Bred Is Going Live!

In case I haven’t been obnoxious enough shouting about this book in all corners of my digital universe…BRED is about to go live or already is depending on where you are and what time you’re reading this!

I’m so in love with this story. And I have to admit, writing it scared the ever-loving crap out of me. At its heart, Bred is a coming-of-age love story inspired by Great Expectations. The Dickens classic happens to be one of my favorite books of all-time. Add this formula up and you get gut-unsettling fear.

But I didn’t want to let intimidation stand in my way. This was a scary thing I wanted to tackle–one that I wanted to slay. And I am so very proud of how BRED came out. It’s a unique story, but classical as well. There are small nods (and a few bigger ones) woven into the story to pay homage, but there’s also a lot of me.

Dark and wonderful. That’s what someone told me after an early read. That small review made my heart feel full, and I hope this story does the same for you.

In case you’re still waiting for it to go live (it will be on Amazon and Free in KU by the way!), here’s a small taste. I wanted to share a short excerpt just to give you an idea of what’s to come.

Enjoy! And if you read on and enjoy Bred, I would love your review.

Find BRED here: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07RKK8P4L

Excerpt from BRED by Ginger Scott
(copyright Ginger Scott – 2019)

“Lily, I love watching you play. I really do. And you’re getting so good. You’re better than me now. God, that first day! Remember how I played the piano?”

“I thought you were amazing,” I say, the goofy grin tickling my cheeks.

“You just thought I was cute,” he says with a tilt of his head. Arrogant and adorable. “I was awful. I know, like…six chords.”

He takes my hands, urging me to my knees in front of him as he places my hands on his chest. He spreads my fingers out and looks down.

“You can play Chopin.” He runs his thumbs over my knuckles, and I fan my fingers along his chest, then play what I remember of the most recent piece I’ve tried. I’m not nearly as good as he says, but he seems so convinced and that makes me think maybe I’m better than I say.

My fingers drum along his chest while his hands hover just above them with the occasional light, feather touch.
“What is this called?”

His lashes are like deep flecks of gold as he looks down at his chest. I love looking at him from this angle, the playful tinge on his lips and new stubble aging his young cheeks. He smells like aftershave sometimes when we’re up here on the rooftop. I like it.

“Polonaise-Fantaisie,” I say, drawing the word out with a curl to my tongue. Henry’s face lifts and his eyes glimmer, narrowing on my lips first, then lifting to my gaze.

“Can you play that for real?”

I move my hands to the right along his body for a run, then lift briefly and move back to the center to tap, just as I would on the keys. My teeth grip my top lip and I shrug.

“I’m working on it. I’m not smooth yet, but it’s getting better.”

I keep thrumming my fingers on his body as I stare at him, but eventually his gaze begins to make me flush, so I look back to my hands. His cover mine when I do, flattening them against his chest and bringing them together so he can hold on with his right hand and move his left to my chin.

“I’d like to hear it tomorrow.” His eyes penetrate, and while I know he truly would, I also know that he isn’t thinking about the piano anymore.

New Covers for Waiting on the Sidelines & Going Long

That’s right! Not only do I have a third book coming out in January to make this series complete, but the covers are all get a little update. Book 1 is just a little update, but Going Long is a whole new look – I can’t wait for you to see all three together! You’re going to love them! Check them out below!

Stay tuned for me to add the third soon! One more week for reveal!

That’s right! A new Waiting Series book is coming in January!

In case you missed it…which, I’ve been a bit obnoxious about it so kudos on being able to shut me out, yo!…but…there’s a new Waiting book coming out in January!

The Hail Mary, Waiting Series Book 3, will pick up where life left off for Reed and Nolan. Now grown up with a teenager of their own, our favorite high school sweethearts are facing down the harsh realities of a football marriage. Quarterbacks get older, life gets harder, and sometimes holding on through it all feels impossible. The Hail Mary is a story about climbing though the depths and fighting for the things we want- even when life gets ugly. Plus, you’ll get to see a few favorite moments from their past–from Reed’s point of view!

Stay tuned for cover reveals (that’s right…reveals…the series is getting a little look update) and lots of teasers, excerpts and pre-order mania! I can’t wait to share this third book in what is now a trilogy with you all! I’ve wanted to share their lives as they’ve grown older with my readers for a long time, but I knew it had to be just right. Reed and Nolan deserved my very best! I hope you love them!

Want to catch up on the series?
Start with Waiting on the Sidelines here- https://amzn.to/2pU4JXy
Going Long is book 2, and find it here – https://amzn.to/2yk3lSC

A Gang Member and a Love Story

Hey. It’s me. It’s been a little while since my last irregular blog post, and I was feelin’ one. I wanted to share a little about my new book (it releases tonight.). More pointedly, I wanted to tell you a little bit about my process writing this book. Where the genesis of it came from, where I drew inspiration and scenes, and a little bit about my old neighborhood.

I had the idea for Cry Baby a little over a year ago. It was sparked by a few things. Like a lot of themes I write into my fiction, some great reporting inspired me here. I was listening to an in-depth piece on NPR about a kid who had to run home after school and hide in his apartment because he was avoiding joining the gang that ravaged his neighborhood. If they saw you, and you were male and of the right age, you were in. It was that simple. Or rather, that complex and horrifying. He couldn’t hide at school, so he survived the torment there. I think about that boy and his story often, wondering if he made it out alive, or if he was sucked in.

The rest of my inspiration came from my world. I grew up in a part of Phoenix that often led the state in gang activity. My street happened to be a few hundred yards away from the one two rival gangs used to divide up territory. I used to have this recurring dream because of some of the things I’d seen and heard, and I had just had it for the first time in years right before I started this book–it had maybe been a decade. The dream always goes like this: Me and my dad are pulling out of a gas station that vaguely resembles the one on the corner of the main street in my old neighborhood. I’m always a young teen girl, twelve or thirteen, and my dad is always in his forties. It flips to slow-motion, and both my dad and I see a car slow down and begin to turn into the gas station, the passenger-side windows facing us and two men leaning out the windows with guns turned to the side and ready to fire. We’re just in the way, but it doesn’t matter. They begin to shoot. Glass shatters. Sometimes my dad is hit in his arm or his chest. He’s never killed, but we’re always both terrified. He pulls me down and ducks above me, shouting at me to push the gas because for some reason he’s no longer able. I always push it with my hand while he turns the wheel, and sometimes I can feel our car dip into the gutter and level out on the road back home. Sometimes we crash. Sometimes, we just keep turning and driving, in circles while bullets pierce our car. It goes on like this until I wake up.

It’s always the same dream. Always so real feeling. I covered a shooting at that very gas station for the newspaper when I was fresh out of college. But this last time I woke up from the dream with a strange feeling. I used to write the dream off to things I heard about at school, to the gun shot sounds we could hear at night from the living room of the house I grew up in, or to the boys I watched grow up in grade school only to read about their incarceration or tragic death in high school or after graduation. This time, though, I woke up thinking about Tristan. He had a name. He had a backstory, and a tragic existence. He was trapped in the same dream I was, and he was loud and demanding. His prologue flew out in minutes. The rest of his story would take a lot longer.

I ruminated about Cry Baby for months, while I worked on other projects. I spent time in my old neighborhood, revisiting the scene of some dreadful things. I sifted through police reports from shootings I was there for, only a block or two away from the place I slept. I began to save stories about MS13, the gang that’s made a lot of news over the last few years. It’s become a political spotlight, of sorts. The saddest part to me, though, is the kids the gang members all start out as.

Kids like Tristan.

I began researching MS13 cases, and digging into old Bloods and Crips articles. Some of the stories truly broke my heart, and every single time, I thought about the young kids who didn’t have a choice. Choice is tricky. If you’re only shown one thing when you’re young, it’s hard to realize you have one. It’s harder still when you know that not falling in line might mean torture and death.

This book is one of my greatest accomplishments. It was tough to write. Honesty is that way, I think. I didn’t sugarcoat things. I gave my readers the real world that some have to survive, and that others fall to. I also hope I gave you characters to love, to root for, and to want in your lives. Maybe people we all wish we were a little bit like, too. Brave.

I hope you enjoy Cry Baby. I hope you feel it in your bones and let it simmer in your soul. I hope it hits you like that NPR story hit me, and I hope we all think about the ways we’re lucky for just a little while, even though there are often ways we aren’t.

Until next time.

XO
Ginger

Cry Baby by Ginger Scott
A Contemporary Young Adult Romance Release day: June 22, 2018 Goodreads: http://bit.ly/2rjlag4

Purchase here–>
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2MBpTnt
Google Play: http://bit.ly/2t69Wxt
Kobo: http://bit.ly/2K3WFyY
Nook: http://bit.ly/2JZEM14i
Books: https://apple.co/2M5qiNW

 

Why I Went Indie

There are two ways I reacted to the recent Guardian op-ed about reasons to not self-publish. (You can read it here.) My first reaction was ouch. Ouch because of the quotation marks around the term “indie publishing.” Ouch because the picture painted of a career I and many others are incredibly proud of, despite the “non-traditional” tracks we took, was being compared to some not-so-flattering things. And ouch because…well…I’ve heard and read this before.

My second reaction was a less emotional one. It was seasoned, likely because of that last point I made above. It was proud because of the truth woven along with the presumptions in the article. And it was inspired to offer a bit of a rebuttal and education because there are probably a lot of people like my past self out there who need the you can to combat the you can’t.  

Let me begin with a short background on how I found self-publishing. I decided to become a writer when I read my first Judy Blume chapter book at the age of twelve. (The book was Forever, for those curious or who haven’t heard me share this story before. Also, let’s just say it was several years ago.) The writing bug became solid after I read The Outsiders. I wanted to write mature young adult stories—ones that dug a little deeper than the books I’d read before. I wanted to create stories that reflected the real world of being young—all the crap, and hurt, and anxieties and battles that feel small to adults but are everything to the young people experiencing them. I also came from a family where you work hard, and you get a job, and earn a living and pay the bills. I had a deep understanding of the value of responsibility, which the life of a writer in many ways conflicted with. I found a way to blend my dream and passion with an 8-to-5 paycheck. I studied journalism. I was a bit of a rock star at it. I won awards. I wrote massive in-depth stories for magazines, and I perfected the art of painful and tedious research. I also learned the power of noting the details and delicately portraying the emotion in real-life tragedies. It enabled me to paint pictures with words and authentically translated important true stories to the masses.

I studied. And while I studied and practiced in one writing world, I imagined and slowly crafted my work in another. But there were a lot of op-eds out there like this one—a lot of tales passed along and shared at author engagements where people I looked up to told me over and over how impossible it was to stand where they were. How lucky they got. How so many people collect nothing but rejections. These warnings, at least that’s how they echoed in my head, flamed my fears. I kept crafting, but my story was quickly becoming a pipe dream. An indulgence. Until the man I married, my very best friend in the world, started convincing me otherwise.

I didn’t want to wait years. I’d put in the time. I’d become damn good at building my kind of cabinet, to borrow the analogy from the Guardian blog post. Most of the stores weren’t really selling my kind of cabinet, though. My stories were long. My genre bent rules. My young adults swore and drank and made sexual mistakes and experienced awakenings. They were, in every sense, the teens I grew up with and once was, and the teens I know exist today.

On the other side of waiting years and hoping someone would understand the need for these stories I had burning in my soul was, to put it in my lingo, a hella-ton of hard work. I got that—that…was not scary. It was just hard work. It was time, and faith in my art, and diligence, and persistence. It was initial expense for something I believed in. It was paying for quality editing, buying or directing emotive images, and yes—it was marketing. But it wasn’t rocket science. It wasn’t brain surgery. It wasn’t some crazy formula I didn’t understand. It was time, and hard work.

It was possible.

Mine happened to pay off. Even if it hadn’t, though, I wouldn’t have done anything differently. If I could travel back in time to visit my twenty-year-old self as she sat in an auditorium hearing all of the reasons she should give up, I’d tell her to get up and leave and start her own thing now. I’d tell her that being rich or famous isn’t the objective so who cares if she makes a work of art that only seventeen people see. I’d tell her that she’s going to be bold and do something different. And while she may not be invited to one party, she’d be welcome in a lot of others. She’d get letters from girls just like her who see themselves in her stories. She’d cry every time she read one. She’d be inspired to write these young adults something new.

Now, don’t take this as anything other than shedding light on points not brought up in the other editorial. There were lots of valid points in there, and I think in many ways praise for the people willing to swim upstream and dare. But it does get some things wrong, at least using myself and a lot of fellow independent writers I know as examples. I don’t think it was really meant to come from a mean-spirited place, despite how it felt. I think it comes from one writer’s journey—a journey that is different from mine.

I’ve heard it before.

I’ve heard it recently.

A colleague and traditionally published YA author was on a panel with me a few months back, and even after complimenting the legitimacy of my book, managed to also tell our audience that when she started she wrote as a hobby, too…like I do. I grimaced inward; she wasn’t thinking through her words as she spoke, and I knew that was the case, but it’s that thinking that ruffles feathers and fuels misconceptions. Independent publishing has come a long way, but there’s still educating to do. These types of conversations don’t happen over independent music and independent film. And both of those types of artists can win Grammys and Oscars.

All of this being said, I am still pursuing a US traditional deal. I have had novels traditionally published in other languages for foreign markets. I want to walk the traditional path from the beginning, though, to experience it and grow from it. More than anything, I want to reach young readers—the mini-me’s out there—who are shopping in the mass spaces and picking up print books from shelves. I want to give them a YA book done my way because I know in my heart they’re dying for it. I know it because I was. And I believe in my work. It’s a damn good cabinet.

Because marketing is important no matter what route you take, I’m adding a little boiler plate to the bottom of this post about me. Ginger Scott is a bestselling and Goodreads Choice nominated author who is willing to push hard for her stories to find the hearts in need of them. One day, you’ll find one of her books in one of the traditional places. She will always be proud of them all. 

 

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Because Straight Edge Is Bad-Ass

So here it is…my first blog post for this new blog page that I have been itching to start. I mentioned this on my social media, ummm….a while ago…but just in case you find this little gem here without warning, I’m gonna post blogs periodically, as the urge strikes. It will be both regular and irregular. I don’t want to make this page about deadlines, so the posts will come organically…when I just feel like I have some shiz to say.

I guess it goes without saying that right now…I’ve got some thoughts to share. This topic is actually the thing that prompted me to finally start this blog. Let me start with some short context: I’m a mom of a newly minted teenager. This does a lot of things when you’re a girl like me who perpetually remains a teen at her core despite the aging happening on the outside. Mostly, it makes me think about the age my son is and the things that I dealt with when I was his age (aaaannnnndddd the things I write about that are very real). So here it goes – if you’re a teen reader, I so very much want you to read this. If you’re a parent of a teen, maybe this post is for sharesies? And if you think one day you may have a teen…well…you get it.

When I was in 8th grade, for whatever reason, I made up my mind that I was never going to drink or smoke or do drugs or do any of those things that posed a threat to my body beyond caffeine. (I love Diet Coke and iced tea.) It was not something that was forced on me through strict parenting. My family was not particularly religious, so it wasn’t part of my faith. There wasn’t a long line of alcoholism or a moment in my past that made a mark that nudged me in this direction. I just sorta thought about all of the things I saw people doing, trying, getting busted for and I thought: “Meh.”

Now, this is very important to understand: I know that what I decided is not what a lot of teens decide, and I know that everyone has different circumstances that draw their paths through life in certain ways. This post is not a preachy post dressed as an anti-drinking campaign. Many of my close friends said yes back in the day. And many of my friends as an adult party hard and love their Ubers. I love my friends for being responsible, and I loved my friends growing up – even when they were reckless. I hung out at the keggers, and can hang now – and no one gives a rip that I’m drinking water instead of beer or moscato (though, I get it wine drinkers – I have tasted this delicious beverage and yeah, it’s lovely). The point of this post is, I say no and it’s totally fine. I said no, and it was totally fine. It’s a little empowering, saying no. It even has a name nowadays – straight edge. It sounds sharp, and bad-ass. I might make a shirt. I would have worn that shirt then. Point being – saying no, and giving peer pressure the middle finger, is actually a thing. And I came out just fine. For real. I even got to wear a sash at homecoming.

When I write the goody-two-shoes girl…she’s not far from home. When I write the reckless ones, they’re not far from home either – I was just always in the position to observe. So embrace the you that YOU want to be. You’ll fit in right where you’re supposed to.

Next post will be wayyyyyy less after-school special. Promise 😉