Saturday, June 30, 2018

The Fragile Ordinary by Samantha Young: Excerpt and Review

   
From the New York Times bestselling author of The Impossible Vastness of Us and the On Dublin Street series comes a heartfelt and beautiful new young adult novel, set in Scotland, about daring to dream and embracing who you are. THE FRAGILE ORDINARY is now available where all fine books are sold. Order your copy of THE FRAGILE ORDINARY today!
   
About THE FRAGILE ORDINARY:

I am Comet Caldwell.
And I sort of, kind of, absolutely hate my name.
People expect extraordinary things from a girl named Comet. That she’ll be effortlessly cool and light up a room the way a comet blazes across the sky.
But from the shyness that makes her book-character friends more appealing than real people to the parents whose indifference hurts more than an open wound, Comet has never wanted to be the center of attention. She can’t wait to graduate from her high school in Edinburgh, Scotland, where the only place she ever feels truly herself is on her anonymous poetry blog. But surely that will change once she leaves to attend university somewhere far, far away.

When new student Tobias King blazes in from America and shakes up the school, Comet thinks she’s got the bad boy figured out. Until they’re thrown together for a class assignment and begin to form an unlikely connection. Everything shifts in Comet’s ordinary world. Tobias has a dark past and runs with a tough crowd—and none of them are happy about his interest in Comet. Targeted by bullies and thrown into the spotlight, Comet and Tobias can go their separate ways…or take a risk on something extraordinary.

 

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“Endearing and relatable, Comet-the girl who is searching for her place in this world-will shoot through the sky and into your heart.”— #1 New York Times bestselling author Erin Watt


      EXCERPT: By the time we got to the house and I let us into my bedroom, I was a jittering wreck. Massive waves of nervous energy were emanating from Tobias, making me worse. He was rarely nervous about anything. Once inside my room, I waited impatiently as Tobias slumped down on my bed, elbows on knees, head in hands. I shrugged out of my jacket and unwound my scarf. Still waiting. “Comet,” he huffed, not looking up. “Sit down, okay, you’re making me nervous.” “You’re making me nervous.” I sat on the armchair across from him. “You and Stevie didn’t kill someone, did you? Did Dean dispose of the body for you and now he’s blackmailing you?” Tobias’s broad shoulders shook and he lifted his head to stare at me with amusement tinged with sadness. “You’ve got to stop reading so many books.” “Never.” He smiled at me, his look so tender that I squirmed with the need to shoot across the room and throw my arms around him. Instead I met his gaze and asked directly, “What happened back there?” “I just chose you over Stevie,” he said. I swear my eyebrows must have hit my hairline at this pronouncement. “What?” “Stevie and some of the guys have been hanging around Dean more and more. Dean is a dealer. And he’s part of something bigger—we’re talking an adult-sized, criminal gang who deal drugs and steal cars for a living. Dean deals cocaine to kids. Blair Lochrie High School is one of his grounds. He sells to quite a few kids there.” At our high school? Class A drugs at our high school? “Bloody hell,” I whispered, “Where have I been?” “Where I prefer you—safe with your nose stuck in a book.” “Tobias…Stevie?” Hearing the worry in my voice, he winced. “I tried, Com. I tried to keep him out of it, but he’s so messed up and I couldn’t stop him. I hung around to make sure he was okay.” “Is that why you’ve been avoiding me?” God, please let that be why he was avoiding me. “Yes.” A million apologies swirled in his gorgeous eyes. “I didn’t mean for Stevie to find out about you, because I didn’t want you anywhere near the stuff he was getting involved in. But then you two got along, so well I thought you might…have feelings for each other, so I told him that he either stopped hanging around Dean or he stopped hanging around you. He agreed keeping you out of that stuff, away from the boys, was better for you. So we stopped coming around as much and then stopped coming around at all. Tonight was his initiation into Dean’s crew. It was supposed to be both our initiations, I guess, because Dean was sending Stevie to some other party with drugs, and I was following Stevie as backup. Now I’m not.” There was so much to process in what he’d just said. My brain blurted out the first thing it wanted to deal with. “Stevie and I don’t have feelings for each other. I don’t like Stevie, Tobias.” His eyes widened as my tone implied that I liked someone else. “No?” “No.” “Good. Because I just left him to that hell.” He stood up and started pacing back and forth. “I tried to help him even if it meant hurting you, and he just let himself get pulled further down into that crap.” I stood up, reached out to touch him, to slow him down. He stilled, looking at my hand on his arm. “What did you mean? You chose me over Stevie?” “Comet, Dean made it clear that if I left with you, I couldn’t go around there or anywhere near him again. So I either had to stay and go with Stevie as his backup on a drug deal and leave you to handle Dean on your own, or I could walk out of there with you and leave Stevie to do it alone. For good.” His gaze moved over my face, as if he were committing each feature to memory. My heart started thudding so hard the blood rushed through my ears. “So you chose me.” “Of course,” he choked out. “I’d never let anything happen to you. And seeing you there…I never want to see that crap touch you again. It was a wake-up call for me. I don’t want to be a part of that shit either. That’s not me.” Seeing something in his expression made me brave in a way I never thought I could be. Knees trembling, I stepped up to him and placed a hand on his chest, over his heart. His chest was strong and hard beneath my hand, his body heat surrounding me and that woodsy, spicy, citrusy scent he wore teasing my senses. I wanted to sway into him, hold him tight, and never let go, but I had something important to say first now that I had his absolute attention. “Being a good student, working for something, achieving something, playing hard at football…it wasn’t all for your dad, Tobias. There is no maybe about it. Deep down you want those things for yourself, too. You’re smart and good and such a special person.” I gave him a tremulous smile, wondering if how I felt for him was as obvious to him as it was to apparently everyone else. “You deserve the life you really want.” His chest rose and fell faster beneath my hand as we stared into one another’s eyes. Tobias licked his lips, as if he was nervous. “What if I want to get my grades back up?” “Then I’ll help.” “And join the rugby team?” “Then you’ll try out.” He nodded and slowly lifted his hand to cover mine. He took a step closer to me, his breathing sounding a little shaky. The thud of his heart racing beneath my palm made mine accelerate. My legs shook and my fingers curled into Tobias’s shirt. “And…what if what I really want…is you?” Joy flooded me. I can’t truly describe the feeling. The euphoria. The excitement and thrill and fear and worry that cascaded through me at the thought of being with Tobias King. No matter the plethora of emotions that came with his question, my answer was instant and absolute. “Then you have me.”  

    About Samantha Young: Samantha Young is the New York Times, USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of adult contemporary romances, including the On Dublin Street series and Hero, as well as the New Adult duology Into the Deep and Out of the Shallows. Every Little Thing, the second book in her new Hart’s Boardwalk series, will be published by Berkley in March 2017. Before turning to contemporary fiction, she wrote several young adult paranormal and fantasy series, including the amazon bestselling Tale of Lunarmorte trilogy. Samantha’s debut YA contemporary novel The Impossible Vastness of Us will be published by Harlequin TEEN in ebook & hardback June 2017 Samantha has been nominated for the Goodreads Choice Award 2012 for Best Author and Best Romance for On Dublin Street, Best Romance 2014 for Before Jamaica Lane, and Best Romance 2015 for Hero. On Dublin Street, a #1 bestseller in Germany, was the Bronze Award Winner in the LeserPreis German Readers Choice Awards for Best Romance 2013, Before Jamaica Lane the Gold Medal Winner for the LeserPreis German Readers Choice Awards for Best Romance 2014 and Echoes of Scotland Street the Bronze Medal Winner for the LeserPreis German Readers Choice Awards for Best Romance 2015. Samantha is currently published in 30 countries and is a #1 international bestselling author.  

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REVIEW
Wow, Samantha Young once again confirms her sublime mastery in writing stories that really touch a reader's heart <3
I have to admit I don't read a lot of YA books anymore, but this book was really a great read for me.

First of all, it was soooo realistic! Sometimes YA books have so much drama, and every emotion needs to be exponentially magnified... But not in "The Fragile Ordinary", nono. This is one of the things that I appreciated the most, the fact that there were some difficulties to overcome, and also big and though ones, but everything was developed really well, the storyline flew, and nothing felt forced or constructed.

Comet was such an interesting character, in so many different ways. From her fashion style, to her personality, to her way of dealing with her life and every situation. She was really mature for her age, and I recognised myself a little bit in her. I loved the fact that she had firm life goals already at 16, and that she did her best to reach them, even by being brave and overcoming her insecurities.
Samantha Young managed to make of Comet a strong and mature teenager, but yet still a teenager, so with difficulties typical of her age: balancing friendships, love issues, family problems.

The book was written from Comet's point of view, so we don't get a direct insight of Tobias's thoughts, but like for Comet, I really liked how he was portrayed and characterised. He had a different life story than Comet, he is a different person with a different personality, but he fit perfectly in this book. Through Tobias and his family, Samantha Young talks about some really delicate issues that unfortunately are quite frequent right now, and I admired how those issues were dealt with.

A great addition to the story were also the secondary characters, how each one of them represented part of the real word and its diversity.

We can say that this book saw a very important character growth for many of its characters, and this is another reason why I appreciated it really much.

I don't want to spoiler anything about this book, but I will just say that I definitely recommend it, both if you are a YA lover or not, because this book it's not a simple YA romance book, but in a certain way it also gives some very important life lessons.


 

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