4/5 stars, this was a hard book to read, but such an important story
Thank you to Penguin Young Readers Group & Rocky Pond Books for the arc through netgalley and a physical arc copy in exchange for an honest review!
Initially, I didn't give this book a rating because I read it in only a couple of hours and really wanted to give it the contemplation it deserved. After thinking about it, I've settled on 4 stars because there were lots of things done very well within this story but I wish there had just been more of it. The book was really short, which allowed it to be very hard-hitting but I also wish that there had been just a little bit more length to allow some more things to sit longer within the story.
This is a painful book to read, it hurts watching the main character recount her trauma and how it begins a downward spiral in her whole final year of high school. I knew going into this that it was going to be hard to read, with trigger warnings of things related to sexual assault, child sexual abuse, domestic violence, substance abuse, suicidal ideation, and the breakup of friends (people can argue this isn't as bad as the others but coupled with it? isolation is never a good thing). Even with all this, the main character never loses her truly honest voice about everything.
Experiencing everything from her mind was difficult, it wasn't easy reading what went on in her mind and being inside dark parts of it, but it allowed for such a deeper connection. I really wanted to see if she was going to be okay, she really deserved so much better than the cards she was dealt in life and every page made me feel so many things for her. It was hard to just sit and watch her life slowly slip away from her, turning to sex as a coping strategy for what happened to her, damaging her friendships, and using alcohol to get through her days.
This book felt so tender, real, and very honest about how things like sexual abuse and domestic violence can impact anyone, but especially a teenager. I didn't feel like at any point the author was trying to glorify any of this, the writing didn't even feel like it was painting Virginia out to be a perfect person despite the things she did. No, it depicted her as a painfully real person who is going through things people around her didn't see. She's not perfect, and this story recognizes that, but it also recognizes her actions are a result of what she's been through.
Also, I don't usually read the author's notes, sometimes for my favorites, but I read a review where it said that I definitely should so I took the time after to reflect with the author. It's most definitely a must-read for delving deeper into this topic and acknowledging how many people go through these things every day. I just wish there had been a bit more time to let the story develop in the length, but honestly, this is one of the best young adult contemporaries that I've read that handles this sort of thing in such a solid way.
[TW: sexual assault, suicidal ideation, physical abuse, child abuse mentioned, sexual themes mentioned, alcohol use and abuse, child sexual abuse, trauma, sexual assault, death of parents, abortion, and teen pregnancy mentioned]