You know when you go so long without talking to certain
people how it seems to get harder and harder to reestablish those connections? And
sometimes you never really do. Often though, it just takes getting past a few
awkward exchanges — Hey, so how’ve you
been? Are you still with so-and so? Still working at such-and such? — and
then it’s like no time has passed at all.
Well, my friend, how about we just skip all the awkward
catching up and ditch the many (however valid, but in the end irrelevant) excuses
and cut to the chase … I’M BACK… and oh, have I been busy.
So, I spent much of this past summer finishing the third
book in my Evelyn Hernandez series. Well, this fall I signed the publishing
contract with Evernight Teen and I have a projected release date of January
2020. It will be titled EVELYN ILLUSTRATED and it picks up very close to where
book two left off. Here’s the official blurb:
Around
school, Evelyn Hernandez is known as the Revenge Artist, or la bruja, the witch. She’s the girl who
out-bullied her bullies. The one with the long dark hair and blunt cut bangs
who only wears dresses and is forever drawing in her mysterious black book.
People say she can help you with your own bully problems … for a price.
Evelyn
is content to ignore the gossip. Let people think what they want. She won’t be
a thug for hire. But when a little girl is found running down the middle of the
street late at night in only her nightgown, the police enlist Evelyn to sketch
a mugshot of the child’s suspected abductor.
What
happens next sends Evelyn into a downward spiral of self-doubt. She makes bad
things happen by drawing them, but does it always have to be this way? Can she
use her abilities to create and not destroy? Can she be a voice for the
voiceless without losing herself in the process?
Without giving too much away, I can tell you Evelyn has a
chance to really evolve as both a hero and a friend in this third story. In book
one, The Revenge Artist, as a victim of bullying, her ability to make bad
things happen by drawing them empowers her, sure, but does it make her a better
person? And in book two, The Dream Diaries, when she tries to help other
victims of bullying, avoiding her abilities only leads her to new and darker discoveries
that actually endanger the lives of the people she is trying to help.
In book three, once again, the hero inside of her refuses to
remain silent. Her instinct to protect an innocent and defenseless child leads
her to fully embrace her dark talents, and when she does the results are immediate
and irrevocable. The question all along, it seems, is whether her gifts, even
when used for good, are still not more of a curse than a blessing. Can Evelyn separate
her artistic talents from her artistic powers? Is there a difference between
the two? And should she even try?
Besides all the superhero soul-searching, the book has
plenty of other surprises. There are several new characters (some friends, some
enemies) as well as a familiar ghost (of sorts) from the past. There’s more
art, more literature, more violence, more magic, and I even manage to squeeze
in a pep-rally, a swim meet, and a school dance!
Can't wait to share it with you!
All my best,
Philip Hoy
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