I will be posting my review of Adrift in the Sound in November.
Just wanted to let you know it’s free on Amazon. Go here to get your copy! Don’t wait.
Please make sure the book is still free before you hit purchase.
Adrift in the Sound
by Kate Campbell
In 1973, frazzled Seattle street artist Lizette Karlson tries to pull herself together and turns to the Franklin Street Dogs for help. This low-life tavern softball team is a horrifying choice for a fractured spirit like Lizette, who’s only trying to stay warm and make it through another rainy night. The Dogs think she’s a head case and don’t realize that while Lizette’s beautiful, talented, and a bit off kilter—she’s also cunning and dangerous.
Lizette wants to make it with top-Dog, Rocket. He’s fixed on next door neighbor Sandy Shore, the little snake dancer who strips for soldiers coming home at the end of the Vietnam War. Everybody sleeps with everybody—whatever gets you through the night—it’s a sexual free-for-all until Sandy turns up pregnant and the scene go haywire.
After witnessing a murder and getting kicked out by the Dogs, Lizette is on the run again, crisscrossing Puget Sound. She hides out on Orcas Island and paints in a secluded cabin owned by her childhood friend Marian, a gifted midwife who recently inherited her family’s ranch. On the island, Lizette works with Lummi tribal leaders Poland and Abaya, who stick to their cultural values, guard their family secrets and offer her unconditional love. Along the way, Lizette sorts out crippling secrets in her own past, unwittingly makes a splash in the New York art world—and finds the only thing that really matters.
If you lived through the free-love 60s, if you’ve ever wondered what happened the day after the music died, ADRIFT IN THE SOUND picks up the beat and offers unforgettable insights into a turbulent time in American history. It’s a story about fighting the tides, surviving the storm, and swimming for shore.
Readers are calling ADRIFT IN THE SOUND an important exploration of the resilience of the human spirit in a radically changing world. In both lyrical prose and gritty street language, Kate Campbell rocks our understanding of contemporary history and challenges our fiercely held beliefs. She reshapes old myths and creates new folktales to delight our imaginations.(less)
A novelist, a journalist, an adventurer, Kate Campbell grew up in San Francisco and has lived and worked throughout California and the West. Like every good Westerner, she can swim, ride and shoot. Her novel “Adrift in the Sound,” was a finalist for New York’s 2011 Mercer Street Books Literary Prize. Her new book for writers: “Between the Sheets: An Intimate Exchange on Writing, Editing, and Publishing,” chronicles the final editing of “Adrift in the Sound” through a spirited exchange with her editor and co-author Thomas T. Thomas. An award-winning journalist and photographer, Campbell’s environmental and political writing appears regularly in newspapers and magazines throughout the U.S. She lives in Sacramento and, in addition to writing fiction and poetry, publishes the Word Garden blog at kate-campbell.blogspot.com. |
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Got mine. It looks great. Thanks for the info.
Great. I think this is one you’ll enjoy and you said you were looking for something different:)
Thanks for helping bring Adrift in the Sound to readers’ attention. You do a beautiful job and provide an important service for storytellers and those who love a good tale.
Damn, I missed this post until now.
Hi Emma: For you and others who wanted to download Adrift in the Sound free, but missed the Oct. offer. Watch FUONLYNEW for the free Nov. days. Laura says the book is a bit longer than many of the books she reads, but the story is worth it. I say expect a lot more story for a lot less money(free) and keep an eye on FUONLYKNEW!
Not really Emma. I was puting links together for my review and discovered it was free. I didn’t know for how long so I quickly threw up this post. Sorry it ended so soon.
Reblogged this on Author, G. D. Grace.
Thanks for the tweet-out. Appreciate the support. I’m feeling like the “Little Engine that Could”
Choo-Choo…. that you are, my fellow writer! ~GD
Oops! Looked at your engaging blog (not tweet) and it’s visually very exciting. Look forward to exploring it further this weekend — after the SF Giants win another one (fingers crossed).
Thank you, kcamp300! I’ve been at it for a few years. And, yes, they did it! Another “Sweep” Giants Forever!!!!
Thanks so much for reblogging!