About the Book:
Scar of the Bamboo Leaf by Sieni A.M.
Scar of the Bamboo Leaf by Sieni A.M.
Genre: Young Adult fiction, Contemporary RomanceAmazon: http://amzn.to/1q2UsEN“Her heart wept when she realized that the hardest part about loving him
was the idea that his love was never meant for her.”Walking with a pronounced limp all her life has never stopped
fifteen-year-old Kiva Mau from doing what she loves. While most girls her age
are playing sports and perfecting their traditional Samoan dance, Kiva finds
serenity in her sketchbook and volunteering at the run-down art center her
extended family owns.When seventeen-year-old Ryler Cade steps into the art center for the
first time, Kiva is drawn to the angry and misguided student sent from abroad to
reform his violent ways. Scarred and tattooed, an unlikely friendship is formed
when the gentle Kiva shows him kindness and beauty through art.
After a tragic accident leaves Kiva severely disfigured, she struggles to see the beauty she has been brought up to believe. Just when she thinks she’s found her place, Ryler begins to pull away, leaving her heartbroken and confused. The patriarch of the family then takes a turn for the worse and Kiva is forced to give up her dreams to help with familial obligations, until an old family secret surfaces that makes her question everything.Immersed in the world of traditional art and culture, this is the story of self-sacrifice and discovery, of acceptance and forbearance, of overcoming adversity and finding one’s purpose. Spanning years, it is a story about an intuitive girl and a misunderstood boy and love that becomes real when tested.
After a tragic accident leaves Kiva severely disfigured, she struggles to see the beauty she has been brought up to believe. Just when she thinks she’s found her place, Ryler begins to pull away, leaving her heartbroken and confused. The patriarch of the family then takes a turn for the worse and Kiva is forced to give up her dreams to help with familial obligations, until an old family secret surfaces that makes her question everything.Immersed in the world of traditional art and culture, this is the story of self-sacrifice and discovery, of acceptance and forbearance, of overcoming adversity and finding one’s purpose. Spanning years, it is a story about an intuitive girl and a misunderstood boy and love that becomes real when tested.
About the Author:
Sieni A.M. is a coffee addict, Instagram enthusiast, world traveler, and
avid reader turned writer. She graduated as an English and History high school
teacher from the University of Canterbury and is currently living in Israel with
her husband and two daughters. “Scar of the Bamboo Leaf” is her second
novel.
Website: http://sieniam.blogspot.co.il/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/illumineher
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/illumineher/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/illumineher
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/illumineher/
This is a very deep and serious book about a girl, Kiva, who could have very well lost herself in the black of the world, the anger, the storm, the despair, the everything dark, as she was dealt a pretty lousy hand as a baby and a child growing up. But her birth mother did one thing right, she gave Kiva to her sister, Naomi, as a baby to raise as her own and to care for and nurture, to love. Naomi and her husband loved Kiva and helped her to grow and see past her disabilities to her abilities as a awesome artists, and Kiva grew up a very happy child, despite everything life threw at her along the way into adulthood, as you will read, Kiva always worked through the hard times and never forgot her dreams. This is such a inspirational book on so many levels that it should be on everyone's to read list! This was a wonderful read even with all the books complexities, it worked to tie it all together and it shows how real life works not a fairytale life like in most romance novels.
5 STARS
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The
Excerpt:
The white van’s presence in the driveway made Kiva’s heart thud against her ribs, and a mysterious anticipation
settled over her. Hobbling into the house, she carried out her chores with
efficiency, hanging the laundry on the line and checking on Masi’s bowl while
stealing curious glances at the art center.
After a long pause, she decided to enter it.
Poised along the far wall to avoid distraction, Kiva perused the
students scattered around the room, heads and shoulders bent over their wood
carvings, the clink and thud of the chisel and mallet competing over each other.
Mau paced his time with each student evenly, making his way around, offering
guidance when needed. Kiva couldn’t make out his words from where she sat, only
a few low mutterings accompanied by the shake or nod of his
head.
Her eyes strayed until they settled on the boy with the mysterious
tattoo. Ryler. Her suspicions were correct about his work when she noticed the
slab of wood with the sliced words in front of him. He hadn’t spoken a word to
any of the other boys, didn’t acknowledge them, and they avoided him too, as if
he’d erected an invisible wall and they were aware of it.
Her uncle had no problem stepping through it though. He was with
him now, speaking in low tones and gesturing to his work. What was he saying?
Kiva strained to hear, but nothing came to her over the cacophony of sounds in
the room. A muscle in Ryler’s jaw ticked as he sat, head bent, listening to him.
Mau remained with him for some time, talking and listening, acknowledging the
need to spend more time. Finally, he gave him a tap on the shoulder and a
satisfied nod before moving away.
Kiva noticed when Ryler picked up a carving knife, pausing in
concentration, his face tentative and contemplative, before he met it with wood,
the muscles in his broad back contorting and flexing from the grip and release
of the tool. What had he decided to carve? Kiva wanted to inch her way forward
to find out but kept herself firmly planted. An hour passed and still she sat
riveted to her spot.
A couple sharp drops on the roof were the only warning to the
torrential downpour that followed.
“Makiva!” Hana’s voice shouted from across the yard and made her jump.
“It’s raining! Get the laundry!”
Kiva scrambled off the floor, the noise drawing attention, and
limped as quickly as she could to the line. The knifelike raindrops hit her on
the back, stinging, and soaked through her shirt. Ignoring the pricks, she
rushed to unpeg each piece of clothing, throwing it in the bucket and returning
for more. The rain came down harder and faster, blurring her eyesight, the sound
of a thunderclap roaring in her ears. Tea towels, Mau’s shirt, Hana’s school
skirt. Breathless, her quick movements had long ago uncoiled her hair, wild and
swirling in the wind; the pencil slipped out, lost somewhere. She was nearing
the end of the line, grappling with a sheet, when she glanced up and noticed the
boys running from the center to the van, their lesson over.
Ryler appeared last through the door, his brown eyes trained on
her, and descended the stairs with heavy, deliberate steps. Kiva stared wide
eyed as he stepped into the rain and came toward her with unhurried, even
strides. She watched as raindrops pelted his gray shirt, soaking through to his
shoulders until the wet dots spread and connected.
When he was a foot away, he lifted his hand.
“You dropped this,” he said, his voice low and hoarse, as if he
was just getting over a cold. He smelled of wood dust and
sweat.
She glanced down at his hand and saw the pencil she used to pin up
her hair. It must have fallen in the art center in her haste to get to the
laundry. Reaching for it, she noticed the deep scars on his left wrist and
paused. From this close they looked even worse.
“It’s not what you think,” he answered, interpreting her
thoughts.
Kiva snapped her eyes to his face. His brown eyes penetrated hers,
thick lashes dripping from the rain, a line formed between his eyebrows. She
tried not to fidget under his gaze and glanced to the right of his face. She saw
a scar near his eye, something she hadn’t noticed before.
She calmly returned her gaze to him. “And what do I
think?”
Ryler took a step closer. “You think that I did this to myself on
purpose.”
“Did you?” She breathed.
He shook his head. “It was from a fight. The other guy had a
broken bottle and I tried to block him.”
Kiva hissed as if she had been the one cut open and bleeding. Her
eyes found the scar again and her stomach plummeted at the thought of the pain
it must have caused. She felt suddenly light-headed and blinked to clear the
blur clouding her mind.
“Are you alright?” he asked, concern laced in his
voice.
She took slow, even breaths and nodded her head.
The sound of the van’s horn blared from the drive
way.
“Ryler! Hurry up, we’re going!” A superior impatiently gestured
for him in the rain.
“You better go,” Kiva said hastily. “Thanks for returning this.”
She took the pencil from his hand and curled her fingers around
it.
Ryler remained unmoving. Why wasn’t he going? Did he want to get
into trouble? He finally stepped away and turned, jogging over to the waiting
van, his shirt now drenched through and stuck to his retreating
back.
Great review! Thanks for being on the Scar of the Bamboo Leaf tour, Trish!
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