Thursday, February 25, 2016

Book Blitz (YA Bound) : Sing Sweet Sparrow by Angela J. Townsend




Sing Sweet Sparrow

by Angela J. Townsend

Release Date: January 2016

Genre: YA Historical Romance

Spinning Broom Books Publishing



Summary from Goodreads:



With the odd disappearance of her parents, Gussie Gibson has lived her entire life with her granny on a peaceful pecan orchard, owned by the meanest man in all of Georgia—Mr. J.P. Combs. Granny teaches Gussie many valuable life lessons as a black woman growing up in the still-segregated south. Mr. Combs is an evil underhanded banker who takes liberties beyond his privilege. When Granny dies, Combs informs Gussie she owes him back rent—but he wants much more than money for payment—and more than Gussie can live with. 

After defending herself against his sexual advances, Gussie flees to escape certain vigilante justice when she meets a charming, handsome stranger, Sam Johnson, who is just returning from World War II. 

Gussie and Sam’s friendship is short-lived when Mr. Combs hunts her down and drags her back to Green Ridge, driven by his craving for revenge and a grudge too deep to comprehend. Gussie fights to return to Sam and his love, but it seems, no matter where she runs, danger follows close on her heels, in the troubled South where cruelty disfigures the human spirit and love is a dim beacon of hope.



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EXCERPT:
1945
No one on this earth deserves to
die more than Mister J.P. Combs.
Mister Combs is the vice
president of the Green Ridge Union Bank, and the nastiest man in all of
Georgia. He robs from the old, the poor, the sick, and the weak. Granny and I
been working for the Combs family for as long as I can remember. Granny taught
me how to wash their silver and fancy china so it comes out shiny, how to iron
the tablecloths, and how to fold the napkins just how Missus Combs likes it
done.
Missus is a nice woman. She
treats Granny and me right. On Sunday she takes her coffee into the kitchen
to visit with us after church. But not Mister. He hates colored folks. He says
we don’t know our place.
Mister never takes his eyes off
of me. It’s like he’s making sure I don’t stop to take an extra breath while
I’m working, so he’s getting his money’s worth. Granny and I tend the Combs’
house for just sixty-nine cents an hour. That’s a lot less than most maids. The
trouble is that Granny is old, tired and slow. Her feet don’t work so good no
more. We got to take what work we can get.
Mister comes home early every
Friday. He likes to lean against the stove while he peels an apple with a buck
knife. He chews the pieces and leers at me while I polish the silver. I’d love
to stuff that apple in his mouth and stick him in the stove. I gotta learn to
control my temper, sometimes it’s hard, especially when Mister’s at me. Don’t
know from one day to the next what’s gonna happen. Somedays I wish I could
explode and blow up the whole world.
Granny knows I got a bad temper.
It worries her. She takes me into Mister’s parlor and stares at me with her
brow all crinkled up. “Gussie child, you keep outta Mister’s way,” she
whispers. “I don’t like how he looks at you.” Granny shakes her head in
disgust. “You’re only sixteen years old. Don’t you let him get close. You stay
by me—you hear?”
I can’t look at Granny. My cheeks
burn with shame.
Granny takes hold of my hands.
“You listening to me, child?”
I nod. She leans in real close,
her bottom lip quivers in a two-tone brown. I stare at the wrinkles around her
mouth, and at her bottom row of teeth all worn down. I worry about how much
longer she’ll live. I don’t want her to leave me. “I see the way he’s been
looking at you,” Granny says. “Like you the hottest thing on the lunch menu.”
Granny lifts my chin so that our eyes meet. “If he comes round, and you
alone—you tell him you got chores to do.” Granny squeezes my hands tighter.
“His heart ain’t nothing but a thumpin’ gizzard. He’ll hurt you if he has a
chance. You stay away from him. You understand me, child?”
I nod again. “Yes, Ma’am.”
The lines around Granny’s eyes
soften. She cradles my head in her knobby hands. “You the only thing I got in
this world, Gussie. I done lost my boy. I don’t plan on losing you too.”
My lips tremble. “I know Granny,
I’ll be careful.” I cross my heart. “I promise.”
She hugs me round the waist, but
I don’t hug her back too hard. She’s so frail, I worry that she’ll break. I
press my face into her chest. Her heart pounds against my ear and I feel her
shaking. All this worry isn’t good for her old body. I don’t want to let go of
her. I bury my head into her shirt collar. She smells like shea butter and
sweet ginger. Granny runs her hand over my head. Her fingers untangle the curls
in my hair, the ones she makes with the pressing comb heated on the stove every
morning. Granny pulls away from me and sits down. She never sits at Mister’s
house. She looks so tired.
“Granny, you okay?”
She closes her eyes for a moment,
placing a hand on her chest. “Take me home, child.”
I help her up, and hold tight to
her thin hand as she walks unsteady beside me. My heart twists over Granny
working so hard at her age. How she worries over me.
We head outside and make our way
down the path through the pecan grove. The path is uneven and it’s hard for
Granny to walk. Her toes are twisted like tree roots with arthritis. I wish I
could carry her home so her feet don’t have to hurt. She holds onto my arm as I
help her up the front steps of the shack we rent from Mister.
We go inside but Granny won’t
rest. She puts supper on the stove, and waves me away when I try to help. She
lowers herself onto her rocking chair while the beans boil on the back burner.
Granny releases a heavy sigh, closes her eyes and stops rocking. I touch her
hand and she don’t move. I can’t breathe. My soul dissolves into darkness. I
know she’s gone but I can’t face it. I run to Mister’s house. Missus lets me
use their telephone and I call for help.
Half an hour later, Granny’s
church ladies come and take her away while my heart rips into pieces. I sit in
the dark staring at her empty chair, at her shoes, at the knitting needles
sticking in the ball of yarn. I close my eyes willing it all to be gone, for
the day to start over with Granny alive. I wish life could be like a chalk
board where you can erase the bad parts and start over. Hours pass with nothing
but the ticking of the clock. I look out the window surprised to see the world
still going on even though Granny isn’t.
After the funeral, I lay up in
the bed and pray that God kills me so I can be with my Granny—the only mother
I’ve ever known—the only person I ever loved. I don’t sleep. I don’t eat. I
don’t go to work. I just don’t care about living anymore. When Granny died,
something came apart and broke inside me. Fell off a shelf and shattered to the
floor. And I just can’t put all the pieces back together.
A week passes and Mister comes
looking for me. He’s mad that I haven’t been to work. He yells his fool head
off, saying I gotta pay the rent or get out. I don’t got no money and nowhere
to go. I don’t know why God don’t come down and take me to Granny. What kind of
a life do I have to look forward to anyhow. I don’t want to be stuck in some
white man’s kitchen the rest of my life.
Mister comes back the next day,
but I already got my bags packed. He looks at me and frowns. “Where you think
you’re going?”
I just shrug.
“You come on home with me. You
can have a room in exchange for looking after the house. You got that, girl?”
I nod my head. I don’t know what
else to do.
I don’t got no choice.
A lonesome sparrow hatches inside
of me, flies out my mouth, and pulls out my insides as it leaves, taking all my
happiness with it.
*****
Missus shows me to my room.
Mister follows and stands in the hallway, watching. Missus hands me a washrag
and towel, shows me where to put my things, and then pulls back my bed sheets.
“I’m so sorry about your Granny.
She was a good woman and I‘ll miss her,” Missus says. “Try to get some sleep,
child.”
She closes the door behind her,
but I hear Mister breathing through the thin wood. I get undressed and slip my
nightgown on as quickly as I can, wash my face and jump into bed, hoping he’ll
go away. As I close my eyes I see Granny, smiling at me. Tears fill my eyes and
roll down the sides of my face into my ears.
Later that night, the feeling of
being watched startles me awake. In the moonlight, Mister stands in the
doorway. Clamping my eyes tight, I try to shut him out. The wood floor groans
as he creeps closer. The smell of whiskey and cheap cologne fill the room. His
cigar breath comes in rapid, short bursts, followed by a wheezing rattle. My
heart jumps like a cricket and blood pulses in my ears. The bed shifts under
Mister’s heavy frame. I lay still as death, petrified, pretending to be asleep.
Mister leans over me, dripping
sweat from his forehead onto my face. I fight to keep my eyes closed. I don’t
want to look at him. He flips back the thin sheet. The bedsprings squeak like a
flock of birds.
“J. P., are you coming to bed?”
Missus yells.
Mister lets out a grunt and
curses under his breath. The bed squeaks again as he moves away. The sounds of
his heavy footsteps echo across the floor and the smell of whiskey grows
fainter. Springing from the covers, I close the door, lock it and slip on my
clothes. I climb back into bed, pull the blankets up under my chin and try to
erase what just happened from my mind. I stare at the moonlit ceiling, praying
that God will keep me safe or take me to heaven so I can be with Granny.
A few hours later, the
grandfather clock in the hallway strikes midnight, waking me up. Heavy footsteps
shuffle outside my door again. The doorknob moves slowly from left to right
then rattles fast against the lock.
I don’t sleep the rest of the
night.




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