If you enjoy contemporary YA then you've probably read at least one book from this series or seen them. The author does such a great job with her characters and making them feel genuine. Check out the book and excerpt, and enter the giveaways below...
(Hundred Oaks #7)
by Miranda Kenneally
by Miranda Kenneally
YA Contemporary
Paperback & ebook, 304 Pages
July 5th 2016 by Sourcebooks Fire
Summary
There are no mistakes in love.
Captain of the soccer team, president of the Debate Club, contender for valedictorian: Taylor’s always pushed herself to be perfect. After all, that’s what is expected of a senator’s daughter. But one impulsive decision—one lie to cover for her boyfriend—and Taylor’s kicked out of private school. Everything she’s worked so hard for is gone, and now she’s starting over at Hundred Oaks High.
Captain of the soccer team, president of the Debate Club, contender for valedictorian: Taylor’s always pushed herself to be perfect. After all, that’s what is expected of a senator’s daughter. But one impulsive decision—one lie to cover for her boyfriend—and Taylor’s kicked out of private school. Everything she’s worked so hard for is gone, and now she’s starting over at Hundred Oaks High.
Soccer has always been Taylor’s escape from the pressures of school and family, but it’s hard to fit in and play on a team that used to be her rival. The only person who seems to understand all that she’s going through is her older brother’s best friend, Ezra. Taylor’s had a crush on him for as long as she can remember. But it’s hard to trust after having been betrayed. Will Taylor repeat her past mistakes or can she score a fresh start?
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Praise for the Book
“I can’t quite put my finger on what is so enthralling about Kenneally’s newest novel, but it totally sucked me in. I loved that Kenneally didn’t go with an easy, traditional happy-go-lucky ending. I also enjoyed the flawed nature of the characters, which made them feel more relatable. This is a great summer read and my favorite novel by Kenneally so far!” – RT Book Reviews, 4 Stars
Excerpt
I now understand culture shock:
it’s me experiencing Hundred Oaks High for the first time.
A lot of
kids go here. Five hundred? A thousand? There are so many I can’t tell. At St.
Andrew’s, there were only forty kids in my entire class. We lived on a calm,
sprawling, green campus. Walking down the halls of Hundred Oaks feels like
last-minute Christmas shopping at a crowded mall.
Two guys
wearing football jerseys are throwing a ball back and forth. It whizzes by my
ear. A suspender-clad male teacher is hanging a poster for the science fair,
while a couple is making out against the wall next to the fire alarm. If they
move another inch, they’ll set off the sprinklers. At St. Andrew’s, kissing in
the hall was an über no-no. We snuck under the staircase or went out into the
woods. Ben and I did that all the time.
Thinking of him makes me stop moving. I shut my eyes.
Dating Ben was stupid. Going into the woods with him was stupid. Thinking about
what happened makes me so mad, I want to rip that newly hung science fair
poster off the wall and tear it apart.
A boy
shoves past me, slamming my arm with his backpack. That’s what I get for
loitering in the middle of the hallway with my eyes closed. He looks me up and
down. “You coming to Rutledge Falls this afternoon?”
“What?”
“Paul
Simmons challenged Nolan Chase to a fight. Rutledge Falls. Three o’clock. Don’t
tell the cops.”
A fight?
Where the h--- am I? Westeros?
A girl
bumps into my side. “Watch it!” Flashing me a dirty look, she disappears into a
classroom with a group of friends, chattering away.
Seeing those girls together reminds me of my best
friends, Steph and Madison. Right now, they’re probably gossiping before trig
starts. I miss Steph’s cool British accent and Madison’s cheerful laugh.
I take a deep, rattled breath. And then another. I feel
trapped, like the time I got locked in my grandpa’s garage and no one found me
for an hour and I banged on the windows until my fists turned purple from
bruises.
I can’t believe I had to leave my school. My home.
All because I made one stupid decision.
I check my schedule. My first class is calculus 1, the
most advanced math course Hundred Oaks offers. Just a week ago, I was taking an
advanced calculus quiz at the University of the South. St. Andrew’s is one of
the best prep schools in the country, and they offer seniors the opportunity to
take courses at the university, which is up the road. Even though I was still
in high school, the professors treated me just like a college kid. I was only
in the course for two weeks, but still. It was insanely difficult. The truth
is, unlike everybody else in my family, I hate math. I have to work at it
harder than anything else in my life.
But if I didn’t take college calc, there’s a good chance
I wouldn’t get into an Ivy League school. I need to go to a top-tier school
because that’s what people in my family do. My father attended Yale, and my
sister Jenna is there now. According to Dad, my brother Oliver—Jenna’s twin—is
a traitor for going to Princeton, but I think Dad respects him for having the
balls to make his own decision.
Me?
When Dad
called me into his home office last night, he barely looked at me as he pored
over my new schedule. The silence was killing me.
“I don’t
know how Yale will still consider me if I’m not taking all AP courses,” I said.
“Hundred Oaks only offers AP chemistry.”
Dad
sighed, took off his glasses, and set down my schedule. “I’m incredibly
disappointed in you, Taylor.”
I looked
him straight in the eyes. His quiet restraint worried me. I’d never seen him so
upset.
But I was
upset too. He rarely had time to call me when I was away at school, but he
could spare a few minutes to comment on my one screwup? After how hard I’ve
always worked?
Over the years, I’ve done hours of homework every night.
I had a 4.2 GPA at St. Andrew’s. A 1520 SAT score. I was on track to be
valedictorian. I was captain of the soccer team and on the debate team. I did
everything I could to show Yale that I worked hard. That I am a unique
individual. Because that’s what Yale wants.
But my
one misstep has muddied my glowing record.
Dad ended
our conversation with a death knell.
“Tee, I
gave you all the tools you needed to succeed,” he said. “I’ve paid for your
private school education since first grade, and you squandered it by getting
kicked out.”
“I’m
sorry,” I said, my face burning. “I’m going to keep working hard at Hundred
Oaks though.”
“You’re
d--- right you will.”
My father
had me so flustered, I wasn’t thinking straight when I said, “Maybe Yale will
still take me because of who I am.”
“You mean
because of who I am.” Dad rubbed his eyes. “I’ve always taught you kids
the importance of integrity, and the minute you got into trouble, instead of
owning it, you called me to bail you out. And now you’re doing it again. Using
my name to try to get ahead.”
I hung my
head. “I’m sorry, Dad.”
“I love you more than anything, but you have to take
responsibility for what you did. You’ll have to figure college out on your
own.”
“What does that mean?” I asked slowly.
“It means I’m not lifting a finger. I won’t be calling the
alumni association or the school president to put in a good word for you.”
“But didn’t you do that for Jenna and Oliver?” I blurted.
He put
his glasses back on. “You need to own up, Tee.”
So here I
am, glancing around the unfamiliar halls of Hundred Oaks. The school is neat
and orderly, but it doesn’t look completely clean, like no matter how hard you
scrub, it still looks old. At least it’s not juvie.
I step into my math class, which is already filled with
kids. I choose an empty seat at a wobbly wooden desk and stare out the window
at the sunny, seventy-degree September day. I bet at St. Andrew’s, my world
politics teacher is telling my friends, “Gather your books. It’s a beautiful
day out. Let’s have class in one of the gardens.”
I check
out the problem set on the whiteboard. I could do this level of math years ago…
My former
guidance counselor told me that colleges look for trends in our GPA and
activities over four years of high school. So that means when colleges see my
application, they will see:
I’m taking easier classes;
I’m no longer doing debate;
I’ve lost my soccer captainship
this year; and
I was expelled.
I have
never simply given up when calculus got a lot tougher or an opponent ran faster
than me on the soccer field. So I refuse to believe my entire future is over
because of one mistake.
I just
need to figure out how to move forward.
Other Books in the Series
About the Author
Growing up in Tennessee, Miranda Kenneally dreamed of becoming an Atlanta Brave, a country singer (cliché!), or a UN interpreter. Instead she writes, and works for the State Department in Washington, D.C., where George W. Bush once used her shoulder as an armrest. Miranda loves Twitter, Star Trek and her husband.
Giveaways
There are two giveaways: a pre-order giveaway (which I would love to win myself) and then a tour giveaway. Feel free to enter both.
Pre-order Sweepstakes - Enter HERE
2 Copies of Defending Taylor
Runs July 1-July 30 (US & Canada only)
a Rafflecopter giveaway
On tour with Sourcebooks.
Have you read any of the other books in this series? What did you think of the excerpt?
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