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304 pages, Paperback
Published October 29, 2025
2019. Ohio, USA. Eleven-year-old Willa has been a resident of the Southern Ohio Children’s Home for four years, ever since her mom died from a drug overdose. Opioid abuse is a common problem in the community, and the Home is a haven for several “drug orphans” as well as other children in need. Willa hopes to always be at the Home, even though she gets in trouble at times. She loves the place, her teacher, her companions, and most of all, Mercy (the director of the Home). The newest resident of the Home is Kacey, a nonbinary teen who has been rejected by their parents for their gender identity. Willa and Kacey soon become fast friends. When the duo discover a secret diary written by Mercy’s late aunt, they stumble upon a dark history connected to the past of the Home and the town.
The story comes to us in Willa’s first-person perspective.
"Every so often, a book comes along that changes you as a person. Somehow, this pre-teen read manages to cover more social issues than a left-wing newspaper in Pride month. From drug overdoses, class divides and animal welfare to colonialism, LGBTQ+ and disabilities, everything is handled sensitively and in an accessible way for children. The representation is weaved unobtrusively throughout making this, in my opinion, a future classic."
"Our latest report, Banned in the USA: The Normalization of Book Banning, found that 6,870 books bans were enacted during the 2024-25 school year, across 23 states and 87 public school districts. And everywhere, it is the books that have long fought for a place on the shelf that are being targeted. Books by authors of color, by LGBTQ+ authors, by women. Books about racism, sexuality, gender, history. PEN America pushes back against censorship and the intolerance and exclusion that undergird it."
“—their bravery reminds me that it is by remembering that we ensure past mistakes are not repeated.”