Wry, compelling,
heart-warming and just plain fun.Allie Emerson is living in a
twenty-four foot trailer with a mother who has decided to Retire
From Life. Not exactly the sort of environment you'd expect to
produce a girl destined to save the world. Allie's barely
managing to survive high school. She hasn't got time to believe
in prophecies and evil. Until evil makes it personal.
The girl voted least likely to save the world may have to do just that.
A sickly mom. A crappy travel trailer. High school bullies and snarky
drama queens. Bad-guys with charming smiles. Allie has problems. And
then there's that whole thing about fulfilling a magical prophecy and
saving the world from evil.
Welcome to the funny, sad, sometimes-scary world of fifteen-year-old
Allie Emerson, who's struggling to keep her act together (not to mention
her mom's) in the small-town
world of Peacock Flats, Washington. A zap from an electrical fence sets
off Allie's weird psychic powers. The next thing she knows she's being
visited by a hippy-dippy guardian angel, and then her mysterious
neighbor, the town "witch," gives her an incredible moonstone pendant
that has powers only a "Star Seeker" is meant to command. "Who, me?" is
Allie's first reaction. But as sinister events begin to unfold, Allie
realizes she's got a destiny far bigger than she ever imagined
If she can just survive everyday life, in the meantime.
"Marilee Brothers' novel stands out for its humor and Allie's strong
point-of-view as an underdog finding her place in the world. This
is another (see her review for Bite Me)
good choice for public library teen/fantasy collections. I look
forward to the next title in this series." --
Grinnell College Libraries
"A delightful read. ...from the first page, this book had
my attention...Ms. Brothers' characters were vibrant and vivid!" --
Books, Books, and More Books Blog
"This one is a fun and well-written story..." --
MrsGiggles.com
"Her strength is in her characters...[but] it's Allie's voice
I've been able to remember since I finished the book. I would
very much to hear that voice again. I understand that she's
got another book in a different series coming out in 2009; I can
only hope that she returns to Allie's story soon." --
Someone's Read It Already Blog
"a fantastic kickoff to what's destined to be a hit series" --
Breenibooks Blog
"I was incredibly surprised by how much I liked it. The
supernatural aspect was so original that I found myself being pulled
into this story and I couldn't put it down until I finished the last
page." --
Just Blinded Book Reviews
"This first book in the Unbidden Magic series was a very enjoyable
read." --
Presenting Lenore Blog
"Moonstone delivers an impressive and emotional rollercoaster
reading experience... Truly riveting and suspenseful.
Moonstone is a very well-crafted, well-paced story. Allie is
not the usual kick-ass heroine but a normal teenage girl struggling
with unusual powers and thrust into exceptional circumstances.
Readers of all ages should enjoy this fresh and bewitching tale.
Moonstone nicely establishes a solid back story and cast of
characters to launch the next volume in the series.
Recommended." -- Doug Knipe,
SciFi Guy Blog
"Ms.
Brothers blends an engaging story of hardship, hope, friendship and
the paranormal into an exceptionally human tale that’s lightened
with a touch of humor." --
DarqueReviews
"Full of magic, twists, and pure fun, Moonstone is the
first in a new young adult paranormal series. The characters
come to life in this shining debut. I look forward to reading
more about Allie and the Star Seekers. What a wonderful book!"
--
Wendy's Minding Spot
"Cross Twilight with a Stephanie Plum book and you'll
get Moonstone. It's supernatural and smart, funny and
affecting. I didn't want to put the book down."
--
http://unmainsteammomreads.blogspot.com
"A wonderful book which I couldn't put down. There's
something about Brothers' writing that just captures you and she
knows how to write a great story...The first in a series Moonstone
is a great paranormal book...I can't wait for the sequel." --
http://bookluver-carol.blogspot.com
"...it's the characters that make this
first novel shine. The main characters are not who they seem to be
on the surface and discovering and getting to know them is a real
treat as they all struggle through a magic situation in a real world
setting. I can't wait to see what happens next for Allie." --http://www.great-reads.blogspot.com/
"A gem of a book. An author to watch." --
YoungAdultBooksCentral.com re:Moonstone
"In Moonstone, Marilee Brothers has given life to a
great new YA urban fantasy series. Allie Emerson has more than
the usual teenage problems on her plate, but there is far more to
Allie than meets the eye. Watching her deal with her newly
discovered magical abilities, the powerful moonstone necklace that
has the bad guys after her, and a hot new boyfriend, kept me riveted
to the very last page. I can't wait for the sequel!" --
Alexis Morgan, bestselling author of Dark Warrior Unleashed
from Pocket Star
"Allie's character shapes this book into a
greatly entertaining story. I've mentioned before that one of my
criteria for giving out five stars is my ability or inability to put a
book down. This is a non-put-downer. It's a fun story with a strong
voice and a memorable setting.
A well-written tale of intrigue and a
great set up for the sequel, with characters I want to know better, and
a plot that has miles to go. This Unbidden Magic series is one I look
forward to reading more of in the (hopefully not too distant) future."
--Julie
M. Prince , YABooksCentral.com
"Moonstone is an excellent read for any fan of YA
fantasy. Brothers has a great sense of humor, even using some
minor, but funny potty humor when describing Allie's uncle's prized
bull. Brothers also has a knack for keeping the action
moving--which gets the reader hooked--and helping the reader feel
what Allie is feeling--which keeps the reader enraptured.
Also, while there are other books out there about teens finding out
they have some sort of mystical powers, Brothers is not afraid to
take the story in a unique direction." -- Ricki Marking-Camuto,
www.Bookloons.com
I’ve been wondering . . . is
there a normal way to become paranormal? Like, go to Google, type in
“Make me magic,” click on a website and wait for a list of rules to pop
up? I really need a list of rules. How else can an almost
fifteen-year-old girl living in Peacock Flats, Washington learn to deal
with special powers? Here’s how it started . . .
Chapter One
One minute, I was on a ten-foot
ladder adjusting the TV antenna on the twenty-four-foot trailer behind
Uncle Sid’s house, where I lived with my mother, Faye. The next minute,
I sailed off the ladder, grazed an electric fence and landed face down
in a cow pie.
Swear to God.
Though groggy and hurting, I
rolled onto my back. A window in the trailer cranked open and I heard my
mother scream. “Allie! Ohmigod! Somebody call 911!”
I was surprised Faye managed to
open the window. She’d spent most of the last two years in bed since, at
age thirty one, she Retired From Life. But really, call 911? We had no
phone and I was the only other person in the area. Who was she talking
to? Blaster the bull? I smiled weakly at the thought of Blaster in a
phone booth, punching in 911 with one gigantic hoof.
Okay, technically, I landed in a
bull pie, not a cow pie. The mess dripping off my face was compliments
of my Uncle Sid’s prize bull, speaking of which . . .
It was then my wits returned. I
felt the ground vibrate, heard the rumble of hooves. I reared up to see
a half-ton cranky bull racing toward me, head down, mean little eyes
fixed on my prone body.
Faye continued to scream
shrilly. I moaned and crawled toward the fence, looking over my shoulder
at Blaster who bore down on me like a runaway train. When I tried to
stand, I slipped in the wet grass and landed on my belly. Oh God, he was
just inches away. I wasn’t going to make it! I rolled into a ball and
screamed, “No, Blaster! Go back! Go back!”
Laying on the wet grass,
trembling with terror, I watched as Blaster stopped on a dime, blew snot
out of his flaring, black nostrils and released a thunderous blast of
flatulence—that’s what my teacher, Mrs. Burke, calls farting—and, of
course, is the reason Uncle Sid named him Blaster.
“Back off, Blaster,” I said
between shallow, panicky breaths. “Good boy.”
I hoped the “boy” comment
wouldn’t tick him off, what with his fully-developed manly-bull parts
dangling in full view as I lay curled on the ground looking up. Yuck!
Suddenly my vision narrowed and
grew dark around the edges. It was like looking down a long tunnel with
Blaster front and center, bathed in light. A loud buzzing filled my
head. The next moment, Blaster took a tentative step backward, then
another, walking slowly, at first, then gradually picking up speed until
he was trotting briskly backwards like a video tape on slow rewind.
Mesmerized by the sight, I sat
up and watched Blaster’s bizarre retreat back through the tunnel. At
that precise moment, I should have known something strange was going on.
But hey, I was a little busy trying to save my life.
As I crawled under the fence, my
vision returned to normal and the buzzing faded away. I stood and swiped
a hand across my sweaty face. At least, I thought it was sweat
until a trickle of blood dripped off the end of my nose. Surprised
because I felt no pain, I touched my face and found the blood was oozing
from a puncture wound in the center of my forehead.
I glanced up at Faye, who
continued to peer out the trailer window, her pale face framed in a halo
of wispy blond curls, her eyes wide with shock. She inhaled sharply, and
I knew another scream was on its way. I held up a hand. “Come on, Faye,
no more screaming. You’re making my head hurt.”
“But, but, the bull . . . he,
he . . . ” Faye began.
I wasn’t ready to go there. “I
know, I know.”
I staggered around the end of
the trailer and banged through the door. Two giant steps to the
bathroom. I shucked off my clothes and stepped into the tiny shower.
“You okay, Allie?” Faye asked.
She peered through the open
doorway, paler than usual. Her right hand clutched the locket that held
my baby picture, the one that makes me look like an angry old man. The
only time she took it off was to shower.
“I’ll live,” I muttered.
“Weird, huh? Blaster, I mean. I
heard you yell at him. Bulls don’t run backward, Allie.”
When I didn’t answer—what could
I say?—she waited a beat. “Use soap on your forehead. Did it stop
bleeding?”
“Yes, Mother.” I reached over
and slid the door shut.
Deep sigh. “You don’t have to be
snotty. I told you to be careful.”
The TV blared suddenly. Oprah.
Not that I’m a spiteful person, but I blamed Oprah for my swan dive off
the ladder. Late last night, a sudden gust of wind knocked over our TV
antenna. When I got home from school today, Faye insisted she had to
watch Oprah. Like that was going to change her life. I finally got tired
of hearing about it and borrowed Uncle Sid’s ladder. Moral of story:
Never wear flip flops on an aluminum ladder.
I turned on the water, stood
under the weak stream and checked for damage. Other than a slight
tingling in my arms and legs and the hole in my head, I seemed okay.
I toweled off my curly,
dark-brown hair and pulled it back into a messy ponytail. When I wiped
the steam off the mirror, I saw a dark-red, dime-sized circle
in the exact center of my forehead. I touched it gingerly, expecting it
to hurt. But it didn’t. Instead, a weird sensation shot through my head,
like my brain was hooked up to Dr. Frankenstein’s machine, that thing he
used to make his monster come alive. I must have given a little yip of
surprise because Faye said again, “You okay, Allie?”
“I’m fine,” I said. “Just a
little sore.”
“Did you check the mail?”
“The first’s not until Friday.
Today’s the twenty-ninth,” I said.
“Sometimes it comes early.”
The welfare check never
came early. The state of Washington was very reliable when it came to
issuing checks.
“Yeah, okay,” I said, not
wanting to burst her bubble.
Wrapped in the towel, I took two
steps into the living room/kitchen, reached under the table and pulled
out the plastic crate containing my clean clothes. I dug around and
found clean underwear, a tee shirt and a pair of cut-off shorts.
I slipped into my bra, once
again thinking how cool it was I finally needed one. Though I hoped for
peaches, I’d managed only to grow a pair of breasts roughly the size and
shape of apricots. Oh, well, apricots are better than cherries. Our
valley is called “The fruit bowl of the nation,” hence, my obsession
with naming body parts after produce.
I slipped into my treacherous
flip flops, headed out the door and spotted Uncle Sid darting behind the
barn. Faye says Uncle Sid is not a people person but I thought he was
just trying to avoid Aunt Sandra and her constant nagging. That woman’s
voice could make a corpse sit up and beg for mercy.
I trotted down the driveway,
stopping suddenly when I spotted a pair of denim-clad legs sticking out
from under the Jeep Wrangler parked next to Uncle Sid’s house. Legs that
belonged to Matt, Uncle Sid’s son and older brother to spoiled brat,
Tiffany.
How can one kid—Tiffany—be so
annoying and the other—Matt—so totally hot? I tried to avoid Matt
because of the way I got when I’m around him. Though I’m normally
loquacious (last Wednesday’s vocabulary word that I copied and vowed to
use at least three times,) one look at Matt and I lost my power of
speech. My jaw dropped and my mouth went dry. There’s just something
about him—sleepy blue eyes, light brown hair that usually needs combing,
a crooked grin and a sculpted, rock-hard body.
It wasn’t some creepy,
incestuous thing since Matt and I weren’t real cousins. Sid was Faye’s
step brother. Nope, we didn’t have the same blood coursing through our
veins. Matt’s was probably blue, while mine came from the mystery man
Faye refused to talk about.
I tiptoed past the Jeep to spare
myself further humiliation. I’d almost made it when he rolled out on one
of those sled thingies and grabbed my ankle. “Hey, kid, how ya doin’?”
The warmth of his hand against
my bare skin turned my normally frisky brain cells to mush. Sure enough,
my lower jaw was heading south. “Uh, just great, Matt,” I said, averting
my eyes and licking my suddenly parched lips.
He released my ankle and stood
up. “Good,” he said. “Your mom still got that . . . whaddaya call it?”
“Fibromyalgia.” As I said the
word, I felt my upper lip curl in a sneer. “So she says.”
“She getting better?”
“She’s trying to get social
security benefits, you know, the one for disability.”
The words tasted bitter in my
mouth.
“Oh yeah,” Matt said. “I saw Big
Ed’s car here the other night. He’s her lawyer, right?”
My hands automatically curled
into fists. I narrowed my eyes and studied Matt’s face, looking for a
smirk or maybe a suggestive wink. Even though I didn’t want to punch
him, I could and I would. I knew how to punch. Faye had made sure.
No problem. He’d moved on.
Wonder of wonders, he was looking at me. I mean, really looking at me
with those sexy blue eyes. His gaze lingered for a long moment on my
chest. Whoa! Was he checking out my ’cots? I was suddenly aware I’d
outgrown my shorts and tee shirt. Not knowing what else to do, I shoved
my hands into the pocket of my cut-offs and took a step back.
“Well, hey, I gotta go check the
mail. See ya, Matt.”
His voice followed me as I
headed down the driveway. “Hey, kid. If you ever need a ride somewhere,
let me know. I got the Jeep running real good.”
Because my mouth had fallen open
once again, I settled for a casual wave of acknowledgement even though I
wanted to pump a fist in the air and scream, “YES!”
As I trotted to the mailbox, the
late April sunlight warm on my shoulders, I pondered this strange turn
of events. Even though he called me “kid,” clearly Matt had noticed a
couple of new bulges on my formerly stick-like body. Hmmm. Had my tumble
off the ladder, followed by the electric fence zapping, released some
sort of male-attracting hormone?
In spite of my mini-triumph,
Matt-wise, a dull headache began to throb painfully at the back of my
skull. I opened the mailbox and, as predicted, Faye’s check had not
arrived. There was, however, a familiar tan envelope from the Social
Security Office of Adjudication and Review. Probably another form for
Faye to fill out asking questions like, “Are you able to push a grocery
cart?” And, “Can you walk up a flight of stairs?” Questions Faye had
already answered “No” and “No.”
When I handed her the envelope,
Faye sighed and dropped it, unopened, onto the pile of similar tan
envelopes stacked between the bed and wall.
“Big Ed’s coming tomorrow. I’ll
let him deal with it.” She looked pointedly at her watch.
I took the hint. It was time for
Fay’s nightly ritual, two slices of peanut butter toast and two cans of
Busch Light. The menu varied only on Thursday night. Big Ed night. He
always brought burgers, fries and a fifth of Stoli. Not that I’m around
on Thursdays. No way. But, when I come home on Friday, the place smells
of grease and vodka.
Let me make this crystal clear.
Big Ed was Faye’s lawyer, not her boyfriend. That was what Faye said.
He’d been working day and night on her case for two years. That was what
Big Ed said. Me? I had my doubts.
Later that night, I heard the
sound of Faye’s rhythmic breathing and tiptoed back to the bedroom. I
gathered up the empties and the plate littered with peanut
butter-smeared crusts and tossed them in the garbage.
Tomorrow was Thursday, Big Ed
night. I’d be staying with Kizzy Lovell, the town witch. That was what a
lot of kids called her. Since I wouldn’t be home until Friday, I made
sure I had clean underwear in my backpack.
As the evening wore on, my
headache grew steadily worse. At ten, I turned out the light. I pulled
the curtains back so I could see the night sky, a brilliant canopy of
far-flung stars and a full-faced moon. I held my hand up to the window.
Bathed in moonlight, my palm looked washed in silver, its tell-tale
lines carved in dark relief by the unknown maker of my fate. I thought
about the times Kizzy studied the lines on my palm and said, “You’re a
special girl, Alfrieda. Like it or not, you have the Gift.”
Every time I’d say, “What gift?”
Kizzy would smile mysteriously and say, “You’ll see,” which really
irritated me because, clearly, the only gift I had was the ability to
get all-A’s on my report card. Even that wasn’t a gift, since I hated
Algebra and had to work my butt off.
I had no sooner wrapped up in my
faded pink quilt and snuggled into the couch bed when I remembered the
aspirin and glass of water I’d placed by the bathroom sink before I
brushed my teeth. I groaned and switched on the light. The bathroom was
only a few steps away. But in my present state—cotton-mouthed and head
pounding with pain—the distance seemed as vast as the Sahara Desert. I
swung my feet to the floor and turned my head slowly toward the
bathroom. I could see the glass of water perched on the counter like it
was taunting me, “Come and get me, Allie.”
I reached out a hand, thinking,
It would be a whole lot easier if you came to me, and it happened
again. The whole dark-around-the-edges, tunnel-vision,
buzzing-in-the-head thing. The glass teetered back and forth, danced a
little jig across the counter and shot into the air for a moment before
it slammed onto the floor and shattered into about a jillion pieces.
“What the hell’s going on,
Allie?”
I looked up to see my mother
standing in the narrow hallway. My hand, still extended toward the glass
that wasn’t there, shook violently. “I dropped it. That’s all,” I said.
“Go back to bed. I’ll clean it up.”
Faye’s eyes narrowed in
suspicion but finally, she turned and trudged back to the bedroom. When
I opened the door and stepped outside to fetch the broom, I was greeted
by a symphony of night music. Strangely, the pain in my head was gone.
The soft spring air was alive with a chorus of crickets backed by a full
orchestra of spring peepers, their mating songs accompanied by the
tinkle of wind chimes.
But, hold on. We didn’t have
wind chimes. We’d never had wind chimes. I walked to the back of the
trailer and stared up at the gnarled old apple tree next to Blaster’s
pasture. Nudged by a gentle breeze, long silver tubes bumped together,
creating a melody with subtle variations as the air around them ebbed
and flowed. It was stabilized by a dangling iridescent glass ball whose
surface caught and held the moonlight.
Must be some prank of Matt’s.
Vowing I’d figure it out in the morning, I grabbed the broom, opened the
door and froze. A woman sat on my couch bed. A woman with flowers in her
long, dark hair, wearing a pink-and-yellow, tie-dye dress embellished
with a blazing purple sun. A woman, smoking what looked and smelled like
weed. I opened my mouth, preparing to scream so loudly and shrilly the
shards of glass on the floor would shatter into even smaller pieces.
The woman said, “Hi. I’m Trilby,
your spirit guide. Guess what? You just passed your first test. Isn’t
that groovy?”