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Picture
Beware of spilling ink!
Skate is a thief, trained and owned by the local crime syndicate, the Ink. When she tries to burgle a shut-in’s home, she gets caught by the owner—a powerful undead wizard. He makes a deal with her: “borrow” books from other wizards in return for a place to stay.

Caught between her growing fondness for the wizard and her past with the crime syndicate, Skate doesn’t know where her loyalties lie. But she’d better figure it out, because there’s a new player in town, one whose magical hypnotism puts them all at risk.
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Picture
On the run!
Her mentor is dead, but he doesn’t have to stay that way. He’s left Skate a clue to bringing him back, and she and her friends are determined to follow it.

No sooner do they set out for unknown lands, however, than things get dangerous. Hot on their tail is the wizard Ossertine, furious over Skate’s part in her friend’s death and thirsty for revenge. Worse still are the attacks that come at night: dark, mysterious, and palpably evil.
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In this race against time, magic, and implacable foes, Skate must rely on her wits and her friends to save not just her mentor’s life, but also her own.
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Summer days: make you forget math

8/3/2019

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While I am waiting for time to pass before returning to the manuscript, I’ve started another manuscript. Who knows whether it will ever get finished, but I have to do something with the creative muscles while the other manuscript sets. Working title for this next project: “Rainbow in the Dark.” I like to give my manuscripts funny names while I’m working on them.

The school year approaches, and I greet it with hope, enthusiasm, and trepidation. I cannot pretend not to have gotten used to summer hours and general lack of commitments with my time. However, the structure of coming back to work is appealing, and of course I’m looking forward to making this the best school year I can. I hope to implement some changes with my grading practices that will make my gradebook more meaningful as a reflection of learning, and we’re getting a brand-new curriculum that I’m excited about using. It’s expansive, so we’ll be learning as we go this year, right along with the students.

Summer vacation, by the way, is a relic of the past that we really should be getting rid of across the board. Researchers have known for ears that such an excessive break from the classroom has a demonstrably negative effect on student knowledge retention, particularly among those most vulnerable students we serve in public schools: low-income family students. These students perform worse on tests covering the same material from May upon their return to school in August. This phenomenon even has a name among education researchers: summer brain drain. As much as I love the break, it’s got to go. It probably won’t happen, though. Inertia is a powerful force in the world of education policy.
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Write your story!
-J. E. Ayers
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    Jeff Ayers writes books that are pretty good.

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