Sweet Tea
By Author: Wendy Lynn Decker
Published by; Booktrope
Release Date: 10.20.15
By Author: Wendy Lynn Decker
Published by; Booktrope
Release Date: 10.20.15
Blurb:
The fourth
anniversary of Olivia’s daddy and John Lennon’s death is approaching.
Like the shot heard ’round the world, TV and radio stations keep the
frenzy alive and recognize Lennon’s life, while Olivia’s mama remembers Daddy’s
death. Instead of healing, Mama’s strange behavior keeps getting worse.
After viewing an afternoon talk show, Olivia discovers her mother
might have more than a case of eccentricity – she may be mentally ill.
When those fears are confirmed, Olivia is faced with more decisions than
any sixteen-year-old should have to make. With no adult family members to
turn to, she is forced to trust the only people who’ve offered help: one
strange man and a friend her mother makes at the mental institution.
Facing the intricacies of her mother’s illness one minute and the
decision to have sex with her new boyfriend the next, Olivia finds that through
faith and determination, she can conquer it all in this poignant story of love,
intuition, compassion, and hope.
Early Reviewer Thoughts:
“In this
day and age, society still finds it difficult to face the challenges families
encounter that are living with a mentally ill parent. Ms. Decker’s novel brings
these issues to light in a realistic manner that engages readers as well as
helps them understand certain traits to look for should they face this type of
situation.”
–Christine Harris, Co-President – Middlesex County NAMI
–Christine Harris, Co-President – Middlesex County NAMI
“Wendy
Lynn Decker has a very unique and talented gift of writing. I really enjoyed
the down home style that assimilates a Tom Sawyer genre and I wouldn’t be
surprised if this book became recommended reading for contemporary school
systems… “
-Ray Costa, LPC, LCADC, NCC
-Ray Costa, LPC, LCADC, NCC
“Sweet Tea
is a fine young adult story…So many titles on mental illness narrow the focus
to coping and neglect the overall bigger picture of how home life with mental
illness can interact with a wider world outside home’s front door”
-D. Donovan, Book Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
-D. Donovan, Book Reviewer, Midwest Book Review
Decker
brings to life the chaos, confusion and poignancy of loving and living with a
mentally ill mother. I couldn’t stop reading, even when my heart was aching and
my brain was cringing.”
– Shari Sanford, Paperback Exchange Bookstore, Belmar, NJ
– Shari Sanford, Paperback Exchange Bookstore, Belmar, NJ
Excerpt 2
p. 30
The emergency room at Henry Medical Center smelled like cigarette smoke and
urine washed over with antiseptic. I’d never been there before, and I didn’t
expect to see so many people that resembled those with the symptoms the doctor
on the talk show spoke about. Although most needed physical care, many seemed
to need mental health care, and this wasn’t a mental hospital.
Some of the people roamed about like zombies in B-movies. Their vacant stares
said, “I’m still here, please come find me.” Many of the patients were pacing,
as if they were taking part in some kind of ritual. Some shouted words at
random. One woman seemed to be speaking in a language only she could
understand. I was afraid to make eye contact with anyone, for fear someone
would approach me. But I knew I had to look around the room.
An old woman with only one-half of her head braided asked me for a cigarette.
One already hung from her twisted lips. It felt like we had wandered into a
secret society meeting, and we had better find Mama and get out while we could.
I overheard one of the nurses say to another, “It must be a full moon tonight.”
“My goodness,” the other nurse responded. “I haven’t seen it like this in quite
some time. That strong lunar force is drawing them out like vampires to a blood
bank.”
CeCe and I approached the desk. “Excuse me, ma’am,” CeCe said to the desk
clerk. “The police told us a woman that fits our mother’s description has been
brought here.”
“What’s
her name?”
“Cassandra Travis,” I answered, surprised at how faint my voice sounded.
She thumbed through
her roster. “The police brought in a Jane Doe. We’ve been asking her name, but
she won’t tell us.” The clerk motioned toward a nurse. “They’re here to see
Jane Doe in room twelve.”
The nurse nodded and said, “Follow me.”
I thought of Luke and was glad we’d left him at home.
CeCe and I followed the nurse down a long corridor. Blue curtains covered
doorways on each side. We approached the last room on the left, and the nurse
pulled a chart from a hook on the wall. She opened the curtain. “This is Jane
Doe.”
Bio:
Wendy Lynn Decker has lived in thirteen different towns in the
state of New Jersey. Now, she lives a bike ride away from the ocean and her
favorite restaurant. She is the author of the middle-grade chapter book, THE
BEDAZZLING BOWL, which is the first book intended for a series.
Find her here:
—
If you would like to review Sweet Tea, I would love to provide you
with an e-book in exchange for a review on Amazon/Blogs/GoodReads.
Email me at aimee.brown@booktrope.com
Email me at aimee.brown@booktrope.com
0 comments:
Post a Comment