Gliterary Girl Book Tours presents the blog tour for THE ARTSY GIRL-IN BRONZE by T.A. Pack.
About THE ARTSY GIRL - IN BRONZE
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You can purchase all formats of THE ARTSY GIRL - IN BRONZE at Amazon.
About Author T.A. Pack
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T.A. loves to hear from his fans and hope you will follow him on the following social media:
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FROM MY PERSPECTIVE:
It took awhile for me to really enjoy what I was reading in this book. But at about the halfway point, Pack drew the story together and I understood and enjoyed....the rest of the story, (to coin a phrase). I rather enjoyed the chapters individually up to that halfway mark, but I questioned what the point was and if I would get it. And then I did. The story became cohesive, understandable, relatable and enjoyable.
Pack's protagonist, Kayla, was good at art in many different venues. She found her peace in art and in doing it well. She was a teenager finding her way and in this story, she "cheated" in her photography. She was also cheated out of a t-shirt design and sought revenge. She learned from her boyfriend's band that her revenge plan wasn't going to work....everybody cheats or lies. Her character developed beautifully in this story and when she finally yielded to the pressure and walked away from the project she was involved in..her friends came to her assistance and saved the day. Well at least to the point, Kayla could continue on with the finishing touches needed to bring the project to fruition.
It was indeed a charming story and it left me chuckling. I loved the ending and I loved the smile it put on my face. If I had to use one word to describe this story, I would use---hopeful.
I rated this a 4 Wink Read and I was glad that I did finally get it.
It took awhile for me to really enjoy what I was reading in this book. But at about the halfway point, Pack drew the story together and I understood and enjoyed....the rest of the story, (to coin a phrase). I rather enjoyed the chapters individually up to that halfway mark, but I questioned what the point was and if I would get it. And then I did. The story became cohesive, understandable, relatable and enjoyable.
Pack's protagonist, Kayla, was good at art in many different venues. She found her peace in art and in doing it well. She was a teenager finding her way and in this story, she "cheated" in her photography. She was also cheated out of a t-shirt design and sought revenge. She learned from her boyfriend's band that her revenge plan wasn't going to work....everybody cheats or lies. Her character developed beautifully in this story and when she finally yielded to the pressure and walked away from the project she was involved in..her friends came to her assistance and saved the day. Well at least to the point, Kayla could continue on with the finishing touches needed to bring the project to fruition.
It was indeed a charming story and it left me chuckling. I loved the ending and I loved the smile it put on my face. If I had to use one word to describe this story, I would use---hopeful.
I rated this a 4 Wink Read and I was glad that I did finally get it.
Excerpt from THE ARTSY GIRL-IN BRONZE by T.A. Pack
When she was seven, Kayla went to a birthday party for Brenda Scroggins, a girl in her class at Dolphin Spray Elementary. A lot of Brenda’s classmates called her Bossy Brenda because she always had to have her way and had to be the center of attention even when it wasn’t her birthday.
At the party, almost everything she said started with It’s my special day ....
As in:
“It’s my special day, so I get to open my presents right away—and I get to pick the party hat you’re going to wear.”
“It’s my special day, so we’re going to play with my guinea pig now. He doesn’t bite hard.”
“It’s my special day, so we’re going to watch The Little Mermaid. I’m going to sing all the songs and fast forward through the other parts.”
After the movie, the party girls had strawberry cake with strawberry icing and strawberry ice cream with strawberry sauce. Brenda said, “It’s my special day, so everybody has to put strawberry sauce on their ice cream.”
It wasn’t even the kind of sauce Kayla liked. She liked thick topping with big chunks of strawberry in it, but Bossy Brenda made everyone soak their ice cream with a runny, blood red sauce from a plastic bottle.
When Kayla tried to squirt it on her ice cream— right when she squeezed—the bottle slipped sideways. She sprayed a big spot of red on the plastic tablecloth, and the other girls laughed. Kayla slumped down in her chair so far that her eyes were level with her plate.
“Don’t worry about that, honey,” Brenda’s mom said. “I’ll clean it up later.” Then she went into the kitchen where everybody’s mom except Kayla’s was drinking coffee.
As soon as Mrs. Scroggins left the room, Brenda started telling her guests what was wrong with their birthday presents.
She already had a bazillion stuffed dolphins, she told Jennifer.
She didn’t like Junie B. Jones books, she told Kayla. In fact, she didn’t like books at all.
And she didn’t like board games with spinners because they made her dizzy, she told Jill.
And speaking of board games, Sandy knew good and well that Brenda had wanted Trouble
for her birthday, not Sorry. She’d wanted Trouble because she liked that plastic bubble in the middle. She liked making the popping sound.
Sandy, who lived next door and was Brenda’s best friend until that exact moment, didn’t like being lumped in with and lectured to in front of the other girls, and she angrily reminded Brenda that it was Sorry—not Trouble—that they’d played until almost eleven o’clock at her house. She was positively sure it was Sorry because she’d had to help Brenda read the cards and Trouble doesn’t have any cards.
And she was absolutely positively sure it was Sorry because Brenda had said, “They should call this game Not Sorry,” and she’d laughed and shouted “Not sorry!” every time she got to do something mean to one of Sandy’s game pieces.
Kayla hated arguments. They were full of scary fireworks—bursts of red and yellow that covered her field of vision. The colors weren’t ugly, but they were too bright and changed too fast, which gave her a headache and made her feel wobbly. To distract herself from Sandy and Brenda’s argument, Kayla used her plastic spork to doodle in the straw- berry sauce she’d squirted on the table.
Sandy was one hundred percent absolutely positively sure that Brenda had said Sorry was the most fun game she’d ever played, and Sandy had been excited about giving it to her, but now, on her birthday, Brenda certainly was not acting like a nice little girl like her mom was always telling her to do. In fact, Brenda was acting like a little butthead.
A birthday butthead.
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1 comment:
Greetings from #Kenya... first and foremost you have a very neat blog and you have done commendable book review that made me purchase the book at Amazon. Good work
http://www.owenhabel.blogspot.com
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