March 29, 2013

EXCLUSIVE Chapter Sneak Peek from TAKEN by Erin Bowman!

Hey everyone! Today I have the extraordinary pleasure of hosting a chapter sneak peek from the highly anticipated debut novel TAKEN by Erin Bowman! There are a total of 8 bloggers who are participating, each providing an exclusive chapter from the book. Check out the list of the other participating bloggers to read more of the book before it's released! Here's some background info on the book:



Taken

Author: Erin Bowman
Genre: YA Fantasy/Dystopian
Release Date: April 16, 2013
Publisher: HarperTeen

Description:

There are no men in Claysoot. There are boys—but every one of them vanishes at midnight on his eighteenth birthday. The ground shakes, the wind howls, a blinding light descends…and he’s gone.

They call it the Heist.

Gray Weathersby’s eighteenth birthday is mere months away, and he’s prepared to meet his fate–until he finds a strange note from his mother and starts to question everything he’s been raised to accept: the Council leaders and their obvious secrets. The Heist itself. And what lies beyond the Wall that surrounds Claysoot–a structure that no one can cross and survive.

Climbing the Wall is suicide, but what comes after the Heist could be worse. Should he sit back and wait to be taken–or risk everything on the hope of the other side?
 



*Note - Here's a link to the pdf chapter file for those of you who are having trouble viewing in here on the blog: https://docs.google.com/file/d/0B_awhT5nbHbaczIyQzNLckE0VUE/edit?usp=sharing

CHAPTER 5


We head south through town, passing the school and blacksmith
shop and the numerous houses, including my own,
that create the border of the village. Where the dirt fades
away, tall grass begins, sprouting up in patches, until finally
we are entering the woods. I don’t usually hunt along the
southern portion of the forest. It’s marshier, and the larger
game sticks to the drier areas. The ground grows soft beneath
our feet as we continue, but there’s been little rain lately and
we avoid sinking into the doughy earth. When we reach the
coarse thicket that I know to be concealing the lake from
view, Emma grabs my arm and pulls me to a standstill.
“This way,” she says, motioning to our right.
“But it’s straight ahead. On the other side of this brush.”
“I know, but the view’s better if you climb the hill.”
“View? There’s no view.”
“Trust, Gray. Have trust.” And then without waiting to see
if I follow, she starts cutting through the trees and brush, no
path to guide her. She holds her dress up about her knees,
and I stare at her legs as she steps over fallen logs and rocks
in our path. We move slowly and up a steady incline. Maybe
there will be a view after all.
When we break loose from the trees, I’m nearly speechless.
We are standing on a hill that overlooks the water. From
this angle it appears rather small and narrow, its thinness
stretching out of view beyond another crest in the land.
Surrounding us are the bellflowers, tall, thick stems that
grow higher than my waist. Delicate purple petals hang from
each, grouped together and dancing in the soft breeze. The
southernmost portion of the Wall is barely visible in the distance.
Emma leads us into the field and toward a lone rock that
sits on the hillside. The purple flowers nearly reach her
shoulders, but she climbs out of their grasp.
“I used to come here with my uncle,” she tells me as we get
comfortable on the stone. “Almost daily. At least until . . . you
know. I was nine when he was lost. I haven’t been back in
years.”
“It’s beautiful from up here,” I say. “And, to be fair,
it seems much smaller from this angle. I can almost
understand why you called it a pond.”
“See?”
“Yeah, well, it’s still a lake. I’m just trying to be nice.”
She sighs. “Ah, yes. That must be difficult for you.”
“You know, despite what you might think, I’m not a mean
person.”
“What you did to Chalice wasn’t mean?”
“That’s different.”
“It was still mean.”
“Okay, fine. I’m not inherently a mean person.”
“I’ll give you that for now.” She plucks a clump of grass and
sprinkles it into the breeze.
“So why’d you do it?” she asks, looking at me. “Why were
you honest about the matchup?”
I’m not quite sure how to answer the question. There are
explanations on many levels. I don’t want to be a father. I
hate the formality of slatings. I want her, but not if it’s forced.
“You were being honest, right?” she asks. “You’re not going
to try to attack me later or something are you? I’m stronger
than I look. Everyone always thinks I’m this kind, caring
thing, because of my healing hands, but I can be forceful if
I need to.”
“So I’ve heard.” I chuckle. “And, yes, I was being honest.”
She gives me that look again, the same one from the Clinic.
I still can’t read it.
“I hate the slatings,” she says.
“Me, too.”
“How many have you gone through with?”
“You don’t want to know.” I can count them on two hands
and even though it’s been a long time since I’ve slept with
anyone, the number is still more than I want to admit to her.
“You?”
“Just one.” So the rumors are wrong. “You remember Craw
Phoenix?” she asks.
I nod. He was lost to the Heist about a year and a half ago.
“I liked him,” she continues. “And I mean really liked him.
It was so nice for that month, and for some reason I thought
it would last and we’d have something. I don’t know what. It
was stupid, really. I wanted to continue slatings with him, but
I guess the feeling wasn’t mutual. Two weeks later he was seeing
Sasha Quarters, and then he was gone completely.”
“We’re all gone eventually,” I say. “That’s half the reason
I hate it, too. I don’t see the point of the scheduling and the
moving around. I only have ’til I’m eighteen. I’d rather find
something good, something comfortable, and stay in it.”
She gives me a half smile. “You mean be with one person?
Like, beyond the duration of the slating?”
“Forget the slating. Pretend there’s no slating and there’s
no rules and there’s no Claysoot and then, yes, one person.
Forever. Is that weird?”
It’s quiet for a moment. I know it’s an odd question, completely
hypothetical and outlandish, and for a second I
think she’s going to laugh at me.
“You know, some hawks mate for life.” She bites her lip and
looks back out over the water. It’s a ripple of icy silver in the
earth, the valley bleeding blue into its depths.
“Really?”
“Yeah, the red-tailed ones. My uncle and I used to see them
here each year. Always returning, always the same pairs
together. If the birds pick one mate for life, why can’t we?”
I feel foolish for a moment. I spend hours in the woods
every day and I’ve never noticed this in the hawks. Then
again, I was never looking for it.
“Maybe some animals mate for life and others don’t,” I say.
“Maybe we’re not supposed to be like the birds.”
“Maybe we are.”
She looks so pretty, sitting there, twisting grass between
her tan fingers. I wonder if we are the only people who
wish this, who long to ignore the matchups and procedures
and settle into something that feels right. There I go again,
thinking with the feelings in my chest instead of using my
head. If we were like the birds, we’d die out in a matter of
decades, once all the men were gone. I still wish it were possible
though, wish I were a bird and Emma were a bird and
we could fly away without looking back.
“You really are nothing like him,” Emma says. It pulls me
from my thoughts and I find her staring at me, again with the
same inquisitive look I can’t read. “Like Blaine,” she clarifies.
“I know, I know. He’s kind and responsible, and I’m reckless.
He thinks things through. I react.”
“Yeah, I know, but I don’t think that’s necessarily a bad
thing. Maybe it’s good to just react, to not overthink everything.
If we were wild and free, like the birds, you’d survive.
Blaine probably wouldn’t. He’d be too worried with pleasing
everyone and making everything fair.”
“Sounds like I’m pretty selfish.”
“No, that’s not what I meant.” She wrings her fingers anxiously.
“I’m trying to say that I think doing what you feel can’t
always be easy, but at least you’re being true to yourself.”
“It’s okay, Emma, you don’t have to try to make me seem
like a better person. You don’t have to justify why it’s all right
to spend time with me.”
“No, I’m not . . . ,” she says, frustration on her face.
“Dammit, Gray, I’m trying to say I admire you for what you
said about the slating, that I agree with you, that it’s not crazy
to want to be like the birds, but above all, I’m trying to apologize
for how I’ve judged you all these years. You’re different
from Blaine but maybe not in a bad way. Maybe in a very good
way, and I’m only seeing it for the first time.”
She’s staring right into me with those eyes of hers, dark
orbs as large as walnuts. Something in my chest surges.
Suddenly it is very warm.
“You want to go for a swim?” I ask, jumping from the rock.
As much as I want to be near her, I need distance. It’s those
 words. What do they mean? Earlier today she despised me,
thought me wicked for hitting Chalice, and now she admires
me? All because I follow those feelings in my chest?
“Swim?” she asks. “Right now? It’s not even that hot out.”
“Suit yourself,” I say, tearing away from her and running
down the flower-filled hillside. When I reach the edge of the
lake, I turn back and can see Emma gazing down at me, perplexed.
She’s probably still trying to figure out why her kind
words sent me running.
“You coming?” I yell back up the hill. She shrugs her shoulders
and then hops from the rock.
I pull off my boots and strip down to my drawers and am in
the water before Emma is even halfway to the lake. The cold
hits me savagely, biting at my lungs. It’s refreshing, though,
and I feel like I can breathe again, Emma’s words falling aside
as I kick into open water. I’m floating on my back, staring
up at an impressive mass of clouds forming overhead, when
something splashes beside me. I twist over and see Emma
along the shore, tossing pebbles in my direction. She has
waded in up to her shins, the hem of her white dress gathered
in her arms.
“Are you coming in or not?”
She shakes her head. “It’s too cold.”
“Wimp.”
“Oh, please.”
“Well, you are.” I swim in until I’m close enough to the shore
to splash her with a well-placed kick. Water catches
the front of her dress and her face goes wide with shock. It
probably feels like ice to her.
“Oh, you’re going to get it,” she shouts.
“How? I’m already in.” I swim back toward the lake’s center.
She’s fuming. She tugs her dress up over her shoulders
and throws it aside before running and diving headlong into
the water. She’s the better swimmer and catches up quickly.
With a strong kick her hands are on my shoulders and pushing
me beneath the surface. I’m too busy admiring how her
undershirt clings to her body to prepare myself for the dunk.
I resurface, sputtering and coughing.
“Who’s the wimp now?” she asks. Her hair is wet and
stringy, pieces of it clinging to her neck. It looks dark in the
water, nearly as black as mine. I lunge at her, but she’s too
quick. She darts away, slipping underwater and resurfacing
behind me, where, to my embarrassment, she dunks me
again. We continue like this for a while, me always trying to
catch her and she easily avoiding my attacks. When I finally
surrender, she’s dunked me four times and eluded me seven.
“Fine, you win,” I admit as we climb out of the lake. “But I
would slaughter you in an archery match.” I pull on my pants
and use my shirt to dry my hair.
“You hunt daily, Gray. That’s hardly fair.” She’s turned away
from me, pulling her dress on. She shakes out her wet hair
and braids it back.
“It doesn’t have to be fair to be true.”
“Fine. Teach me,” she retorts.
“Really?”
“Yes, teach me how to shoot and then we’ll have a match.”
She spins to face me. There are wet patches where her dress
meets the curved parts of her body.
“Okay,” I agree. “Start tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow.”
We walk home in silence. I try to figure out what it all
means, Emma being so nice, so playful. The last time the two
of us got along so well was when I was six.
“Today was actually a lot of fun,” I tell her as we approach
the outskirts of town.
“Yeah,” she agrees, “like being a kid again.”
We cut down a side street and head for the Clinic. Up ahead
I can see Maude and Clara sitting outside the Danner sisters’
house.
“Emma, take my hand.”
“What? Why?”
“Just take it.” I reach out and grab hers before she can argue.
Her skin is soft and delicate, unlike my callused hunting
hands. I spread my fingers between hers and squeeze them
lightly as we carry on. My chest heaves ever so slightly. As
we near Maude, I watch how her eyes linger on our entwined
hands and I flash her a devious smile as we walk by.  


Find Erin:  Blog / Twitter

Epic Reads Website: http://www.epicreads.com/ 



TAKEN Chapter Sneak Peek Schedule:


Monday, 3/25 – Chapter 1

Wendy Darling @ The Midnight Garden



Tuesday, 3/26 – Chapter 2

Lena Ainsworth @ Addicted 2 Novels



Wednesday, 3/27 – Chapter 3

Erica Haglund @ The Bookcellar



Thursday, 3/28 – Chapter 4

Shane Morgan @ Itching for Books



Friday, 3/29 – Chapter 5

Stephanie Ward @ A Dream Within A Dream



Saturday, 3/30 – Chapter 6

Krystal Larson @ Live to Read



Sunday, 3/31 – Chapter 7

Alicia Guerrero @ Shooting Stars Mag



Monday, 4/1 – Chapter 8

Jessica Estep @ Total Bookaholic



 *SQUEE!* I cannot wait to read this one! It sounds really awesome! It's definitely on my TBR - and has been there since I first read the description. Come back soon to read my review!!  :)

Alright - what did you think of the chapter?? Are you excited for this title? Leave a comment!

 

4 comments:

  1. Thanks for posting this! I've had my eye on it for awhile and now I know I'll love it! Is it told from the guy's pov all through or both?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Where is the .pdf file like on the rest of the blogs? It's way too difficult to read on your blog. Your blog is SOOOOO slow loading, and with everything you have running on it, it scrolls at a snails pace. Please provide the .pdf link so we can read this chapter. Thanks!

    Toni @ My Book Addiction

    ReplyDelete
  3. I read this as an ARC. I loved the idea, tho I think it's been overplayed by other books and movies. I didn't like the main character at all, and I usually love male POV. And I thought it was a bit all over the place, lots of stuff started and left out there. I don't think I will be continuing with this series.

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  4. Could you fix the Google Doc link? It doesn't work and I'd like this as pdf like all the other blogs provided.

    ReplyDelete