Showing posts with label The Good Luck Girls series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Good Luck Girls series. Show all posts

Friday, August 13, 2021

BLOG TOUR: The Sisters of Reckoning by Charlotte Nicole Davis

 

Welcome to the Official Blog Tour for The Sisters of Reckoning, the second installment in The Good Luck Girls series, by Charlotte Nicole Davis!!! Today, on our tour stop, we have an exclusive chapter excerpt AND a tour-wide giveaway to share!! So... Check it out and grab your copy now!!! Follow the tour, HERE!

Genre:
Young Adult
Fantasy/Western/Historical Fiction
Series:
The Good Luck Girls, #2
Publish Date:
August 10, 2021
Publisher:

Synopsis:
The Sisters of Reckoning is the blockbuster sequel to Charlotte Nicole Davis's alternate Old West-set commercial fantasy adventure.

The Good Luck Girls are free. Aster's sister and friends have new lives across the border in Ferron, while Aster remains in Arketta, helping more girls escape. But news of a new welcome house opening fills Aster with a need to do more than just help individual girls. And an unexpected reunion gives her an idea of how to do it. From there, grows a wildly ambitious plan to free all dustbloods, who live as prisoners to Arketta's landmasters and debt slavery.

When Clementine and the others return from Ferron, they become the heart of a vibrant group of fearless fighters, working to unite the various underclasses and convince them to join in the fight. Along the way, friendships will be forged, lives will be lost, and love will take root even in the harshest of circumstances, between the most unexpected of lovers.

But will Arketta's dustbloods finally come into power and freedom, or will the resistance just open them up to a new sort of danger?


       
    

*Excerpt*

1

Part 2


It had been near a year since Aster and the other Green Creek runaways found the Lady Ghosts. Since then, the public had been told that all of them were dead, captured and killed by the brave lawmen on their trail. Aster suspected that Jerrod McClennon, head of the wealthiest landmaster family in Arketta, had spun the lie to save his own reputation after they’d escaped his estate. In truth, Clementine, Tansy, and Mallow had all been borderjumped into Ferron.

The only exception, of course, was Violet, whom they’d had to leave behind.

But Aster, in her stubbornness, could not bring herself to believe that Violet was dead.

If McClennon was lying about the rest of them, then he was lying about her, too. He had to be. Violet would have survived that night. She would have survived whatever McClennon had put her through since. Maybe she would have even escaped on her own, somehow. And as soon as Aster got proof, she was going back for her. Her conscience would not let her rest until she did, no matter how many other Good Luck Girls she border- jumped to safety.

Focus on the task at hand, Aster thought roughly, before her guilt could sink its teeth in any deeper. The girl in the back of their wagon now was hardly safe yet.

The good news was that these border agents, along with most of the rest of the world, believed Aster was dead. Beyond that, she looked completely different now. She had shorn her hair into a military crop. She had changed her favor from an aster flower to a sunburst. And she was dressed like a high-end fortuna, not a bandit on the run. There was no reason for anyone to recognize her or suspect she was anyone other than who she said she was.

But still . . . Two armymen waved the wagon ahead of them through. Aster snapped the reins and led the horse forward, tightening her mouth as one of the armymen approached. He was tall, clear-eyed, cut like canyon rock, with no shadow at his feet: a dustblood, like the majority of the rank and file of Arketta’s armed forces—a lifetime of service would see his family’s debts forgiven. The gold buttons on the man’s immaculate slate gray uniform winked in the late afternoon sunlight. Like his companion in the guard tower, he was armed with voltric weapons: twin pistols that whined at the edge of Aster’s hearing like the drone of flies.

“Papers,” he said to Aster in a bored tone, holding out a hairy hand. Then his eyes widened as they fell on Aster’s and Raven’s favors. “You girls have guarants?” he asked more roughly.

“Yes, sir, right here,” Aster answered evenly. “We’re transporting goods for our keeper. Be meeting him right on the other side of the border.” She handed the guarants over to the armyman, along with export documents for the cargo. He fixed a lens over his eye and scanned the papers slowly. If the guar- ants were legitimate, the bewitched ink, seen through the lens, would glow.

“‘In the service of Anthony Wise,’” he read aloud slowly. He glanced up at Aster and Raven, a smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. “Well, aren’t you the lucky ones, finding that one special brag who’s willing to make you his forever. Tell me, what’s Mr. Wise doing sending his Luckers to do his business for him? Doesn’t seem very wise to me.”

Aster tensed, but Raven shook her head imperceptibly.

“It’s strange country, Ferron. Mr. Wise gets lonely up there,” Aster said, keeping her tone level. “We’ve made this run half a hundred times to visit him. Just so happens this time we’re bring- ing some cargo with us. Why should he pay someone else to do it when we already know the way?”

Doubt passed over the armyman’s face. Aster didn’t break her gaze, forcing her body to remain still even as her mind whipped itself into a frenzy. If he’d been at this post a long time, he might know they weren’t the same Good Luck Girls sent for Anthony Wise in the past. The Ladies were careful to account for these things, but there were so many moving parts, so many places for this to go wrong—

At last, the armyman put his lens away and handed the guar- ants back. Aster let out a low breath.

“Says here you’re carrying a shipment of tobacco chaw,” he said, holding up the export documents now. “I’m going to need to take a look in the back.”

“Of course, sir.”

Aster flashed a reassuring smile at Raven before climbing down from the driver’s seat. But behind her smile, her mouth had gone dry. They were carrying boxes of chaw—but of course that wasn’t all.

Copyright © 2021 by Charlotte Nicole Davis



Praise for The Sisters of Reckoning

Featured in Teen Vogue

“Populated by a unique and diverse collection of characters that you will immediately fall in love with, this is a novel that will make you think, make you feel, and make you cry out, 'glory to the reckoning'.” ―Lauren Shippen, author of The Infinite Noise: A Bright Sessions Novel

“Davis has a knack for effortlessly tying in character development to the fast-moving plot. Readers will enjoy meeting and continuing to get to know the diverse cast[.] This book is hard to put down and readers will be inspired by its ending...Perfect for fans of Snowpiercer and Firefly.” ―School Library Journal

~~~~~

The Good Girls series
 
(cover link to Goodreads)

         
  

~~~~~

**About the Author**
Photo Content from Brett Pruitt
Charlotte Nicole Davis is the author of The Good Luck Girls, a young adult fantasy novel releasing in Fall 2019 with Tor Teen. A graduate of The New School’s Writing for Children MFA program, Charlotte loves comic book movies and books with maps in the front. She currently lives in Brooklyn with a cat with a crooked tail. 

Stay connected with Charlotte Nicole Davis
     

~~~~~

***The Giveaway***


Giveaway Open Internationally | Must be 13+ to Enter
~ ends August 30, 2021
Note: Not Responsible for Lost & Damaged Prizes in Your Mail Box
a Rafflecopter giveaway

Blog Tour Organized by

Friday, October 4, 2019

BLOG TOUR: The Good Luck Girls by Charlotte Nicole Davis


Welcome to the Official Blog Tour for The Good Luck Girls, the first title in The Good Luck Girls series, by Charlotte Nicole Davis!!! Today, on our tour stop, we have an exclusive excerpt AND a tour-wide giveaway to share!! So... Check it out and grab your copy now!!! Follow the tour, HERE!

Genre:
Young Adult
Fantasy
Series:
The Good Luck Girls, #1
Publish Date:
October 1, 2019
Publisher:

Synopsis:
Westworld meets The Handmaid's Tale in this stunning fantasy adventure from debut author Charlotte Nicole Davis.

Aster, the protector
Violet, the favorite
Tansy, the medic
Mallow, the fighter
Clementine, the catalyst

THE GOOD LUCK GIRLS

The country of Arketta calls them Good Luck Girls--they know their luck is anything but. Sold to a "welcome house" as children and branded with cursed markings. Trapped in a life they would never have chosen.

When Clementine accidentally murders a man, the girls risk a dangerous escape and harrowing journey to find freedom, justice, and revenge in a country that wants them to have none of those things. Pursued by Arketta's most vicious and powerful forces, both human and inhuman, their only hope lies in a bedtime story passed from one Good Luck Girl to another, a story that only the youngest or most desperate would ever believe.

It's going to take more than luck for them all to survive.


      
 

*Excerpt*
For several heartbeats, Clementine remained seated at the vanity, her reflection an exaggeration of shadows. The brag would be up here any moment. Should she stand to greet him? Lie waiting on the bed? She’d had all day to plan for this. She’d had years.
Then she heard it. The heavy creak of footsteps on the stairs.
Think of a song, she told herself. Aster’s right downstairs. Just think of a song.
The door opened.
The man behind it was more brutish than Clementine expected, a broad-shouldered ox stuffed in a suit. His fine black coat fell down to his knees, while his derby hat hung low over a shovel-shaped face framed by an auburn beard. Nothing about his outward appearance gave away who he might be, but his wealth was evident from the glint of the theomite ring on his thumb. The dark gemstone was large enough to buy the whole welcome house.
The brag paused in the doorway as he took stock of his suite: the plum-colored walls and their paintings of Arketta’s red-rock mountains, the ornate imported rug underfoot, the plush couch against the wall, the decanter of wine at its table. And, of course, the royal bed in the center of the room, its pillows piled high against a gilded headboard. At last the brag’s gaze landed on Clementine herself, who held up her chin. He ran his tongue over his thin lips and grinned. Clementine recoiled, then scolded herself for it. This was a welcome house. She would make him feel welcome.
The brag swung the door shut, the latch loud as a gunshot. He tossed his coat and hat on the hook. His thick shoulders strained against his white dress shirt, but Clementine could see now that he was younger than she’d first thought. Nineteen, maybe twenty, with ice blue eyes. She took a tentative step forward.
“Let me get that for you,” she said, stepping in to unbutton his vest. “You must be glad to get off the road.”
The scripted words felt unnatural to her, but the brag held out his arms cooperatively as she pulled the vest free and loosened his tie.
“And what would a girl like you know about the road? Or anything outside this fine establishment?” he drawled.
Clementine’s memory flickered, sunlight on water. “Enough,” she replied.
He licked his lips again, stepping in to study her more closely. He ran a thumb over her favor. “Skin like silk,” he murmured. “They did a good job with you.”
She was surprised by the roughness of his hands, the warmth of his touch. The only other man outside of kin who had touched her at all was the welcome house doctor, who always wore cold rubber gloves. She brought her own hand up to cover the brag’s and wound their fingers together.
“Glad you like what you see,” she said, summoning her courage. “Let’s find out what else you like.”
It must have been the right thing to say, or near enough, because he lifted his brow and led her to the bed, his bear paw of a hand still wrapped around hers. Clementine’s stomach gave another flip. Just the moon moths, she told herself, and a moment later they were sitting side by side on the edge of the mattress. The brag leaned down to unlace his boots. Clementine struggled for some way to fill the silence. Her cheeks began to burn. She wasn’t allowed to make idle conversation, wasn’t allowed to ask his name or where he’d come from. Those secrets were a man’s to give or keep as he saw fit.
Then he started unbuttoning his shirt. Clementine gripped the duvet.
“Quiet one, are you?” he asked.
She let out a nervous laugh. “I guess you might say that.”
“Seems y’all are always quiet the first time,” he said matter-of-factly. “Just as well. All that cooked-up banter some of the girls throw around just wastes time. I’d rather get my shine’s worth out of every minute.”
Clementine’s heart dropped. Her breaths grew sharp and short. “Looks to me like you’re the kind of man with plenty of shine to spare,” she replied. She had to keep him talking.
“Well, it’s my father’s money, for now.” He stood and shrugged off his shirt, revealing a thickset chest matted with red hair. “You know who my father is?”
Clementine shook her head.
“Just as well,” he said again. “I’ll be running things soon enough. And once I am, I’ll come back sometime and bring you something pretty, hear?” He tilted her chin up, meeting her eyes for the first time. His grin cut like a blade. “If you treat me right, that is.”
Then, before Clementine could stall him any longer, he scooped her up and laid her down on the middle of the bed, crawling over her, trapping her between his arms. His breath was sour with the smell of whiskey. Clementine’s stomach rolled as his gaze traced the v of her neckline. There was no more mistaking this queasiness for a few harmless moon moths. She was going to be sick.
I have to stop this—
The brag leaned in and began kissing her throat.
Clementine drew a startled breath and held it. Tensed, shut her eyes. His cracked lips scraped across her skin. His blunt teeth tugged at her with clumsy need. After a moment, though, she slowly opened her eyes. This wasn’t so bad, she told herself. The kissing may be a little messy, but it wasn’t so bad.
Then he relaxed, settling his full weight on top of her as he began to work way down her neckline, tracing her favor. Clementine squirmed underneath the suffocating pressure.
“Wait,” she managed. He ignored her. She began to struggle, raising her voice. “Wait, please—”
“You said you’d be quiet,” he said roughly. His hand slid up her leg, slipping under her dress, resting on her bare knee. Her heart beat hard as a horse kick. Think of a song, think of a song.
His hand moved higher.
Wait, please, I’m not ready—”
He braced a forearm against her throat. To quiet her, Clementine was sure. She swallowed around a knot of pain. Lightheadedness washed over her.
She couldn’t breathe.
It was enough to unleash the fear that had been mounting in her since that morning, spurring it into a red-blooded panic. She didn’t want this, she wasn’t ready for this, she couldn’t breathe
“Stop!” she cried out, pushing against his chest with all her strength. It was the last word she was able to choke out. He only pressed his arm down more firmly. Her vision swam, eyes watering. Her lungs grew tight. She reached out blindly for the side table, searching for something, anything. Her fingers found the lamp. Grasped it by its neck.
And swung its heavy base towards his head.
The man roared, reeling back, pressing his hand where the lamp had connected.
“Damn you!” he cried, eyes flashing with rage. “I’ll kill you for that—”
Clementine hit him again, harder. This time his body went slack and he collapsed on top of her. She sucked in a gasping breath at the sudden, crushing pressure. She heaved him off of her and rolled away, leaping up and backing herself into the corner of the darkened room, her spine pressed against the wall. She coughed so much she feared she’d retch, forcing out the tears that had pricked at her eyes. She’d done it now. Now he was going to be even more furious, and he’d come for her again, and he—and he—
And he wasn’t getting up. Clementine went still, listening for the sound of his breath. Looking for the slightest movement.
Nothing.
Slowly, she crept back towards the bed. She could just make out the shape of his body in the dark. She laid a hand to his head and snatched it back the moment she felt the bloody dent in his skull, warm and wet.
Shock washed over her, followed by a relief so pure it buckled her knees. A song finally floated up from her memory, its last three chords ringing in her ears.
Eliza Little with her hair so red,
Her first husband took another woman to his bed,
She found him out and listened to him beg,
Then she took her rifle and she killed—him—dead.

Copyright © 2019 by Charlotte Nicole Davis

Praise for THE GOOD LUCK GIRLS

“Don't underestimate the girls in the Arkettan welcome houses because you might just lose your life. Davis' The Good Luck Girls is a dust-filled, bloody fairytale set in a menacing world haunted with the reminder―the price of freedom is high, but it's worth fighting for at all costs. Rise up, teen readers!” ―Dhonielle Clayton, New York Times bestselling author of The Belles

“This dystopian debut is deeply connected to today’s social issues, and readers will feel that impact.” ―Booklist

~~~~~

**About the Author**
Photo Content from Brett Pruitt
Charlotte Nicole Davis is the author of The Good Luck Girls, a young adult fantasy novel releasing in Fall 2019 with Tor Teen. A graduate of The New School’s Writing for Children MFA program, Charlotte loves comic book movies and books with maps in the front. She currently lives in Brooklyn with a cat with a crooked tail. 

Stay connected with Charlotte Nicole Davis
     

~~~~~

***The Giveaway***


Giveaway Open Internationally | Must be 13+ to Enter
Note: Not Responsible for Lost & Damaged Prizes in Your Mail Box
a Rafflecopter giveaway


Blog Tour Organized by