You'd Be Home Now
From the bestselling author of TikTok sensation Girl in Pieces
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- 5,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
From the internationally bestselling author of Girl in Pieces and How to Make Friends with the Dark comes a breathtaking contemporary YA about addiction, family and finding your voice.
‘Kathleen Glasgow expands our hearts and invites in a little more humanity.’ Val Emmich, author of Dear Evan Hansen
The quiet one, the obedient one, the reliable one. Emmy has spent her life being told exactly who she is. Not strong-willed like her beautiful sister Maddie and not in rehab like her wild brother Joey. But when a tragic accident changes life in her small town forever, can Emmy keep up the act?
‘Heartbreaking...breathtaking.’ Amber Smith, New York Times bestselling author of The Way I Used to Be
‘Raw, honest and overflowing with feelings.’ Erin Hahn, author of You’d Be Mine
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sixteen-year-old Emory Ward, who cues as white, feels invisible. After she and her older brother Joey are in a car crash that kills another student, and heroin is found in Joey's system, her life fractures. Her friends abandon her for her perceived part in their classmate's death; her relationship with Joey, even after he returns from rehab, isn't the same; and she shoplifts to ease the pain of not being seen. The teens' mother, whose family built the mill that gave their small town its name, expects too much of both recovering Joey and "good" child Emory, but connecting with friends old and new allows Emory to finally begin building self-confidence and meaningfully support her brother. Glasgow (How to Make Friends with the Dark) tackles such difficult topics as classism and bigotry in the educational system, and draws struggles with addiction, especially Joey's, with remarkable compassion. A melodramatic twist in the third act unfortunately undercuts the nuance established by the book's beginning, but Emory and Joey's journeys and sibling relationship are memorable, and the conclusion admirably humanizes a group of people whom society frequently demonizes. Ages 14–up.