
âWhy do you look embarrassed?â he asked.
âI guess I was hoping you didnât know about my family and the smelter.â
âOh. That. My aunt told me years ago. Is that what you think? That theyâre mean to you because of your family history with the town?â
âWhy else?â
âCatherine.â My name sounded like a soft laugh tumbling from his mouth. âTheyâre jealous of you.â
I frowned and shook my head. âWhat could they possibly be jealous of me for? We barely have two pennies to rub together.â
âHave you seen yourself?â he asked.
I blushed and looked down. Only Dad had ever complimented my looks.
âYouâre all the things theyâre not.â
I crossed my arms on the table and watched the warm hue of the corner streetlight blink between the branches of a tree. It was a strange feeling, wanting to hear more and hoping heâd talk about anything else. âWhat they said doesnât bother you?â I asked, surprised.
âIt use to.â
âNow it doesnât?â
âMy uncle John says people can only make us angry if we let them, and if we let them, we give them power.â
âThatâs pretty profound.â
âI listen to him sometimes, even though he thinks I donât.â
âWhat else does he say?â He didnât hesitate. âThat you either get good at rising above and meeting ignorance with education, or you get really good at being bitter.â
I smiled. Elliott spoke his uncleâs words with respect.
âSo you just choose not to let what people say get to you?â
âPretty much.â
âHow?â I said, leaning in. I was genuinely curious, hoping he would unveil some magical secret that would end the misery Presley and her friends loved invoking in me.
âOh, I get angry. It gets old when people feel the need to tell me their great-grandmother was a Cherokee princess, or that stupid joke about if I got my name from the first thing my parents saw after they walked out of a teepee. I can get heated when someone calls me chief, when I see people in headdresses outside of our ceremonies. But my uncle says we should either be compassionate and educate or leave them alone in their ignorance. Besides, thereâs too much ignorance in the world to let it all get to me. If I did, all Iâd ever feel is anger, and I donât want to be like my mom.â
âIs that why you were punching our tree?â
He looked down, either unwilling or unable to answer the question.
âA lot bothers me,â I grumbled, sitting back. I glanced at the clones, dressed in cutoff denim shorts and floral blouses, just variations of the same shirt from the same store.
Dad tried to make sure I had the right clothes and the right backpack, but year after year Mama watched as more of my childhood friends faded away. She began to wonder what weâd done wrong, and then I began to wonder, too.
The truth was, I hated Presley for hating me. I didnât have the heart to tell Mama that I would never fit in. I wasnât vile enough for those small-town, small-minded girls. It took me a long time to figure out that I didnât really want to, but at fifteen, I sometimes wondered if it was better than being alone. Dad couldnât be my best friend forever. I took a bite of my sherbet.
âStop,â Elliott said.
âStop what?â I asked, the cool orangey-goodness melting on my tongue.
âLooking at them like you wish you were sitting over there. Youâre better than that.â
âWe should probably, um . . . we should go.â
Elliott stood, waiting for me to slide out of the booth. He followed me out, so I wasnât sure if he noticed Presley and the clones covering their insults and giggles with their hands.
When he stopped next to the trash can behind their booth, I knew he had. âWhat are you laughing at?â he asked.
I tugged on his T-shirt, begging him with my eyes to keep walking.
Presley rolled her shoulders and lifted her chin, thrilled to be acknowledged. âJust how cute is Kit-Cat with her new boyfriend? Itâs precious how you donât want to hurt her feelings. I mean . . . I have to assume thatâs whatââshe gestured to usââthis is.â
Elliott walked over to their table, and the girlsâ giggles quieted. He knocked on the wood and sighed. âYou know why youâll never outgrow the need to make others feel like shit so you can feel better, Presley?â
She narrowed her eyes at him, watching him like a snake ready to strike.
Elliott continued, âBecause itâs a temporary high. It never lasts, and youâll never stop because itâs the only happiness youâll ever have in your sad, pathetic life that revolves around manicures and highlighting your hair. Your friends? They donât like you. No one ever will because you donât like yourself. So every time you give Catherine a hard time, sheâll know. Sheâll know why youâre doing it, just like your friends will know. Just like youâll know that youâre overcompensating. Every time you throw insults Catherineâs way, itâs that much less of a secret.â He made eye contact with each clone and then Presley. âHave the day you deserve.â
He returned to the door and held it open, gesturing for me to walk through. We navigated the parked cars until we were on the other side of the lot, and headed back toward our neighborhood. The streetlamps were on, the gnats and mosquitoes buzzing beneath the bright bulbs. The quiet made the sounds of our shoes against the pavement more prominent.
âThat was,â I began, searching for the right word, âlegendary. I could never tell someone off like that.â
âWell, I donât live here, so that makes it easier. And that wasnât entirely mine.â
âWhat do you mean?â âItâs from a scene in Detention Club Musical. Donât tell me you didnât watch it when you were little.â
I stared at him in disbelief, and then laughter erupted from my throat. âThe movie that came out when we were eight?â
âI watched it every day for like a year and a half.â
I giggled. âWow. I canât believe I didnât catch it.â
âIâm just glad Presley didnât. That would have made my monologue much less intimidating.â
******
Title: All The Little Lights
Author: Jamie McGuire
Release Date: May 29, 2018
Summary
The first time Elliott Youngblood spots Catherine Calhoun, heâs just a boy with a camera, and heâs never seen a sadder and more beautiful sight. Both Elliott and Catherine feel like outcasts, yet they find an easy friendship with each other. But when Catherine needs him most, Elliott is forced to leave town.
Elliott finally returns, but he and Catherine are now different people. Heâs a star high school athlete, and she spends all her free time working at her motherâs mysterious bed-and-breakfast. Catherine hasnât forgiven Elliott for abandoning her, but heâs determined to win back her friendshipâŚand her heart.
Just when Catherine is ready to fully trust Elliott, he becomes the prime suspect in a local tragedy. Despite the townâs growing suspicions, Catherine clings to her love for Elliott. But a devastating secret that Catherine has buried could destroy whatever chance of happiness they have left.
About the Author
Jamie McGuire is the #1 New York Times, USA Today, and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of Walking Disaster, the Maddox Brothers series, the Providence trilogy, and the international bestseller Beautiful Disaster, which paved the way for the new-adult genre. She was the first independent author in history to strike a print deal with retail giant Walmart, and her work has been translated into fifty languages. She lives in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, with her husband, Jeff, and their three children. To learn more about Jamie, visit www.jamiemcguire.com, or follow her on Twitter @JamieMcGuire.
Social Media Links
Website: https://www.jamiemcguire.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/JamieMcGuire
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