I am thrilled to have the talented children's author, C.K. Volnek, today as my guest on the J.Q. Rose blog. I enjoyed reading her book, A Horse Called Trouble, so much, I contacted her so we could get the word out on this book you'll love. It's my pleasure to be a guest on her blog today, what we refer to as blog swapping. Please take a minute after visiting here to click on over to C. K.'s blog, the Mind's Eye.
Meet
Tara Cummings from A Horse Called
Trouble
Hello.
Oh, I thought we were meeting C.K. Volnek today to discuss her book, A Horse Called Trouble.
Sorry. C.K. asked me to
take her place today. My name is Tara and this is the story of how Trouble and
I met.
C.K. says I need to get out
and meet our readers. I do like meeting you all. I never used to be comfortable
meeting new people. I was always afraid of getting put down and pushed around
again. But now since I’ve met Trouble and moved to Freedom farms, I have found I’m
more confident and trusting.
Oh,
how wonderful. Can you tell us a little bit about A
Horse Called Trouble?
Sure. I was so happy when
C.K. decided to write A Horse Called
Trouble. It’s a horse story…of course. Lol. I’ve always loved horses,
though until I was sent to this horse therapy program I’d never been around one
in real life. Now, after everything Trouble and I have been through, I don’t
know how I could live without him. He’s taught me so much.
How
old are you, Tara?
I’m 13. I’ll be starting
high school in the fall. I used to be afraid to go to high school. I just knew
I would be miserable. I was always miserable. I never had any self-confidence
and got pushed around a lot. Now, after meeting Trouble, I think I can handle
it. I’ve made some friends and feel confident I can do it.
Good
for you. Where are you from, Tara?
I used to wish I lived somewhere beautiful and green, like some place out of a travel magazine. But I’ve always lived in this dirty city. With it being in the mid-west, one would think there would be more green. But not so in the part I grew up in. It was all concrete and garbage. If something did try to grow, it was choked out by car exhausts and people tramping it.
I used to wish I lived somewhere beautiful and green, like some place out of a travel magazine. But I’ve always lived in this dirty city. With it being in the mid-west, one would think there would be more green. But not so in the part I grew up in. It was all concrete and garbage. If something did try to grow, it was choked out by car exhausts and people tramping it.
Once, I found a bunch of
‘Little House on the Prairie’ videos in the dumpster out behind our apartment
and I watched them over and over at Grandma Kay’s. (She wasn’t my real
Grandmother, but I loved her as if she was. She took care of me when Mom was
gone or drunk.) Anyway, I used to dream about running in the tall grass like
Laura Ingalls does in the show. I never thought I would ever see that much
grass. But going out to Freedom Farm was like a dream come true. There is so
much grass and tons of trees. It’s the most beautiful place in the world.
At first I didn’t want to
be at the farm. I was sent there because I’d been set up. I didn’t take
Alissa’s purse…and she knew it. But it was just like her to get me kicked out
of our school for it. I learned a long time ago to just keep my mouth shut and
try to stay as low as possible to keep off everyone’s radar. Everyone expects
me to be trouble. Partly because Mom was a drunk and dumped me, leaving me to
fend for myself in foster care. I quit trying to prove to everyone I wasn’t
bad. I couldn’t win. Then I met Trouble. Kind of funny, him being named
Trouble. But we had a lot in common. And it’s because of him that I can hold my
head high now. I never thought I’d ever feel confident or find happiness.
Freedom
Farms sounds like a wonderful place.
Sigh. It is. It’s beautiful. I’d never smelled lilacs before I went there. Oh my gosh, I loved it! My first day, all the kids were gagging because of the barn smells. It was pretty bad. A guy was cleaning out some really raunchy stalls. But once I got past that, the smells grew on me. I even found myself liking the smell of horse sweat. Ha!
Sigh. It is. It’s beautiful. I’d never smelled lilacs before I went there. Oh my gosh, I loved it! My first day, all the kids were gagging because of the barn smells. It was pretty bad. A guy was cleaning out some really raunchy stalls. But once I got past that, the smells grew on me. I even found myself liking the smell of horse sweat. Ha!
The farm is just outside
the city, though it feels like it’s light-years away. It’s fresh and green,
with tons of open spaces. Wide open pastures and white rail fences. Horses of
all colors and sizes. Peaceful. And quiet. You can even see a million stars
from there.
You
talked about a Horse Therapy Program. What is that?
It’s a really neat program. In this particular program, they bring troubled kids and horses together. The horses are our teachers. I thought the instructor was so stupid the first day when she said that. How was I going to learn anything from a horse? But they do teach us—a lot. Horses could walk all over us if they wanted to, but instead they choose to work with us…if we work with them. They teach us about teamwork, respect and trust. I’ll never forget the first day Clancy tried riding. Clancy is one of the other kids in our program. He was not working with Homer and Homer let him know it. I couldn’t help but laugh. Yeah, that didn’t go over so well with Clancy. I thought he was going to kill me.
It’s a really neat program. In this particular program, they bring troubled kids and horses together. The horses are our teachers. I thought the instructor was so stupid the first day when she said that. How was I going to learn anything from a horse? But they do teach us—a lot. Horses could walk all over us if they wanted to, but instead they choose to work with us…if we work with them. They teach us about teamwork, respect and trust. I’ll never forget the first day Clancy tried riding. Clancy is one of the other kids in our program. He was not working with Homer and Homer let him know it. I couldn’t help but laugh. Yeah, that didn’t go over so well with Clancy. I thought he was going to kill me.
What
did Clancy do?
You have to understand, Clancy ruled Marvel’s. Or so he thought. I accidently kicked him where no guy likes to get kicked the first day I got to Marvel’s. I didn’t mean to. He dumped me out of ‘his’ chair and my leg just kicked him there. Anyway, ever since, he’s been after me. I tried to stay out of his way and hoped he’d forget. Except Alissa wouldn’t let that happen.
You have to understand, Clancy ruled Marvel’s. Or so he thought. I accidently kicked him where no guy likes to get kicked the first day I got to Marvel’s. I didn’t mean to. He dumped me out of ‘his’ chair and my leg just kicked him there. Anyway, ever since, he’s been after me. I tried to stay out of his way and hoped he’d forget. Except Alissa wouldn’t let that happen.
Who
is Alissa?
Alissa is a girl from my
other school. She hates me. And I don’t know why. And she is so mean to
Trouble, too. That was one of the things we had in common. I had to stop her
from hurting Trouble.
Tell
us about Trouble.
Trouble is a great horse.
And he’s so beautiful. He’s what they call a bay—red with a black mane and tail
and a white blaze down his face. At first I was scared of him. He was wild and
crazy, ready to kill anyone in his path. But I can see why, knowing Alissa. If
I hadn’t met him, there’s no telling what would have happened to him…or me for
that fact. He saved me as much as I saved him.
Well, I need to
go. Feeding time will be here soon and Trouble likes his oats. Thanks for
letting me stop by today. C.K. wanted me to remind our readers, we would love
to hear from them. They can find us…
…at ckvolnek
(at) yahoo (dot) com.
They can also
find her on Facebook (C.K. Volnek) or Twitter (CKVolnek), Good Reads, and Jacket
Flap.
as
well as other great on-line bookstores.
So, on behalf of
C.K. Volnek and me, thanks again. We’d love for you to leave us a comment.
Tara Cummings
BOOK TRAILER
BOOK TRAILER
How about an excerpt to tantalize the readers?
A Horse
Called Trouble…
The massive barn towered up, into the Midwest sky, a
prison of whitewashed boards, sunlight glinting off it. Might as well be barbed
wire. Tara Cummings blinked, momentarily blinded.
So this was
her punishment—horse therapy?
She shook her head, letting her mousy brown hair fall
over her face. Another time she would have been thrilled to be here, to see a
real horse, to actually touch one, not watch it on TV or the internet.
Her fingers tightened into a fist. This time was
different. This was a sentence of shame—for something she hadn’t even done. She
didn’t steal Alissa’s purse!
Resentment and desire burned as one in her chest.
She’d never have money or popularity.
She’d been born a have-not and the world was making sure she would always stay
a have-not.
A cool morning breeze blew across the farmyard, cold
fingers reminding the world that despite the sun and the absence of snow, it
was only early spring and summer was still a long way off. Tara
shivered and withdrew into her shabby sweatshirt, wrapping her skinny arms up
in its scratchy fabric. She should have tried harder to prove her innocence to
Principal Jackman. Should’ve made him listen.
A long breath whistled through her teeth. It wouldn’t
have made any difference. He wanted to be rid of her, like everyone else in her
life. Teachers, foster parents, her own mother. All too happy to wash their
hands and dump her onto someone else. No one cared. Why would Jackman be any
different? He couldn’t wait to ship her off to Marvel’s, the east side’s
alternative to regular school. Marvel was, after all, the best place to dump
all the 8th grade scum no one wanted.
Maybe this wouldn’t be so bad after all.
A leaf rustled
on the path in front of her, its dry brown contrasting against the spring-green
grass. It twirled and danced on the gust of wind making its way from the barn
toward Tara …along with the horrible stink. She
pressed a ragged sleeve to her nose. Eww! It was everywhere. Like a subway
toilet that hadn’t been flushed in weeks.
Who had she been kidding? This wasn’t some nursery
rhyme Old McDonald’s Farm. This was a place to be disciplined and chastised.
She pressed her sleeve hard against her nose. Her classmates were right—they
just wanted to make them clean up the stinky horse crap.
A horse screamed. A flock of sparrows took flight from
the tree next to the barn, swirling into the air, a dark cloud of feathers
chattering their irritation. Tara searched for
the animal and jumped as it screamed again.
“Whoa,” a man’s voice bellowed from inside the gaping
doorway. “Blast it, I said, whoa!”
A short, thick-necked man stumbled out, heels digging
into the hard dirt as he fought to hold onto the red horse dancing in circles
around him. He clung to the thick reins with one hand and pulled a leather whip
from his rear pocket with the other, snapping it at the horse with a loud crack.
The horse laid his ears flat, flashed a mouthful of
large teeth and dove at his captor, hatred sparking in his eyes. Stumbling
backward, the man let loose of the reins, surprise and fear flooding his face.
The horse spun around to face her, ears swiveling,
black hooves stamping and pawing at the ground. Rage flared his black nostrils.
“Get back, Miss,” a voice ordered from behind her.
Rough hands shoved her to the side of the path and a dark-haired man rushed
forward, grabbing at the horse’s reins. The horse reared, lashing out, black
mane rippling like a nest of angry snakes. The dark-haired man held on.
The horse blared again, his eyes wild, white rings
surrounding the black.
“Are you crazy, Richard?” the black-haired man yelled,
glancing back at Tara before turning his sole attention
to the horse. “You know we aren’t supposed to have him on this side of the
barns today. Beth’s therapy class is here.” He glared at the fancy
leather saddle on the horse’s back. “And, what’s this dressage crap doing on
him again?”
Richard stepped back toward the barn door, his face a
mix of stubborn anger and impatience.
“I had my orders, Sam,” Richard grunted. “Miss Jordan called
and told me to saddle him up. She wants to ride him.”
Sam pulled the horse down the path away from Tara , moving to avoid the dangerous hooves. “No way is anyone
riding him, especially not in this get-up. He’s not ready. And this
stunt is going to set him back even further.”
Richard snorted. “Don’t know why you’re wasting your
time on this stupid animal anyway.” He extracted a dirty handkerchief from his
pocket and wiped his glistening brow. “That horse ought to be shot. The only
thing he’s good for is dog food.”
Sam stopped and stared back at Richard, anger
darkening his eyes, his face turning almost as red as the horse. “I think you
better mind your chores, Richard, before I do something I might regret—like
tell Mr. McDonald you’ve been slacking on those stalls.” With a loud grunt, he
directed the rearing horse toward a small corral between the two barns. “Let me take care of this horse,” he yelled
over his shoulder.
Richard stuffed his handkerchief back in his rear
pocket, the end sticking out like a grimy plaid tail. “You wait ‘til Miss Jordan gets
here,” he scowled. “Then we’ll see who ‘takes care’ of that horse.”
Turning, Richard spotted Tara .
He narrowed his eyes and growled to himself. “Slackers. Beth’s asking for
trouble bringing these punk kids here.”
Richard pushed the open barn door closed, revealing a
large wheelbarrow filled to overflowing with filthy dirty straw. A black cloud
of flies hummed around it like bees to honey.
With a loud grunt, Richard boosted the wheelbarrow’s
handles and drove the smelly refuse down a winding path, disappearing behind a
large shed at the bottom of the hill.
Finally, with Richard and the wheelbarrow gone, she
dared to take a breath, coughing at the leftover stink, wishing she was
somewhere else…anywhere but here. She didn’t belong here.
Rejection bit at her.
She didn’t belong anywhere.
12 comments:
Welcome C.K. and Tara. I really enjoyed the excerpt you chose to share and Tara's interview. Of course I'm a fan of the entire book. I think teens will identify with Tara's situation. Thanks for being my first guest author on the I Love Books Blog event!
Great interview. I love the idea of speaking with the main character. :)
Sounds like a lovely read. I wish you success with your sales. I think the concept will go over great with the Tweens.
I have read this book folks and anybody would enjoy it! It has something for everybody!
It's a winner!
Penny Estelle
Tammy, I agree. Very clever to talk directly to Tara.
Penny, you're so right. This book is a winner!
Lorrie, you'll like it for sure. Just take our recommendation!!
Sounds so sad, heart wrenching even. Congrats, CK. Sounds like a great book. Tara is a wonderful character. I love her voice.
Off to visit you over at CK's blog, Janet.
What a great interview! Very moving and I look forward to reading the book! Tara, your story sounds very compelling, please congratulate Charlie for me on her success.
JQ, you have done it again, my friend. I wish you much success with your I Love Books Blog!
Very enjoyable character interview. I was a city kid who always wanted a horse. Never got a real one, but I love horse stories, and this one sounds like a winner. Best to you both, C.K. and Tara!
Greetings all. Sorry to be slow in chiming in. I am so honored to have J.Q. on my site today. And I'm honored to have this talented writer as my friend! Many kudos to her and her stories. Write on, Sister!
Thanks, Scott and Joylene. I never had a horse either, but luckily my girlfriend lived on a farm so we rode her big horse and a little pony. We would giggle so hard while we rode, we fell off the pony. Good times.
Thanks, Charlie. You are hosting me on your blog with such a magnificent title, J.Q. Rose, Author Extaordinaire.. Makes me blush.
Visit C K's blog at http://www.ckvolnek.com/4/post/2013/02/introducing-jq-roseauthorextraordinaire.html
Great interview, Charlie. I like that it is in Tara voice. Love the book.
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