Surfacing by Kristin
Halbrook
Publication date: December 10th 2014
Genres: Mystery, New Adult
Publication date: December 10th 2014
Genres: Mystery, New Adult
Synopsis:
Katie’s fairy-tale façade hides a past she would like to forget, but Chelsea’s death brings every old emotion to the surface. If she’s going to move on from her hurts, Katie has to pull her not-so-perfect self together and search out the identity of Chelsea’s killer, even if it means turning to Josh Hunter for help. It’s not easy. Josh infuriates her. Once upon a time, they were next door neighbors and best friends. They were confidants. They were even teenagers fumbling and exploring each other in the dark. He knew everything about her. He owned her heart. That was before things changed.
Now, secrets are surfacing. Chelsea was seeing someone. And she was pregnant when she died. Katie must come to terms with Chelsea’s other life…and face the fact that she has some secrets of her own. Even if it means letting the past–and Josh Hunter–back into her life.
A college Clueless meets Veronica Mars, Kristin Halbrook’s new adult mystery is full of sexy romance and twists that will keep you guessing until the end.
Purchase:
When
she was little, Kristin Halbrook wanted to be a writer, the President of the
USA or the first female NFL quarterback. The first one stuck. Even when
pursuing other dreams, she always took time to write, including stories for
adults, teens, and children. She is the author of Nobody But
Us (HarperTeen, 2013) and the forthcoming Every Last
Promise (HarperTeen, April 2015). Surfacing is her new adult
debut.
When she's not writing or reading, she's spending time with three pixies, her Mad Scot soulmate, and one grumpy cocker spaniel; traveling across oceans and time; cooking and baking up a storm; and watching waves crash and suns set on the beach. She currently lives, loves and explores in The Emerald City, though she occasionally makes wispy, dream-like plans to move to Paris or a Scottish castle one day (if just temporarily).
When she's not writing or reading, she's spending time with three pixies, her Mad Scot soulmate, and one grumpy cocker spaniel; traveling across oceans and time; cooking and baking up a storm; and watching waves crash and suns set on the beach. She currently lives, loves and explores in The Emerald City, though she occasionally makes wispy, dream-like plans to move to Paris or a Scottish castle one day (if just temporarily).
He’d said he had an early soccer game, so I headed to the fields
before my classes. His intramural team had enough of a crowd that I could slip
in unnoticed to watch the last ten minutes. There was something exhilarating
about watching him streak across the field, about seeing his intense expression
as he passed the ball, watching his team jump all over each other when they
scored.
At the way his muscles tensed and relaxed, the way he was
completely zoned into the action. Passion, of a sort. I pressed my fingers to
my throat. I knew that look so well. Remembered how it had been focused on me,
long ago.
At the final whistle, I caught up with him on the sidelines.
“Josh, can I have a minute?”
He looked at me over his water bottle. I had just finished
studying the lines of his neck and shoulders as his head tipped back for a
drink. A couple other guys exchanged a look but Josh shrugged coolly and
dropped his bottle in his bag.
“See you guys later,” he told them. He shouldered his backpack
and stood with an exaggerated sigh. “Where to?”
“We can walk, if you don’t mind.”
“All right.”
I led him blindly away from the field. I wasn’t sure where to
go. I wasn’t entirely sure what I wanted from Josh.
He could tell.
“Here,” he said, stopping me with a touch of his finger on my
arm. “Come down here. I need to drop these cones in the equipment room.”
In the equipment room, dust swirled among the limited oxygen
supply and the smell of sweat soaked leather dominated everything else. I
plugged my nose and gave Josh a look.
“This was the only place you could think of?”
He leaned against a steel frame rack of football helmets.
“You’re the one who needed alone time. Damon not meeting your
needs anymore?”
I hated how we flip-flopped. How one moment with him could be
absolute perfection, and the next a battle. Josh had no right to act jealous.
We were nothing to each other. No matter how he made me feel. And the way he
made me feel…frustrated me. I picked up a plastic orange cone and launched it.
He ducked with an exasperating laugh.
“Shut up, Josh. When’s the last time you had a girlfriend?”
It wasn’t as though I expected him to list them. We both knew he
wasn’t lonely. But he shrugged the question off, folding his arms across his
chest, refusing to answer me. His eyes, usually so warm and inviting, were
closed to me.
“What do you want, Katie?”
I retrieved the cone, being sure to avoid Josh’s personal space,
and replaced it at the top of its stack. I straightened a shoulder pad on the
shelf behind me, realized what I was touching, and wiped my hand on my skirt.
Ew.
“Did you find anything yet? About Chelsea’s – about the frat
guy?”
“You mean anything in the very short span of time between
yesterday afternoon and now? What did you expect from me?”
“I’m so sorry to expect anything from you.”
“Believe me, I already know that.”
A heavy silence hung between us.
“Why aren’t you over that, anyway?” he continued. “They arrested
the janitor, didn’t you hear?”
I picked a stopwatch up off one of the shelves and played with
the buttons, resetting the time to zero. I set it back down quickly, hoping no
one was saving that time for something important.
“Yeah, but I’m just not sure –.”
“Just not sure what?”
When I failed to answer him he heaved a sigh.
“What do you want from me, Katie?”
I blinked back a surprise rush of tears. How could I tell him I
wanted both everything – and nothing – from him, but that I knew I deserved
less than either?
“I want to find . . . I want to know who . . .” I shook my head.
Why was Josh the hardest person on the planet to talk to, when I knew for a
fact he was the easiest person to talk to?
“It’s not your job to solve this crime,” he said, after the
silence between us filled the room, pressing against our skin painfully. “You
need to give your energy to dealing with it in other ways.”
“Chelsea’s murder,” I corrected. “Not just some random crime. I
don’t think the janitor did it.”
“Stop it,” he whispered. He started to reach a hand out to me,
but pulled back before touching me. I couldn’t tell him that I wanted him to.
To reach out to me. To touch me. To everything.
“I can’t. Please.” I’d lowered myself to whimpering. My shame
had no end when it came to Chelsea.
“I don’t have anything for you.”
For a moment, my heart melted under the regret in his voice. But
then I realized I was doing it again: setting him up to get hurt. I replaced my
guilt with anger.
“Then why did you bring me in here?”
“What? I’m not the one who dragged me into this equipment
closet.”
I smirked. I had him there.
“Actually, yes you did.”
“Right. The idea to be alone with you was mine.”
I bit back my retort and paused. Wait. He didn’t want to be
alone with me? What boy wouldn’t?
“I just wanted to ask you about the username. Somewhere where
your entire soccer team wasn’t going to overhear. You were the one dragging us
into rooms that reek of the gladiators time forgot.”
He pushed off the rack and came within a foot of my face.
Electricity fizzed in the air. I clutched the rack behind my back to keep from
curving my body into his.
“So, you’re saying you don’t want to be alone with me? Katie
Sawyer, you break my heart.”
His mouth hesitated around the next word, the one he didn’t say
but that we both knew had almost spilled out: again.
Kristin Halbrook Author Q&A
You have a Young
Adult novel out now (NOBODY BUT US) and another one coming out next year (EVERY
LAST PROMISE), in addition to your New Adult debut, SURFACING. What are some of
the differences between writing YA and NA?
I love writing both Young Adult and New Adult. It’s been
interesting seeing some of the differences in my writing style between the two,
but also noticing what is the same. My Young Adult novels are upper YA, so
there’s not a lot of disparity in content. Having said that, my New Adult
projects definitely feature more sexytimes as an essential part of the plot. I
also feel like the plot itself takes a bit more spotlight in my New Adult
projects, which is fun, while my Young Adult books feel a bit more character-driven
and perhaps more crafted at the line level. Still, whether I’m writing New
Adult or Young Adult, the books are definitely “me” and are getting the best of
my ability.
What are your
inspirations?
SURFACING, in particular, is inspired by two of my favorite
things to watch: Veronica Mars and the movie, Clueless. I like writing
emotionally complicated characters who have to face their own demons as they
are also trying to come to terms with an event that doesn’t have easy answers.
There is a mystery element to this book, but it isn’t quite at Nancy Drew
levels. It’s a little more about finding oneself than about finding a villain,
even though there certainly is a villain!
I have also been inspired by the setting. I love the beach
as much as Katie does, which is why it plays such a role in this story. And I’m
a huge fan of female friendships and of women living together and interacting
on a daily basis, which is why I chose to set this, and all the companion
books, in the Delta Gamma sorority. It’s a good place to explore female
dynamics in a real and empowering way.
SURFACING has a
mystery element. Do you think that makes it different from other New Adult
books?
SURFACING does have a mystery element, and I think it’s
something that’s a little different than a lot of what’s out there right now in
New Adult. But it also has a lot of the elements that I think New Adult readers
like to see: identifiable female characters, great men, sexual tension and
personal growth in a turbulent life stage. I like to think I’ve taken the
popular contemporary romance and given it a little twist with the mystery.
Do you have favorite
characters in your books?
Not usually. I sometimes like my characters, I sometimes
dislike them. Either way, I always love writing
them. I do have to admit, though, that Josh is a really, really, really good guy (in so many ways) and
also, you know, hot, and if I had to
pick a book boyfriend, it would be him.
What are your future
New Adult plans? Any previews you can give us?
I have lots of fun plans for my future New Adult projects!
Right now, several more books featuring the ladies from Delta Gamma are in the
works. Some of the characters you’ll see in SURFACING get their own turn in the
spotlight, and there will even be a change of setting for a couple of them to
some of my own favorite places to visit (Scotland! Snow-capped mountains!).
Hopefully, I’ll be able to share previews soon, so stay tuned! A good place to
keep up with what’s new is my twitter @KristinHalbrook or my Tumblr page:
www.tumblr.com/KristinHalbrook
Surfacing Dream Cast
Katie: She’s cute and motivated. Into the beach and the
sciences. The perfect actress effortlessly pulls off her big brains and her
great heels, plus a steely gaze that hides her vulnerabiilty. Easy, right? Ha!
But I think Claire Julien fits the bill. Photo: http://www.listal.com/viewimage/5910571
Josh: He has a great smile, a fantastic body from all that
soccer players, and eyes that show his emotions. The actor who plays him should
feel approachable and look great in shorts and soccer socks. Josh Bowman fits.
Bonus: No need to take on a different character name! Photo: http://cdn01.cdn.justjared.com/wp-content/uploads/headlines/2012/04/joshua-bowman-womens-health.jpg
Chelsea: The best friend of best friends, Chelsea’s
beautiful, dark looks are from her mix of Hispanic and Italian heritages.
Odette Annable’s hauntingly lovely eyes are a good fit. Photo: http://www.listal.com/viewimage/3896479
Damon: A quick perusal of the Friday Nights Light cast and the perfect Damon is there: the
rich-boy football player could be played to a T by Taylor Kitsch. Photo: http://images5.fanpop.com/image/photos/31500000/-Taylor-Kitsch-taylor-kitsch-31547466-400-266.jpg
Carolina: She picks up the role of Katie’s best friend,
offering a shoulder and some love when Katie needs it most. Michelle Ang’s work
on several popular international teen dramas is great training for this role.
Photo: http://www.thebigidea.co.nz/files/imagecache/display/images/MichelleAng1_0.jpg
a Rafflecopter giveaway
No comments:
Post a Comment