Shucked by Megg Jensen
Publication date: April 14th 2013
Genre: YA Contemporary
Synopsis
Suburgatory meets Indiana Jones...on a farm
Fifteen-year-old Tabitha has had the kind of life that would impress even the greatest adventurers. She's escaped a croc attack in the Amazon, walked the length of the Great Wall of China, and earned a black belt in taekwondo in Korea. She owes her worldly experience to her mother's career in archaeology, but when her mother takes on a dangerous new assignment, Tabitha is devastated to learn she can't tag along.
Instead, she's forced to live on a midwestern farm with her grandparents where she'll have to attend a full year of public school. It's Tabitha's greatest nightmare, because despite all her adventures, she has no practical experience with the one thing that frightens her the most - other teenagers.
Her math teacher is her mom's old high school boyfriend, she can't tell the friendly girls from the mean ones, and she develops a major crush on a boy she knows she can't trust. And just when she thinks she'll never get the hang of this normal teenager thing, an attack brings the danger of her previous life right up to her midwestern porch. Who could have ever guessed getting totally shucked would bring her face-to-face with her most exciting adventure yet?
Fifteen-year-old Tabitha has had the kind of life that would impress even the greatest adventurers. She's escaped a croc attack in the Amazon, walked the length of the Great Wall of China, and earned a black belt in taekwondo in Korea. She owes her worldly experience to her mother's career in archaeology, but when her mother takes on a dangerous new assignment, Tabitha is devastated to learn she can't tag along.
Instead, she's forced to live on a midwestern farm with her grandparents where she'll have to attend a full year of public school. It's Tabitha's greatest nightmare, because despite all her adventures, she has no practical experience with the one thing that frightens her the most - other teenagers.
Her math teacher is her mom's old high school boyfriend, she can't tell the friendly girls from the mean ones, and she develops a major crush on a boy she knows she can't trust. And just when she thinks she'll never get the hang of this normal teenager thing, an attack brings the danger of her previous life right up to her midwestern porch. Who could have ever guessed getting totally shucked would bring her face-to-face with her most exciting adventure yet?
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The
experts always say, “Write what you know.” That’s a tip I’ve
largely ignored during my writing career. I mean, really, who wants
to read about the things I know? My life is boring! That’s one of
the big reasons I’ve always stuck with writing fantasy.
But
Tabitha’s story in Shucked is really a reflection of what I know –
because I grew up on a farm and went to school in a tiny farming
community. I didn’t live with my grandparents or have a
globetrotting archaeologist mom, but the flavor and lifestyle in
Shucked is 100% authentic. It’s what I know and what I treasure
most from my childhood.
In
Shucked I wanted to convey the hilarious realities of farm life while
mixing in the toughness that comes with growing up in a place where
everyone knows everything about everyone else. There’s little
privacy, but there is a whole lot of love.
And
speaking of love…I wanted to give Tabitha an unusual, unexpected
love interest. In the Midwest, you’ll occasionally find adoptees.
They stick out because most people in small farming communities are
whiter than bleached underwear. It’s not about prejudice, it’s
usually just generations of the same families for hundreds of years.
There isn’t much movement, or new blood, trickling into these
communities.
Alex stands out to Tabitha. As a
Korean adoptee, he looks completely different from every other boy in
the school. Yet Tabitha, who grew up traveling around the world with
her archaeologist mom, is used to guys who are exotic. Seeing him the
first day school turns her attitude on its ear. She has a lot of
expectations for what school will be like, mainly because her only
exposure to American teens has been through reality TV. She finds out
fast that while some of her expectations are completely wrong,
unfortunately a few are true.
Tabitha
has a lot to learn about life, American teens, and, especially,
herself. Her layers are stripped away one by one as she learns to
trust people. It’s not just because she’s new to attending school
or hanging out with teens. Every kid goes through this process in one
way or another while in high school. It’s part of the experience.
Tabitha just happens to come from a totally different world of
experience.
Author Bio
I've been a freelance parenting journalist since 2003 and began writing YA novels in 2009. I co-run DarkSide Publishing, am a member of SCBWI, and I blog about writing while juggling freelancing, volunteering, and family life. I live in the Chicago suburbs with my husband, two kids, and our miniature schnauzer, Ace.
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