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Wild Reckless Cover Reveal Countdown

I'm busy working on Paige's story, but in the middle of the Falling series, I wrote something entirely different. And this book…it's my favorite. I made a promise to myself that I wouldn't be bashful about it (that's hard for me; I may be a touch wallflower). I love it, and I hope like hell you all love it to because I'm pretty sure if you don't I'll cry, and I'm an ugly crier. Just ask around. I don't cry often. I whine; I admit to whining. But crying is reserved for bleeding and girly emotions. And my cry--it's bad.

I'm digressing.

Just wanted to post this little update because the Wild Reckless cover reveal is coming Feb. 4. Here's the synopsis. I even love the synopsis. Okay, putting my excitement back in check.

Synopsis:

Kensington Worth had a vision for her senior year. It involved her best friends, her posh private school in downtown Chicago and time alone with her piano until her audition was perfected, a guaranteed ticket into the best music programs in the world.

Instead, a nightmare took over.

It didn’t happen all at once, but her life unraveled quickly—a tiny thread that evil somehow kept pulling until everything precious was taken from her. She was suddenly living miles away from her old life, trapped in an existence she didn’t choose—one determined to destroy her from the inside, leaving only hate and anger behind. It didn’t help that her neighbor, the one whose eyes held danger, was enjoying every second of her fall.

Owen Harper was trouble, his heart wild and his past the kind that’s spoken about in whispers. And somehow, his path was always intertwined with Kensington’s, every interaction crushing her, ruining her hope for any future better than her now. Sometimes, though, what everyone warns is trouble, is exactly what the heart needs. Owen Harper was consumed with darkness, and it held onto his soul for years. When Kensington looked at him, she saw a boy who’d gotten good at taking others down when they threatened his carefully balanced life. But the more she looked, the more she saw other things too—good things…things to admire.

Things…to love. Things that made her want to be reckless.

And those things…they were the scariest of all.
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Published on January 22, 2015 14:53 Tags: basketball, cover-reveal, dark, emotional, ginger-scott, high-school, illinois, music, romance, sports, twisty, ya

Wild Reckless Cover Reveal Time!

It's midnight by now EST, so I feel like it's perfectly acceptable to share this a little early for Arizona.

COVER REVEAL FOR WILD RECKLESS - a mature YA romance by Ginger Scott

Wild Reckless by Ginger Scott

I have a hard time being bold. I guess I feel like I never deserve to be bold, if that makes sense. Or rather, like I have so much left to prove. And I want to prove it -- believe me, I'm up for the challenge, albeit awkwardly, from the corner, like the un-bold wallflower I totally am. But…I am not going to be shy about this book. I can't. I'm proud of it. Stupid proud! I mean, big, loud, obnoxious, want to wave it in your face like a Packer fan proud! Every chapter I finished made me smile, made me breathe deeply, sigh and feel so damned satisfied. I love this book so hard, and oh my GAWD do I hope you do too. I threw a penny into a wishing well this week, hoping this book finds hearts beyond mine. I believe in it, and for me, that's a terribly hard thing. It scares me. So…here's the first piece of Wild Reckless. I even love the cover more than any cover I've done. And over the next few weeks, I'll share teasers, previews and more. And on March 17, I'll shut my eyes tightly and hold my breath as Wild Reckless goes live. I'm pretty sure I'm going to go through a lot of pennies with this one…

Synopsis:
Kensington Worth had a vision for her senior year. It involved her best friends, her posh private school in downtown Chicago and time alone with her piano until her audition was perfected, a guaranteed ticket into the best music programs in the world.

Instead, a nightmare took over.

It didn’t happen all at once, but her life unraveled quickly—a tiny thread that evil somehow kept pulling until everything precious was taken from her. She was suddenly living miles away from her old life, trapped in an existence she didn’t choose—one determined to destroy her from the inside, leaving only hate and anger behind. It didn’t help that her neighbor, the one whose eyes held danger, was enjoying every second of her fall.

Owen Harper was trouble, his heart wild and his past the kind that’s spoken about in whispers. And somehow, his path was always intertwined with Kensington’s, every interaction crushing her, ruining her hope for any future better than her now. Sometimes, though, what everyone warns is trouble, is exactly what the heart needs. Owen Harper was consumed with darkness, and it held onto his soul for years. When Kensington looked at him, she saw a boy who’d gotten good at taking others down when they threatened his carefully balanced life. But the more she looked, the more she saw other things too—good things…things to admire.

Things…to love. Things that made her want to be reckless.

And those things…they were the scariest of all.

Add to your goodreads shelf here: Wild Reckless

I'll share pre-order links once I have them.
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Published on February 03, 2015 21:53 Tags: basketball, cover-reveal, dark, emotional, ginger-scott, high-school, illinois, music, romance, sports, twisty, ya

Thank you, Ponyboy

As I write this, I'm counting down the hours with a nervous tummy for the release of Wicked Restless - the second book in the Harper Boys novels. I'm nervous because I always am on release eve. Heck, I'm nervous until the book has been out for weeks, and I find something new to be nervous about. These books are little pieces of me, and I want them to find readers' hearts so very badly. I know I'm not alone in wanting that - it's something I share with many author friends of mine. We talk often about how we hope there are more lovers than haters, but in the end, we wouldn't have written it any differently.

And that's the case with Andrew Harper's story for me.

I wrote Wild Reckless, Owen's story, without any idea that there would be a second book. Owen's story has its own beginning, middle and end. But after it was released, and the threads of his story--the things that happened in his life to make him the way he was--began to touch readers, I realized those same threads were what made his younger brother Andrew so alive in the story. It only took one email from a reader asking for Andrew's story to clinch it for me. There were too many things that happened in Wild that had to leave a mark on Andrew, and then I started thinking about all of the things yet to come in his young life.

And then I tested him.

As I sent out the advance copies of Wicked to a few reviewers, one who I have come to know and value so very deeply sent me a note--"this story has that Outsiders feel," she said. I read that statement over and over. It hit me--right in the chest.

Yes. Yes!

There are books that I have read that are definitely influences in my writing style. I think I will always be chasing Sittenfeld and Fitzgerald. I like to dabble in tragedy and the bleak side of life. But I also like to find my way out. I like to see heroes and heroines overcome adversity.

And thanks to SE Hinton, I think I'm always chasing Ponyboy, too. If you haven't read The Outsiders, then one: how did you get through eighth grade without having to? And two: you should. Everyone really should. There's a reason it's on the academic must-read roster--it's important. Whereas a lot of my classmates when I was a young, awkward, 13-year-old rolled their eyes and despised having to write the essay on the greasers and the socs, I swam in it.

For me, The Outsiders wasn't a story about class. It wasn't about rebelling or sex or the angst of wanting a girl outside of your circle. Well, no...it was. But that wasn't what hit home, what resonated to the point that I cranked out six pages of essay in an hour-long class (note: that is a lot of scribbling for an eighth grader who probably also had half of her brain focused on the cute boy two rows over and one desk up). It was a story about family. I wrote about loyalty, disappointment, longing and what happens when young people have to step into the holes left behind when someone dies.

So how do these rambling thoughts come together? Well, as I mentioned--I get stupid sick to my stomach on release night because I want my baby to be loved. I close my eyes and throw pennies and blow lashes into the wind hoping. But for once, this, my ninth book, I feel just a little less nervous. Because of Ponyboy, and the fact that my story made someone think of him, just a little. I'm smiling as I type those words. I'm smiling because as much as I put Andrew Harper through in Wicked, I'm glad I did. I wouldn't change a thing. And that Outsiders feel--well damn, that one word review alone is good enough for me.

I hope you all enjoy.
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