What She Missed
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Sixteen-year-old Ebony Jones is devastated when her family moves from Houston to her grandmother’s house in the country. There’s absolutely nothing for Ebony in Alula Lake, Texas. So she thinks.
Award-winning author Liara Tamani’s What She Missed is a rich and emotional novel that celebrates change, nature, friendship, growing up, and love, for readers of Sarah Dessen’s The Rest of the Story and Elizabeth Acevedo’s Clap When You Land.
When Ebony and her parents move from Houston, Texas, to her grandmother’s house in a small lake town, Ebony is sure her life is doomed. And to make matters worse, the ghost of Ebony’s beloved grandmother—a strong swimmer who tragically drowned in the lake—is everywhere. Alula Lake does offer one perk: reconnecting Ebony with her childhood friend, Jalen.
But as Ebony settles into life, she finds herself drifting away from Jalen and gravitating to his older sister, Lena. Lena is chaotic, disorderly, and rebellious, yet she offers a reprieve for the anger and sadness Ebony feels about losing so much.
An ode to nature, art, friendship, history, family, and love, this lyrical coming-of-age story explores one girl’s summer of self-discovery as she reimagines the world and her place in it. What She Missed is for fans of Sarah Dessen, Nina LaCour, and Nicola Yoon.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Sixteen-year-old painter Ebony Jones, who is Black, is struggling to figure out who she is. After being unable to finish a self-portrait assignment at school and flip-flopping between her birth name and chosen name Indigo, she feels as if she no longer sees herself clearly. These feelings of instability worsen when both of her parents lose their jobs in Houston, forcing the family to move to remote Lake Alula, a predominantly Black Texas shore town where her late grandmother lived. Though her childhood friend Jalen is excited to reintroduce her to all the things they did as children, Ebony is haunted by bittersweet memories of her grandmother, causing her to withdraw emotionally. She instead gravitates toward Jalen's older sister Lena, whose rebellious streak and bombastic personality make Ebony feel more like herself. Lyrical yet grounded prose by Tamani (All the Things We Never Knew) depicts Ebony's emotional turmoil via a keen first-person POV, while interstitials featuring an omniscient narrator act as between-the-lines glimpses into Ebony's psyche. Amid the emotional intensity, these unique moments of narrative interjection provide quiet spaces for reader contemplation regarding the things one hides from oneself and the ways in which self-discovery can inspire both fear and feelings of freedom. Ages 13–up.