Release
Day Party Creepy Christmas
We’re hosting a release
day party for “Creepy Christmas”, a MG fiction book by author
Jaimie Admans. You can get the book for free for a limited time from
Amazon http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009Z2QOL8
(from November 15th to November 17th)
so get it while you can!
About Creepy Christmas
Title: Creepy Christmas
Author: Jaimie Admans
Genre: MG Fiction
“Strange things
are occurring in the neighbourhood. A mysterious snowfall, one Santa
too many, and eyes of coal that watch you wherever you
go.
Ten-year-old Kaity is busy trying to get rid of her mum's creepy new boyfriend and reunite her divorced parents, but her curiosity gets the better of her when she meets the new mall Santa and his enchanting daughter Blizzard. Can Kaity help them save Christmas from being destroyed by Anti-Claus – a pretend Santa who is a permanent member of the naughty list?
It’s Christmas in the village of Chelferry, but this year the snowmen can move, the fairy won’t stay on top of the Christmas tree, and if you listen closely to the musical Christmas cards, you can hear the faint sound of screaming over the Jingle Bells...
- - - - - - - - - -
Creepy Christmas is a 50,000 word (approx 200 pages) novel suitable for ages 8 and upwards.”
Ten-year-old Kaity is busy trying to get rid of her mum's creepy new boyfriend and reunite her divorced parents, but her curiosity gets the better of her when she meets the new mall Santa and his enchanting daughter Blizzard. Can Kaity help them save Christmas from being destroyed by Anti-Claus – a pretend Santa who is a permanent member of the naughty list?
It’s Christmas in the village of Chelferry, but this year the snowmen can move, the fairy won’t stay on top of the Christmas tree, and if you listen closely to the musical Christmas cards, you can hear the faint sound of screaming over the Jingle Bells...
- - - - - - - - - -
Creepy Christmas is a 50,000 word (approx 200 pages) novel suitable for ages 8 and upwards.”
Read an Excerpt
The next morning we wake up to white.
The world that is. Unexpected snowfall has hit Chelferry, and it’s
incredible. It’s a Sunday so we don’t get a day off school – we
don’t get snow very often around here, maybe once a year, and the
whole town literally stops still until it melts. School closes,
public transport stops, and shops close, either because the staff
can’t get in or because they realise that even if they did open
they would have no customers. My little sister Pippa is bouncing on
my bed at six o’clock in the morning, and for a minute I think I’ve
lost the past four weeks and it’s Christmas Day already. Then I
realise that she’s squealing about snow and it’s so dark outside
that I don’t even know how she can see the snow, let alone get
excited about it, but she does. I get out of bed and pad over to the
window with her just to get her to be quiet so as not to wake Mum and
Dad, and when I—
Wait… It’s Mum
and Seth now. Not Dad. How can I still forget even after all these
months that Dad’s not here anymore? How can I forget that on the
real Christmas morning, when Pippa goes careening into Mum’s room
and bounces on their bed, that Dad isn’t going to be there? I
wonder about Dad. How does he feel knowing that his daughters are
going to be waking someone else up on Christmas morning? Well, okay,
probably relieved given our tendency to wake up in the early hours at
Christmas, but still. The thoughts suddenly make the snow less
appealing. “I’m going back to bed for a couple of hours, Pips,”
I say sadly. “You should too, it’s early.”
She shuffles out of
my room like she can sense the change in my mood, and I can’t help
but wonder what she really feels about all of this. I’m finding it
so hard to adjust and I’m five years older than Pippa. Either she’s
too little to really understand what’s going on with our parents’
divorce, or she’s much more mature than we give her credit for and
she’s handling everything much better than I am.
I smile at the
thought of her and snow. An overnight snowfall is almost as exciting
as Christmas for Pips as she’s only just old enough to understand
that snow means school closure and playing outside for hours on end
and losing feeling in your extremities.
I stay in bed but
end up tossing and turning for a couple more hours. Just as it starts
getting light, I decide to take Harry for his morning walk early,
before every kid in the neighbourhood is outside having a snowball
fight. Harry doesn’t particularly like kids or
snow, so he can be a bit of a handful if the two are mixed. Mum and
Seth aren’t up yet, and I can’t hear any signs of Pippa so I
guess she went back to sleep too. Dad always used to be up early. It
was always a rare occasion to come downstairs to an empty house, even
on a Sunday. Dad would always be here because he said his body clock
was used to getting up early for work. I never realised how much I
liked coming downstairs to see Dad sitting at the kitchen table
reading his newspaper.
I sigh and try to
shake myself out of these thoughts. I’m far too melancholy today. I
grab my warmest coat, the one that makes me look like the Michelin
man, attach Harry’s lead and walk out into the snow.
I’m surprised to
see the street totally deserted. I stand on our front step and survey
up and down the road, and there isn’t a sign of anyone about. Okay,
it is still early and it is a Sunday, but I’m surprised not to see
any kids out here yet. Oh well, all the more space for me. I pull my
wellies up and jump off our front step, landing knee deep in a
snowdrift.
The snow looks so
beautiful as I shuffle down to the end of our driveway and let myself
out the gate. Virgin snow with no sign of a footprint makes the
picturesque street look like a Christmas card.
That’s when I
notice the snowmen.
How strange. I
guess I’m not that early after all as evidently half the
neighbourhood has been outside building snowmen already. Every house,
in every garden, there’s an almost identical looking snowman.
Almost the same in size, with the same tree branch arms, coal
buttons, coal eyes, and carrots for noses.
There is even one
in our garden, which is a bit of a cheek if you ask me, as I’m sure
Pippa would have loved to build one, but someone’s already done it.
Odd though that
there are no footprints. Anywhere. I mean, I’m the first person
making footprints this morning, and yet there are snowmen in almost
every garden, so obviously people have been out and playing in the
snow and probably just popped back in for breakfast. So why no
footprints? I try to puzzle it out as I drag Harry off down the
street, just to nip around the block so he can do his business and
then go back. I love the snow but it is cold this morning.
I try to glance
into some of the houses, but they all look dark still, like the
occupants are still sleeping with their curtains and blinds closed.
And then I want to
physically smack myself in the head for being so stupid. Obviously
the reason that there aren’t any footprints is because we’ve had
another snowfall since everybody came out. Fresh snow has obviously
covered up all the previous tracks in the snow. Epic facepalm.
Although I wasn’t really sleeping since Pippa woke me up, I was
just lying there thinking, so I’m quite surprised I didn’t hear
the kids yelling and shouting and playing in the snow. But that’s
beside the point. Every house has a snowman. I can’t believe all
these people were out here making snowmen and I didn’t hear a
thing.
I look at the
snowmen as I pass and suddenly I get a chill up my spine. All of a
sudden I feel very alone and small in the world, and I can’t help
but speed up a little in my walking. I’m not far from the house and
getting back there suddenly feels like it would be a very good thing
so I hurry Harry along.
I can feel their
creepy coal eyes staring at me. I know it’s my imagination but I
feel like the eyes follow me as I pass them. They’re all so eerily
similar to look at. Almost military and uniform in their build, and I
briefly wonder if maybe the families who built them all discussed how
their snowmen would look and synchronized them. And how did they all
manage to do that before eight in the morning and without me hearing?
I speed up so much
that I am almost running, not wanting to be out here on my own
anymore. I turn the corner into our street again, not surprised to
find it still completely empty bar the snowmen. I don’t want to
look behind me, I’m too scared, and where did that fear come from?
I feel that if I look back I will find twenty pairs of snowmen eyes
staring at me, even though I know that’s not possible. Maybe this
divorce is affecting me more than I thought. I’m clearly losing my
marbles if I think snowmen are watching me.
I’m bright red
and panting as I race up to our house, dragging Harry behind me and
still refusing to look back. I fall in the door and slam it hard
behind me.
“What’s up with
you?” Mum is on her way down the stairs, yawning and rubbing her
eyes tiredly.
“Mum, there are
snowmen everywhere. In every house.”
“Well, the
neighbours must’ve been busy.”
“No, you don’t
get it. There’s a snowman in every garden. Even ours. And we didn’t
build it.”
“Well, isn’t
that nice, Kaity? Obviously one of the neighbours has been round and
done it overnight.”
“I don’t know…”
“What a nice way
to spread Christmas cheer. I wonder who it was?”
“I don’t
think—”
“Pips! Kaity says
there’s a snowman, do you want to come and see?”
“Yaaaaay,”
Pippa runs out of the kitchen shouting.
I ignore her and
shuffle up to my bedroom. I sit on the windowseat and watch Pippa in
the front garden talking to the snowman, and Mum yelling at her to
come back and get her coat on.
I guess Mum is
right. I don’t know what’s gotten into me. Obviously someone has
come round and built a snowman in every garden during the night. It
actually is quite a nice way to spread Christmas cheer. And I suppose
that if the same person has built them it would explain why they all
look the same.
I don’t know why
they creeped me out. I guess I’m just reading too much into what is
quite clearly a simple explanation.
I glance out the
window at them all again, lined up perfectly in each garden, and I
can’t help the eerie feeling that creeps down my spine.
Jaimie
is a 27-year-old English-sounding Welsh girl with an awkward-to-spell
name. She lives in South Wales and enjoys writing, gardening,
drinking tea and watching horror movies. She hates spiders and cheese
& onion crisps.
She
has been writing for years, but has never before plucked up the
courage to tell people. Creepy Christmas is her second novel and she
hopes you like it!
Links
Website: http://www.jaimieadmans.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/be_the_spark
Facebook: http://facebook.com/jaimieadmansbooks
Twitter: http://twitter.com/be_the_spark
Facebook: http://facebook.com/jaimieadmansbooks
Creepy Christmas on
Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B009Z2QOL8
Creepy Christmas on
Amazon US: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009Z2QOL8
Get The Book For Free!
You can get Creepy Christmas for free
from Amazon for a limited time – November 15th, 16th
and 17th. Go get your free copy while you still can!
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B009Z2QOL8


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