The way i used to be5/6/2023 ![]() Amber Smith gets it exactly right.You're 55 years old, and you have three kids and 25+ books - I can barely manage to get my grocery shopping done! You must have an incredible writing regimen! It is The Hero's Journey through a distorted circus mirror-one girl's quest to turn desperation into courage, to become a survivor instead of a victim. As unforgettable and stirring as Laurie Halse Anderson's Speak, Smith's provocative debut is best described as a survival story with hope and anger serving as prominent themes so fully explored they simmer off the page.- "The Young Folks" THE WAY I USED TO BE promises to be meaningful, significant, and truly unforgettable.- "FIKTSHUN" With an achingly beautiful narrative and carefully crafted plot, The Way I Used to Be is more than just an excellent book it's an important one.- "NOVEL NOVICE" " The Way I Used to Be explores the aftermath of sexual assault with a precision and searing honesty that is often terrifying, sometimes eerily beautiful, and always completely true. An honest look at one teen's struggle to find her way back to herself, to mold herself into the survivor she is.- "FANGIRLISH" Readers will root for her as she gathers the courage, at last, to speak up.- "BN Teen blog" This is far from a feel-good read, but I can't implore how necessary it is to read a book like this one. Eden's story gets told on her terms, in her voice. Pick it up and read it because Eden's story demands to be read.- "Once Upon a Twilight" Easily one of the hardest books to read on this list. "BCCB" Don't let a book of this magnitude pass you by. Eden's shell-shocked narrative is an excellent narrative conduit for what Smith has to say."-Booklist "February 1, 2016" "A heart-twisting, but ultimately hopeful, exploration of how pain can lead to strength." - "The Boston Globe" "Bottom Line: powerful, emotional and raw."- "BRANDI BREATHES BOOKS" "Edy's exploration of the meaning of sexuality and intimacy will be thought provoking for teen readers of various experience levels, and this title is likely to find space alongside Anderson's Speak. ![]() A must-have for every collection that serves teens.- "SLJ / Teen Librarian Toolbox" "A difficult, painful journey, but teens who have experienced rape and abuse will be grateful for this unvarnished and ultimately hopeful portrait. VERDICT An important addition for every collection."- "School Library Journal" The Way I Used To Be is an intensely gripping and raw look at secrets, silence, speaking out, and survival in the aftermath of a sexual assault. STARRED REVIEW "This is a poignant book that realistically looks at the lasting effects of trauma on love, relationships, and life.Teens will be reminded of Laurie Halse Anderson's Speak. But it also demonstrates one young woman’s strength as she navigates the disappointment and unbearable pains of adolescence, of first love and first heartbreak, of friendships broken and rebuilt, all while learning to embrace the power of survival she never knew she had hidden within her heart. Told in four parts-freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior year-this provocative debut reveals the deep cuts of trauma. Nothing makes sense anymore, and she knows she’s supposed to tell someone what happened but she can’t. What she thought she knew to be true, is now lies. What Eden once loved-who she once loved-she now hates. But the night her brother’s best friend rapes her, Eden’s world capsizes. Starting high school didn’t change who she was. ![]() ![]() In the tradition of Speak, this extraordinary debut novel “is a poignant book that realistically looks at the lasting effects of trauma on love, relationships, and life” ( School Library Journal, starred review).
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