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EXCERPT: One Fine Voice

  • 4 days ago
  • 3 min read

My first foray into singing was when I was five-years old. I sang in my Church's "Cherub Choir". I even remember the song, the moment we were being led into the sanctuary--everything. From then on, the musical bug was deeply embedded and as I grew up, I continued my interest in Fine Arts. From performing on-stage in community theater musicals until I was in college, singing on international tours, I fostered my love for music.


This past spring, I retired after teaching music for thirty-six years. And just when I thought I was really "done", a private Christian school was in my future and I'm still teaching music--but limiting my time to only two days weekly so I'm able to write.


Therefore, I'm more than pleased to feature a book about a young girl and her musicality. I would like to welcome Rebecca Langston-George to the Journal. Hers is a story about a young lady courageous enough to stand up for her fellow-man in an age when hooded KKK clans haunted communities in the US.


Welcome Rebecca, and READ ON, everyone!





ALL ABOUT THE BOOK


 

~All her life, Esther Hopkins has been told she has a mighty fine voice.~

 

Still, she can't believe her luck when just days after moving to town she's invited to sing a solo at the 1923 Independence Day picnic.

 

But the group sponsoring the picnic is not the benevolent fraternal order they claim to be. Worse, they've recruited her father, the town's freshly ordained Baptist minister, to become their chaplain.

 

When they target the immigrant family of her new best friend, Esther must risk her father's anger, the KKK's revenge, and her family's safety to follow her conscience, salvage her friendship, and find the strength to speak truth to power even if it costs all she holds dear.



EXCERPT FROM ONE FINE VOICE

By: Rebecca Langston-George



Chapter 1

 

“Esther,” Daddy called. “It’s time to go.”

 

I didn’t want to go.

 

I wanted to stay and even though it was the first day of summer, I wanted to go to Meadow Springs School and sit next to Dorothy Hoover just like I, Esther Hopkins, had done ever since my first day of school. Why, the alphabet itself had pre-ordained that we would be best friends for life!

 

But no one ever listened to what I wanted. My voice didn’t seem to matter.

 

When I finally climbed into the backseat, I pushed against my father’s battered old Army footlocker trying to make more room. But it didn’t budge. Just like my father. This move was all his doing. A promise he had made nearly five years ago in a trench in the Western Front. My father, the farmer, promised God he’d serve him and become a minister if he lived through the Great War in Europe. It had taken him several years and a lot of studying, but my father was making good on his promise.

 

Daddy started the car. Mama leaned out the open window to hug Dorothy’s mother. As Daddy pulled the car through the gate and onto the road, Mama and I turned to wave through the back window until we couldn’t see our friends any longer. Only Daddy looked forward, straight ahead, driving to Grayson, Indiana, and a new life. A new job waited for him there where he’d be ordained as the new Baptist minister.

 

What did the road ahead hold for me?



ALL ABOUT REBECCA


  

Rebecca Langston-George is the author of nineteen books for young readers including the globally popular For the Right to Learn: Malala Yousafzai’s Story. Though she’s long been known for nonfiction, One Fine Voice is her first middle grade historical fiction.

 

A retired teacher credentialed in both single subject language arts for upper grades and multiple subjects for younger grades, Rebecca is a popular school presenter for all ages, encouraging students to investigate and tap into their personal interests when writing.

 

She serves on the board of The California Reading Association and is the Co-Regional Advisor for SCBWI Central-Coastal California, helping other writers achieve their dreams.

 

She splits her time between California’s scenic coast and its agricultural heartland, writing (and mostly rewriting) at one mile per hour on a treadmill desk. Read more at Rebecca Langston-George | Children's Book Author.



CONNECT WITH REBECCA




BUY THE BOOK!!!


 ~For the BUY LINK, click HERE~
~For the BUY LINK, click HERE~

 
 
 

1 Comment


Cathie Dunn
Cathie Dunn
4 days ago

Thank you so much for hosting Rebecca Langston-George today, with such a warm, welcoming post for her compelling new book, One Fine Voice. Take care, Cathie xo The Coffee Pot Book Club

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