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Monday, July 8, 2013

Blog Tour: Keeper of the Black Stones by P.T. McHugh





Title: Keeper of the Black Stones
Author: P.T. McHugh
Age Range: 10 and up
Paperback: 369 pages
Publisher: Glass House Press
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0981676804
ISBN-13: 978-0981676807

Jason Evans, a shy, introverted high school freshman, thought that his mundane life was all there was – girls, golf, physics, and the occasional bully. Until he found out about the secrets his grandfather had been keeping from him … a set of stones that allowed them to jump through time … a maniacal madman who used the stones to shape history to his liking … and Jason’s role as one of the few people in the world who could stop that man.
Against impossible odds, a fourteen-year-old boy must take up his legacy, learn everything he needs to know within one short day, and travel helter skelter into the Middle Ages, to join Henry VII’s fight against Richard III, end the Dark Ages, and stop the man who now holds his grandfather captive. In this romp through history, Jason and his friends must race against time to accomplish not one, but two missions.
Save his grandfather.
And save the world.



Excerpt:

I never thought anything exciting would happen to me. The sky was blue, the football jocks were arrogant, and my best friend was absolutely crazy. To be honest, my life was a little boring. Until things, well, changed.

And then suddenly, I was meeting Anne Frank before she wrote her diary. Consulting with Churchill on political doctrine. Crossing thePotomac with Washington. I even shined Napoleon’s shoes in the streets of Charleroi, once, though it’s not a story I like to tell. I’ve been in too many places to name, and done things I never thought I would do. All in the name of saving history, and saving the world we call home.

I realize that these boasts won’t be taken seriously, but I must remind you that at one time the earth was flat, the atom unbreakable. And the thought of reaching the moon was just as ridiculous as the idea of jumping through time. 

I know, because I was there.
           
My name is Jason Evans. I’m ten days shy of my fifteenth birthday, and this is my story…





 About the Author:

PT McHugh didn’t start out as a storyteller. He was, however, born into a family of that encouraged imagination. He became a fan of history in school and then went to college to become a construction engineer, to build a world of straight lines, angles, and equations.

He was just as surprised as everyone else when he realized that he believed in magic, and might just know the secret of how to jump through time. Since then, he’s been researching the possibility and learning everything he can about history. Just in case the opportunity arises.

PT was born and raised in New Hampshire and currently lives in Raleigh, North Carolina with his wife, two daughters, and a dog named Bob, daring to dream of alternate worlds and cheering for his beloved New England Patriots.
His latest book is the YA fantasy/time travel, Keeper of the Stones.

Visit his website at http://www.ptmchugh.com/.

Connect & Socialize with PT:

TWITTER | FACEBOOK

 

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First Chapter Reveal:

Title: Keeper of the Black Stones
Author: P.T. McHugh
Age Range: 10 and up
Paperback: 369 pages
Publisher: Glass House Press
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0981676804
ISBN-13: 978-0981676807

Jason Evans, a shy, introverted high school freshman, thought that his mundane life was all there was – girls, golf, physics, and the occasional bully. Until he found out about the secrets his grandfather had been keeping from him … a set of stones that allowed them to jump through time … a maniacal madman who used the stones to shape history to his liking … and Jason’s role as one of the few people in the world who could stop that man.
Against impossible odds, a fourteen-year-old boy must take up his legacy, learn everything he needs to know within one short day, and travel helter skelter into the Middle Ages, to join Henry VII’s fight against Richard III, end the Dark Ages, and stop the man who now holds his grandfather captive. In this romp through history, Jason and his friends must race against time to accomplish not one, but two missions.
Save his grandfather.
And save the world.


First Chapter:

LebanonNew Hampshire

Present Day

“Jay ….  Jason, are you listening to me?” Paul asked abruptly.

“Yeah, I heard you,” I lied. Of course I hadn’t really been listening. If I listened to everything Paul said, I’m pretty sure I’d have gone insane by now. Don’t get me wrong, he’s my best friend and all, but everyone has a breaking point.  

“If you stack your rotation with right-handers and no lefties, you’re screwed, right? How come I’m the only one who can see that?” Paul asked impatiently. By his tone of voice, I thought, this must be the second or third time he’d asked.

I cringed. This was Paul’s newest obsession: second-guessing the decisions of the Red Sox coaching staff. Personally I couldn’t be bothered, and I didn’t know why he bothered, but I played along with his disgust. “I don’t know, Paul.”

The truth was that I hadn’t been paying attention. Not even remotely, if I was being honest. Which I usually was. I loved Paul like a brother, and I’d usually go along with his crazy self-important fantasies, but my grandfather had just returned from yet another out-of-town conference, this time in IthacaNew York, and I was busy trying to figure out where he’d actually gone. He was doing that a lot lately – disappearing for days on end, to a place that didn’t get cell phone coverage. Or mail, evidently, since he never left hotel information, or a forwarding address. How could the city of Ithacanot have cell phone coverage? It was a university town, for God’s sake, and yet I hadn’t been able to reach him for three full days. It wasn’t like I needed to know where he was at all times, I argued against myself, but I’d be lying if I said it didn’t bother me. And asking Mrs. Grey, our neighbor, to check in on me several times a day – as he was wont to do – didn’t make it any better.  She was nice and all, but her never ending need to know everything about where I was or what I did was getting annoying.

Suddenly I realized that Paul was talking to me again. I gave myself a mental slap and turned back to the real world. I could worry about my grandfather later. Right now I had some real life to handle; namely, getting to school on time. I looked around, trying to remember where we were, and paused at the scenery. It was late October in New Hampshire, which meant that the leaf-peeking tourists were long gone. The leaves on the trees had all but disappeared as well, giving the dark gray mountains that surrounded our little town of Lebanon free range over the landscape. The sky was low and gray, and the air already felt cold and wet. It was actually a little sinister, I thought. The smell of burning wood filled the air, announcing the approach of winter as much as the remains of the brightly colored foliage. Everyone in New England said they loved the fall, but what they really meant was that they loved the two weeks of bright autumn foliage. After that, it was downright depressing. 

“I’m cold … it’s colder out than usual, don’t you think?” Paul asked. He tucked his hands deeper into his jacket pockets and glanced at me. Not that it would have mattered what I thought. I caught a smile at the corner of my mouth and stifled it. Paul’s questions were never actually questions. He was used to me agreeing with him about pretty much everything, and even when I didn’t agree with him, and said so, he chose to hear what he wanted to hear.

Still, he had a point. It was only October, but it wouldn’t be long before the town was buried in snow and practically hibernating. From then on it would be short days, early nights, and mornings so cold that you couldn’t feel your feet when you got out of bed. With my luck, we wouldn’t get a thaw until May. I’d spent my entire life in this town, and I still wasn’t used to the cold. I definitely didn’t like it. Snow was okay until Christmas. That was about it.    

That was my life, though. Boring. Pointless. Cold. Like any other kid, I had dreams of doing something more. Going somewhere. Meeting someone. Having an adventure. Having anything at all, for that matter. Not that it would happen. I’d probably be stuck here forever. I bit my lip, pulled my jacket tighter around me, and trudged forward. It was 7:30AM on a Friday, and my job right now was to get to school. Just like every other day of the year.

“What do you have planned for your birthday?” Paul asked abruptly. This was another of Paul’s trademark moves: changing topics abruptly, taking everyone else by surprise.

I shrugged my shoulders. “I’m pretty open.” No doubt Paul already had something in mind.

“How about bowling?” Paul casually bent down, picked up a rock, and tossed it across the street into the woods, as though nothing mattered. Which was what made me suspicious. That and the fact that we never went bowling.

“Bowling?” I asked, matching his casual tone. “Since when do you like bowling?”

“I don’t know, I was just thinking it was something you’d like to do, that’s all.”

I started to laugh. “Yeah, sure. Tell you what, how about we hire a clown as well?”

Paul’s face drew down into a frown. “Hey, I was just asking,” he snapped. “I didn’t know you were going to over react about it.” He turned away abruptly.

I sighed. Despite his outgoing demeanor, Paul was actually pretty sensitive. And extremely insecure. If you disagreed with him, he took it personally. Which was why I generally tried to play nice. Fighting with Paul was … unpleasant, at best.

“I didn’t say I hated bowling,” I said, trying to make it up. I wasn’t in the mood to fight this morning. “I just think you have to be under ten to have a birthday party at a bowling alley, that’s all. I mean, I think it’s a rule or something.” I was trying to stop laughing, really. Granted, I wasn’t succeeding.

“You’re an ass, do you know that? I was just asking!” Paul ducked his head and marched ahead of me, pouting the way he did any time I didn’t agree to his plans.

Then it hit me. “Wait a minute. This doesn’t have anything to do with Heather Woods, does it?”

Paul looked at me with puppy dog eyes, “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he deadpanned.

I snorted. “Yeah, right.” Paul had been obsessing about Heather Woods for weeks, if not months, and I knew for sure that she’d recently started working at the bowling alley. Besides, Paul never offered something like a party without having an ulterior motive of one sort or another.

I laughed again, then grew quiet. His question got me thinking. My birthday was only a couple of weeks away. I wasn’t really looking forward to it, to be honest. Not that I was opposed to turning fifteen … I was actually pretty excited about being a year older. But my parents had died three years earlier, two days before I turned twelve, and my birthday never failed to bring those thoughts and feelings back. They had died in a traffic accident, on their way home from a conference in Boston. I had blamed myself for their death at the time and had never quite gotten over it. I knew I wasn’t the one that physically hit them – a drunk driver had taken care of that – but I was the one that had begged for their early return. They hadn’t been scheduled to drive back until the following morning, when bright sunlight and a decent hour may have saved them. I’d been in love with my parents, though, and desperate for them to return. They had, of course, given in. And died satisfying my selfish wish. Counselors and friends – and my grandfather – had spent the last three years trying to talk me out of it, but I’d clung to the truth; it had been my fault that my parents were killed, and I would have to live with that burden for the rest of my life.

Birthdays always reminded me of that fact. It hadn’t exactly made them happy occasions.

Paul and my grandfather – Doc, to me – would want to celebrate my birthday, though. They always did. And I would go along with them, like I always did. Who was I to argue? I’d smile and laugh and pretend that the whole thing didn’t conjure up bad memories. Like it always did.

“Now that you mention it, I guess bowling doesn’t sound so bad.” I picked up my own rock and tossed it into the woods after Paul’s, then saw him smile out of the corner of my eye and turned to grin at him. He always won our arguments. It didn’t really bother me anymore. 

Neither of us spoke as we walked toward Harvey’s Truck Stop. This was our standard route to school, with our standard stop. Paul went inside and bought himself a large cup of coffee while I waited outside, watching the trucks come and go on their way to bigger, better places. Paul was the only kid I knew that drank coffee. He didn’t actually like it – and that was a fact – but it was another part of his persona. Another attempt to look and feel older than he actually was. 

I looked long and hard at the storefront window as I waited, and studied my reflection. I was a good 4 inches shorter than Paul, but not quite as thin. I grinned at that. Paul had the general size and dimension of a flagpole, so I would have had a lot of trouble being any skinnier than him. I turned to the side to view my profile, and sighed. Undersized kid. Messy, unkempt hair that would have made my mother cringe. Button-up shirt – buttoned to the top, of course – with skinny jeans and a coat that was about two seasons out of style. I wasn’t ugly, but I didn’t think I was ever going to break any hearts. To be honest, I thought I was probably the sort of kid that people overlooked. I blended in, flew below the radar. This was partially natural, and partially my own mask. I’d been working on it for about three years now.

Evidently, I’d done a good job. My grandfather had told me that I was the perfect model for the average American boy. “A Rockwell painting,” he’d said. I knew who Rockwell was, and I knew Doc had meant it as a compliment. In a way, that was what I wanted. But lately there had been a voice in the back of my head, whispering in my ear, asking me if I really wanted to be average. Overlooked. Unimportant. Wasn’t that like picking vanilla ice cream as your favorite flavor every time you went into the ice cream parlor? Preferring vanilla over the million and one other exotic flavors available?

Ironically enough, vanilla was my favorite flavor. But it was starting to lose its charm.

“Any plans for the weekend?” Paul asked from behind me.

I jumped, and realized he’d probably been watching me check myself out in the window for a while now. I hunched lower into my worn-out jacket, embarrassed at having been caught. And at the question. Paul knew perfectly well that I didn’t have any plans. I never had plans. Sometimes I thought that his asking was a form of pointing that out. Then again, maybe that was just my bizarre mood.

“Nope,” I muttered, stepping past him and heading up the driveway to school.

This was always the most interesting part of the walk, as it took us directly through the entire student body. Everyone who was anyone hung out in front of the school until about fifteen seconds after the last bell rang, displayed in all their group mentality glory. Paul and I made our way past the upper classmen, who stood clustered together in cliques. The jocks stood outside the gymnasium doors to the right of the main entrance, while the ‘untouchable girls’ huddled around a handicapped parking sign just to the left. The emo kids stood next to the bike racks at the end of the parking lot, smoking cigarettes, talking in low voices, and doing their level best to look mysterious. The techies, armed with Apple’s latest and greatest creations, were content to hang out beside the recycling dumpster on the opposite end of the entrance. For a moment I wondered what it would be like to be in one of those groups. To be honest, though, I knew that none of them would accept me, and I didn’t belong with any of those kids. I was the smartest kid in school, brought up on physics and history. I lived with my grandfather, a well-known genius and world-famous college professor. I dressed like a thirty-year-old computer programmer. I was, for all intents and purposes, a self-admitted nerd.

Paul, who I didn’t think ever worried about these things, shoved past me to throw away his (untouched) cup of coffee. I laughed and looked beyond him, to the entrance of our school. A large, ugly concrete staircase led up to four empty glass doors. The only attempt at decoration was a sign that read “Future Leaders of the World.” Somewhat self important, if you asked me. Having known these kids for most of my life, I also hoped that it was a huge exaggeration. Otherwise our world was in a lot of trouble.

***

I kept my head down as I made my way through the crowded hallway, trying to avoid eye contact with both teachers and students. In my experience, making eye contact encouraged people to talk to you, and that was usually the last thing I wanted. The result, of course, was that I generally got knocked around like a ball inside a pinball machine when I was in the hall. I also got stepped on at least three times a day, and always by someone taller than me. Through some bizarre twist of fate, though, I never managed to run into any girls. Only guys. Large guys. Sometimes I had a real problem with Murphy and his laws.

I got to the refuge of my locker – which I shared with Paul – bruised, battered, and disheveled, and heaved a sigh of relief. I opened the locker, then opened my bag and started shoving books into the compartment. I could never understand why we needed so many books for school. Most of them were worse than useless, and the physics text I had right now was juvenile at best. The thing was, though, you had to have your books in every class or –

“Damn,” I muttered, pulling my hand out and peering down into my bag. Nothing left there, and I hadn’t found the book I needed yet.

“What’s up?” Paul asked, looking up from the copy of Johnny Quest in his hand.

I slammed my hand into the door of my locker in frustration. This turned out to be a mistake, as the locker swung back, hit the locker next to mine, and rebounded right into my forehead, causing Cristina Patterson, who stood across the hall from us, to laugh. This, of course, just made the whole situation even worse.

“Nothing, other than the fact that I grabbed Doc's bag again, and I don’t have my Spanish textbook.” Damn it. This was the third time I’d done this. My grandfather’s bag looked exactly like mine, and I had a record of grabbing his bag, stuffing some of my books into it, and ending up at school with only half of the things I needed. This time I had ended up with Doc’s personal journal rather than my Spanish text.

“Not like it matters,” Paul said with a smile. “You don’t understand the textbook anyhow.”

“True,” I replied. I pulled the journal out of my locker and blew the dust off the leather-bound cover. At least it was the same color as the Spanish book – a deep blood red. I shrugged. “I’ll just bring it to class. Maybe Senora Caswell won’t notice.”

“That seems like an awfully big gamble,” Paul replied, grinning. ”Good luck.”

Paul turned away, laughing at his own joke. I cringed, but shook it off. Paul Merrell had been my best friend since I was five, and he’d always been this way. He wore hand-me-down clothes from his brother, and they never fit his lanky frame like they should. His mom cut his jet-black hair for him, so he usually looked like he’d had a run-in with the business end of a weed whacker. He was also the underdog in a screwed-up family. His mother was rarely home, and when she was, she was asleep or ignoring him. Or forcing a haircut on him because she didn’t want to pay for one. Paul’s dad had disappeared several years earlier, leaving him at the mercy of a clueless mother and monster of a brother. He made up for these physical shortcomings with intelligence, a sense of humor, and an independent streak that bordered on suicidal. He also said what he thought – all the time – and cared very little about whether he hurt anyone. And that included me. Paul was even more socially awkward than I was. I had never figured out whether this bothered him or not.  

 I snorted. “You’re a funny guy. I find it hard to believe that no one likes you.”

Paul shook his head and shut his locker, then headed down the hall. I followed him to class, my hand in my bag. I was in for a tough time if the teacher noticed that I didn’t have my book. But this was the third time I’d grabbed Doc’s journal by mistake, and my mind flew back to his recent prolonged – and mysterious – disappearances. As long as I had a book full of his private thoughts, and nothing better to do…
Hey, I said I was smart. Not perfect. 

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