2013-09-02



We're very excited to host the kick-off of Leila Sale's blog tour for her newest novel This Song Will Save Your Life. Leila's here today with a special guest post for our readers. Also, be sure to check out Jessica's review here.



This Song Will Save
Your Life
by Leila Sales

Release Date: Sept. 17, 2013
Publisher: Farrar, Straus, & Giroux BFYR

Making friends has never been Elise Dembowski’s strong suit. All throughout her life, she’s been the butt of every joke and the outsider in every conversation. When a final attempt at popularity fails, Elise nearly gives up. Then she stumbles upon a warehouse party where she meets Vicky, a girl in a band who accepts her; Char, a cute, yet mysterious disc jockey; Pippa, a carefree spirit from England; and most importantly, a love for DJing.

Told in a refreshingly genuine and laugh-out-loud funny voice, This Song Will Save Your Life is an exuberant novel about identity, friendship, and the power of music to bring people together.



About the Author

Leila Sales is the author of This Song Will Save Your Life (September 17, 2013, Farrar Straus & Giroux Books for Young Readers),
as well as Past Perfect and Mostly Good Girls. 

Find Leila online... 

Website / Fierce Reads Tour

Facebook / Twitter

In my new novel, This
Song Will Save Your Life, 16-year-old Elise stumbles across an underground
dance club where she makes friends for the first time ever, discovers a passion
for DJing, and finds a reason to go on living after a failed suicide attempt.
The club she finds is an indie rock party called Start. What you probably don’t
know, unless you lived in Boston in the early ‘00s, is that Start! was once a
real indie rock dance party.

I have fallen in love with many dance parties in my life,
and you can see a number of them listed in the acknowledgements at the back of This Song Will Save Your Life. But
Start! will always hold a special place in my heart because it was the first party I ever felt that way about.

My friends and I started going to Start! in the spring of
2002, as soon as we could legally get in. I don’t remember how we heard about
it, though I know for sure that I was not the one who discovered it. I didn’t
exactly have my “ear to the ground” for cool indie/electro nightclubs. In fact,
I had never even been to a nightclub.
I had been to some school dances but, as a general rule, I hated them; school
dances made me anxious.

I think my friend Allie was the one to discover Start!. At
the time she was a member of what I believe to be the first-ever social
networking site, makeoutclub.com, which was founded in the late 90s by Gibby
Miller, who also created Start!. I assume that’s how Allie heard about the
party, and she brought the rest of us there.

As you may have figured out if you read my novel Mostly Good Girls, my friends and I went
to an all-girls high school. We didn’t know many boys, we didn’t know older
kids, we didn’t know much music that wasn’t Dave Matthews Band. Start! changed
all of that for us.

Many of Elise’s experiences in This Song Will Save Your Life are taken directly from moments that
I remember from my own time at real-world Start!. These were small moments that
have stuck with me over the past decade because everything about Start!, no
matter how minor, seemed new and noteworthy. The moment when Pippa hands Elise
her beer, for example, so she can go off and dance, using Elise as nothing more
than a cup holder—that happened to me once. The description of a member of the
Dirty Curtains wearing a shirt that says “I shop at the Gap” is based on shirts
that I saw a group of guys once wearing at Start!, on which they’d written
things like “Liv Tyler” and “Blink-182.”

I never had a meteoric rise through nightlife culture at
Start! in the way Elise did. I never once spoke to the DJ or the booker or any
of the exciting bands that came through there. I didn’t make friends with the
bouncer. Instead I danced in a circle near the edges of the room with my
high-school friends, and I can’t imagine I had any impact on anything that went
on at that party—but it had an impact on me.

Since then I’ve thrown dance parties for hundreds of people,
I’ve booked DJs, I’ve kissed DJs, and I’ve danced to Blur’s song “Girls and
Boys” at least as many times as Char
has in the book—but if I had to choose, I would probably still point to Start!
as the most influential party in my life. I hope that reading This Song Will Save Your Life gives you
at least a taste of the experience that I had there. To help with that, I’ve
created a Start! Spotify playlist: Start.
These
aren’t all songs that Elise would play or even know, but they are all songs you
could have heard on Lansdowne Street in Boston, Massachusetts, shortly after
the turn of the century.

Follow the tour...

Monday 9/2

Wastepaper Prose

Tuesday 9/3

Alexa Loves Books

Wednesday 9/4

Good Books and Good Wine

Thursday 9/5

Once Upon a Prologue

Friday 9/6

Cuddlebuggery

Monday 9/9

Ticket to Anywhere

Tuesday 9/10

The Book Cellar

Wednesday 9/11

Hobbitsies

Thursday 9/12

The Irish Banana Review

Friday 9/13

I Swim for Oceans

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