I'm so excited to welcome back Pintip Dunn, a Golden Heart sister, to Get Lost in a Story! If you haven't read her RITA Finalist debut FORGET TOMORROW run, don't walk, to grab it! But today we're talking about Pintip's latest book THE DARKEST LIE - which released this week.
Before we get to the good stuff--don't forget to comment below for a chance to win a Kindle copy of FORGET TOMORROW her stunning debut.
MEET PINTIP DUNN
Pintip Dunn graduated from Harvard University, magna cum laude, with an A.B. in English Literature and Language. She received her J.D. at Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the YALE LAW JOURNAL. She also published an article in the YALE LAW JOURNAL, entitled, “How Judges Overrule: Speech Act Theory and the Doctrine of Stare Decisis.”
Before we get to the good stuff--don't forget to comment below for a chance to win a Kindle copy of FORGET TOMORROW her stunning debut.
MEET PINTIP DUNN
Pintip Dunn graduated from Harvard University, magna cum laude, with an A.B. in English Literature and Language. She received her J.D. at Yale Law School, where she was an editor of the YALE LAW JOURNAL. She also published an article in the YALE LAW JOURNAL, entitled, “How Judges Overrule: Speech Act Theory and the Doctrine of Stare Decisis.”
Pintip is represented by literary agent Beth Miller of Writers House. She is a 2012 RWA Golden Heart® finalist and a 2014 double-finalist. She is a member of Romance Writers of America, Washington Romance Writers, YARWA, and The Golden Network.
Nan: Impressive credientials!
Let's talk about THE DARKEST LIE.
THE STORY BLURB
Is it better
to live with a lie, or risk everything for the truth?
In Pintip Dunn’s gripping and timely novel, a young woman whose life unravels in the wake of her mother’s alleged suicide sets out to clear her name.
“The mother I knew would never do those things. But maybe I never knew her after all.”
Clothes, jokes, coded messages…Cecilia Brooks and her mom shared everything. At least, CeCe thought they did. Six months ago, her mom killed herself after accusations of having sex with a student, and CeCe’s been the subject of whispers and taunts ever since. Now, at the start of her high school senior year, between dealing with her grieving, distracted father, and the social nightmare that has become her life, CeCe just wants to fly under the radar. Instead, she’s volunteering at the school’s crisis hotline—the same place her mother worked.
As she counsels troubled strangers, CeCe’s lingering suspicions about her mom’s death resurface. With the help of Sam, a new student and newspaper intern, she starts to piece together fragmented clues that point to a twisted secret at the heart of her community. Soon, finding the truth isn’t just a matter of restoring her mother’s reputation, it’s about saving lives—including CeCe’s own…Nan: I started the book last night. I love it!
In Pintip Dunn’s gripping and timely novel, a young woman whose life unravels in the wake of her mother’s alleged suicide sets out to clear her name.
“The mother I knew would never do those things. But maybe I never knew her after all.”
Clothes, jokes, coded messages…Cecilia Brooks and her mom shared everything. At least, CeCe thought they did. Six months ago, her mom killed herself after accusations of having sex with a student, and CeCe’s been the subject of whispers and taunts ever since. Now, at the start of her high school senior year, between dealing with her grieving, distracted father, and the social nightmare that has become her life, CeCe just wants to fly under the radar. Instead, she’s volunteering at the school’s crisis hotline—the same place her mother worked.
As she counsels troubled strangers, CeCe’s lingering suspicions about her mom’s death resurface. With the help of Sam, a new student and newspaper intern, she starts to piece together fragmented clues that point to a twisted secret at the heart of her community. Soon, finding the truth isn’t just a matter of restoring her mother’s reputation, it’s about saving lives—including CeCe’s own…Nan: I started the book last night. I love it!
READ A LITTLE
It’s time to view the body. Family first.
Well, technically, me first. There was always only three of
us in the nuclear unit, and Dad’s been locked in the den for the past
seventy-two hours. I’ve only seen him once, when he shuffled upstairs like a
pajama-clad zombie and asked me if I’d eaten.
That was it: Did you eat?
Not: I prefer the cherry wood casket. Or: Let me make your
grandma’s travel arrangements. Or even: I know this was Mom’s favorite dress,
but isn’t the neckline a little...low?
Did I eat?
Yes, Dad. I had soup from the can and microwaved pizza rolls
and a bowl of cereal. The food sloshes in my stomach now as I walk down the
runner to the casket I picked out because of its mauve tint.
Calla lilies pile in urns around the viewing room, and the
air-conditioning wars with the sweat along my hairline. My mom smiles at me
from a portrait erected behind the casket. Her eyes are hesitant and a little
wary, as if she knew, somehow, some way, she would wind up here. Lifeless.
Pumped full of formaldehyde. About to be gawked at by a town full of gossips.
This was only going to end one of two ways—with Tabitha
Brooks dead or in jail. I never thought I’d say this, but I’d give anything to
see my mother behind bars.
I wade through the dense, chilly air and stop a few feet from
the body. Behind me, my grandmother and aunt sit, a box of tissues between
them, blowing their noses like it’s a sport.
“Look at our Cecilia,” Gram sniffs. “So brave. Not a single
tear shed.”
If she only knew. I’m not brave. Fifteen minutes ago, I was
retching into the toilet bowl. Five minutes from now, when the doors open for
the visitation, I’ll be long gone, leaving Gram to shake people’s hands and
deal with the bit lips, the knowing eyebrows, that inevitable
speaking-in-a-funeral-parlor whisper. I can hear the titters: “Is it true?
Tabitha’s heart stopped while she was boffing the high school quarterback? Why,
she must’ve been twenty years his senior!”
Twenty-three years, to be exact, and a high school English
teacher to boot. But she didn’t actually die during sex. Instead, a few days
after Tommy Farrow came forward with their affair, my mother took her own life.
What could be a clearer admission of guilt? She might as well
have been caught in the act. The investigation was shut down before it even
began.
I take a shuddering breath. Two more minutes. A hundred and
twenty seconds and then I can leave. I steel my shoulders and walk the final
steps to my mother’s body.
Oh god. It’s even worse than I thought.
The room whirls around me, and nausea sprints up my throat.
My hands shoot out to grab the casket, stopping short of actually touching the
corpse.
This . . . this thing . . . can’t be my mother. She never
smiled like that, all serene and peaceful-like. She never wore this much
makeup; her red hair was never chopped so closely to her head. My mother was
chaos and passion, devastation and joy. Dad used to say you could reach deep
into her eyes and pull out a song.
Well, her eyes are closed now, and I’m not sure there’ll be
any music in my life, ever again.
Nan: I missed the significance of her mother's hair when I started the book. (You will all have to buy the book to find out what I'm talking about!)
BUY THE BOOK
Add THE DARKEST LIE to your GoodReads shelf.
A LIGHTING ROUND OF Q&A WITH PINTIP DUNN
NAN: How often do you get lost in a story?
PINTIP: I am (in my opinion!) a writer's dream reader.
I very, very, very frequently get lost in a story. It used to be that I would
read nearly every book in one sitting, simply because I could not put the story
-- any story! -- down. This has changed since I've had three kids because I
simply don't have time. Still, probably three or four times a year, I find a
book that falls into this category. The
holy-crap-it's-3-am-what-am-I-doing-I-have-to-get-up-early-oh-well-gotta-see-how-this-ends
category. Of course, this number doesn't include the times I scold myself,
"Put the book down. I mean it. Back slowly away from that
book!"
Nan: I know what you mean!
PINTIP: Ha! This question is very timely because I just finished a book
two days ago! (Girl in Between, out next July.) So the first thing I did was
text a few of my writing friends, who have been following along with my goals
and cheering me on. Then, I ran downstairs and hugged my kids and swung them
around in a dance. And then I proceeded to beam for the rest of the night and
feel a sense of complete and utter pride. I
have just written another book! This book now exists in the world because of
me.
Nan: Prosecco is usually involved when I finish a book. :-)
NAN: What’s the last show you
binge watched?
PINTIP: The 100! I am so freaking obsessed with this show. I watched the
first two seasons back-to-back, and then for season 3, I had to wait an entire
week in between episodes, which was just torture! Once season 3 ended, I still
needed my fix, so I read the books, which are really different but still super
fun. And once I finished those? I started watching season 1 all over
again.
NAN: Who is your celebrity crush and why?
Why do I love The 100? This show features complex characters who
make really tough moral decisions. (Gee, that sounds kinda like my books! No
wonder I love it so much!)
Nan: Fun!
NAN: Who is your celebrity crush and why?
PINTIP: Bob Morley, who plays Bellamy Blake on The 100. Why?
1. Because I'm obsessed with the show (see answer above.)
2. Because he is extremely cute.
3. Because he loves his sister and will do anything to protect
her. (Bellamy, not Bob. Perhaps Bob does, too. I have no idea.)
4. Because he struggles with his morality. He tries to do what's
right but doesn't always make the right decisions (Bellamy, not Bob).
5. Because he is part-Filipino. (Bob, not Bellamy).
6. And, because he is extremely cute. Oops, did I already say
that?
Nan: I'm sensing a recurring theme here!
NAN'S GOTTA ASK: What book are you currently reading?
PINTIP: GOTTA ANSWER: Touching Fate, by
Brenda Drake. I’m about halfway through this book and absolutely loving it!
It’s a fun, super-fast read, about the extremely intriguing world of fate
changers. As always, I am so impressed by the creativity of Brenda’s mind, and
I love her easy flowing writing style.
Nan: I don't think I've read any of her books.
UP NEXT FOR PINTIP
REMEMBER YESTERDAY, book 2 in the Forget Tomorrow
series, will release on October 4, 2016!
Nan: I can't wait!
I'm so excited you are celebrating your release with us, Pintip. Thanks for spending the day here!
FIND PINTIP DUNN:
PINTIP WANTS TO KNOW: Is
it better to live with a lie, or risk everything for the truth?
Pintip will be giving away an Kindle copy of FORGET TOMORROW to one lucky commenter.