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BELIEVAREXIC

Despite occasional unevenness, a powerful story of healing and self-acceptance.

In an autobiographical novel, Jennifer spends two months at a mental hospital in Syracuse, New York, undergoing treatment for her eating disorder.

The story begins when Jennifer asks her parents to take her to the hospital. Though skeptical, her mother assents, and soon Jennifer is a resident in the Eating Disorders Unit at the Samuel Tuke Center. Immediately, Jennifer is thrust into a world of humiliating suspicion (a particularly nasty nurse is certain that Jennifer is manipulating her weigh-in results), complex social hierarchies (as a bulimarexic, Jennifer falls somewhere between anorexics and overeaters), and regimented treatment. Treatment-plan documents appear interspersed with the text, which begins as a verse novel and abruptly shifts into prose—and from a third- to a first-person narrator—when Jennifer enters her second of three treatment stages. The 1980s setting is vividly realized, clear not only from the dates in each chapter heading, but from well-chosen details—the cigarette-smoke–filled EDU lounge, the pop-music enthusiasm Jennifer shares with her favorite nurse, Chuck. Some storylines begin or end abruptly, however, and some details come seemingly out of nowhere. Jennifer is relieved midway through the book, for example, to have a new roommate who understands how much she misses a dog she's barely mentioned in the preceding pages.

Despite occasional unevenness, a powerful story of healing and self-acceptance. (Historical fiction. 12-18)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2015

ISBN: 978-1-56145-771-7

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Peachtree

Review Posted Online: July 14, 2015

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2015

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THE ATLAS OF US

Gripping and authentic in the ways it portrays grief and shows how moving forward means having to let go.

After her father dies, a teen drops out of high school, loses her job, and embarks on a four-week journey through the California backcountry.

Everyone in the Bear Creek Community Service program is assigned a nickname as part of starting over with “a blank slate.” No one needs to know your past or whether you’re there by choice or court order. All that matters is the present: working on hiking trail maintenance. For Atlas James, or Maps, as she’s now known, it’s an escape from the poor decisions she’s made since her father’s death from cancer and a tribute to him. One of his dying wishes was to hike the Western Sierra Trail with her—the same one she’ll now be spending the summer working on with Books, Junior, Sugar, and King. Maps is immediately drawn to group leader King, and as secrets are revealed, the two act as magnets, attracting and repelling one another. Maps’ tangible grief is centered as she copes with the loss of the only person who understood her and always had her back. Gradually, as they clear brush, dig drainage, and battle the backcountry and their pasts, a sense of family is forged among the crew. The palpable romantic tension between King and Maps propels this beautifully written story. Junior is coded Black; other major characters read white.

Gripping and authentic in the ways it portrays grief and shows how moving forward means having to let go. (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Jan. 9, 2024

ISBN: 9780063088580

Page Count: 336

Publisher: HarperTeen

Review Posted Online: Sept. 23, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2023

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FAR FROM THE TREE

From the first page to the last, this compassionate, funny, moving, compulsively readable novel about what makes a family...

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  • Kirkus Reviews'
    Best Books Of 2017


  • New York Times Bestseller


  • National Book Award Winner

Placing her daughter for adoption left a hole in Grace’s heart; her adoptive parents can’t fill it, and her birth mother’s unreachable—then Grace learns she has siblings.

Maya, 15, a year younger than Grace, was adopted by wealthy parents 13 months before their biological daughter, Lauren, arrived. Joaquin, nearly 18, a survivor of 17 failed foster-care placements and one failed adoption, is troubled when his current foster parents express a wish to adopt him. Grace reaches out, and the siblings soon bond. All—Maya especially, standing out in a family of redheads—are grateful to meet others with dark hair (only Joaquin identifies not as white but Latino) and weird food preferences (French fries with mayo). Still, each keeps secrets. Maya discusses her girlfriend but not her mother’s secret drinking; Joaquin edits out his failed adoption; Grace, her pregnancy and daughter’s birth. It hurts that her siblings have zero interest in tracking down the mom who gave them away, yet Grace persists. Chapters alternate through their third-person perspectives, straightforward structure and syntax delivering accessibility without sacrificing nuance or complexity. Family issues are neither airbrushed nor oversimplified (as the ambiguous title suggests). These are multifaceted characters, shaped by upbringing as well as their genes, in complicated families. Absent birthparents matter, as do bio siblings: when their parents separate, Lauren fears Maya will abandon her for her “real” siblings.

From the first page to the last, this compassionate, funny, moving, compulsively readable novel about what makes a family gets it right. (Fiction. 13-18)

Pub Date: Oct. 3, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-06-233062-8

Page Count: 384

Publisher: HarperTeen

Review Posted Online: Aug. 1, 2017

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2017

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