THE AUTHOR
Anna-Marie McLemore writes from her Mexican-American heritage and the love for stories she learned from her family. She lives in California’s Central Valley. Her debut novel THE WEIGHT OF FEATHERS, a YA contemporary love story with a magical twist, will be released in 2015 from Thomas Dunne Books/St. Martin's Press.
THE BOOK
For twenty years, the Palomas and the Corbeaus have been rivals and enemies, locked in an escalating feud for over a generation. Both families make their living as traveling performers in competing shows—the Palomas swimming in mermaid exhibitions, the Corbeaus, former tightrope walkers, performing in the tallest trees they can find.
Lace Paloma may be new to her family’s show, but she knows as well as anyone that the Corbeaus are pure magia negra, black magic from the devil himself. Simply touching one could mean death, and she's been taught from birth to keep away. But when disaster strikes the small town where both families are performing, it’s a Corbeau boy, Cluck, who saves Lace’s life. And his touch immerses her in the world of the Corbeaus, where falling for him could turn his own family against him, and one misstep can be just as dangerous on the ground as it is in the trees.
Beautifully written, and richly imaginative, The Weight of Feathers is an utterly captivating young adult novel by a talented new voice.
Lace Paloma may be new to her family’s show, but she knows as well as anyone that the Corbeaus are pure magia negra, black magic from the devil himself. Simply touching one could mean death, and she's been taught from birth to keep away. But when disaster strikes the small town where both families are performing, it’s a Corbeau boy, Cluck, who saves Lace’s life. And his touch immerses her in the world of the Corbeaus, where falling for him could turn his own family against him, and one misstep can be just as dangerous on the ground as it is in the trees.
Beautifully written, and richly imaginative, The Weight of Feathers is an utterly captivating young adult novel by a talented new voice.
THE EXCERPT
THE
WEIGHT OF FEATHERS by Anna-Marie McLemore.
Copyright © 2015 by the author and reprinted by permission of Thomas
Dunne Books / St. Martin’s Griffin.
The
feathers were Lace’s first warning. They showed up between suitcases, in the
trunk of her father’s station wagon, on the handles of came-with-the-car
first-aid kits so old the gauze had yellowed. They snagged on antennas, turning
the local stations to static.
Lace’s
mother found a feather in with the family’s costumes the day they crossed into
Almendro, a town named for almond fields that once filled the air with the scent
of sugary blossoms and bitter wood. But over the last few decades an adhesive
plant had bought out the farms that could not survive the droughts, and the
acres of almonds dwindled to a couple of orchards on the edge of town.
The
wisp of that black feather caught on a cluster of sequins. Lace knew from the
set to her mother’s eyes that she’d throw the whole mermaid tail in a bucket
and burn it, elastane and all.
Lace
grabbed the tail and held on. If her mother burned it, it would take Lace and
her great-aunt at least a week to remake it. Tía Lora’s hands were growing stiff, and Lace’s were new and slow.
Her
mother tried to pull the tail from her grip, but Lace balled the fabric in her
hands.
“Let
go,” her mother warned.
“It’s
one feather.” Lace dug in her fingers. “It’s not them.” Lace knew the danger of
touching a Corbeau. Her abuela said
she’d be better off petting a rattlesnake. But these feathers were not the
Corbeaus’ skin. They didn’t hold the same poison as a Corbeau’s body.
“It’s
cursed,” her mother said. One hard tug, and she won. She threw the costume tail
into a bucket and lit it. The metal pail grew hot as a stove. The fumes off the
melting sequins stung Lace’s throat.
“Did
you have to burn the whole thing?” she asked.
“Better
safe, mija,” her mother said, wetting
down the undergrowth with day-old aguas
frescas so the brush wouldn’t catch.
They
could have cleaned the tail, blessed it, stripped away the feather’s touch.
Burning it only gave the Corbeaus more power. Those feathers already had such
weight. The fire in the pail was an admission that, against them, Lace’s family
had no guard.
Before
Lace was born, the Palomas and the Corbeaus had just been competing acts, two
of the only shows left that bothered with the Central Valley’s smallest towns.
Back then it was just business, not hate. Even now Lace’s family sometimes
ended up in the same town with a band of traveling singers or acrobats, and
there were no fights, no blood. Only the wordless agreement that each of them
were there to survive, and no grudges after. Every fall when the show season
ended, Lace’s aunts swapped hot-plate recipes with a trio of trapeze artists.
Her father traded homeschooling lesson plans with a troupe of Georgian folk
dancers.
The
Corbeaus never traded anything with anyone. They shared nothing, took nothing.
They kept to themselves, only straying from the cheapest motel in town to give
one of Lace’s cousins a black eye, or leave a dead fish at the riverbank. Lace
and Martha found the last one, its eye shining like a wet marble.
Before
Lace was born, these were bloodless threats, ways the Corbeaus tried to rattle
her family before their shows. Now every Paloma knew there was nothing the
Corbeaus wouldn’t do.
Lace’s
mother watched the elastane threads curl inside a shell of flame. “They’re
coming,” she said.
“Did
you think they wouldn’t?” Lace asked. Her mother smiled. “I can hope, can’t I?”
She
could hope all she wanted. The Corbeaus wouldn’t give up the crowds that came
with Almendro’s annual festival. So many tourists, all so eager to fill their
scrapbooks. That meant two weeks in Almendro. Two weeks when the younger Paloma
men hardened their fists, and their mothers prayed they didn’t come home with
broken ribs.
Lace’s
grandmother set the schedule each year, and no one spoke up against Abuela. If they ever did, she’d pack
their bags for them. Lace had watched Abuela
cram her cousin Licha’s things into a suitcase, clearing her perfumes and
lipsticks off the motel dresser with one sweep of her arm. When Lace visited
her in Visalia and they went swimming, Licha’s two-piece showed that her escamas, the birthmarks that branded her
a Paloma, had disappeared.
Lace’s
mother taught her that those birthmarks kept them safe from the Corbeaus’
feathers. That family was el Diablo
on earth, with dark wings strapped to their bodies, French on their tongues, a
sprinkling of gypsy blood. When Lace slept, they went with her, living in
nightmares made of a thousand wings.
Another
black feather swirled on a downdraft. Lace watched it spin and fall. It settled
in her hair, its slight weight like a moth’s feet.
Her
mother snatched it off Lace’s head. “¡Madre
mía!” she cried, and threw it into the flames.
Lace’s
cousins said the Corbeaus grew black feathers right out of their heads, like
hair. She never believed it. It was another rumor that strengthened the
Corbeaus’ place in their nightmares. But the truth, that wind pulled feathers
off the wings they wore as costumes, wasn’t a strong enough warning to keep
Paloma children from the woods.
“La magia negra,” her mother said. She
always called those feathers black magic.
The
fire dimmed to embers. Lace’s mother gave the pail a hard kick. It tumbled down
the bank and into the river, the hot metal hissing and sinking.
“Let
them drown,” her mother said, and the last of the rim vanished.
THE GIVEAWAY
Things you should know!
~St. Martin's Press is providing the prize (1 signed copy of The Weight of Feathers).
~It is only open to residents of the United States and Canada.
~I will be sending your contact info to SMP, should you win.
~I will be checking entries, so no cheating!
This sounds like such a great read! I love the cover and the plot line sounds unique!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds like a pretty cool book. Not my usual style, but I'll look into it anyway
ReplyDeletesounds interesting
ReplyDelete