Midnight Dragonfly Book Series Tour



Hello everyone!  Sorry for the delay in the Blog Tour posting, I had a family emergency.  I hope you enjoy Ellie’s Super Secret Special Content!

From Ellie:

So there I am one day, on the way to the dog park when I check Twitter and see someone has tweeted a review for Shattered Dreams. I thought about putting the phone down, but curiosity got the better of me (as it always does), and I pulled up the review…and my day got a whole lot better.

That’s how my path first crossed with Jessica’s. Since then I’ve had the pleasure of trading tweets and exploring her blog, and now here we are, the second to last stop on my blog tour, with an extra special scene to share.

If you’ve been following along, you know what I’m going to say (so you can skip down to the ***!) Every now and then a character comes along who spins a story in an entirely new direction. Sometimes these characters are planned; sometimes they’re walk-ons. Regardless, they’re not supposed to be important. They’re not supposed to blow up the plot. They’re not supposed to torture the writer. But, inevitably, they do.

Dylan Fourcade is such a character. He showed up during the last third of SHATTERED DREAMS, the first Midnight Dragonfly book. He was supposed to be a minor, secondary character. Yes, I intended for him to cause conflict between Trinity and her boyfriend, but he wasn’t supposed to touch her soul—or mine. Heck, there was a strong possibility he was going to die somewhere in the second book, BROKEN ILLUSIONS.

But from the moment I first saw him standing there, statue still in the shade of his father’s back porch, everything changed, and I wanted to know more. I had to know more. So did Trinity…and readers. I was blown away by the response to Dylan, who had such a small role in Shattered Dreams. By and far the most common comment about Shattered was…more Dylan, please!

So there I found myself with Dylan, with me wanting to know more about him, with Trinity wanting to know more, with readers wanting to know more…except he was like all Mr. Secret Guy. He wasn’t someone who would just sit down and spill all that he knew or was thinking, all that he felt. He had his reasons for trying to stay in the background, in the shadows, all of which blew up in his face as the story barreled on and Trinity’s precognitive visions put her in greater and greater danger. All the while I found myself longing to see the world through his eyes. However, since the stories are told through Trinity’s eyes, I never could.

Until now, and a series of five secret scenes…

***

Here we find Dylan at an abandoned theme park on the outskirts of New Orleans, sitting in decay and ruin since Hurricane Katrina…

 

He didn’t know how to leave her, not again. Sometimes that seemed all he did, all he was destined to do. Turn away, walk away. But this time was different. He wasn’t leaving her in a good place. He wasn’t slipping back into the shadows while she moved toward the sunshine. She was kneeling beside an old roller coaster, trying so hard to be brave, when he knew that inside she was dying. Chase was hurt. Bad.  He lay there broken and bleeding, hanging on with all that he had, for her. He needed to get to a hospital—fast.

He’d seen her, Trinity’s aunt. From his perch high on the rotting curve, Chase had seen Sara. And something else—someone. Dylan knew that as surely as he knew that Trinity was right. He had to go, to finish what Chase had started.

“Call me,” he gritted out, stripping every fissure of emotion from his voice. That’s not what she needed right now, emotion. She needed strength. She needed action. She needed him to turn and walk away, to find her aunt, even if doing so ripped at all those dark places inside of him.

“If you hear anything,” he said, pushing to his feet. “If a shadow so much as falls the wrong way—”

Her eyes met his, blasting him with resolve and recognition, with the quiet understanding of all that lay ahead of them, and all that lay behind. “I will,” she promised. “I promise.”

Something hard and tight coiled through him. Move, he told himself. It was time to move, but he couldn’t turn away, not with the tears streaming down her face.

“Hurry,” she whispered, pleading—begging. “Please.”

Detaching himself in every way that he could, he pulled the switchblade from his back pocket and extended it toward her. “Take this.”

Wordlessly, she did.

He turned then, and ran.

#

Broken glass crunched beneath his feet, graffiti swirled against the walls. Trash lay strewn everywhere, abandoned like the gutted, water-sogged remains of stuffed animals. Gift shops and cafes and restrooms, they were all there, just as they’d been before the storm. Waiting. Still.

Time was running out. That was all he could think. With each second that drained away, whoever had Sara had one more second to get her out of the park—or find Trinity. And he couldn’t let that happen.

A sound then, registering above the wind. Footsteps. Running. Slipping quickly inside an old snack shop, he lifted his gun just as his father came into view.

“Dad!” he whisper-shouted.

His father spun toward him, his eyes flashing with something wild and dark as he thrust out his arm, as if to stop someone behind him. But the moment passed as quickly as it came, and his father ran toward him.

“They’re here!” Dylan told him, explaining everything.

“We’ve got the place surrounded,” his dad told him, scanning, always scanning. He hesitated in the direction of the alley from where he’d come. “No one’s getting out of here without being seen.”

Dylan nodded, wanting to find comfort in that. But he couldn’t. Cops and guns didn’t guarantee happy endings.

Then the phone rang.

Adrenaline surging, he yanked it toward his face, but it wasn’t Trinity’s name he saw, just a number. A number he didn’t recognize.

He answered anyway.

“Aunt Sara!” came a voice—her voice. “Aunt Sara!”

His heart kicked hard. “Trinity?”

His father stepped closer.

The sound of breathing ripped in from the phone, hard, fast.  Desperate. “Aunt Sara, please—”

He started to run. He didn’t know why. He just knew that he had to run, to get to her. That something was wrong. “What?” he asked, sprinting past the blur of shops and rides. “What are you talking about? Did you find her?”

Dylan!” That was a scream.

The wind shoved at him, as if trying to hold him back, but he was so beyond that, being held back. “I’m here,” he shouted, not caring, not caring who heard or saw. “I’m right here. Tell me where you are—”

“Dylan!” she called, as if she had no idea he was on the phone, no idea where he was. “Aunt Sara! Where are you?”

For a second everything stopped. But that was only his imagination. Reality moved faster, sharper. “Trinity…” he said, injecting a calm into his voice, a calm he didn’t come close to feeling. “What are you talking about?”

But it wasn’t Trinity’s voice that answered. It was a different voice, a man’s voice, garbled, barely audible. Someone with her. Someone shouting. The wind distorted, but he made out a few words. “…mistake…”

“No,” she vowed, and this time her voice chilled to the bone.  “I’m not leaving here with you.”

“Yes, you are.”

Oh, Jesus. Oh, God.

Beyond the upside down Jester, the old roller coaster came into view, the overgrown grass where he’d left her.

Chase still lay there, motionless.

Trinity was gone.

“Not without my aunt,” she vowed through the phone, and he realized it, realized it as he sprinted toward the ice cream shop at the corner. She’d called him so that he could hear…so that he would know what was happening to her.

So he could find her.

“Where are you,” he gritted out, even though he knew it was pointless. “Tell me where you are…”

More garbled words: “…game over…I win.”

That voice….

“No,” she cried, and Dylan heard it, the way her voice broke . “I’m not. I’m not stupid, either. I’m not going to be your play thing until you get bored with me.”

Game. The word made his blood run cold.

He legged around the corner, spinning at the same moment he saw the movement from the kiddie area. Red and blue flags flapped violently against a series of twisted tubes. Beyond, old medal swings swung in an endless circle…

The sound of a single gunshot pierced his heart.

“Trinity!’ he shouted, running again, running always. And then he saw her, there on the ground, dragging herself away from—

He couldn’t see the man, not his face. But he saw his shadow, and he knew that he saw her, too.

Metal clanged against metal, and another gunshot ripped into the rush of wind.

A hundred yards separated them.

“No!” he shouted at the same time Detective Jackson’s voice rang in. “Freeze!”

 Ninety.

They both ran toward the swings.

Eighty.

“Trinity!” Dylan shouted, seeing it all play before him, every detail, and knowing he would never get there in time. He raised his gun at the exact same moment as the man in shadow.

Her eyes met his.

 “No!” he shouted.

Seventy.

Something dark and desperate flashed between them, a recognition they’d lived countless times before. “Dylan—”

Three shots rang out.

The man went down.

All movement stopped, all except the rhythmic swaying of the swings, and the blur of his own movements.

Fifty.

Forty.

Through a haze of darkness he was aware of Jackson ahead of him, shouting, of the brutal, animalistic cry of pain.

Twenty-five.

Of the way the detective went down on his knees and rolled the man away…

Twenty. Fifteen—

And then he saw her, motionless.

Ten—

Dark, blood-matted hair streaked against her pale face.

“Ah, God,” he cried, as everything flashed, and then he was there, dropping down beside her. Touch her. It was all he could think. He had to touch her, to put his hands to her body, her heart.

“I’m here,” he murmured, pulling her limp form in his arms. No breath moved through her. “I’ve got you.”

Always.

 

 

About Ellie James

Most people who know Ellie think she’s your nice, average wife and mom of two little kids. They see someone who does all that normal stuff, like grocery shopping, going to soccer games, and somehow always forgetting to get the house cleaned and laundry done.
What they don’t know is that more often than not, this LSU J-School alum is somewhere far, far away, deeply embroiled in solving a riddle or puzzle or crime, testing the limits of possibility, exploring the unexplained, and holding her breath while two people fall in love.
Regardless of which world Ellie’s in, she loves rain and wind and thunder and lightning; the first warm kiss of spring and the first cool whisper of fall; family, friends, and animals; dreams and happy endings; Lost and Fringe; Arcade Fire and Dave Matthews, and last but not least…warm gooey chocolate chip cookies.

 

 

Her next book, FRAGILE DARKNESS, is available from Griffin Teen November 27, 2012. 

 
About the Midnight Dragonfly Series

Glimpses. That’s all they are. Shadowy premonitions flickering through sixteen year old psychic Trinity Monsour’s dreams. Some terrify: a girl screaming, a knife lifting, a body in the grass. But others–the dark, tortured eyes and the shattering kiss, the promise of forever–whisper to her soul. They come without warning. They come without detail.

But they always mean the same thing: The clock is ticking, and only Trinity can stop it.
 


Find out how in Shattered Dreams, Broken Illusions, and Fragile Darkness, available from Griffin Teen!


Click on the book titles above to check out A Midsummer Night’s Read reviews of each of Ellie James’ novels!

Hello again! It’s me, Jessica. I just have to tell you how much I adored this series (notice I said SERIES instead of TRILOGY, because I’m holding out hope that Ellie will continue Trinity’s story!) and I think everyone needs to pick up a copy ASAP. 

Although, you are in luck!  I’m giving away the entire trilogy here on A Midsummer Night’s Read!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Book Review: Fragile Darkness by Ellie James

How do you stop someone you can’t see?

For as long as she can remember, sixteen-year-old psychic Trinity Monsour has seen things before they happen. But now, in the wake of tragedy, her visions have gone dark. She can still feel, though, and the danger she senses swirling around a new friend sends her into the New Orleans party scene, where nothing is as it seems, surprises wait at every turn, and the last guy she wants to see is the one she needs the most: the mercurial Dylan Fourcade, part stranger, part friend, part so much more.

It’s the so much more that confuses her. How can she be drawn to someone she barely knows?

But whether she wants him there or not, he’s by her side, shadowing her every step of the way, until the darkness clears, and a shocking truth emerges—a truth that changes everything.

After the emotional rollar coaster (I can only cringe at that phrase now) of Broken Illusions, I wasn’t expecting James to be able to top such a well constructed and intricate storyline… she proved me wrong. 
 
Fragile Darkness picks up a few weeks after the tragic end of Broken Illusions and the death of a major character, with Trinity unable to cope with the death of her friend. (I’m trying to keep from saying the characters name so I won’t ruin anything for you if you haven’t read the first two novels yet.) Dylan has been MIA, Aunt Sara has pulled away, and Trinity hasn’t been able to dream. 
 
I think that this book is arguably my favorite of the series, because it involved much more information about Dylan–who he is, his past with Trinity, and we finally learn some small details about his life.  Although, every time the characters mentioned that the Navajo was strong with him, I kept thinking of Star Wars: “The force is strong with this one.”
 
I’ve been able to relate to Trinity since the first novel, but she became much more than just a character in this novel, she seemed to become my friend.  I sympathized with her pain and confusion, and wished genuinely for her happiness (Dylan. *swoon*)
 
I get the feeling that Trinity’s story isn’t over, as James left many loose ends that could lead to a fourth novel (PLEASE? I don’t want to leave Trinity and Dylan behind yet!) and explore the power of the newly introduced character, Will. 
 
Overall, the Midnight Dragonfly series has become one of my favorites and I will wait eagerly for an announcement that the series will continue past this third installment.
 
If you haven’t read this series, I recommend you pick it up and start it as soon as possible.  If you have…then get ready for a great read.
 
4.5 Bards
 
 

Book Review: Broken Illusions by Ellie James

It’s Mardi Gras, but for 16 year-old psychic Trinity Monsour this is no time for celebration. Another girl is missing. Haunted by visions she doesn’t understand—of an empty street lined by crumbling old buildings, a terrified voice warning her to be careful, and a body lying motionless in the grass—Trinity embarks upon a dark odyssey she could never have imagined. She’ll stop at nothing to better understand her abilities, convinced that doing so is the only way she can make sure the terrifying images she sees never actually happen.

But it seems everyone wants to stop her. Her aunt is worried Trinity might discover secrets best left in the past. Her best friend, Victoria, is afraid Trinity is slipping away, her boyfriend, Chase, fears she’s taking too many chances, and the lead detective will barely let her out of his sight. Only one person stands by her side, and in doing so, he slips deeper and deeper into her heart—and her dreams—blurring the lines of reality and illusion. When the dust settles, one of them will be dead.

I was lucky enough to have a copy of this novel on hand as soon as I finished Shattered Dreams, because I immediately had to know what was happening to Trinity, Chase, Dylan, and Jessica. 

Broken Illusions is a novel to be read and enjoyed in depth, not just at face value.  There are a number of references and clues to the outcome of the novel that I would not have noticed had I not re-read some passsages.  I will say that James creates a complicated web of a narrative, and if you aren’t careful you might just lose your place.  I should know, it happened to me a few times, but after flipping back a page or two, I was able to grasp what I had missed.

This novel picks up not long after the end of Shattered Dreams, and we learn that Jessica is attempting to recover, that Chase spends time with her, and that it makes Trinity a little uncomfortable. As soon as one of her mother’s former friends goes missing, Trinity begins to connect with her and the chase begins.

James did an extraordinary job of leading me off the path of the perpetraitor and I was absolutely convinced that it was someone completely different than it was.  Trinity and the rest of the gang were equally as fooled.

As with the first novel, my only complaint about the narrative is some of the references to popular culture.  Why? Well, I feel that novels should be able to withstand the test of time so generations after ours can continue to read them.  References to popular culture can only bog down the narrative and cause future readers to not be able to appreciate the hilarity or cleverness of the reference.

I really loved how James incorporated Dylan in this novel, since we barely see him in the first installment.  I can’t help but say that I adore him and hope he sticks around. 

Excellent read and amazing narrative.

4.5 Bards

Book Review: Shattered Dreams by Ellie James

Sixteen-year-old Trinity Monsour wants nothing more than to live a normal life. But that isn’t as easy as it seems. Trinity is different. She is special. She sees visions, and for those she’s seen, it’s already too late.

Trinity arrives on her aunt’s doorstep in New Orleans with virtually no knowledge of her mysterious heritage. She begins settling into life at a new school and even starts making friends. But all too quickly her dreams accelerate; twisted, terrifying visions of a girl locked in a dark room. And when the head cheerleader, Jessica, goes missing, Trinity knows she has no choice but to step forward with what she’s seen.

But people believe that Trinity has information about Jessica’s disappearance not because of a dream, but because she is involved. She is kind-of dating Jessica’s ex-boyfriend, Chase, and Jessica did pull a nasty prank on Trinity. Revenge seems like the likeliest scenario.

Nothing prepares Trinity for the dark odyssey that ensues while searching for Jessica, including the surprising romance she finds with Chase, or the shocking truths she learns, not just about the girl who has gone missing, but the past that has been hidden from her. 

Wow. That is the first thought that came to my mind as I turned the final page of Shattered Dreams.  I wasn’t expecting this story to take my breath away and put me on the edge of my seat as it did.  How did I not find this book sooner?

The story takes place in a recuperating New Orleans a few years after the destruction of Katrina (and the events still haunt a few of the main characters) with Trinity who has just moved there in the wake of her grandmother’s death.  It doesn’t take long for Trinity to get the attention of the cute quarterback and his vengeful girlfriend.  Lo and behold, Jessica (the vengeful girlfriend) takes Trinity and a group of her friends to an abandoned “haunted” house.  They pull a killer prank on Trinity, and then two days later Jessica goes missing.

Trinity isn’t a normal teenager, however. She dreams of things that are yet to come.  She is in touch with the spirit of Jessica while she is missing. Such an interesting concept: the ability to see something bad and have to interpret it and be able to help prevent or solve the problem.

Along the way the readers learn more about Chase, the boy that caused Jessica’s need for revenge, and more importantly: Trinity.

I applaud James for being able to incorporate the storytelling and explanation of Trinity’s abilities through Trinity learning for the first time for herself. Brilliant. The story is addicting, the characters are extremely realistic, and the mystery and paranormal elements are breathtaking.

I hate myself for not finding James’ series sooner. Go pick up a copy now!

5 Bards.