THE MAUI EFFECT
Author: Sara Ackerman
Publication Date: November 19,
2024
ISBN: 9780778369561
Format: Trade Paperback
Publisher: Harlequin Trade
Publishing / MIRA
Price $18.99
Buy Links:
HarperCollins: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/the-maui-effect-sara-ackerman?variant=41553143595042
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Social Links:
Author website: https://www.ackermanbooks.com/
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Book Summary:
Taylor Jenkins Reid meets The Hundred Foot Wave in this dazzling new romance by USA Today bestselling author Sara
Ackerman.
'Iwa Young’s life is high in the
Maui rainforest. As a field biologist, she’s happiest in company with trees and
birds and waterfalls. When a developer arrives with plans for a so-called Eco
Resort in the middle of a forest full of endangered species, 'Iwa puts all her
energy into the fight to protect it. But a chance encounter threatens to
distract her. His name is Dane Parsons, and he’s a big wave surfer from
California. 'Iwa has a few unbreakable rules, and at the top of her list: Never
Date A Surfer.
Dane Parsons is part of an
underground group of big wave riders and his connection to the ocean runs deep.
When he meets 'Iwa he can’t get her out of his mind. But 'Iwa wants nothing to
do with Dane until he offers to help protect her beloved forest and waterfall.
Always on the hunt for the ultimate ride, Dane suddenly glimpses something even
greater, but just out of reach.
In this thunderous love story, we
travel deep into the Maui rainforest and hop across the globe from Maui to
Mavericks to Portugal, chasing waves the size of nine story buildings–where the
unthinkable is always just one breath away.
Author Bio:
|
Sara
Ackerman is the Hawai'i born, bestselling author of historical & romance
novels set in the islands. Her books have been labeled “unforgettable” by
Apple Books, “empowering & deliciously visceral” by Book Riot, and New York Times bestselling authors
Kate Quinn and Madeline Martin have praised Sara’s novels as “fresh and
delightful” and “brilliantly written.” Amazon chose Radar Girls as a best book of the month, and ALA Booklist gave The Codebreaker’s Secret a starred
review. Find out more about Sara and her books at www.ackermanbooks.com and
follow her on Instagram @saraackermanbooks and on Facebook @ackermanbooks. |
THE
BLUE ROOM
Dane
Pe’ahi,
Maui, January 3, 2012
The Hawaiian ocean was more blue than he
remembered, and it smelled faintly of salt and sea foam. Dane sat on his
surfboard watching rays of sun pierce the surface and descend into the depths.
Farther out above the trench, the water shone indigo, and inside over the coral
shelf, a dappled turquoise. Bathwater warm, smooth as blown glass, deadly.
There were sounds—a light splash, the low rumble of whitewater meeting rock on
the shoreline—but he didn’t hear them.
Someone is going to die.
An old man on the cliff had spoken these
words to him just as he was scrambling down the rocks to get in the water, and
he was having a hard time shaking it off. The man was thin as a twig and
wrinkled, with a shock of white hair against his sun-beaten skin. A complete
stranger. He touched Dane’s shoulder and looked him straight in the eye,
pinning Dane in place for a few seconds, before he pulled himself away. His
shoulder still burned.
Now he focused on the horizon and matched
his breath to the rise and fall of the swells. Reaching down with both hands,
he scooped up water and splashed himself to cool off. The air was thick with a
salty haze, windless, hot and lazy. Usually by this time—early afternoon, the
waves were blown out and ragged from the wind. But today was perfection. Even
the locals were saying the conditions were epic.
All he needed was one wave.
The Maui offshore buoys showed an afternoon
pulse, which meant that the swell could get even bigger before it faded away.
No doubt it was a gamble to paddle out on his biggest board, a mint green
beauty, but risk was his thing, the only constant he knew. While most people
moved away from risk, Dane had always sought it out. Not consciously, but
looking back, he had been the kid to climb the tallest tree, skateboard down
the steepest road or take the highest jump on his bike, and later, often the
only one to paddle out on those winter days when the whole horizon was closing
out.
He checked his watch. Eighteen minutes
since the last set rolled in, but it seemed like days. He could feel the island
behind him, a massive volcano with a dollop of white snow on her peak, but he
refused to look. Never turn your back on the sea. Anyone raised around the
ocean knew this.
Four minutes left in the heat and Dane had
nothing to show for it. He had missed the only rideable wave on the last set by
being too far out. His last hope was the tide. It had just bottomed out, and
now began to fill back in, the whole ocean heaving toward the island. All he
could do was wait. Mother nature called the shots out here, there was no way
around it.
Two minutes left and he was starting to
sweat, when he noticed a bump on the horizon. He stood up on his board to get a
better look. Definitely a set. Kicking his board out in front of him, he fell
back in the water and crossed himself. This was it. Sliding back onto his
board, he adjusted his vest, took a deep breath and started paddling toward the
horizon.
A live wire ran under his skin,
electrifying every cell, every muscle. It was a familiar feeling, and it meant
game on. The first wave in the set rose up like a liquid mountain and began to
feather, but already he could tell it wasn’t the one he was waiting for. Too
small and a little too west. Let someone else have it. When he reached the top
of that one, he got his first look at what was coming—a blue wall of water
taller than a small building and farther out than he had thought possible.
Lined up perfectly and swinging straight for him.
He scrambled to position himself a little
deeper as the wave moved in and lifted him up and up. And fricking up. He
turned and went for it. At the top, he hung for a second as he looked down the
vertical face of water, half wishing he had wings. Beyond the point of no
return, he jumped to his feet and dropped in. The first few seconds were a free
fall and he was poised with arms out, as if in flight, while his board
miraculously stayed under him. He managed to level out and picked his line.
From behind, the lip hurled and thundered and created a bus-sized barrel,
spitting out at him.
Still high up on the wave, which felt ready
to pitch him at any moment, he felt the burn in his legs, his lungs, his eyes.
Spray from the barrel chandeliered down on him and began to blot out the sun
and everything else. If this beast closed out, he was done. He’d be held down
on the reef for at least a few waves and then washed into a frothy cauldron of
whitewater and boulders at the bottom of the cliffs.
Someone is going to die. The words came to
him again in a flash, then disappeared. Today was not his day to die.
The avalanche of water behind him was
creating its own wind, but he managed to stall for a few seconds in the barrel
before getting shot out in the spit. Time slowed, and the outside world slipped
away. A feeling of euphoria came over him. Saltwater ran in his veins and he
looked down on the scene from a bird’s-eye view. Albatross or petrel or booby.
When he hit the shoulder of the wave still standing, his arms shot up skyward
and he fell back, landing with a splash in the very water that could have
easily taken him. The horn sounded a few moments later, signifying the end of
the heat.
The crowd in the channel went crazy; he
heard them even underwater. Jet skis, boats, boards, camera guys swimming—all
rushed toward him. People yelling, hooting, clapping, cheering. Shirtless men
and bikini-clad women. Not a wetsuit in sight. And there was no need to see the
score, or the video. Their reaction told him everything he needed to know.
Excerpted
from THE MAUI EFFECT by Sara Ackerman. Copyright © 2024 by Sara Ackerman.
Published by MIRA Books, an imprint of HarperCollins.
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