Monday, October 21, 2013
ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD
The cover art to my new Andy Mackpeace time travel book, ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD is here! It was designed by Ken Hornbeck. The book comes out very soon; I'll keep you posted.
Monday, September 16, 2013
ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD
For those curious to read the third time travel novel featuring Andy Mackpeace, here is Chapter One from ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD, due out in October 2013.
Chapter
1
Andy
Mackpeace was hauling his navy blue suitcase off the Baggage Claim conveyor
belt. Flashes of cowboy hats and boots and belt buckles surrounded him and it finally
hit the fourteen-year-old boy that Missoula, Montana was a long ways away from
Silver Lake, New Hampshire.
His
best friend Roger Stanley hunched next to him while his parents stood near the
exit doors and Mr. Stanley calling Andy’s father to say that the kid arrived on
time.
“C’mon
Andy, yes or no, did you bring the stick?” Roger whispered.
“You’re
starting to sound like a drug dealer,” Andy smiled.
Andy
and Roger had grown up together in New Hampshire, and last year, the two boys
and their other friend, Miranda Roberts, had unexpectedly time traveled. Andy’s
bizarre, psychic Grandmother Geri had bequeathed him an assorted-colored
collection of incense sticks, and when the three of them lit one, they ended up
in Ante-Bellum Georgia. Grandma Geri had died a year ago, but Andy still
communicated with her in his mind. Mostly.
Roger
moved to Missoula last September when his father got a Department Chair at the University
of Montana.
“Yes,
I brought it,” Andy whispered back, “it’s in my suitcase and I hope it’s not
all broken up.”
“A
new piece, right?”
“Yesss,”
Andy said. “I picked it from the box yesterday. Never been used. It’s an orange
one.”
“Orange?
Are you sure that is-”
“Yessssss!
It’s fine, bro. Trust me,” Andy laughed at Roger’s questions. “Now shut up
because your mom’s coming over to get us.”
“Are
you ready, Andy?” Mrs. Stanley asked. “Anything else coming down the chute?”
“No,
this is it,” Andy said lifting his suitcase and heading toward the door. He
took two steps, bumped into it with a thud and stopped, surprised, looking at
the portal wondering what had gone wrong.
“What
time did you get up this morning?” Mrs. Stanley asked him, opening it for him
and guiding him outside.
“4:00.
My dad drove me to Boston, then I flew to Denver, a two hour layover, and then
another flight to here.”
“Time
difference and long trips can make anybody tired,” she said. “I think, Roger,
it would be better if Andy ate some dinner and then called it an early night.
He’ll be more like himself in the morning.”
Andy
had been bugging his parents since Christmas to let him fly alone to Montana in
June right after his fourteenth birthday. He was going to be a freshmen in high
school in September, he had argued, he would be all right. His parents
eventually said yes, and Andy did every odd job he could find to save the
dollars that dripped in to pay for the flight. On the two-hour drive to Boston
that morning, Andy’s dad talked to him like he was much older, like he was
already shaving.
“I’m
trusting you will manage this fine,” he said. He didn’t tell Andy the boy was
one year shy of exemption from the Unaccompanied Minors Program, and airline
regulations required a flight attendant to walk him from transfer to transfer
and make sure his boarding passes were all lined up, making Andy, at times,
especially with the stares from other people, feel idiotic.
The
Missoula airport was miniscule compared to Logan’s and they walked to their car
in the tiny parking lot. The sun was shining over the Rockies and the mountains
made Andy stop and blink. They were beautiful.
“Good
night!” Andy said. “Those are huge!”
“It’s
a far cry from New Hampshire, right?” Roger said, grabbing his friend. “It’s a
completely different world out here.”
In
the far distance, Andy heard someone riding a horse.
Friday, September 6, 2013
ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD
For those of you following my Andy Mackpeace time travel series: IN THE NICK OF TIME and THE TIME OF HIS LIFE, the third book is coming out in October. It is called ALL THE TIME IN THE WORLD; I'm very excited about this one.
Andy is now 14 and travels to Montana to visit his best friend Roger and smuggles an incense stick in his luggage. Roger has a special intention and wants to use the stick to get an artifact from the past.
It's exciting to see the characters grow, not only in age, but in wisdom and experience. I had a blast writing this latest installment.
Andy is now 14 and travels to Montana to visit his best friend Roger and smuggles an incense stick in his luggage. Roger has a special intention and wants to use the stick to get an artifact from the past.
It's exciting to see the characters grow, not only in age, but in wisdom and experience. I had a blast writing this latest installment.
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
A touching Review
Thank you to BhamGhostwriter for a touching review on my YA coming of age novel THE PROMISE OF LIVING.
This is on my Amazon page for the novel.
This is on my Amazon page for the novel.
By BhamGhostwriter on August 11, 2013
Format: Kindle Edition Amazon Verified Purchase
With its vague metaphysical motif leading the way in some respects, I was truly finding myself totally absorbed in this extremely well-written and otherwise quite realistic coming-of-age novel. Having read the Amazon editorial piece and the extant reviews (one of which mentioned the HEA ending referenced in MY review title), I thought I knew exactly where the story was going and with whom I would be traveling as the plot proceeded in that direction. Then, just past the novel's halfway point and totally out of the blue, the author figuratively - but savagely - kicked me in the gut and stabbed me in the heart. Down for the count, I turned off the Kindle and let it rest on my pounding chest. Jeez! After making a real investment in how I thought this would turn out, I was left completely bereft of that emotional investment; I decided I couldn't finish reading the book. I poured myself a glass of Merlot to calm my nerves and my hurting heart.
A few minutes later however, I felt that by picking up the book again - in the way readers' minds sometimes work - I could thereby take the grieving Ryan into my arms and hold him. He needed someone; he needed me (since I had been through what he was going through). Or, perhaps more likely, I needed him; I needed to continue holding onto him (since I had been through what he was going through). Still, even with such rationales, did it ever hurt.
Please don't get me wrong. I'm glad I decided to finish the book. And though it seemed, somehow, a little rushed and a bit like some literary afterthought, the conclusion provided a fitting and believable HEA. And I appreciated that even though it didn't - at least for me - bring comfort enough to make up for what had gone before. I honestly think the story line could have continued apace, resolving whatever needed to be resolved (the murder, Ryan's future and the question of his sexuality, the "problem" of his visions, Ryan's feelings for Dave) without having to force - midway through - the inclusion of a horridly sad turn of events.
This is one of those rare books which I found myself loving even as I felt totally let down by how it all came to be. Take from this what you will.
A few minutes later however, I felt that by picking up the book again - in the way readers' minds sometimes work - I could thereby take the grieving Ryan into my arms and hold him. He needed someone; he needed me (since I had been through what he was going through). Or, perhaps more likely, I needed him; I needed to continue holding onto him (since I had been through what he was going through). Still, even with such rationales, did it ever hurt.
Please don't get me wrong. I'm glad I decided to finish the book. And though it seemed, somehow, a little rushed and a bit like some literary afterthought, the conclusion provided a fitting and believable HEA. And I appreciated that even though it didn't - at least for me - bring comfort enough to make up for what had gone before. I honestly think the story line could have continued apace, resolving whatever needed to be resolved (the murder, Ryan's future and the question of his sexuality, the "problem" of his visions, Ryan's feelings for Dave) without having to force - midway through - the inclusion of a horridly sad turn of events.
This is one of those rare books which I found myself loving even as I felt totally let down by how it all came to be. Take from this what you will.
Labels:
coming of age,
J. Lee Graham,
The Promise of Living,
YA
Wednesday, July 24, 2013
Privateers Interview with me! Thank you Privateers!
A terrific Middle Grade Blog called The Privateers from England interviewed me regarding my time travel series. The link is here.
Thank you Privateers! I had a blast!
Peace,
J. Lee Graham
Thank you Privateers! I had a blast!
Peace,
J. Lee Graham
Labels:
England,
J Lee Graham,
Privateers,
time travel adventures
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
THE PROMISE OF LIVING REVIEW!
Many thanks to Mrs. Condit Reads Books blog for reviewing my YA coming of age novel, THE PROMISE OF LIVING. I was very moved.
Here it is:
BLURB: THE PROMISE OF LIVING is a heart-rending coming of age novel of sixteen-year-old Ryan Colton and his quest for his own authenticity. Ryan’s mother died when he was young, and he and his father carve out a tenuous but trusting relationship. Ryan works on Lee Hemmer’s farm with his best friend Dave in Wilson’s Ferry, New Hampshire, a stifling, small town where, in 1975, everyone, it seems, has something to hide. Ryan has a mysterious series of premonitions and visions that reveal the darker secrets of the townspeople. His gift becomes overwhelming when he visions a murky murder at the high school and cannot prevent its occurrence. Ryan seeks the help of a Boston transfer student and a famous psychic to not only focus his gifts to solve the murder but to finally accept his own personal feelings for Dave. Ryan struggles with his own power of being different in the world and knows that the true resolution lies within him.
Here it is:
Posted by Pattycake on June 29, 2013
“Ryan took a breath. “You have a code of honor, Dad, about what it means to be a man and even though I must have grown up watching it, I never even noticed it until this year. I think about that a lot. How valuable that is, and how much I admire that in you.”
GENRE: M/M, coming of age, YA
RATING: 4 Sweet Peas!
GENRE: M/M, coming of age, YA
RATING: 4 Sweet Peas!

TRISH’S OPINION: J. Lee Graham has written a powerful and moving coming-of’age story in The Promise of Living. The blurb lays out the bare bones of the story, but you really need to read this wonderful tale to really appreciate the rich feast laid out by the author. Ryan Colton and his best friend Dave Calderwood are your typical teens growing up in your typical small town until events start to happen that shake them and the rest of the town to their very core. Suicide,murder, feelings that don’t fit what small town society decrees to be normal, and other deep secrets are brought out into the light of day, and things will never be the same again.
This is a brilliantly character driven story with a plot that starts out with a smooth flow, then grabs ahold of you and doesn’t let go until the very end. The characters are solid, credible, and face the same triumphs and tragedies that shape the lives of people in the real world. The backstory is rich with details that lay a solid foundation for the storyline without too much trivia. The writing style of the author is eloquently precise, crisp, clear, and so wonderfully down-to-earth. There is no real sex in the story, but it doesn’t detract ftom the book at all. The author displays a solid and well-researched knowledge of what life was like in that time and place with no jarring errors. There are bittersweet moments when tragedy strikes some of the secondary characters, but the book itself has a HEA ending. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this beautiful book and would definitely recommend it to anyone looking for a fascinating coming-of-age tale.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)