Itâs not easy being the Queen Bee. Alice Taylor should know.
You know that girl. The one that the whole schoolâs social life seems to revolve around. Alice used to be that girl until she decided to quit sixth form college. Suddenly her âfriendsâ arenât so interested in following her around and her attention-grabbing behaviour is about to get her kicked out of home. With nowhere to go and no one to turn to, her world starts spiralling seriously out of control.
Only new friend Zac Newton seems to believe in her. Lifeguard and poolside hottie, Zac is quite literally her lifesaver. But then, heâs never met âMaliceâ, her mean-girl alter ego, and Alice wants to keep it that way. She knows this is her last chance for a fresh start until her past catches up with her at the worst possible moment.
As everything Alice has worked towards comes crashing down around her, she realises that the hardest thing of all is being yourselfâ¦
AURELIA B. ROWL
lives on the edge of the Peak District in the UK with her very understanding husband, their two fantastic children, and their mad rescue mutt who doesnât mind being used as a sounding post and source of inspiration. She regularly wows them all with her curious, hastily thrown together meals when she gets too caught up with her latest writing projectâ¦or five!â¦and she has developed the fine art of ignoring the housework.
Aurelia writes Young Adult/New Adult crossover fiction and contemporary romance. To find out more about Aurelia, or check out which project sheâs working on right now, you can visit her website: www.aureliabrowl.com
This is the book that didnât want to be written but with a lead character like Alice, I should have expected nothing less. At times Alice had me wanting to pull my hair out, refusing to let me inside her head, but she finally learned to trust me and allowed me write her story.
As ever, humongous thanks must go to my husband for keeping everything going on the home front, ferrying the kids to school and everywhere else and for holding the fort, especially in the run up to deadline when I locked myself away to get the words on the page. I guess I should also thank my children for letting me get on without too many distractions but itâll be a few years yet until theyâre old enough to read this book.
Massive thanks go to my fabulous editor, Anna Baggaley, for your patience and support while I struggled to get Aliceâs story on paper. Your feedback and guidance has been invaluable and your praise and encouragement has bolstered my confidence and helped me to produce a story that I am very proud to have written. But yeahâphew âIâm glad itâs all done nowâ¦until the next book in the series, of course.
Thanks also to my good friends Jo and Sara, for listening to me complain when things werenât going as well as Iâd hoped and for coming up with various ideas (i.e. bribes like advent calendars and Thorntonâs chocolate) to keep me motivated.
Speaking of friends, my ABCs have been there for me at every stage and I appreciate you all immensely. A special mention must go to Debbie Wentlein, of I Heart YA Booksâalpha reader extraordinaireâso please stop by her blog and Facebook page and tell her I sent you. Unknown to Debbie, I changed a characterâs name during the latter stage of edits and I hope Debbie likes the surprise. And then there are my âAnticsâ who pick up the baton and read the books I write and help to spread the word.
Iâd also like to give a shout-out to my fellow Carina UK authors to say how amazing you all are, especially Katlyn Duncan, Kierney Scott and Kerry Barrett for your input during the first draft. Thanks to the power of social media, a bunch of us are turning into a pretty tight-knit group made up of incredibly talented writers, across several different genres, and it is my privilege to consider many of you as my friends.
Many thanks must go to the wonderful staff at The Venue at Wimberry Hill for allowing me to explore and include their beautiful premises in Aliceâs story. I would never have believed such a place could exist had I not seen it with my own eyes; I only hope I have done the place justice.
And finally to you, the reader; thank you for giving me this chance to write the stories I love and for welcoming characters like Lena, Jake, Zac, Alice, Flick, Nathan and the rest of the crazy gang from Popping the Cherry into your lives. I hope you can learn to forgive Alice as you embark on her story in A Girl Called Maliceâ¦
To my husband, Al, for being my best friend;
to my sister, Julie, for being my first friend;
and to Leonie, Andrew, Jo, Sara and Shona, for being fabulous friends for lifeâ¦