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Where U @

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Trea Jones has always known the bitterness of bigotry and abject poverty. Her half-Cherokee daddy disappeared thirteen years ago on the pretense of getting milk. Mama has done nothing but mourn his loss, and she blames Trea for that. Now that she's starting her senior year of high school, Trea hopes for something better, but she doesn't hold out much hope.
Until …
She loosens up on some of her rules. Her guy, Dave, proves to her that she is worthy of everything the others have. The last day of classes prior to the winter break, she's ready to share some stupendous news with Dave, but tragedy intervenes when her daddy texts while driving a bus. Trea is left wondering if she can ever be free of a curse that heaps a lot of bad luck on her whenever good things happen to her.

189 pages, Kindle Edition

First published November 12, 2013

7 people want to read

About the author

K.C. Sprayberry

169 books168 followers
A lifetime of observing people around her has given K.C. Sprayberry many insights into the human condition. Now that she's in her retirement years, she takes those experiences and turns them into stories that have attracted many.


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Author 11 books13 followers
July 12, 2015
Where U @ is a YA novel by K.C. Sprayberry. At first, I thought this was just a story of a high school girl and her boyfriend. But I soon got involved reading about her family life and not her school life. She has problems with her mother and grandmother. She despises her long-gone but not forgotten father. But as the story moves along, she finds her grandmother is not as bad as she seems. Trea is dealt a rough hand early in life and it is not her fault. Every time she gets a happy moment, something else quickly comes along to dull the thrill of a golden moment. Over and over she has to figure out how to overcome her horrible upbringing. I found myself cheering Trea on, hoping against hope that there would be a light at the end of the tunnel for the plucky and hard working girl. This was a very satisfying and well written book. You will remember it long after you finish the last page
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