Remember, folks: I have to sell the soap, from time to time!
The No-Campfire Girls,
a YA adventure—just 99 cents on Kindle and $5 in paperback:
Fifteen year old Beth Hamlin is horrified to discover her
beloved summer camp must go without campfires this year, due to the fire hazard
from a drought. But Beth isn't one to just sit (or swim, or boat, or horseback)
around. When her new cabinmate, Cassidy, claims a local Cherokee can do a rain
dance, she jumps into action.
All they have to do is trick the Camp Director into letting Running Creek do the dance, avoid the local bully and a flying arrow or two, and keep from getting caught plotting with Cassidy’s firefighter father on a forbidden cell phone. With luck southern Indiana will get a nice, soaking rain, and Camp Inipi can have proper campfires again.
But when things go horribly wrong, the whole area is endangered by a double disaster. Now Beth and her unit may be the only people who can save not only their camp, but everyone in it.
*A portion of the proceeds of this book benefits Friends of Latonka, an organization made to save a summer camp in Wappapello, Missouri.
All they have to do is trick the Camp Director into letting Running Creek do the dance, avoid the local bully and a flying arrow or two, and keep from getting caught plotting with Cassidy’s firefighter father on a forbidden cell phone. With luck southern Indiana will get a nice, soaking rain, and Camp Inipi can have proper campfires again.
But when things go horribly wrong, the whole area is endangered by a double disaster. Now Beth and her unit may be the only people who can save not only their camp, but everyone in it.
*A portion of the proceeds of this book benefits Friends of Latonka, an organization made to save a summer camp in Wappapello, Missouri.
Passing the word along, Mark.
ReplyDeleteMuch appreciated! I haven't been doing much promoting, which might just have something to do with why I haven't been doing much selling.
DeleteIt's perfect for anyone who is already sad the kids are back in school.
ReplyDeleteMy kids graduated years ago, and I still get sad when the kids go back to school.
Delete