I liked "Shut the Door" by the 16 year old Amanda Marquit. She has amazing talent. She sets up a dysfunctional family who does not communicate with each oher ---- the mom (Beatrice), who adores her husband so much that she smothers him, her husband Harry, who has gone to Cleveland on a once in a lifetime business trip, who meets up with a hooker named Chloe and falls in love, daughter Lillian, the wild child who finally falls in love with Paul, and cuts his name on her arm (and he thinks she's too young for him), and daughter Vivian, who spends the whole book changing herself to be more like Lillian --- the book used total omniscience, so not a lot of stuff happens, but the thoughts are very universal, and I couldn't believe that those parts were written by such a young person. However, the dialogue parts were awful --- purposefully? not sure, but just awful, like hi, how are you, I'm okay, how are you? stuff that I used to put slashes through when I graded sophomore short stories. So if I would have edited the book, the dialogue would have been less, and so would the thoughts --- the book went on way too long, but the end was good, so I'm glad I finished it --- just too long in parts, lots of repetition (I Love Harry, I Love Paul, I hate myself being fat, I don't want to go home over and over and over)