The Girl Who Saved Ghosts
Author: K.C. Tansley
Publication Date: October 17th, 2017
Genre: YA Mystery / Time-Travel
Author: K.C. Tansley
Publication Date: October 17th, 2017
Genre: YA Mystery / Time-Travel
Book Description:
She tried to ignore them. Now she might risk everything to save them.
After a summer spent in a haunted castle—a summer in which she traveled through time to solve a murder mystery—Kat is looking forward to a totally normal senior year at McTernan Academy. Then the ghost of a little girl appears and begs Kat for help, and more unquiet apparitions follow. All of them are terrified by the Dark One, and it soon becomes clear that that this evil force wants Kat dead.
Searching for help, Kat leaves school for the ancestral home she’s only just discovered. Her friend Evan, whose family is joined to her own by an arcane history, accompanies her. With the assistance of her eccentric great aunts and a loyal family ghost, Kat soon learns that she and Evan can only fix the present by traveling into the past.
As Kat and Evan make their way through nineteenth-century Vienna, the Dark One stalks them, and Kat must decide what she’s willing to sacrifice to save a ghost.
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EXCERPT
“I can’t help you now,” I said to the ghost beside my desk. I tucked my blond hair behind my ear and pushed my tortoiseshell glasses higher on my nose.
He remained there in his high-waisted, dark gray suit and fedora hat. Definitely circa the 1920s. He folded his arms and leaned against my desk, the picture of patience. “I can wait.”
I looked out the window in front of me. On the sidewalk below, parents helped my classmates lug their belongings into the dorm. Today was the start of my senior year at McTernan Academy. And a return to normal.
But this was the third ghost to visit my dorm for his reckoning, that one final piece of business they had to complete before they could move on.
Not believing in ghosts had kept them away for years until this summer, when I was forced to confront some incredible unbelievables—ghosts, spells, curses, and time travel. I couldn’t pretend to not believe anymore, so, since then, ghosts kept appearing and asking for my help. I wanted to help them. I truly did.
But it was exhausting. Every time a ghost appeared, it stole energy from the living. And I was always the nearest living person. I scarfed down junk food and sugary snacks to keep my energy up. It wasn’t enough. At seventeen, I had regressed to daily naps.
I’d spent most of August trying to get ahead of their reckonings before the school year started. I really thought it was possible. For a while, it even distracted me from my own issues; but senior year was starting, and the ghosts were becoming a serious problem.
I took a bite of my Twix and tried to reason with the ghost. “Someone might see you in my dorm. Can you all form a line and meet me in the park on Saturdays?” I could devote my Saturdays to the ghosts, just not my every day.
He glanced back over his shoulder and smiled like he saw something I didn’t. “We’ve been in line for years.”
A dull pounding started in the base of my skull. “I can’t keep up this pace.” My voice thinned the way a plastic bag does when you put too much in it.
His smile flickered. “But we need your help.”
“And there’s no one else?” I wasn’t the only person who saw ghosts. There were other believers out there. Some of them were my friends.
“No one quite like you.”
Sometimes I really wished I were mediocre. Being special meant that the ghosts were going to take over my life again. I couldn’t let that happen. Luckily, ghosts from his era were polite. He’d introduced himself when he arrived and that gave me the power to send him away. “Gilbert Wells, go away.”
He frowned and faded into a shimmer of dust that disappeared into a shadow.
It was the best I could do.
I got up and a wave of dizziness made me stumble. I needed to rest for a bit. I sat on my bright blue comforter, laid my head on my pillow, and was asleep in seconds.
He remained there in his high-waisted, dark gray suit and fedora hat. Definitely circa the 1920s. He folded his arms and leaned against my desk, the picture of patience. “I can wait.”
I looked out the window in front of me. On the sidewalk below, parents helped my classmates lug their belongings into the dorm. Today was the start of my senior year at McTernan Academy. And a return to normal.
But this was the third ghost to visit my dorm for his reckoning, that one final piece of business they had to complete before they could move on.
Not believing in ghosts had kept them away for years until this summer, when I was forced to confront some incredible unbelievables—ghosts, spells, curses, and time travel. I couldn’t pretend to not believe anymore, so, since then, ghosts kept appearing and asking for my help. I wanted to help them. I truly did.
But it was exhausting. Every time a ghost appeared, it stole energy from the living. And I was always the nearest living person. I scarfed down junk food and sugary snacks to keep my energy up. It wasn’t enough. At seventeen, I had regressed to daily naps.
I’d spent most of August trying to get ahead of their reckonings before the school year started. I really thought it was possible. For a while, it even distracted me from my own issues; but senior year was starting, and the ghosts were becoming a serious problem.
I took a bite of my Twix and tried to reason with the ghost. “Someone might see you in my dorm. Can you all form a line and meet me in the park on Saturdays?” I could devote my Saturdays to the ghosts, just not my every day.
He glanced back over his shoulder and smiled like he saw something I didn’t. “We’ve been in line for years.”
A dull pounding started in the base of my skull. “I can’t keep up this pace.” My voice thinned the way a plastic bag does when you put too much in it.
His smile flickered. “But we need your help.”
“And there’s no one else?” I wasn’t the only person who saw ghosts. There were other believers out there. Some of them were my friends.
“No one quite like you.”
Sometimes I really wished I were mediocre. Being special meant that the ghosts were going to take over my life again. I couldn’t let that happen. Luckily, ghosts from his era were polite. He’d introduced himself when he arrived and that gave me the power to send him away. “Gilbert Wells, go away.”
He frowned and faded into a shimmer of dust that disappeared into a shadow.
It was the best I could do.
I got up and a wave of dizziness made me stumble. I needed to rest for a bit. I sat on my bright blue comforter, laid my head on my pillow, and was asleep in seconds.
K.C. Tansley lives with her warrior lapdog, Emerson, and two quirky golden retrievers on a hill somewhere in Connecticut. She tends to believe in the unbelievables—spells, ghosts, time travel—and writes about them.
Never one to say no to a road trip, she’s climbed the Great Wall twice, hopped on the Sound of Music tour in Salzburg, and danced the night away in the dunes of Cape Hatteras. She loves the ocean and hates the sun, which makes for interesting beach days. The Girl Who Ignored Ghosts is her award-winning and bestselling first novel in The Unbelievables series.
As Kourtney Heintz, she also writes award winning cross-genre fiction for adults.
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***GIVEAWAY***
Blog Tour Organised by:
I am looking forward to reading this....it looks like fun reading....I love ghost stories....and yes, they are real
ReplyDeleteThanks, Scott. I had a fantastic time writing the book. I am a huge fan of ghost stories...and I believe they are real too!
DeleteHi Al! Thanks so much for being a part of my blog tour and sharing an excerpt today!
DeleteThanks for sharing! :)
ReplyDeleteThe book description and excerpt sounds intriguing. Thanks for sharing. Love the cover too.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Solange.That's really awesome to hear. :)
DeleteLooks really good Thanks for sharing it with us and for the chance to win a copy
ReplyDeleteThanks, Linda. I am so thrilled Al shared my excerpt and giveaway with you too.
DeleteThis looks like a fun series, I've added them both to my tbr list.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much, Diane! I really enjoyed writing them. :)
DeleteSounds Incredible.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jodi!
DeleteA great excerpt. I can't wait to read this. Thanks so much for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Bea! I love to hear that. Thanks for stopping by my blog tour and good luck in the giveaway!
Delete