Solomon’s Bell
The Genie Chronicles Book 2
The Genie Chronicles Book 2
By
Michelle Lowery Combs
66,000 words *
Young Adult Fantasy / Historical Fantasy / Paranormal Mystery
Author Bio:
Michelle Lowery Combs is an award-winning
writer and book blogger living in rural Alabama with her
husband, one cat and too many children to count. She spends her
spare time commanding armies of basketball and soccer munchkins for
the Parks & Recreation departments of two cities. When not in the
presence of throngs of toddlers, tweens and teens, Michelle can be
found neglecting her roots and dreaming up the next best seller. She
is a member of the Alabama Writers’ Conclave, Jacksonville State
University’s Writers’ Club and her local Aspiring Authors group.
Check Michelle out at her website MichelleLoweryCombs.com
Social Media Links:
Author: https://twitter.com/miclowery77
Publisher:
https://twitter.com/WorldWeaver_wwp
https://www.facebook.com/WorldWeaverPress
Blurb:
To save her family, Ginn uses her newfound
genie powers to transport herself and her friends to 16th century
Prague. Only one thing there remains the same as at home: she can't
let anyone know what she really is.
The Emperor of Prague and those closest to him
are obsessed with magic. In pursuit of it, they’ve waged war on the
citizens of their city. In the citizens' defense, someone has brought
to life a golem, a dangerous being with connections to an artifact
capable of summoning and commanding an entire army of genies. Can
Ginn escape the notice of the Emperor as she attempts to discover a
way to defeat Prague’s golem in time to save her family from a
similar creature?
Solomon's Bell is the sequel to Heir
to the Lamp and the second book of the Genie Chronicles
series.
Buy Links:
Amazon:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N7MNKGS
B&N:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/solomons-bell-michelle-lowery-combs/1125298663
iTunes:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/solomons-bell/id1184186594
World Weaver Press: http://www.worldweaverpress.com/store/p115/Solomon%27s_Bell_%28Genie_Chronicles%2C_Book_2%29.html
Excerpt:
Haley
Hardy blinks up at me, her big blue eyes made larger with surprise.
Haley’s the newbie: a tiny ten-year-old my family has been
fostering for the last few months. Mom and Dad want to adopt Haley,
but she hasn’t decided on Charles and Molly Lawson and their
chaotic brood of six children yet.
“What’s
up, Haley?” I ask, trying to sound as though I don’t know she’s
seen me appear from out of nowhere. I turn my back to her, retrieve
the lamp from the ground, and stuff it into my pack.
“Sixty-four
percent of people believe the Loch Ness monster really exists,”
Haley says in her high voice. “Of course, you’d have to use a
point zero one significance level to test that claim; the survey I
saw was online.”
Half
the time I have no idea what Haley is talking about. She’s insanely
smart—a genius even. I can practically feel my IQ plummet whenever
I try to have a conversation with her.
“Um,
really?” I ask, trying to imagine where this is going. Haley half
turns toward the open door of the small barn as if she’s about to
leave. I sigh with relief, but Haley seems to think better of it and
turns to face me again.
“Did
you know that there’s an ongoing project to have collected evidence
validated by science and the Sasquatch officially recognized as a
species?”
What?
“Haley, where do you come up with this stuff?” I sink onto the
wooden bench behind me, peering into the bright eyes of the strangest
kid I’ve ever met.
“I
like to read,” she says, looking away. Between her right thumb and
first two thin fingers, Haley rolls the fat glass marble she carries
with her at all times. Mom says it’s a kind of security object,
like how some kids develop attachments to stuffed toys or blankets
from their babyhood. Mom also says the rest of us kids shouldn’t
make a huge deal about it. Haley’s been in six foster homes in five
years, and Mom figures the marble could be a keepsake from her life
before all that, though Haley hasn’t said as much. She’s so
intense sometimes; I don’t think anyone knows what to make of her.
Mom says some of the other foster families exploited Haley; she’s
been on a major talk show and even won twenty-five thousand dollars
for one of her foster families on some game show before they
abandoned her on the steps of the Children’s Methodist Home on
their way to Las Vegas. Watching her with her marble, seeing how
slowly she works the ball of glass flecked with every color of the
rainbow, I can tell I’ve hurt her feelings.
“Reading’s
cool,” I say, hoping to reassure her. Sure, I thought about
divorcing my parents when I found out we were taking in another kid,
even when in the beginning the arrangement was supposed to be only
temporary, but I kind of like the little brainiac. Mostly because of
the way she’s able to keep Eli and Jasper in line. The Twosome are
crazy about our new foster sister. Part of me is starting to wonder
if Haley’s stats on Bigfoot could have anything to do with the
boys’ obsession with B-grade horror movies.
“I’d
be satisfied with being half as smart as you, Haley. I’m having the
worst time in algebra.”
“Mr.
Lawson is teaching me trigonometry,” Haley says brightening.
“Algebra was a breeze.” My parents are homeschooling Haley; they
say it’s for the best. She’d be at least a junior at my high
school otherwise. I can imagine all four and a half feet of her
struggling on tip-toe to reach a locker—that is if her statistics
about the Loch Ness Monster didn’t get her stuffed into it. “I’m
happy to tutor you,” she tells me.
“Thanks.
I’ll keep that in mind.”
I
stand and watch Haley eye the backpack on my shoulder. She looks from
my face to the pack a few times. I think she’s about to say
something about what she’s seen or thinks she’s seen with the
lamp when Jasper bursts through the barn door.
“Hay-wee!”
he exclaims. “We need wou, quick! I fink we found a chupacabwa!”
“It’s
highly unlikely that a goat sucker or el
chupacabra would
be found this far north of Latin America, Jasper,” Haley says. She
corrects my seven-year-old brother even as she allows him to tug her
excitedly from the barn.
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