I'm so excited to be part of this blog tour!! Thank you Anna for having me part of this!
Series: Otherborn (Book One)
290 Pages
Author: Anna Silver
Publisher: Sapphire Star Publishing
Release Date: April 4, 2013
Format: Paperback, ebook
Genre: YA
Subgenres: dystopian, science fiction
SYNOPSIS:
London and her teenage friends live in a reprocessed world.
Confined within Capital City’s concrete walls, London has done the impossible and the illegal. She’s created something New- a song. But her mentor, club owner Pauly, is not impressed. Since the historic Energy Crisis forced everyone behind walls generations ago, the Tycoons have ensured there is truly nothing new allowed under the sun. Pauly warns London to keep her song to herself, if she knows what’s good for her.
What he doesn’t know is that London is keeping an even bigger secret: she dreams. And she’s not alone. London’s band-mates and friends have begun dreaming as well, seeing themselves in “night pictures” as beings from another world. As Otherborn, they must piece together the story of their astral avatars, the Others, in order to save their world from a dreamless, hopeless future.
When Pauly is murdered and an Otherborn goes missing, London realizes someone is hunting them down. Escaping along the Outroads, they brave the deserted Houselands with only their dreams to guide them. Can they find their friend before the assassin finds them? Will being Otherborn save their lives, or destroy them?
Here's and excerpt from the book! Enjoy!
“It feels weird, doesn’t it?” London asked.
Rye smiled at her but
didn’t say anything and London
felt even more put off. “You okay?” she asked him.
London
shrugged. “Worth a shot. Let’s do this.”
Rye
chucked a pebble, watching it slip away beneath the surface. “Never really
looked at the bayou,” he said matter-of-factly.
London
raised an eyebrow. She hoped she was right about this. Either way, she didn’t
want to hang around City Central letting Kingsnake pick them off one by one.
And there was nothing east but more Tycoon control—the pits, the plants, the
farms. She didn’t exactly feel like visiting her dad’s grave today. They were
going west. There was nothing else to do. “No point standing here thinking
about it. May as well get started.”
“What?” Kim said, lighting a cigarette.
“This. Leaving. It feels weird to just start walking
with no place in particular to go. Where you’ve never been before.”
“Yeah, it does,” said Zen.
“As good as can be expected,” he said.
She blew off the uneasiness this created in her and
said, “So, any dreams last night? Anyone see their Otherborn? Degan?” She
didn’t want to say Avery, but they all knew the name was right there on
the tip of her tongue. A chorus of no’s confirmed that they were dreaming no
more.
They moved together through the maze of the city. Capital City was laid out in an urban grid of
buildings, towering sentinels and squatty old-timers all squished together like
they were in a tin can. It was a long trek down Travis, past the park, and up
the ramps that crossed the bayou which ran all the way to Old Green and the
west wall. The ramps led straight onto the Ten, but they had to get past the
Interstate Gates before they’d
truly be on their way. One stop for coffee set them back a
bit, and Kim detoured at a corner store to grab a carton of cigarettes, courtesy
of Capital City .
When they reached the ramps, they stood staring at
the bayou below with bulging eyes. Here it ran thick and disappeared through a
culvert in the wall to the north. They
were already pushing the scope of London ’s territory, and they weren’t even
outside the walls yet. She’d only seen the bayou a handful of times before. Kim
leaned over and dangled his spit above the steady, deep, brown waters.
“That’s because it’s the color of shit. Not much
worth looking at,” Kim said after finally letting his spit fall and mix into the
rush. “Look!” he said pointing below. “Now I’m part of the bayou too.” He
waggled his eyebrows at London .
“We could’ve
taken the culverts out.”
“Yeah, if we wanted to drown,” London said. “Morons,” she muttered to
herself, though she knew there were Scrappers who braved the culverts all the
time. Occasionally, one washed up at Old Green, bobbing on the surface, all
bloated and sticky.
She stared up the asphalt and rebar ramp where the Interstate
Gates hung, their solid aluminum bars glinting a plain white-silver in the
sunlight at their rounded corners. They were offset, one falling just a little
lower than the other, its dull metal finish nearly scraping the road. At the
middle, they were bound together in chains, a large black padlock looped
through each end. The chains reminded her of Ernesto’s necklaces.
From either side, the walls wrapped around the city
like giant concrete arms, holding it in a stony embrace. The Interstate Gates
were its metal hands, opening and closing at the Tycoons’ will. But the spaces
between the poles of the gates were wide and
gaping; anyone on foot could slip through them as easily
as sand through fingers.
Beyond, the great asphalt snake of the Ten undulated through
a thicket of uninhabited, decaying buildings swallowed by trees and overgrowth,
their roofs and rafters, beams and walls rising from the flood of foliage like drowning
men reaching out
desperately for help. The Houselands. Graveyard to the
ones who got locked out. A chill ran up London ’s
spine. What the hell were they doing?
“This is it,” she blinked. It wasn’t a question.
“Yep,” said Zen, turning away from the sight of
flowing water. “This is the one the Tycoons always parade in and out on.”
The Tycoons didn’t make appearances often. Actually, they
didn’t make them ever. Just their cars. Capital City
housed the presidential compound, the last remaining government office—farce
though it was. Once or twice a year, their caravan would parade slowly through
the streets and circle on its lawns, a centipede of black shining metal and
rolling rubber. More often, they traveled by plane or helicopter, which could
be heard coming first, their growing rumble a hungry beast in the sky, followed
by the sight of flashing wings or whirling propellers. London thought they looked like giant,
mechanical bugs.
“That way?” Rye
asked, pointing where the trees eventually converged on the interstate. A
visible wound in the concrete skin of the Ten exposed steel rods like rusty
bones. Beyond the walls, civilization was losing its war with nature.
“Yep,” Zen nodded.
As they approached the gates, London decided she wouldn’t look back at the
receding city. Pauly wasn’t there, not anymore. Dogma would become just another
dingy hole for city rejects. There was nothing in Capital City
for her anymore. Whatever she had of value was tucked away inside a bag of memories
or standing next to her now, in the form of Rye and her friends. She would leave her
pain, her years of disappointment, and her grief over Pauly at these gates.
There was nothing for them back there but death. Course, there may only be the
same ahead. It was a chance they would have to take.
AUTHOR BIO:
Anna Silver grew up with a passion for words, books, and storytelling. She began writing as a child and eventually landed at St. Edward’s University in Austin where she studied English Writing & Rhetoric. She has always nurtured a vivid imagination and a love for art, expression, and fantasy. Currently she resides in the greater Houston area with her family and pets where she continues to read, write, and dream. Otherborn is her first published novel.
AUTHOR BIO:
Anna Silver grew up with a passion for words, books, and storytelling. She began writing as a child and eventually landed at St. Edward’s University in Austin where she studied English Writing & Rhetoric. She has always nurtured a vivid imagination and a love for art, expression, and fantasy. Currently she resides in the greater Houston area with her family and pets where she continues to read, write, and dream. Otherborn is her first published novel.
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