July 31, 2017

The Inevitable Collision of Birdie & Bash Blog Tour

The Book
31450675

Birdie never meant to be at the party. Bash should have been long gone. But when they meet, a collision course is set off they may never recover from.

Sebastian Alvaréz is just trying to hold the pieces together: to not flunk out, to keep his sort-of-best friend Wild Kyle from doing something really bad, and to see his beloved Ma through chemo. But when he meets Birdie Paxton, a near-Valedictorian who doesn’t realize she’s smoking hot in her science pun T-shirt, at a party, an undeniable attraction sparks. And suddenly he’s not worried about anything. But before they are able to exchange numbers, they are pulled apart. A horrifying tragedy soon links Birdie and Bash together—but neither knows it. When they finally reconnect, and are starting to fall—hard—the events of the tragedy unfold, changing both their lives in ways they can never undo. Told in alternating perspectives, The Inevitable Collision of Birdie & Bash by Candace Ganger is a beautiful, complex, and ultimately hopeful teen novel that will move you to the very last page.

The Author

CANDACE GANGER is a young adult author, contributing writer for Hello Giggles, and obsessive marathoner. Aside from having past lives as a singer, nanotechnology website editor, and world’s worst vacuum sales rep, she’s also ghostwritten hundreds of projects for companies, best-selling fiction and award-winning nonfiction authors alike. Candace—aka—Candyland—has a severe Milky Way latter addiction + eats way too many donuts/doughnuts but all things in excess, amiright? FYI: She’s TOTALLY awkward in person (#sorrynotsorry). She lives in Ohio with her family.


The Excerpt

I lose sight of Layla for just a moment. The crowd parts in a zigzag fashion and beneath the light machine, where the red, green, and blue hit the hardest, I see her—this statuesque beautyhiding behind a trail of long brown hair and thick-framed glasses. With her hands folded snug in her lap, shes looking around, sinking farther into the couchs wilted threads as if hoping to not be seen, but I see her because hiding is typically what I do, too.
My God, I say. The cigarette hangs from my bottom lip, and this girl, who finally stops talking, is still looking at up me, glitter plummeting from her silver-tinted eye shadow. The flakes dance down to the tops of my boots like little snowflakes. She follows my eyes across the floor to the big, plaid couch, letting her smile fade. Losing interest (finally), she drops my hand and disappears into the sea of people from which she first emerged.
With my heart nearly beating out of my chest, I watch Couch Girl. The way she tucks her hair behind her ears with precision, the way she nudges her falling glasses up the bridge of her nose, the way she pretends shes not as earth-shatteringly stunning as she really is. Radiance surrounds her—not a halo, but some kind of ethereal glowand I cant look away. She looks up at me. Once, twice, three times; tries to avoid my eyes, but cant. For the length of a whole song, my gaze doesnt abandon her, and by the middle of the next song, shes smiling at me. Score. Normally, Id hang back, wait and see if weaccidentally cross paths, but Laylas determined eyes are on me so I up my game. To finish her.
I push through the haze and find my way to Couch Girl. She looks up at me with these electric green eyes that are more evident through her lenses, and I do something I thought Id never in a million years dohold out my hand.
I dont dance, she says, reluctant.

Me either. Too many germs. A few seconds pass before she decides to take my humble offering. I pull her to her feet, and our palms smash together and slide across the dampness. This would normally gross me out, but I kind of want to linger in it with her. Gently, I lead her to the center of the floor where we are now gestural shapes on this dark canvas, too.
Help me out here, I say. See that girl over there? I point to Layla with my middle finger. A silent dig, if you will.
She nods.
I need her to see us talking.
She scrunches up her face. Im not getting in the middle of whatever that is. Her finger is waving around, grabbing Laylas attention. But thanks.
As she tries to walk away, I tug on her sleeve. Eyebrows arched, and my own full puppy-lipped pout now in full effect. Please.
She must sense my sadness (read: desperation), because with one sharp sigh and a roll of her beautiful eyes, she digs her feet firmly into the floor. Okay, fine. Just for a minute though.”
Were not dancing, not swaying or grinding, but here we are, in the epicenter of it all. She crosses her arms, I cross mine, too. “So are we going to actually talk or just pretend?she snaps.
Who the hell are you? I ask with a smirk.
She looks down. Who am I? You mean what name was I given at birth, or who am I in a general sense?
I start to respond, but she interrupts.
Because, in said general sense, Im a girl at a party I shouldve never come to but did and am now trapped in this weird interaction between subjects A and B while Id much rather be at home teaching my chunky cat how to drink from a running faucet, thank you very much.
With my gaze pressed hard on her porcelain skin, I drop the last bit of cigarette to the floor and twist the cinder into the grooves until it burns no more. My smile grows, and all of a sudden, I dont care if Laylas watching or not. Fair enough.”
Who are you? she replies with a touch of snark.
I look down to the holes in my shirtsleeve where the fab- ric has worn, and I realize I have two choices here. I can tell her the lame, true story of my life and wait for her to walk away, or I can do the opposite and hope that, for one perfect night, Im allowed to feel this way about a girl whos way out of my league, knowing the second I leave here, this, whatever this is, leaves with it.
Plus, itd totally piss Layla off, and that makes it sweeter. Well, I say, in a general sense, Im a boy at a party I
shouldve never come to but did and am now gloriously trapped in this enlightened conversation with, probably, the most captivating girl in the entire house. In an even generaler senseshe stops me, tells me thats not a wordIm nobody. Well, until I saw you. My smile widens. To sell it.
She blushes. Her fingers fumbling through her long, silky strands, she objects. One, thats so ridiculously cliché, and two, statistically speaking, youre a percentage of this party as a whole house equation. Without the exact number of bodiesI estimate around thirty-sevenyoure something like 2.7027 percent somebody without ever seeing me.
My heart drops through this creaky, wooden floor, and this smile thats still pastedits about to rip my face in two. The forces of the earth have rumbled beneath my feet and combined, climbing up through the dirt core, into my heart. We stand here, for, I dont know, what feels like an infinity (she abruptly explains infinity is a concept and theres no way to solve for x, so in reality, we cant actually stand here that long), and all these things start flying out of my mouthhow I graduated last year, Im only in town for tonightand with every passing lie, I think, Youre no better than Kyle, which makes me sicklike, physically ill with the sweats and a weird clamminess and all these symptoms that remind me how I felt when I first met Layla.
When the song ends, we hold on to this moment that, in the space between, feels like a million electrodes have be- gun to rattle and vibrate. I feel it fuse to my bones. It con- nects us together, grounds us, right here, right now. Laylas gone—who cares now?but just as I start to ask for her num- ber, or the name she was given at birth, a tiny little thing with big, springy curls that dangle over one eye pulls  at Couch Girls arm.
Ready to go? the friend asks. Shes looking me over in this protective kind of way, and I know what shes thinking because I beat her to it.
While the two of them decide, a hand slaps the back of my shirt hard enough to leave a mark. I turn around to see Kyles cousins friends college boyfriend with a worried look on his face. Your friend might need to go to the hospital. Hes, like, not waking up.
With a heavy sigh, something that follows Kyles hijinks often, I silently agree to retrieve my sort-of-ill-behaved dog that does as he pleases. Before I can even think about what to say to Couch Girl next, I spin around and she, and her tiny friend, are gone.
Just like that, its over before it even started.