The Best Reader:
Viking

  • Tour Guest Post & Giveaway: Trafficked by Kim Purcell

    Tour Guest Post & Giveaway: Trafficked by Kim Purcell

    Kim Purcell has stopped by today to share the scary statistics of human trafficking. Her novel, Trafficked, explores the life of a girl in one of these situations.

    Sign up below for a chance to win a copy.

    When I first learned about the scope of modern-day slavery, I knew I had to write a novel about it. I couldn’t believe that someone could do that to another human being, especially in westernized countries. So, I wrote TRAFFICKED, about a girl who comes from Moldova to America to be a nanny and ends up a modern-day slave.

    People often want to know what the stats are behind modern-day slavery and sadly, due to the nature of this crime, it seems nobody knows. The stats vary greatly, depending on who’s reporting them. The biggest reason is that it’s such a hidden crime. Modern-day slaves are disposable. If they manage to escape, they have a lot of incentives to stay hidden. They fear their captors. They fear the government. Often, they come into a country illegally and they fear imprisonment and deportation. Maybe their family members have been threatened. Sometimes they’re ashamed. So they never come forward. This is why it’s difficult to get exact numbers.

    In any case, here are some stats, which most people agree upon, though they have all been disputed by different NGOs and government organizations.

    This information can be found in more detail on two anti-trafficking organization websites: Stop Child Trafficking Now: sctnow.org and Free the Slaves: freetheslaves.net. If you’d like to learn how to help trafficked teens, go to my website: http://kimpurcell.com/Help-Trafficked-Teens

    The Stats:

    Child/Human Trafficking is one of the fastest growing crimes in the world. Child/ human trafficking is the world’s second largest criminal enterprise, after drugs. U.S. State Department
    The global market of child trafficking is over $12 billion a year with over 1.2 million child victims. UNICEF

    The average age of entry for children victimized by the sex trade industry is 12 years. U.S. Department of Justice

    Approximately 80% of human trafficking victims are women and girls and up to 50% are minors. U.S. State Department

    Research conducted with Free the Slaves found documented cases of slavery in over 90 cities in the US.

    Human Slaves are cheap. In 1850 the average slave cost $40,000 in today’s money, presently a slave costs an average of $90.

    In its 400 years, the transatlantic slave trade is estimated to have shipped up to 12 million Africans to colonies in the West. Free the Slaves estimates that the number of people in slavery today is at least 27 million.
    600,000 – 800,000 people are bought and sold across international borders each year; 50% are children, most are female. Most of these victims are forced into the commercial sex trade. U.S. Department of State, 2004, Trafficking in Persons Report, Washington, D.C.

    14,500 to 17,500 foreign nationals are trafficked into the United States each year. The number of U.S. citizens trafficked within the country is even higher, with an estimated 200,000 American children at risk for trafficking into the sex industry. U.S. Department of Justice Report to Congress from Attorney General John Ashcroft on U.S. Government Efforts to Combat Trafficking in Persons

    Based on hundreds of cases that filter through their agencies, advocates estimate that domestic workers account for about one-third of the total. In other words, about 5,000 migrant domestic servants take jobs each year in homes where they are highly vulnerable to abuse by their employers.

    There have been only 100 prosecutions for involuntary servitude or labor trafficking since the passage of the 2000 anti-trafficking law. US Justice Dept.

    Trafficked by Kim Purcell
    Publisher: Viking Children's Books (February 16th, 2012)
    Reading Level: Young Adult
    Hardback: 352 pages
    A 17-year-old Moldovan girl whose parents have been killed is brought to the United States to work as a slave for a family in Los Angeles.

    Prize:

    • 1 winner will receive a copy of TRAFFICKED.
    Rules:
    • You must be at least 13 to enter.
    • Name and email must be provided and counts as 1 entry.
    • Extra entries are possible and links must be provided.
    • Contest is US Only and ends March 10th.
    • Once contacted, the winner will have 48 hours to respond.
    • The form must be filled out to enter.

    Website | Goodreads | Twitter | Facebook

    Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Book Depository

  • Interview & Giveaway: Try Not to Breathe by Janenifer R. Hubbard

    Interview & Giveaway: Try Not to Breathe by Janenifer R. Hubbard

    Jennifer R. Hubbard is here today to talk a little about her newest book Try Not to Breathe. It was just released last week and I can't wait to get my hands on it!

    Fill out the form below to be entered for some swag!

    1. Try Not to Breathe had a cover makeover. Can you tell us a little about the process and what your reactions have been as you've seen the old and new covers?
    The original cover, which appeared on the ARC, captured several of the book's symbols: rain, glass, waterfall. It was also a beautiful cover, pale blue with that dreamy quality. The cover that is going on the hardback is bolder, edgier, perhaps more modern-looking: it's a closeup of two faces.
    Authors generally don't have input into their covers, and I didn't have any say over either image. What the design team is aiming for is a cover that will make people look at the book and pick it up. I'm not a visual artist nor a designer, so I don't really know what will accomplish that. I only hope that people like what's inside!
    Because the change was made fairly late in the design process, I had bookmarks made with the original cover, and I have bookmarks with the new cover. I'm happy to provide both to people who request them!
    2. Did your writing strategy or style change as you prepared to write this novel — as compared to when you wrote The Secret Year?
    I was toying with the idea of writing a verse novel when I started Try Not to Breathe. The beginning of the first draft was a mix of verse and cut-line prose and prose poems, very different from the first draft of The Secret Year. I quickly turned this book into traditional prose, but (I hope) something poetic about the language remains.
    3. Can you tell us 5 words you would use to describe each character — Ryan and Nicki?
    Ryan: thoughtful, cautious, loyal, intelligent, self-protective Nicki: sympathetic, free-spirited, adventurous, assertive, curious
    4. What is the biggest lesson you have learned as an author?
    That's a very difficult question. Probably, I would say that the writing itself is still its own reward. Writing brings us many side benefits, and communicating with others through novels is a wonderful experience. But there's so much we can't control, so much that's a matter of chance, about what happens to a piece of writing when it goes out into the world. The writing itself is the starting point and the central act, and it's a beautiful thing to do no matter what else happens afterward.

    Try Not to Breathe by Janenifer R. Hubbard Publisher: Viking (January 19th, 2012) Reading Level: Young Adult Hardback: 272 pages A dark and provocative novel from the author of The Secret Year

    Ryan spends most of his time alone at the local waterfall because it’s the only thing that makes him feel alive. He’s sixteen, post-suicidal, and trying to figure out what to do with himself after a stint in a mental hospital. Then Nicki barges into his world, brimming with life and energy, and asking questions about Ryan’s depression that no one else has ever been brave enough—or cared enough—to ask. Ryan isn’t sure why he trusts Nicki with his darkest secrets, but that trust turns out to be the catalyst that he desperately needs to start living again.

    Prize:

    • 5 winners will receive a Try Not to Breathe bookmark.
    Rules:
    • You must be at least 13 to enter.
    • Name and email must be provided.
    • Extra entries are possible and links must be provided.
    • Contest is US/CA and ends February 7th.
    • Once contacted, the winner will have 48 hours to respond.
    • The form must be filled out to enter.

    Website | Goodreads | Twitter | Blog

    Amazon | Barnes & Noble | The Book Depository

Random for life: