Good morning everyone! Who's up and who's sleeping in? Me, I like to sleep in on Saturdays but the munchkins rarely let me! lol! Today, we're talking about a New Adult Contemporary - Precious Things by Stephanie Parent. Check it out below, plus a little from the author AND a giveaway! As a special Blitz promo- during the blitz week only, Precious Things is only $0.99 on Amazon! Go grab it !
Precious Things
By: Stephenie Parent
Publication : June 4, 2013
Genre: New Adult Contemporary
Book Description :
Isabelle Andrews isn’t supposed to be here. She isn’t supposed to be a freshman at Hartford Community College, she isn't supposed to be living at home and working at her dad’s failing bakery, and she definitely isn’t supposed to be taking Intro to Electronic Music Production, a class that will get her nowhere toward her goal of an English Lit Ph.D. by age twenty-five. But when her dad’s latest business fiasco eats up her college fund, Hartford Community College is exactly where Isabelle finds herself—and thanks to her late enrollment, she doesn’t even get to choose her classes. Stuck with Electronic Music and way-too-easy English courses, Isabelle is determined to wallow in all the misery she feels entitled to.
But community college brings some unexpected benefits…like the fact that a certain overworked, over-scheduled Electronic Music professor hands over most of his duties to his teaching assistant. His tall, green-eyed, absolutely gorgeous teaching assistant. When TA Evan Strauss discovers Isabelle’s apathy toward electronic music—and, well, all music—he makes it his mission to convert her. The music Evan composes stirs something inside Isabelle, but she can’t get involved—after all, she’ll be transferring out as soon as possible.
Still, no matter how tightly Isabelle holds on to her misery, she finds it slipping away in the wake of all Hartford Community offers: new friendships, a surprisingly cool poetry professor, and most of all, Evan. But Evan’s dream of owning his own music studio is as impractical as Isabelle’s dad’s bakery, and when Evan makes a terrible decision, everything Isabelle has gained threatens to unravel. Soon Isabelle discovers that some of the most important lessons take place outside the classroom…and that in life, as in Evan’s favorite Depeche Mode song, the most precious things can be the hardest to hold on to.
Buy it : Amazon / Barnes & Noble
A Little note from the author ....
What the Heck Is the College Experience, Anyway?
In Precious Things,
I really wanted to capture the so-called “college experience”…but the fact is
that the college experience encompasses many different things, and is different
for every person. There are the classes
themselves, the social aspect, the dorms, being away from home for the first
time, just to name a few. For me
personally, since I am an extremely private person, the whole dorm
culture/roommate aspect was so overwhelming (in a bad way) that it completely
dominated my first semester. I know I
had some great classes, was able to participate in a dance company for the
first time in my life, and met some amazing people…but when I think back on
that time, I get an overwhelmingly negative feeling, mostly because of all the
dorm ickiness. (September 11th
also happened right after I started college, which certainly didn’t help, but
that’s a whole different post…)
My experience with dorm life is actually one of the reasons
I chose to set Precious Things at a
community college without dorms, with my main character still living at
home. I wanted to show that not everyone
has the same stereotypical “college experience,” and that missing out on it isn’t
necessarily such a bad thing—and I also wanted to focus on other aspects of
college, like the classes and the people.
At the same time, I tried to show hints of alternate
“college experiences” through Isabelle’s interactions with her high school
friends. Because of over-enrollment, Isabelle’s
friend Jenny ends up sharing a two-person dorm room with two other people at
the University of Maryland—and believe me, those dorm rooms are tiny enough
with just the two people they’re meant for!
This actually happened to a few high-school friends of mine, and they were
absolutely miserable. And even at a
top-tier school like Stanford, where Isabelle’s ex-boyfriend Andrew enrolls,
roommates cause problems, with Andrew spending almost every night in the
library to avoid his roomie (and especially his roomies “guests”). I knew plenty of people who went through this
kind of thing as well, and at a time in your life when you’re dealing with a
completely new environment, separation from parents and home, and most likely a
much greater amount of academic work than you’re used to, it can be completely
overwhelming. Contrary to popular
belief, college students do need sleep, and that can be a challenge with
strange people coming in and out of your room at all hours of the night!
And then there’s the whole social aspect of college…the frat
parties, the drinking. Late in the book,
Jenny explains to Isabelle why she decided to join a sorority, and her feelings
about the situation pretty much match mine.
(Although no, I never considered joining a sorority—I am way too much of
a loner for that!) Here’s what Jenny
says:
“I guess rushing was…it’s been my way of coping, and
I’m glad I did it. College isn’t exactly
like I thought it would be. It’s
like…” She thinks for a moment. “Remember those huge parties in Ajel Cho’s
basement, when he would invite the entire school?”
“Unfortunately, yes.”
“You know how we acted like everything was so great,
like we were so happy and excited to be there, when really we’d rather have
been home watching movies and eating ice cream?”
I laugh. “Yeah.”
“Well, college is sort of like that, but…all the
time. You have all this freedom and
you’re supposed to be having the time of your life, but sometimes you just want
to escape and curl up on the couch to watch a movie, except you can’t,
because…the party’s in your bedroom. And
besides, there is no couch other than the ratty stained one in the dorm common
room, which people are probably either hooking up or passed out on. Oh, and you’re also supposed to read more
than you ever have in your life, and write twenty-page papers, and study for
exams while all this is going on.”
So for Jenny, and Isabelle—and me—college is a lot more
complicated than just having “the time of your life.” I hope I reflected that in Precious Things…and yes, I just might be
courageous enough to tackle the dorm environment in more detail in my next NA
novel!
Stephanie
Parent is a graduate of the Master of Professional Writing program at USC
and attended the Baltimore School for the Arts as a piano major. She
moved to Los Angeles because of Francesca Lia Block's WEETZIE BAT books,
which might give you some idea of how much books mean to
her. She also loves dogs, books about dogs, and sugary coffee drinks
both hot and cold.
Thanks so much for posting!
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