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Première Place dans la catégorie Young Adult Fantastique/Sci-Fi des Pencraft Award Le monde de Léa s'est effondré quand elle a découvert l'adultère de son père. Il l'a suppliée de se taire, mais elle ne l'a pas fait. Sa famille a été brisée, et elle est envahie de regrets, particulièrement au moment où elle apprend que chacune de ses décisions donne naissance à un nouvel univers, dans lequel elle a fait l'autre choix. Si seulement elle pouvait les traverser, vers la Léa qui n'a rien dit. Mais elle ne peut s'enfuir que par son imagination, jusqu'à ce qu'un fait divers vienne troubler la frontière entre les mondes. Deux jeunes filles ont été assassinées, au même moment et au même endroit où se passait l'adultère de son père. D'étranges événements poussent Léa à croire que leurs os sont reliés à elle, et à la soeur qu'elle a toujours voulu avoir. Léa doit prendre une décision. Certaines Léa disent oui, d'autres disent non; certaines vivent, et certaines meurent. Et d'autres traversent les mondes.
Editor's Pick Booklife Reviews: A fast-paced yet thoughtful romance of coming out and finding love in later life in Alaska5 Star Clarion Reviews: A riveting novel . . . about love, courage, and solidarityKirkus Reviews: [A]n impressive story that packs a punch.¿Trapped between a homicidal brother and a homophobic podcaster eager to reveal her lesbian romance novels, a seventy-year-old grandmother seeks help in Clear, Alaska.Suffocating in a loveless marriage and lonely existence, Taylor MacKenzie lives only through her writing, using the pen name Brooke Skipstone, her best friend in college and lover before her death in 1974. Afraid of being murdered before anyone in her family or community knows her life story, Taylor writes an autobiography about her time with Brooke and shares it with those closest to her, hoping for understanding and acceptance.Accused of promoting the queering and debasement of America by a local podcaster, Taylor embroils the conservative community in controversy but fights back with the help of a new, surprising friend.Can she endure the attacks from haters and gaslighters? Can she champion the queering she represents?And will she survive?
Hunter needs to remember. Jazz needs to forget. They need each other to heal in this teen thriller of survivor love.Hunter's past is a mystery to him, erased by a doctor at the direction of his father. But memories of the secret trauma begin to surface when Hunter sees other people's memories-visions invading his mind with stories of abuse, teen self-mutilation, rape, and forbidden sex.His best friend Jazz has dark and disturbing memories of her own that she hides behind her sass and wit. Hunter discovers he can rescue the victims, even though he risks adding their suffering to his own.Hunter and Jazz kiss each other's scars and form a bond of empathy no two teens should ever need.This book contains scenes of sexual abuse, self-mutilation, and suicide. It should not be read by teens who wish to be shielded from such harsh realities their peers may be enduring alone. Nor by anyone who desires to remain in the dark despite being in a position to shine light. However, those who suffer in private or wish to help those who do-please read this story and share its contents.Many parts of this book are difficult to read and were very difficult to write. But there is much truth in these pages, some profoundly ugly and some beautiful in its resilience. As one character says, "I have to believe I can still love and be loved. We can't stay broken forever."And they shouldn't be unknown forever. People need to feel the pain of others.
In 1968, a seventeen-year-old queer girl traveled to Alaska disguised as a boy.
"Sixteen-year-old Delaney, who is traumatized after witnessing her father's infidelity in the woods, blames herself for her parents' divorce. She rewrites stories from that period, telling herself "I couldn't go back in time, but maybe I could skip sideways." When her mother, a physicist, explains the Many Worlds Theory--in which a separate universe exists for each possible choice a person could have made, including consequences that branch out from them--Delaney is shaken. Enticing because of its eerie implications and gradual in its execution, the theory unfolds through Delaney's anxious perspective."--
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