Tag Archives: Elle Strauss

Seaweed by Elle Strauss

Announcing SEAWEED by Elle Strauss!

 A teen swim athlete discovers a merfolk world that threatens to keep her out of the ocean forever.

 

 

Dori Seward can’t wait to get out of Eastcove, a sleepy fishing village on the border of New Brunswick and Maine. She bides her time by hanging out with friends, attending swim club, and holding her biggest competition, Colby–who wants more than just friendship, at arm’s length.

Then Tor Riley comes to town and he has everything Dori dreams of in a boyfriend–looks, athleticism and mystery.

But Tor also has a tantalizing secret and Dori is determined to find out what it is. The truth is crazier than her wildest imaginations and more dangerous, too.

Dori has new fantastical enemies , and they will do anything to get to her.

Her life, her dreams and her love for Tor are all weighing in the balance. Will Dori risk it all in order to have it all?

 SEAWEED is FREE for a limited time on Amazon!

It’s also free on itunes and smashwords.

Elle Strauss writes time travel and merfolk chic-lit, light SF and historical YA fiction. To ward off writer’s butt she does a bit of hiking, biking and yoga. Elle is married with four children and divides her time between British Columbia, Canada, and Germany.

Clockwiser by Elle Strauss

CLOCKWISER by Elle Strauss

The exciting follow-up sequel to Clockwise is here!

 
The  last year has been smooth sailing for Casey Donovan. She and her  boyfriend Nate are doing better than ever, and things at home are good,  too. Everything’s been so calm, she hasn’t “tripped” back to the  nineteenth century in ages.
Then  the unthinkable happens and she accidentally takes her rebellious  brother Tim back in time. It’s 1862 with the Civil War brewing, and for  Tim this spells adventure and excitement. Finding himself stuck in the  past, he enlists in the Union army, but it doesn’t take long before he  discovers real life war is no fun and games.
Casey  and Nate race against the clock to find Tim, but the strain wears on  their relationship. It doesn’t help that the intriguing new boy next  door has his sights on Casey, and isn’t shy to let her know it.

Can Nate and Casey find Tim in time to save him? And is it too late to save their love?

 
Sales links:

Amazon
Smashwords

Sample Chapter

Chapter One

CASEY

Beginning of Summer Holidays

Sometimes  I wished I were an only child. But then I’d be walking or taking  transit instead of getting a lift from my brother Tim in his Cavalier  beater. He didn’t have air conditioning either, and the wind blowing in  from our open windows was hot and moist. The humidity made me feel like I  was wearing a warm, wet washcloth for a shirt.

“Can’t  you drop me off first?” I said, fanning myself with my hand. I was  meeting my best friend Lucinda at the mall, and she only had a thirty  minute break from her job at Forever21. Plus, the mall was air conditioned. Bonus.

“I  gotta get some cash first. Besides, I’m not your personal taxi service,  Casey.” Tim snarled, turning the volume up on his stereo. The bass beat  was so loud it rattled the trunk. “Get off your lazy butt and get your  license already.”

I  gave him a dirty look and reached over to turn the music down. I had a  very good reason for not getting my license, but I could never tell Tim  or any member of my family what it was. There were only three people currently living who knew the reason. One of them was my boyfriend Nate Mackenzie.

My heart still fluttered a bit when I thought of him in those terms. My boyfriend. Not just some out-of-reach guy I crushed hard on my whole sophomore year, but my boyfriend.

We’d  already been an official couple for an entire year, totally blowing all  the doomsday predictions that we’d never make it. No one thought a  college boy would stick it out with a junior in high school–especially  Nate’s evil former girlfriend!

But  he did, and we were still going strong. I’d be starting my senior year  in a few weeks and then I’d join him at Boston University, too.

“If you dropped me off first, you wouldn’t have to deal with me,” I tried to reason.

“If I didn’t shuttle you around at all I wouldn’t have to deal with you.”

The  only reason he did was because my parents were putting the screws in.  Tim’s bad attitude, questionable choice of friends and poor grades put  him in their bad books. Driving me around was penance.

He  pulled into the parking lot of the bank and hopped out, leaving the car  running. I reached over and turned it off. Idling the car was bad for  the environment for one, and a waste of Tim’s hard-earned minimum-wage  job gas money for another. You’d think he’d know better.

I  checked the time on my phone and grew anxious as Lucinda’s break time  grew nearer. Tim had his back to me as he stood in line at the ATM  window. I looked at my reflection in the visor mirror. Since I’d grown  out of my skinny awkwardness last year (and snagged a hot boyfriend), I  was more mindful of my looks. Instead of trying to hide behind a bush of  dark, curly hair, I used better hair products and found a great  stylist, and I liked the way my curls framed my face now. I took a tube  of lip gloss out of my purse and rolled it onto my lips.

I  tugged on my shorts and rubbed my bare legs. They were so long, my  knees almost touched the glove compartment. Height had its advantages,  but getting comfortable in a small car wasn’t one of them.

I  turned the radio on and hummed along. I daydreamed about me and Nate  and how we could relax for the rest of the summer, hopefully stretching  the lazy days out as long as possible.

I checked the time on my phone again and immediately started stressing about being late to meet Lucinda. C’mon, Tim! He was second in line now. I texted Lucinda to let her know I might be a little late.

I  heard sirens and I perked up. This wasn’t the best neighborhood. The  bank wasn’t huge, just tucked into a strip mall along with a nail place,  a dollar store, and a thrift shop. Litter overflowed from the bin and a  good amount had been blown up against the cement foundation.

I  checked on Tim. He’d finally made it to the front, the last one in  line. If I’d known it was going to take him this long, I would’ve run  into the dollar store and picked up cheap nail polish.

The  siren noise grew increasingly louder and suddenly three cop cars pulled  into the parking lot beside me. My heart jumped, and I thought  fleetingly that maybe Tim was in trouble with the law again. Only, he  was getting money out of the ATM, not robbing the bank.

But someone was.

Everything happened so fast.

A  guy with a ski mask pushed past Tim as he ran out the bank doors. A cop  shouted, “Stop or I’ll shoot,” and another masked man followed. Guns  went off. Tim stood there, stunned and frozen.

I heard myself shout, “Tim!” He was right in the middle of the cross-fire!

A  police officer ran to him, pushing him to the ground just as the second  armed man shot in their direction. The officer fell to the ground,  taking the bullet instead of Tim.

The robbers ran around the corner and out of sight, chased by police officers on foot and a cruiser down the back ally.

I sprinted to Tim where he was on the ground by the fallen cop.

“Are you okay?” I asked, my voice tight.

His face was white, and he motioned to the woman beside him. “Yeah, but I don’t think she is.”

The officer moaned, holding her hand on her chest.

“Oh, ma’am, are you okay?” I searched for blood but couldn’t see any.

“I will be,” she said gasping for breath. “I have a vest on.”

Another officer kneeled beside her. “Ambulance is on its way.”

The  woman had dark hair pulled back in a low bun. Her eyes stayed pinched  together and her pale face glistened with sweat. The impact of the  bullet was enough to do some damage. I picked up her police hat that had  fallen off her head and handed it to her.

“Thank you,” I said.

“Just doing my duty.”

The ambulance arrived. The paramedics pushed us aside and lifted the woman onto a gurney.

The cop who’d checked her pulse stepped forward from his open door cruiser. Radio dispatch noises leaked out.

I watched the ambulance pull away, siren blasting, and realized I didn’t know her name. I asked the officer standing beside me.

“That’s Officer Clarice Porter,” he said. “Now, would you two mind coming with me to the station to file a report?”

We  agreed, and I took my first ride in a police car. It was Tim’s second,  but his first was not for noble reasons. He still claimed it was his  friend Alex, and not him, who’d stolen the cigarettes from the  convenience store.

A thought like a loud banner ran through my mind as the doors of the police cruiser slammed shut and we drove away.

Clarice Porter saved my brother’s life.

Guest post by Elle Strauss – adding a playlist to your e-book

Elle Strauss, author of the awesome YA novel Clockwise, has a new MG book out, entitled It’s a Little Haywire. Elle did something cool with It’s a Little Haywire, in that she added both illustrations and hyperlinks in the book to one of the characters playlist.

I’ve asked Elle why she chose to add a playlist and I think her answer is fab.

More on that in a second. First, here’s a little about It’s a Little Haywire, which will be FREE on Amazon February 22nd and 23rd:

Owen True is eleven and eleven twelfths and has been “exiled” to the small crazy town of Hayward, WA, aka, Haywire, while his mother is on her honeymoon. All he has to whittle away the time is the company of Gramps, his black lab Daisy, and his Haywire friends, Mason and Mikala Sweet. They don’t look so hot this year, in fact, the whole town has gone to pot since the mill shut down.
Owen has his first encounter with a real life homeless man who ends up needing Owen’s help in more ways than one. But how does a rich city kid help the small town’s suffering citizens?
And what is Owen to make of the fog train and its scary, otherworldy occupants that appears out of thin air on the old tracks behind Gramps’ house? Do they have the answer Owen is looking for?

Praise for IT’S A LITTLE HAYWIRE

“Strauss’ characters are absolutely precious, especially Mikala. Your heart just breaks for her and her family. And Owen was a funny little toot, with a heart of gold. Just because you are young doesn’t mean you can’t help a community in need!Such a wonderful little read, that brought a tear to my eye at the end.” -  Mandy at twimom101 book blog- book reviewer

“IT’S A LITTLE HAYWIRE reminds me of Because of Winn Dixie by Kate DiCamillo. It’s that good….I loved the magic in this story. I mean the magic of story, a great story, the kind that pulls you in and makes you care about the characters. Elle Strauss does a wonderful job of pulling everything together at the end in a moving way.”  – Laura Pauling – book blogger,  book reviewer

And now, a word from Elle:

Charlie True’s Playlist

 

One of the cool things about digital publishing is that you can include extra features with your e-book that you can’t with print. And as e-readers advance in technology, the extra features are going to get more high-tech as well.  With the ipad and kindle fire now on the market and in the hands of many consumers, there will be a hunger and eventually, an expectation for books to have extra features like music, video clips, and inter-active apps.

The only thing that is holding back the tide is that many readers currently used by the consumer can’t handle all that extra media, but I think we’ll see the day soon when e-books will be published with two versions, one with the bells and whistles and one without. And over time, everyone will have a reader with the technology and bells and whistles will be the norm.

I decided to add hyperlinks to It’s a Little Haywire just because I could. It’s not high-tech, meaning the songs aren’t imbedded in the actual story. The links take you to another web source, youtube in this case, that showcase the songs. But, doing it this way also meant I didn’t have to deal with copyright issues.

Since the story of It’s a Little Haywire holds its own without the hyperlinks, why did I bother?

The reason I decided to include the hyperlinks was sentimental. Like my character, Gramps, my dad has a habit of breaking out into song. The most mundane thing will remind him of a tune from days gone by and he just has to sing it. What I noticed over the holidays was that while I recognized the songs, my kids didn’t. There was just something sad about that.

When I decided Gramps was going to be a spontaneous singer, I asked my dad for ideas. So, everyday while he was visiting he would tell me about the song that came to him in that moment. I made a list and the ones that fit the story of IT’S A LITTLE HAYWIRE, made the cut.

I included the hyperlinks because I thought it would be an interesting way to expose the next generation to some great songs they may never hear of otherwise. I hope it catches on.

Elle Strauss – Author
Bio: Elle Strauss writes Young Adult and Middle Grade fiction. She’s a married mom of four, and lives in the beautiful Okanagan Valley, famous for beaches and vineyards. She’s fond of Lindt’s sea salt dark chocolate and hiking in good weather. Her Young Adult rom/com time-travel CLOCKWISE and contemporary/otherworldly Middle Grade IT’S A LITTLE HAYWIRE are now available on Amazon.
Contact: ellestraussbooks at gmail dot com
Links: www.ellestraussbookscom

Twitter: @elle_strauss

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I’d like to thank Elle for stopping by today. Now go get her books!!