’89
Walls Blog Tour
About the
Author
Katie
Pierson freelances for local non-profits, using her background in
public policy and grassroots organizing to overthrow the patriarchy
one introverted step at a time. When she’s not writing fiction, she
returns library books, makes soup, and tries to be cooler than she
really is by hip-hopping at the YMCA. She earned a Bachelor’s
Degree in American History from the University of Pennsylvania (where
she dabbled briefly in being a College Republican) and a Master’s
in American History from the University of Minnesota. She grew up in
Lincoln, Nebraska, and now lives with her family in a suburb of
Minneapolis. ’89
Walls is her first novel.
For More
Information
About the
Book:
Title: ’89 Walls
Author: Katie Pierson
Publisher: Wise Ink Creative Publishing
Pages: 240
Genre: Young Adult
Format: Paperback
Author: Katie Pierson
Publisher: Wise Ink Creative Publishing
Pages: 240
Genre: Young Adult
Format: Paperback
College
is not in the cards for Seth. He spends his minimum wage on groceries
and fakes happiness to distract his mom from the MS they both know
will kill her. It’s agony to carry around a frayed love note for a
girl who’s both out of his league and beneath his dignity.
Quinn’s
finishing high school on top. But that cynical, liberal guy in her
social studies class makes her doubt her old assumptions. Challenging
the rules now, though, would a)
squander her last summer at home, b)
antagonize her conservative dad, and c)
make her a hypocrite.
Seth
and Quinn’s passionate new romance
takes them both by surprise. They keep it a secret: it’s too early
to make plans and too late not to care. But it’s 1989. As politics
suddenly get personal, they find themselves fighting bare-fisted for
their beliefs—and each other—in the clear light of day.
For More Information
- ’89 Walls is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Book Excerpt:
Quinn used the three extra
minutes before class that day to turn in her cap-and-gown order form
at the office. She made sure no one was looking before skipping down
the marble staircase like a little kid. She watched her light-green
sundress rise and settle with each bounce. The translucent afternoon
sun had managed to warm the foyer by the entrance doors as if spring
might actually stick. A tiny breeze jiggled the branches of the
narrow pine trees framing the building’s entrance. The stretch of
blue sky spanning the transom window reassured her, like it was
telling her that years of self-conscious high school angst were
almost over.
Only
Trish understood how crucial Quinn’s façade of success was to the
fact of it. As long as she stuck to the script—Take the advanced
placement classes. Study. Join the debate team. Perform.—she could
hold herself together. She could no more drop the script than let her
bones dissolve.
Quinn
hated the debate team.
She
stomped on the final step. As she rounded the bottom of the
stairwell, she saw Seth walking to class from the opposite direction.
His dark-blond hair looked like it wanted to cover his eyes but was
failing at it. Even looking at him made her feel defensive.
He drew
near enough for Quinn to read his T-shirt. A cartoon of Uncle Sam
silk-screened in black-and-white on the front said, “Join the army.
Travel to exotic, distant lands. Meet exciting, unusual people. And
kill them.” On the inside, Quinn rolled her eyes; why did liberals
like him act as though people like her invented war and they alone
wanted peace, love, and teddy bears? Quinn read his shirt again.
Okay, maybe it was kind of funny. But it looked out of place on a guy
who never smiled.
They had
less than a minute before the bell rang, and the hallway had emptied
out. He probably wouldn’t acknowledge her; he never even said hi
unless she said hi first. But he passed the classroom door. He was
headed straight for her. His tan cheeks glowed bright pink, and his
eyebrows scrunched together. Quinn felt her shoulders creep up as
their eyes met. Was he going to call her out on something right now?
She saw
Ilene slipping into the classroom and waved at her. Quinn tried to
veer out of Seth’s path; if he wanted to tangle, he’d have to
wait until class, when Mr. Levine could referee. But he sidestepped
in front of her, forcing her to stop. What the hell? They stared at
each other for several seconds. Quinn noticed that the dark brown of
Seth’s eyes blended right into his pupils. He also had broad
shoulders for a lean guy, but he was barely three inches taller than
she was.
Seth
started to say something but then kind of deflated. He pressed a
limp, folded piece of notebook paper into her hand. Scowling at the
floor, he mumbled something under his breath before charging into the
classroom.
Quinn
looked around in confusion to see if there had been witnesses. There
hadn’t. She walked into room 105. She sat down next to Ilene and
said hi back to a few people. Taking a huge, slow breath, she slid
the letter into her folder and pulled a pen out of her backpack.
Waiting
for the slackers to trickle in, Mr. Levine strolled over to his desk
and pried the lid off yesterday’s McDonald’s drink. He poured the
light-brown liquid into the spider plant. Then he flipped off the
lights and closed the door. He rubbed his hands together with that
sinister glee that teachers saved up for things like pop quizzes.
Then he slapped an outline on the overhead projector, on which he’d
chicken-scratched the title “South Africa.” As the class groaned,
Mr. Levine shrugged out of his sports jacket. He tossed it across his
desk with one of the sleeves inside out.
As soon
as he starting talking about apartheid, Quinn flipped open her folder
to read the note.
Dear
Quinn,
Here’s what I’ve wanted to say to you for a long time: I’ve
liked you since the beginning of tenth grade. We haven’t had any
big conversations, but I feel like I know you.
I know that you’re genuinely nice. Even though you have a lot of
friends, you make a point of saying hello to people like me (the shy,
antisocial types!). You’re really pretty, especially when you wear
that green dress. You’re also smart. I hear George Washington
University figured that out, too. Congratulations on getting in.
I wondered if you’d like to go to a movie sometime. I know it
sounds weird coming from someone you’ve barely talked to (and
especially from someone who would tease you about being a
Republican), but I hope you’ll say yes.
Seth
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