Check out my stop on the Einstein's Compass: A YA Time Traveler Adventure by Grace Blair & Laren Bright blog tour! Don't forget to enter to win an e-copy or audiobook before you go!
by Grace Blair & Laren Bright
Genre: YA Sci-fi/Time Travel
Release Date: January 2019
Summary:
How did Albert Einstein come up with his wondrous theories of light and time? In Einstein's Compass: A YA Time Traveler Adventure, a young Albert is given a supernatural compass that allows him to travel through time and space, and find wisdom in other dimensions, including the lost city of Atlantis. But evil forces seek the power of the compass, including a monstrous, shape-shifting dragon from a different age. Can the compass protect Albert from such villainy?
2019 Finalist National Indie Excellence Award Young Adult Fiction
2019 eLit Award-Winner in the Juvenile/YA Fiction Category
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Excerpt
Raka sat in his grotto on a battered wooden armchair that 
had washed up on the shore of his hideaway cove. For the 
last day or so he had done little but experiment with his 
new  form  and  new  powers.  He  had  begun  to  develop  a 
healthy respect for his strength and the seeming 
indestructibility of his body. He had come to grips with 
the realization that there was no going back. 
Truth be told, he was beginning to think he wouldn’t 
have wanted to go back even if it were possible. He had 
not been appreciated. Neither his uncle Thoth nor his 
twin, Arka, had ever recognized his promise. “If only Ar- 
ka had let me practice the mystical arts with him, I would 
have shown him what I could do. Fool! It’s his fault I am 
here,” Raka muttered to himself. 
The day before his meeting with the Council, reflect- 
ing further, Raka remembered his quarrel with Arka. 
Arka pointed to the container on the counter. “Where 
were you today? You were supposed to take the ruby crys- 
tals to the Temple of Healing. We had to cancel the 
treatments when they did not arrive.” 
Raka petulantly stared at the ground. “Something im- 
portant  came  up.”  Then  he  looked  up  at  Arka  defiantly. 
“But I told Prensa to take the crystals to the temple. It’s his 
fault the treatments were canceled, not mine.” 
Arka frowned. “Prensa? He is our cook, not your servant.” 
Arka shook his head as if to disperse Raka’s weak ex- 
cuse, then changed course. “The temple guard said he saw 
you walking with a female member of the Belial Brother- 
hood  near  the  gardens.  What  were  you  doing  there  with 
her?” 
“She wanted  to  know  what  we  did  in  the  Temple  of 
Healing,” Raka lied. “I showed her around the temple 
grounds.” That wasn’t all I showed her, Raka thought to 
himself with a lascivious smirk. 
Arka could only shake his head in resignation. 
The memory aroused Raka’s anger,  which brought 
him crashing back to the present. “I am meant to do im- 
portant things, not just be an errand boy!” he shouted at 
the rock walls of the cavern. 
With  thoughts  of  revenge  seething  in  his  mind,  he 
snatched at a rat that had the misfortune to scurry past. It 
was the first sustenance he’d had since the transfor- 
mation—he hadn’t really been hungry. He angrily tore a 
leg off and took a bite, the first food he’d had since changing 
form. As he swallowed, he felt something a transfor- 
mation  begins—short,  gray  hairs  started  to  replace  the 
scales on his arm. Raka stopped chewing and watched the 
shift. He was a changeling, he realized, but the transfor- 
mation didn’t end with his dragon form. Tossing the still 
squirming rat aside, he plucked a beetle off the cave wall 
and  bit  down  on  it with a  sickening  crunch.  A  moment 
later, his skin began hardening into a chitinous shell. 
Concentrating, he found he was able to control, or even 
halt, the changes to his structure. 
The  thought  of  changing  into  other  forms  intrigued 
him. His mind flooded with information he had learned 
in his healing energy classes. Raka felt something else as 
he  sorted  through  what  was  happening.  It  was  a  sort  of 
knowing, an intuition. Could be this be from the dragon 
DNA he had ingested? He thought back over his 
transformation. 
He  discovered  that  his  eyes  were  now  acutely  sensi- 
tive. He could see in total darkness and normal light. His 
memory, too, had sharpened. He could repeat his entire 
meeting  with  the  council  verbatim.  His  memories  were 
much  more  vivid.  He  recalled  his  rage  at  his  uncle  and 
brother  and  felt  it  with  new  intensity.  In  fact,  he  could 
muster no feelings of compassion or love at all. Glancing 
at the writhing rat whose leg he had bitten off, he studied 
its  suffering.  This  excited  his  killing  instinct.  It  took  an 
effort not to inflict further pain on the creature. He craved 
more  of  the  rat’s  blood,  and  he  speculated  that  human 
blood and organs would be a delicacy. A burst of intuition 
revealed that eating an entire human body and drinking 
its  blood  would  transform  him  into  a  doppelganger  of
that person. He would have to test out how long this
would last, but he suspected it would hold until he decid-
ed to take on another form.
As he discovered more of the strengths his new form
provided, Raka reveled in the thought that he had nothing
to fear. Then, an ancestral memory—perhaps connected
to his dragon DNA—flared in his mind. He saw many of
his fellow reptiles trapped in a burning structure, writhing
in agony. Fear welled up in him at this vivid memory. He
had at least one vulnerability: fire. Raka tore himself away
from the vision and shakily drew in a deep breath to calm
his trembling body. “Enough wasting time on what I fear.
Now it’s time to plan for the future and my revenge on
Arka  and  his  ilk.”  That  is  the  task  worthy  of  my  new,
transformed self, he thought.
Grace Allison Blair is an award-winning self-help and motivational author, and podcast host, who has assisted thousands to find their spiritual wisdom to solve everyday challenges.
Throughout her adult life, Grace became a serious student of the spiritual. She found that, often, psychological principles and practices were incomplete, but could be filled out by adding the missing spiritual component. Her approach was always to see practical applications for what she uncovered in the mystical. It was through immersing herself in this field of study and experience that she came up with her idea for her book, Einstein’s Compass.
Grace is a successful award-winning author, modern mystic, wellness consultant, business development advisor, marketing coach, and workshop facilitator. She has faced many life challenges, including life-threatening disease, and used what she encountered as a stimulus to gain greater happiness and fulfillment.
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