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324 pages, Kindle Edition
First published May 16, 2013

5 out of 10
“Sing 'em to remember. Sing 'em because you remember.”

what was crazier was that she seemed to love being this stereotype. even more than that, no one else seemed to notice what a stereotype she was. it was like no one else in my school watched movies.
[arc, 15%]
how lacy coped with living her life as a barbie doll i had no idea. then again, maybe she just had no concept of irony. or maybe this was all meant to be ironic?
[arc, 20%]
in one short bizarre conversation with a cheerleader my entire perspective on life had changed. well, on cheerleaders at any rate.
who the heck was lacy green? who the heck were any of them? (..) i'd grown up with them. i knew them as lists of features, but that was it. i didn't know them at all. not really. felt kind of stupid about that. kind of bad.
[arc, 26%]
"thank you for choosing us, and in your glory we ask that you continue this gift. we thank you for sending us guidance to steer us into your love, and we thank pastor warren for taking this burden unto himself. thank the angels."
"thank the angels," repeated the fold.
i wondered if pastor warren ever said the thanks, and if he did, if he had to thank himself:"we thank me for taking this burden unto myself .."
[arc, 37%]

Fifth year they took Chris, my best friend since we were little and who I’d just had my first kiss with the week before.
Sixth year, I shot an angel in the face.

After six years of “angels” coming out of the sky and taking people from her town, 16-year-old Riley Carver has just about had it living with the constant fear.



My baby has a bright blue Cadillac
She drives it so fast I think it could fly
And someday soon we're gonna go to the moon
Aim that bright blue Cadillac right into the sky.
"He reappeared maybe ten feet away in front of me. I heard laughing in my head. You're a strange one. That's the last straw, buddy. "Yeah, well, you're dead." And I shot that angel right in the face."














