I'm excited to share with you this new release as part of the Tribute Books Blog Tour!
Can a troubled young girl reenter society
after living in isolation?
When a beautiful 16-year-old girl named Sophie is found
sequestered in a cage-like room in a rundown house in the
desolate hills of Arbon Valley, Idaho, the entire community
is shocked to learn she is the legendary Callidora--a baby
girl who was kidnapped from her crib almost seventeen years
ago and canonized in missing posters with portraits of what
the fabled girl might resemble. Authorities soon learn that
the cage was there to protect people from Sophie, because
her biological father believes she is cursed.
Sophie is discovered after the man she knows as Papa, shoots
and injures Damien, a young man who is trying to rescue her.
Now, unsocialized and thrust into the world, and into a
family she has never met, Sophie must decide whether she
should accept her Papa’s claims that she is cursed and he
was only trying to protect others, or trust the new people
in her life who have their own agendas. Guided by a wise
cousin, Sophie realizes that her most heartbreaking
challenge is to decide if her love for Damien will destroy
him like her Papa claims, or free her from past demons that
haunt her mind.
Kindle buy link - $2.99
Nook buy link - $4.95
iBookstore buy link - $4.99
Google buy link - $3.79
Smashwords buy link - $4.99
PDF buy link - $4.95
The Color of Snow GoodReads page:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13456512-the-color-of-snow
Tribute Books website:
http://www.tribute-books.com
Tribute Books Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Archbald-PA/Tribute-Books/171628704176
Tribute Books Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/TributeBooks
Tribute Books Blog Tours Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Tribute-Books-Blog-Tours/242431245775186
Guest Post by Brenda Stanley
The Color of Snow has been described as dark or
mysterious. I feel most of my writing fits this description
because I enjoy looking at the strange and unusual things in
life. My novel will definitely make some people uncomfortable. I
like to look at situations and issues and try to figure out how
people will react. For years I was a crime reporter, so I enjoy
investigating stories and learning about the parts of life most
people try to hide. When I wrote The Color of Snow, I was
working on a story about a young girl who went missing years ago
and has never been found. I started thinking about what would
happen if she were to suddenly show up now. I loved putting
myself in Sophie’s shoes and seeing things for the first time.
Sophie’s relationship with Damien is both intense and tempered.
Her father has raised her to believe that she will destroy anyone
who truly loves her, so she is torn between her love for Damien
and her fear of causing him harm.
The story changes between what is going on with Sophie and what
happened in her parent’s past that brought her to where she is. I
wanted readers to experience the often isolated feeling of living
in a vast rural area, but also the mental confinement of a small
town.
Mental illness, teen pregnancy, religious intolerance, and racism
are all big parts of The Color of Snow. I like my
characters to face challenges and see them grow from them. It is
not only the conflicts with the other characters that keeps the
story going, but also those within the person’s own mind.
I wanted Sophie to be unusually beautiful so that people treated
her strangely and therefore made her feel even more alien when she
is first discovered. She has transformed from a tragic kidnapping
victim to a mythical ghost from the past and this makes her
transition into her new life even more difficult.
My ties to the Mormon Church go back to my great-great
grandparents. I was raised in the teachings of the Mormon
religion and even though I am no longer a member, I have many
friends and family who are still very active in the church. My
descriptions of the Mormon culture are how I view it and how I
feel someone who has never been exposed to it might see it. I
think there are a lot of people who are curious about the Mormon
religion and have misconceptions. I feel I’ve been both candid
and fair in my portrayal.
Brenda Stanley's Bio:
Brenda Stanley is the former news
anchor at her NBC affiliate KPVI in Eastern Iadho. Her writing
has been recognized by the Scripps Howard Foundation, the Hearst
Journalism Awards, the Idaho Press Club and the Society for
Professional Journalists. She is a graduate of Dixie College in
St. George, Utah, and the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
Brenda lived for two years in Ballard, Utah, within the Fort
Duchesne reservation where the novel is set. She and her husband
live on a small ranch near the Snake River with their horses and
dogs.
Brenda Stanley's Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/brenda.baumgartnerstanley
Brenda Stanley's Twitter:
http://twitter.com/#!/myauthorlife
Brenda Stanley's Website:
http://www.brendastanleybooks.net/
Brenda Stanley's GoodReads:
http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4086376.Brenda_Stanley
2 comments:
Thank you for the post!!
Aubrie, thanks for the spotlight :)
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