2021 San Francisco Writers Conference Young Adult Writing Contest Winner
Alicia Ortega, a 14-year-old Mexican girl, struggles to protect her father’s land when she and her older sisters are aggressively courted by land-hungry Yankees and rough-cut fur traders in the Spanish colony. It’s up to Alicia, her sister Clara, and their Chumash friend Nina to shoulder the responsibility of caring for the Ortega home and business.
When Alicia’s oldest sister is sent to finishing school in Texas for protection and refinement, the remaining younger sisters must run the rancho alone. Dangers on all sides begin to descend as the sisters are pursued by Yankee immigrant merchants and sailors hoping to cash in on rich lands and access to Pacific ports.
Alicia is trying her best to keep her family’s home and business afloat and thankfully, her companion, Nina is there to help. But as an indigenous girl, Nina is valuable to traders, trappers, and surveyors for her knowledge of the Californian terrain and her network of tribal relations. However, she won’t always be there to help Alicia’s family, especially since she has problems of her own. The Franciscan Mission is pressuring her family to convert to Catholicism, a charming trader is courting her, and, worse of all, their tribal territory and tribal ways are vanishing.
The girls struggle to protect the Ortega family’s land and black market dock from conniving suitors, but tough family secrets are threatening everything, and Alicia doesn’t know if they’ll be able to survive until her parents return.
Dr. Perez Ferguson is a cross-cultural educator and consultant. Her fiction brings to life the voices of California inhabitants living 200 years ago. She has twice won the Best YA Fiction Award from the San Francisco Writers Conference, 2021 and 2022.
Regarding Broken Promises:
"The tightly wound plot flows effortlessly from one moment to the next.... readers will find themselves inspired by the future Sparrow creates for herself and those around her." — Kirkus Reviews
Her non-fiction promotes the voices of under-represented communities in the twenty-first century. This earned her the 2014 Lacayo Lifetime Achievement Award from the United States Hispanic Leadership Institute. She is an Advisor and Former Chair for the InterAmerican Foundation and a former Visiting Lecturer for the Council for Independent Colleges. She enjoys living and writing on the Pacific coast.
As a writer, I must confess that I have often been guilty of following the instructions of other writers just because they were successful men.
Did they know my story? No. Did they even write in my genre? No. But before I gained my own confidence in my writing, I fell into the same trap that my characters, Clara and Alicia, reflect in this short excerpt from Golden Secrets. The two young women featured in this second book of my Mission Bells Trilogy are growing in self-confidence as they make independent decisions about the family property in old California in the 1800s. Find all three of these books here at Bublish.com and at all major outlets. Coming next; Lupe Throws Like A Girl. She is another confident young woman!
Book Excerpt
Golden Secrets
Clara gazed around the dusty corners of the clerk’s tiny space while Alicia endured the humiliation of her ignorance. She regretted the day she’d copied Harris’s phony documents to produce her invoices. Why did she follow the example of a cheat and a scoundrel? She realized the answer: because he was a man. She assumed he understood what he was doing.
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