Phantom's Dance
by Lesa Howard
Release Date: 03/01/14
Summary from Goodreads:
Christine Dadey’s
family uprooted their lives and moved to Houston for her to attend the
prestigious Rousseau Academy of Dance. Now, two years later, Christine
struggles to compete among the Academy’s finest dancers, her parents are on the
brink of divorce, and she’s told no one about her debilitating performance
anxiety and what she’s willing to do to cope with it.
Erik was a ballet prodigy, a savant, destined to be a star on the world’s stage, but a suspicious fire left Erik’s face horribly disfigured. Now, a lonely phantom forced to keep his scars hidden, he spends his nights haunting the theater halls, mourning all he’s lost. Then, from behind the curtain he sees the lovely Christine. The moldable, malleable Christine.
Drawn in by Erik’s unwavering confidence, Christine allows herself to believe Erik’s declarations that he can transform her into the dancer she longs to be. But Christine’s hope of achieving her dreams may be her undoing when she learns Erik is not everything he claims. And before long, Erik’s shadowy past jeopardizes Christine’s unstable present as his obsession with her becomes hopelessly entangled with his plans for revenge.
Erik was a ballet prodigy, a savant, destined to be a star on the world’s stage, but a suspicious fire left Erik’s face horribly disfigured. Now, a lonely phantom forced to keep his scars hidden, he spends his nights haunting the theater halls, mourning all he’s lost. Then, from behind the curtain he sees the lovely Christine. The moldable, malleable Christine.
Drawn in by Erik’s unwavering confidence, Christine allows herself to believe Erik’s declarations that he can transform her into the dancer she longs to be. But Christine’s hope of achieving her dreams may be her undoing when she learns Erik is not everything he claims. And before long, Erik’s shadowy past jeopardizes Christine’s unstable present as his obsession with her becomes hopelessly entangled with his plans for revenge.
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Excerpt:
When
I reached the back corner of the four-story, brick building, I hesitated. The
sun had dipped below the adjacent structure, leaving the alley in a gray haze
and giving it a creepy vibe. My heart sped up as I replayed all the horror
stories Mom had drilled into me. Though we tell everyone we’re from El Paso,
the truth is we lived in a small suburb outside the city. So Mom filled my head
with tales about the dangers of living downtown in a city the size of
Houston—muggings, assaults, drug deals, she’d warned me repeatedly, and now
those cautionary tales were hammering through me with every beat in the music
spilling from behind the building.
Pressing
my back against the bricks, I felt the heavy thump of the bass in my chest. The
music issued out, echoing around me, like a rhythmic call to battle. I stood
there long enough for one song to end and another to begin. Then, clutching my
bag to my side, I peeked around the bend and was surprised to see a group of
about a dozen people gathered in a loose circle. A mixture of ethnicities, some
shuffled and shimmied, while others bounced and popped to the music’s time.
When
their formation shifted, I could see into the ring of figures. A young
African-American man danced there, arms snaking in and out and legs nimbly
swirling. After several steps, he twitched his head toward someone in the
surrounding group, and a woman laughed uproariously before jumping into the
center as he sauntered out. She jiggled and jolted to the music in a way that
was captivating. It was as if the music emanated from the dancer, rather than
the big boom box sitting on the trunk of a car.
Their
laughter was exhilarating, and I could see that taunting and bragging was a
part of the performance. Completely engrossed, I became careless and before I
knew it, I’d drifted from the safety of the building’s shadow to stand in the
open. Then someone spoke, and I knew I’d made a horrible mistake.
About the Author
I'm not the typical author. I didn't always enjoy reading or writing. While in school, I found it to be a chore I'd just as soon skip. I would rather have been daydreaming, my favorite past time. It wasn’t until I grew up and didn’t have to, that I realized reading was fun. I soon discovered that reading fueled my daydreaming. So, remembering a short story I'd written in high school, I began imagining expanding that story into a book. Before long I found I had loads of ideas for not just the short story but other books and stories as well. Fast forward a few years, a lot of studying about writing, practicing my writing, studying some more, taking classes from people who knew what they were doing, studying and practicing yet more, and ta-dah, author! In the same way I had learned I loved reading, I learned I loved writing, too. It’s just that writing is a lot harder than reading.
I'm not the typical author. I didn't always enjoy reading or writing. While in school, I found it to be a chore I'd just as soon skip. I would rather have been daydreaming, my favorite past time. It wasn’t until I grew up and didn’t have to, that I realized reading was fun. I soon discovered that reading fueled my daydreaming. So, remembering a short story I'd written in high school, I began imagining expanding that story into a book. Before long I found I had loads of ideas for not just the short story but other books and stories as well. Fast forward a few years, a lot of studying about writing, practicing my writing, studying some more, taking classes from people who knew what they were doing, studying and practicing yet more, and ta-dah, author! In the same way I had learned I loved reading, I learned I loved writing, too. It’s just that writing is a lot harder than reading.
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Just to let you know that there was a problem with my facebook username, and then I had to change it - so, now it's https://www.facebook.com/ana.kitsuneninko - Probably the one mentioned in the rafflecopter is the wrong one, could you correct it for me, please? Thanks, Ana Death Duarte
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