Blog Archive
-
▼
2018
(3484)
-
▼
October
(236)
- Ballistic by Keri Lake
- Havoc by Kindle Alexander
- Systematic Siege by N. Isabelle Blanco
- Tuning It Put by Riley Long
- Accidentally Yours by Ilsa Ames
- Jackal’s Pride by Michelle Gross
- Mercy by India R. Adams
- Shattered // Into Pieces by Nicole Banks
- Trinity by M. Never
- Sleighed by Annie Dyer
- A Wicked Treat by Crimson Syn
- Until Coby by Aurora Rose Reynolds
- His Angel by Leah Sharelle
- Love And Death by Alice K. Wayne
- The Love That Heals by H.J. Marshall
- Chasing The Sunrise by H.A. Robinson
- Waiting For Autumn by J.A. DeRouen
- The Society by K.A. Linde
- Rewrite The Stars by Charleigh Rose
- Indiscreet by Nicole French
- Trust In Me by Sierra Cartwright
- Blushing Kisses by Nazarea Andrews
- The Pope by LP Lovell
- From Breath And Ruins by Carrie Ann Ryan
- The Last Resort Motel: Room 666 by Geri Glenn
- Sailors Knot by Phoebe Alexander
- Exquisite Taste by J.D. Hollyfield
- Reckless Anthology
- One Week Hating You by Roya Carmen
- Claiming Candy by Madison Faye
- The Right Mistake by A.M. Guilliams
- The Day The Jerk Started Falling by Max Monroe
- Cheat by Mayra Statham
- Jerome by Miranda Lynn
- White Collar Blues by Mel Walker
- The Wrangler by Ally Prince
- The Millionaire Mountain Climber by Laura Boon
- Love On The Ranch by Ciara Knight
- Devious Eyes by Charlotte E. Hart & Rachel De Lune
- All I Need by Jennifer Van Wyk
- Inked by Drew Elyse
- Art Of Survival Part 2 by Monique Orgeron
- The Necromancer’s Bride by Brianna Hale
- Through The Mist by Cece Ferrell
- Deviance by KE Osborn
- Ben by Anne L. Parks
- Destroying Dominic by Ginger Ring
- Further To Fall by Catherine Cowles
- Off The Ice by L.P. Dover
- Fever by Ellen Mint
- Into The Light by Megan Hetherington
- Scars & Silks by Rose Harper
- Chess Club Dropout by Lux Carmine
- The Man Bible: A Survival Guide by L.A. Casey
- Trust In Me by Sierra Cartwright
- The Heart Of Him by Katie Fox
- Out Of The Blue by Lila Rose
- Lost With Me by J. Kenner
- Chasing The Ballgirl by Trish Williford
- All Shook Up by Ashley Bostock
- The Librarian’s Vampire Assistant 2 by Mimi Jean P...
- Whiskey by Giulia Lagomarsino
- The Society by K.A. Linde
- Taken by Natasha Knight
- The Billionaire Shifters Club Series by Diana Seere
- The Day I Stopped Falling For Jerks by Max Monroe
- Bad Candy: Part One by Ava Alise
- You Do You by Jen Mann
- Cover by Olivia Ryann
- The Assist by Rebecca Jenshak
- Dear Diamond by Stephie Walls
- Spiral Of Bliss Series by Nina Lane
- Love Reclaimed by Delancey Stewart
- Nothing Lasts Forever by Scarlett Black
- Alphas Of Seduction Anthology
- The Heart Of Him by Katie Fox
- The Christmas Window by Melissa McClone
- Christina And The Rebel Affair by R. Linda
- The Wrangler by Ally Prince
- Love On The Ranch by Ciara Knight
- The arogue’s Redemption by Cecelia Mecca
- The Life I Never Asked For by Kira Adams
- Born To Fight by Brittany Anne
- Hollywood Fairytale by Harlow Layne
- Credence Woods by Alexandria Sure
- The Rival by Megan Green
- Fighting For Someday by M.M. Koenig
- Bryce by Jeannine Colette & Lauren Runow
- Sir’s Rise by Red Phoenix
- The Pope by LP Lovell
- Doctor Next Door by Olivia Rush
- Fake by Olivia Rush
- TearAssunder by Nashoda Rose
- All My Life by Prescott Lane
- Listen Pitch by Lani Lynn Vale
- Vow Of Honor by Emma Renshaw
- The Hanged Man by Clarissa Wild
- Jerome by Miranda Lynn
- Between Cases by Annie Dyer
- Off The Ice by L.P. Dover
-
▼
October
(236)
Ugly by Margaret McHeyzer
October 08, 2018
|
By
D&K
|
Title: Ugly
Author: Margaret McHeyzer
Genre: YA/NA
Narrator: Becca Ballenger
Audio Release Date: August 7, 2018
Blurb
From New York Times bestselling author Margaret McHeyzer....
If I were dead, I wouldn't be able to see.
If I were dead, I wouldn't be able to see.
If I were dead, I wouldn't be able to feel.
If I were dead, he'd never raise his hand to me again.
If I were dead, his words wouldn't cut as deep as they do.
If I were dead, I'd be beautiful and I wouldn't be so...ugly.
I'm not dead...but I wish I was.
I'm not dead...but I wish I was.
Purchase Links
Also available as an ebook
Trailer
Prologue
It’s days like today I wish I was dead.
“Lily Anderson, you get your ugly ass out here right this minute. Don’t make me come after you,” Daddy screams.
He’s so angry. I knew the moment I heard him come home from work I was in for it. I was in my bedroom, lying on the floor trying to do my math. He slammed the front door so hard the windows in my room shook.
And then I knew, I knew I was in for it.
“Lily Anderson!” he yells again.
As soon as I heard him yell I ran to my hiding spot. I’m inside the closet in the hallway, wedged as far into the corner as I can get. Mom’s old coat hangs in front of me and I can still smell a faint waft of the perfume she used to wear.
“Lily Anderson!” he shouts. I can hear the anger in his voice and I can already feel the pain he’s going to inflict on me when he opens the closet door. I know what’s coming.
I close my eyes tight, scrunching them up so no light can seep through. I put my hands over my ears so I can’t hear him.
“I swear to God; if I have to find you, you will not sit for a month.”
My knees are folded into my chest. I’m trying to make myself small, invisible, so he forgets I’m here. I’m rocking myself, trying to block out what he’s saying.
School is safe. School is safe. School is safe. I keep repeating the mantra because in a few short hours I’ll be back at school. Maybe tomorrow I can go to the library after school, stay there until it closes and then sneak in after Dad’s passed out, because he’s had too much to drink.
It was never like this before. Ever.
I’m twelve years old and I can remember when Mom, Dad, and I were all happy. But that was years ago. It’s been a long time since there’s been any happiness in this house.
Well, before Mom died anyway, and not a day since.
Mom died when I was nine. I don’t remember much about her, except I remember her telling me how ugly I am. How life would be better if I was taken away from them. How I’ll never be anything, because I’m stupid and ugly.
Sometimes I dream happy things. Like me, Mom, Dad and a little blond-haired boy all going for a picnic. The sun beamed down on us as we played outside and laughed. We’d eat yummy sandwiches Mom made for us, and we’d drink homemade lemonade. We’d spend hours outside, laughing and talking and just having fun. Mom would tell me how pretty I am, and how much she loved me. She would play with my hair, braid it, and then we’d go and pick bright flowers to take home and put in a vase. Dad would smile and call us “his girls”, always kissing Mom and hugging me. Dad would put the little boy on his shoulders and run around the park, trying to catch the clouds.
I love those dreams, and I hold onto them; wishing they were real. But I’ve never had a mom like that, and my dad doesn’t talk much unless it’s with his fists, or to tell me how ugly and useless I am.
I feel him walking around the house. The floorboards creak and the vibrations from his footsteps come through the floor to where my bottom is. I close my eyes tighter and try and breathe as quietly as I can.
Please go away, Daddy. Please go away.
My heart is beating so fast. My hands are shaking and I’m trying really hard not to think about what’s going to happen the minute he opens the closet door.
Shhh, it’s so quiet. The only sound is my heart thrumming in my ears. Nothing else. Not a whisper, not a rattle…nothing.
Maybe Daddy’s left. Maybe he’s gone to the pub to have a few drinks. Maybe, just maybe, he’s left...forever.
I take a deep breath and just relax for a moment. My shoulders drop and I finally stop rocking.
Slowly I take my hands down from my ears, and I’m so happy because I can’t hear him yelling at me. I can’t hear him at all.
Gradually, I begin to unscrunch my eyes from the way I’ve tightly closed them. But something’s not right. There’s light coming into the closet.
I don’t even get a chance to open them fully before a rough hand reaches in, latches onto my ponytail and yanks.
“I told you it’d be worse for you if I had to find you,” Dad says, as he drags me out of the closet by my hair.
I’m desperately trying to hold onto my head so he doesn’t rip my hair out. My feet are trying to find traction on the dirty floorboards.
“Please, Daddy. Please. You’re hurting me,” I begin sobbing as I plead with him.
“Then your ugly ass should’ve come when I called you, you stupid bitch. You’re fucking worthless, you ugly idiot,” he says. But now his voice is calm as he continues to drag me toward the family room.
That’s when he’s most scary. When his voice is low and his eyes are filled with hate.
He throws me against the side of the sofa and takes a step back to look at me.
I look up and can see he’s the angriest I’ve ever seen him. “You dumb, ugly piece of shit,” he says, as he paces back and forth in front of me.
“Sorry, Daddy. Whatever I did, I’m so sorry.” I cower into myself, trying to make myself as small as possible.
“You’re just too fucking stupid, aren’t you?” he spits toward me as he brings his hand up to scratch at his chin.
“I’m sorry,” I say again. Tears are falling hot and fast down my cheeks. My head hurts from where he was pulling my hair, but I don’t dare try to rub the spot.
“You ugly fuck.” He kicks a boot into my leg.
The pain is instant and my leg feels like it’s shattered. “Please, Daddy,” I beg again, burying my face into my hands.
But ‘please’ never seems to work.
Nothing does.
“Lily Anderson, you get your ugly ass out here right this minute. Don’t make me come after you,” Daddy screams.
He’s so angry. I knew the moment I heard him come home from work I was in for it. I was in my bedroom, lying on the floor trying to do my math. He slammed the front door so hard the windows in my room shook.
And then I knew, I knew I was in for it.
“Lily Anderson!” he yells again.
As soon as I heard him yell I ran to my hiding spot. I’m inside the closet in the hallway, wedged as far into the corner as I can get. Mom’s old coat hangs in front of me and I can still smell a faint waft of the perfume she used to wear.
“Lily Anderson!” he shouts. I can hear the anger in his voice and I can already feel the pain he’s going to inflict on me when he opens the closet door. I know what’s coming.
I close my eyes tight, scrunching them up so no light can seep through. I put my hands over my ears so I can’t hear him.
“I swear to God; if I have to find you, you will not sit for a month.”
My knees are folded into my chest. I’m trying to make myself small, invisible, so he forgets I’m here. I’m rocking myself, trying to block out what he’s saying.
School is safe. School is safe. School is safe. I keep repeating the mantra because in a few short hours I’ll be back at school. Maybe tomorrow I can go to the library after school, stay there until it closes and then sneak in after Dad’s passed out, because he’s had too much to drink.
It was never like this before. Ever.
I’m twelve years old and I can remember when Mom, Dad, and I were all happy. But that was years ago. It’s been a long time since there’s been any happiness in this house.
Well, before Mom died anyway, and not a day since.
Mom died when I was nine. I don’t remember much about her, except I remember her telling me how ugly I am. How life would be better if I was taken away from them. How I’ll never be anything, because I’m stupid and ugly.
Sometimes I dream happy things. Like me, Mom, Dad and a little blond-haired boy all going for a picnic. The sun beamed down on us as we played outside and laughed. We’d eat yummy sandwiches Mom made for us, and we’d drink homemade lemonade. We’d spend hours outside, laughing and talking and just having fun. Mom would tell me how pretty I am, and how much she loved me. She would play with my hair, braid it, and then we’d go and pick bright flowers to take home and put in a vase. Dad would smile and call us “his girls”, always kissing Mom and hugging me. Dad would put the little boy on his shoulders and run around the park, trying to catch the clouds.
I love those dreams, and I hold onto them; wishing they were real. But I’ve never had a mom like that, and my dad doesn’t talk much unless it’s with his fists, or to tell me how ugly and useless I am.
I feel him walking around the house. The floorboards creak and the vibrations from his footsteps come through the floor to where my bottom is. I close my eyes tighter and try and breathe as quietly as I can.
Please go away, Daddy. Please go away.
My heart is beating so fast. My hands are shaking and I’m trying really hard not to think about what’s going to happen the minute he opens the closet door.
Shhh, it’s so quiet. The only sound is my heart thrumming in my ears. Nothing else. Not a whisper, not a rattle…nothing.
Maybe Daddy’s left. Maybe he’s gone to the pub to have a few drinks. Maybe, just maybe, he’s left...forever.
I take a deep breath and just relax for a moment. My shoulders drop and I finally stop rocking.
Slowly I take my hands down from my ears, and I’m so happy because I can’t hear him yelling at me. I can’t hear him at all.
Gradually, I begin to unscrunch my eyes from the way I’ve tightly closed them. But something’s not right. There’s light coming into the closet.
I don’t even get a chance to open them fully before a rough hand reaches in, latches onto my ponytail and yanks.
“I told you it’d be worse for you if I had to find you,” Dad says, as he drags me out of the closet by my hair.
I’m desperately trying to hold onto my head so he doesn’t rip my hair out. My feet are trying to find traction on the dirty floorboards.
“Please, Daddy. Please. You’re hurting me,” I begin sobbing as I plead with him.
“Then your ugly ass should’ve come when I called you, you stupid bitch. You’re fucking worthless, you ugly idiot,” he says. But now his voice is calm as he continues to drag me toward the family room.
That’s when he’s most scary. When his voice is low and his eyes are filled with hate.
He throws me against the side of the sofa and takes a step back to look at me.
I look up and can see he’s the angriest I’ve ever seen him. “You dumb, ugly piece of shit,” he says, as he paces back and forth in front of me.
“Sorry, Daddy. Whatever I did, I’m so sorry.” I cower into myself, trying to make myself as small as possible.
“You’re just too fucking stupid, aren’t you?” he spits toward me as he brings his hand up to scratch at his chin.
“I’m sorry,” I say again. Tears are falling hot and fast down my cheeks. My head hurts from where he was pulling my hair, but I don’t dare try to rub the spot.
“You ugly fuck.” He kicks a boot into my leg.
The pain is instant and my leg feels like it’s shattered. “Please, Daddy,” I beg again, burying my face into my hands.
But ‘please’ never seems to work.
Nothing does.
I’ve just got to take the beatings, because that’s what stupid, ugly girls do.
Author Bio
NEW YORK TIMES BEST SELLER OF UGLY AND MISTRUST
**Write something worth reading**
I'm Margaret and I'm a self-published author.
Recently I was fortunate in obtaining New York Times best selling status on my YA/NA book - Ugly, and my YA book - Mistrust.
My last five books have been YA and I'm completely in love with the genre. I love being able to communicate with people through my words and stories.
My writing genres all differ, but the one thing I keep consistent is my heroines. All my female lead characters are strong, gutsy and not the 'perfect' woman. While my books all have romantic elements in them, they aren't just about the romance. They're about finding strength, acceptance and making life long connections.
I hope you enjoy my stories as much as I have while writing them.
Author Links
Labels:
Audio Release Blitz
,
Becca Ballenger
,
Give Me Books
,
Margaret McHeyzer
,
New Adult
,
Ugly
,
Young Adult
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
0 comments :
Post a Comment