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Shug
Shug
Shug
Ebook189 pages2 hours

Shug

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

Annemarie “Shug” Wilcox is clever and brave and true (on the inside anyway). And she’s about to become your new best friend in this enchanting middle grade novel from the New York Times bestselling author of To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before (soon to be a major motion picture!), Jenny Han.

Annemarie Wilcox, or Shug as her family calls her, is beginning to think there's nothing worse than being twelve. She's too tall, too freckled, and way too flat-chested. Shug is sure that there's not one good or amazing thing about her. And now she has to start junior high, where the friends she counts most dear aren't acting so dear anymore -- especially Mark...
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 29, 2012
ISBN9781442466463
Author

Jenny Han

Jenny Han is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before series, now Netflix movies. She is also the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling The Summer I Turned Pretty series, now streaming on Amazon Prime, as well as Shug, and Clara Lee and the Apple Pie Dream. She is the coauthor of the Burn for Burn trilogy, with Siobhan Vivian. Her books have been published in more than thirty languages. A former librarian, Jenny earned her MFA in creative writing at the New School. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.

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Rating: 4.070652200724638 out of 5 stars
4/5

276 ratings33 reviews

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The light and bright, cheerful cover of Shug belies the serious issues within. Even the descriptive blurb suggests a fairly light story of a 7th grade girl's first real crush, on a boy who'd been her best friend since early childhood. And it is about that. But it's also about dealing with an alcoholic mother and virtually absentee father, coping with peer pressure to stay in the in-crowd, even when they're urging you to do things you know are wrong, and close friendships that change and grow distant as we get older. As small asides, pre-teen drinking and child abuse are touched on as well.This is a good book - it's just much more serious and realistic than I expected from the happy-looking dust jacket. But, as they say, you can't judge a book by its cover. Certainly true in this case!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    really cute!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    this is one is of the best hilarious story I’ve ever read, I remember slapping someone or my table during the funny parts and LOL-ing most of time during those snassy witty comeback of Shug. all sort of funny highschool dramas! if your feeling goodvibes I highly recommend this! this will surely bring you nostalgia of your highschool days!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Fun! Easy read. Enjoyed the storyline and the characters were relatable.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read it back in middle school. I’ve never forgotten it. I’m 24 years old now and decided to read it again. Just as wonderful as I remember.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    the kiss at the end and how shug relized thaat she deserved more then mark
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Narrated by Liz Morton. Very much on point with the social and emotional dynamics of being a young teen in middle school. Liz Morton crafts just the right voice for Shug's story.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazingly true and well-written.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Shug struggles with all the growing up things as she enters 7th grade - changes in her relationships with her best friends, being in "love" and problems with her parents. Han really takes you to the heart of being 12, loved this book.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Shug (that's short for Sugar - Annemarie's nickname) is just about to start 7th grade and everything seems to be changing. All of a sudden her oldest friend Mark is looking completely different (in a cute way!) and Annemarie can't figure out how to make him see her differently. Annemarie has always been the one the teachers liked, but junior high brings Ms. Gillybush who can't seem to stand Annemarie. All the other girls are wearing two-piece swimsuits, but Annemarie's still got her old one-piece - which has a hole! Shug wants everything to stay the way it has been, but soon she realizes change is going to happen whether she's ready for it or not. Shug is realistic fiction that captures the life of a preteen girl - the peer pressure, the embarrassing parents, and the mystery of boys. Shug herself is far from perfect, but readers will immediately identify with her and many of the problems she has to face. There's also a serious look at alcohol abuse here, as Shug's mother uses alcohol to comfort herself in the absence of her traveling husband and Shug is pressured to try beer at a party. Shug is a great choice for upper grade school and middle school fans of realistic fiction.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was such a fun and adorable read. When I first picked this book I had my doubts, but this book was funny, imaginative and totally original. I got so absorbed into Shug's life, that I read through the book so quickly and it just left me wanting more. I hope theres a sequel!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Shug starts off the new school year with a crush on her neighbor, a beautiful older sister, embarrassing parents, a group of friends, a group of frenemies, and a whole host of problems. Han writes convincingly about starting junior high, excellently capturing the complexity of early adolescent friendship. Han also captures the essence of early adolescent social changes in concrete events, such as when everyone’s moms stop showing up to an annual pool party, and the girls make a show of not eating in front of the boys; at the end of the pool party, Shug admits this is probably the last year it will even happen, marking the end of an era. Each character is nuanced and well developed, with more being revealed about them as the book progresses. No character is perfect, yet no single trait or flaw entirely defines them. Han’s dialogue is fresh, as is Shug’s narration of events. Without the presence of a gimmicky plot device, this novel relies solely upon its characters and their interactions. The plot is defined by several smaller character driven narrative arches, such as Shug’s relationship with her parents or Shug’s friendship with her best friends. Shug’s life isn’t perfect and as such, this novel hits upon some issues, mainly an alcoholic parent. This issue is present without dominating the entire story, and is addressed in a way appropriate for its intended audience. This enjoyable read is highly recommended for girls ages ten to twelve.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    "Shug" is about a twelve year-old girl, Annemarie. She has grown onto a nickname, Shug. She believes she is the most ugliest girl in the neighborhood. Soon Shug falls deeply in love with her bestfriend, Mark. Mark has been her bestfriend ever since they were five. When Shug starts junior high, Mark doesn't pay much attention to her anymore. She ends up falling in love with one of MArk's bestfriend, Jake. She always hated Jake. She ends up having her first kiss with Jake instead of Mark. I love this book because it can relate to me. This book can relate to some problems you can have in your everyday teen life. It is a very great book. This book was recommended and i would recommend it to others, too.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    -Annemarie Wilcox, or Shug as her family calls her, is beginning to think there’s nothing worse than being twelve. She’s too tall, too freckled, and way too flat-chested. Shug is sure that there’s not one good or amazing thing about her. And now she has to start junior high, where the friends she counts most dear aren’t acting so dear anymore – especially Mark, the boy she’s known her whole life through. Life is growing up all around her, and all Shug wants is for things to be like they used to be. How is a person supposed to prepare for what happens tomorrow when there is just no figuring out today? Shug reads well and is well written. While intended for a middle school audience, it is constructed well enough to be read by other ages. The characters are well developed and easy to picture. It is a quick reading novel and shows promise. The ending wraps up a little too perfectly but hard to find fault with the book as a whole.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Perfect romance for the middle school readers. Annemarie, aka Shug, is struggling with who she is, as well as who those she's most familiar with are. The 12 years old girl is growing up and wants to experience her first kiss. While she is ready to do this with her BFF, Mark, the feelings are not reciprocated. In the meantime, she struggles with seeing her mother and father in a different light. Shug used to think her mom was someone else, not the alcoholic that she is. She notices the strain in her parents' relationship, as her dad prefers to be away from home working and avoiding Shug's mom. While nothing happens with Mark, she discovers that Jack might not be as bad as everyone thinks he is. When Shug has to help Jack pull his grades up, she gets to know him and realizes she might relate to him better than anyone. With junior high being a challenging time, the everyday tween can relate to all of the changes and adjustments they, like Shug, will face during this time. This book is perfect for the girl who is about to leap from the elementary school setting to jr. high.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    When Annemarie Wilcox realizes that Mark, the true one for her, has a girlfriend, it crushes her. Who will be her be her boyfriend now?
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Annemarie, known as Shug to her family, is going into middle school. As the summer ends and she tries to transition in seventh grade she faces cliques, peer pressure, a teacher who hates her, a family which seems to be falling apart, her first love, her first kiss and her first heartbreak.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is about a twelve year old named Annemarie, who is going through all the bumps and bruises of adolescence. From liking a boy who doesn't like her back, a mean teacher, going to school dances, and getting into fights with her best friend, Annemarie doesn't want to grow up. She doesn't like the cliques or how everybody is changing and she wants everything to stay the same. Shug is one of those books that you just can't put down because you just have to know what happens next. I really enjoyed reading this book because I could really relate to Annemarie, who is just your average twelve year old. I've been through some of the same experiences she has and she's also just a fun, funny character and very easy to connect to. When I finished reading the book I liked it so much that I really didn't want it to end.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Because I have to read all the Caudill books, I randomly started this one. At first I groaned about how girly it was and didn't think I would enjoy it. Instead, I found it "real" and refreshing - the character I really related to as being the "awkward junior high kid" who was a late bloomer (reminds me of myself). It was really just cute, sweet and still dealt with some serious issues of friendship, divorce, dating, etc.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Twelve-year-old Annemarie Wilcox--nicknamed "Shug," which is short for sugar--is feeling anything but sweet right now. She's entering middle school, her parents are constantly fighting (when they're not drunk or away for work), and things are changing between her and her friends. Mairi, Hadley, and even her best friend Elaine, a Korean American from up north, are eagerly venturing into the world of becoming a woman and meeting boys. But Annemarie wants nothing to do with that world...not unless it includes Mark Findley, her childhood best friend and the guy she recently realizes she's in love with.Trouble is, Mark doesn't seem to reciprocate her feelings. In fact, Annemarie feels like she hardly sees him anymore, so busy is he with hanging out with other people. Instead, she's spending a lot of time tutoring Jack Connelly, which is too bad because they're sworn enemies and hate each other's guts. Annemarie doesn't want to grow up just yet, but she has to learn the hard way (like we all do) that it's a painful and necessary, sometimes heartbreaking, process with light at the end of the tunnel.I love Judy Blume-esque books that focus on that painfully awkward and difficult transition right before puberty; thus, I LOVED Shug. This is a story that's full of characters that you'll want to be friends with. Annemarie in particular is a spunky heroine, unafraid to say her mind, the girl we all remember being back at that age and the girl we want to befriend. The supporting characters, too, are not caricatures but rather boys and girls (and men and women) with their own problems. I'm especially a fan of Jack right from the start; the dynamics between Annemarie and Jack are great.If you want a growing-up novel that's more Southern than Judy Blume's and less sex-oriented than Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's Alice series, pick up SHUG. You won't regret it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I looked at the cover, and I noticed a cherry popsicle. It looked exciting, so I bought it. This book is about a teenager. She has a crush, her best friend. She can't stop thinking about him, wondering if he liked her back. She's going through rough times -- an alchoholic mom, love, and puberty. Find out what happens in Shug.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    If entering the teen years is something you would rather forget, then this book is not for you. However, if you want to really experience life as a young girl entering Junior High and coping with her alcoholhic mother and mostly absent father, then Jennifer Han's "Shug" will leave you stunned and amazed that any of us survived Junior High.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a wonderful book! The characters felt so real—it was like being transported to 12 years old again! I definitely recommend it, particularly for girls 9-14, but also for anyone who used to be that age. :)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A twelve-year-old girl learns about friendship, first loves, and self-worth in a small town in the South.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Shug (Annemarie) is getting ready to start junior high. When the story begins she has just discovered that she is love with her best friend, Mark. However, in junior high everything is different. Her parents are not getting along, her mom is drinking a lot, her sister is out of the house as often as possible, and she is worried about what will happen with her best friend Elaine, who is clearly meant to be in the popular crowd. I loved the story with her arch-enemy Jack. This was just an all around enjoyable, touching read. I'm glad it is on the Caudill list! The girls at my school are really going to love it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was a great pre-teen book, I loved it! I wish I had this book to read when I was growing up instead of Sweet Valley High. Very realistic, especially the pool party.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I felt like it started a little slowly for me. It's one of those books that plops you down right in the middle of the story and just keeps building. I'd say about 100 pages in, I was totally hooked. I loved Annemarie and wanted to see her succeed, wanted to see what was going to happen with her and her friends. Could she stand up to the queen bees she secretly despised? Would Mark realize his folly and turn out to love her back? I thought the ending was very realistic. It wraps everything up, but not everything gets wrapped up with a neat little happy bow.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really liked this book because it is about a girl my age and she is going through most of the same problems as me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is an extremely good book about a twelve year old girl named, Annemarie, but everyone calls her Shug. It's about her life in middle school, how she goes from liking her best friend, Mark, to liking her worst enemy, Jack. I'd recomend this book to romance lovers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Shug is a charming story about the perils of being a twelve-year-old girl. Shug, also known as Annemarie, struggles with her family where her mother is a distant drinker, her father is in and out of her life, and her older sister is focused more on leaving for college than in her younger sister. When Shug realizes that she has suddenly fallen for her best friend, Mark, she no longer knows how to act around him, and the distance between the two of them grows. Starting junior high as a non-popular girl is also a challenge as she tries to navigate between being herself and still having friends. As her best girl friend Elaine is courted by the popular crowd, Shug finds another friend in the very last place she expected to.The writing in this book is sparklingly clean and clear, making it easy and very pleasurable reading. The characters face challenges that are not easily solved and the world of junior high is as confusing and amazing as it was when I was that age. I truly appreciate someone writing a great book for girls at this age, before they are teenagers but at the same time that so many confusing things are happening with their emotions and their bodies. The character Annemarie or Shug is so well-developed that she becomes real. Recommend this to preteens as well as teenagers. This is a true tween book, and you know where to find the exact girls for it. Additionally, it is a great book for mothers to share with daughters and have a conversation about the new challenges of becoming a teen and the world of junior high.

Book preview

Shug - Jenny Han

chapter 1

It is the end of a summer afternoon and the sun will be setting soon, our favorite part of the day. We’re eating Popsicles, cherry ones. My shirt is sticking to my back, and my hands feel sugary and warm, but my lips are cool. The sun is turning that fiery pink I love, and I turn to Mark the way I always do.

I look at him, really look at him. We have sat under this tree, our tree, a hundred times or more, and he’s always been the same Mark—the Mark I have known since we were five years old and I told him my mama was a whole lot prettier than his. But today, at this very moment, he is different, and it’s not even something I can explain. But I feel it. Boy, do I feel it. On the outside, everything looks the way it always does, but on the inside, it’s like some little part of me is waking up.

His hair is hanging in his eyes, and his skin is brown as toast. He smells the way he always smells in summer—like green grass and sweat and chlorine. He’s watching the sun turn its different colors, and he’s all quiet and hushed up. He turns to me and smiles, and in that moment he is so dear to me I hurt inside. That’s when I feel it—like my heart might burst right out of my chest. This is it; this is the exact moment when he is supposed to kiss me, the kind of moment movies are made for. He’ll look at me, and he’ll know, just like I know.

Everybody knows that twelve is the perfect age for your first kiss.

Except, he isn’t looking at me anymore. And he’s talking; the big jerk is talking when he should be kissing. He’s going on about some mountain bike his dad is going to buy him for his birthday. Man, it’s gonna be sweet. We’re gonna go on the Tuckashawnee trail—

Hey, Mark, I interrupt. I’m giving him one last chance to make this moment up to me, one last chance to see me the way I see him. I will him to look at me, really look at me. Don’t see the mosquito bites on my legs, don’t see the ketchup stain on my shorts, or the scabs on my elbows. Don’t see the girl you’ve known your whole life. See me. See me.

Yeah? He’s looking at me, and he doesn’t see me at all. I can tell he’s still thinking about that bike and hasn’t even thought of kissing me. His mouth is cherry red from his Popsicle. He looks like he’s wearing lipstick.

You look like you’re wearing lipstick, I say. You look like a girl. A girl with really bad taste. I laugh like it’s the funniest thing in the world.

He flushes. Shut up, Annemarie, he says, wiping away at his mouth furiously.

I bet Celia has some eye shadow that would look terrif with that lipstick, I continue. Celia is my big sister, and probably the prettiest girl in our town, maybe even the state.

Mark glares at me. You’re just jealous because Celia’s prettier than you.

I bite my lip. You should let Celia give you a makeover, I say. My eyes are starting to burn. When the two of us get started we don’t quit until one of us leaves crying. Usually it’s Mark, but this time I am afraid it will be me.

Please, please don’t let it be me.

You’re the one who could use a makeover, Mark says cruelly.

You are really ignorant, Mark, you know that? You’re a real troglodyte. You’re so ignorant, I bet you don’t even know what that means. It means a primitive person who lives in caves. I only know because I looked it up after Celia called me one when I tried to eat grapes with my toes.

So what? I bet you don’t know what it means either. I bet you copied it off your mom or your sister.

I did not. I happen to be gifted. I never copy off of anybody, unlike some troglodytes I know.

Last year I caught Mark copying Jack Connelly’s homework on the bus. He pretended like it was no big deal in front of his buddies, but when I threatened to tell his mama, Mrs. Findley, he started boohooing like a little baby. The dumbest part is that Jack Connelly is easily the least smart person in our grade. If Mark’s a troglodyte, Jack is king of the troglodytes.

Mark gapes at me and shakes his head disgustedly. Geez, Annemarie, why’d you have to bring that up? You started it.

I was just foolin’, and if you weren’t so dense, you’d know better than to criticize a girl’s looks. It’s degrading, and it’s, well, it’s sexist. I raise my eyebrows high and dare him to disagree.

What a load of crap. You can say whatever you want to me, and I can’t say jack to you? Mark says, shaking his head again. That’s dumb.

That’s the way it goes, I say. And anyway, you didn’t have to rub it in about Celia. I know she’s prettier than me.

My sister Celia is the kind of girl whose hair curls just right in a ponytail. She is smaller than me, the kind of small that boys want to scoop up and hold on to real tight. I am too tall for even my daddy to scoop up anymore, much less a sixth grade boy. Boys like Celia; they go crazy for her sneaky smiles and sassy strut. They are always calling the house and making Daddy frown. Mama just smiles and says, the boys buzz around my Celia because they know she is sweeter than honey. I sure wish boys would buzz around me.

On every Valentine’s Day since the fourth grade, Celia has come home with pink carnations and solid milk chocolate hearts and at least one Whitman’s Sampler. She always lets me eat the square ones with caramel inside, even though they are her favorite too. The most I ever get on Valentine’s Day are the valentines the class got for one another because they had to, the Scooby-Doo or Mickey Mouse kind that come twenty-four to a box at the drugstore.

Mark gives me his I’m sorry look—his half grin–half grimace that’s supposed to look like real remorse. He looks like he always does when he has messed up, like a puppy that’s peed on himself and is sorry, but will inevitably do it again. Mark Findley has been saying sorry to me his whole life.

Sorry, Annemarie, he says.

I scowl at him. Yeah, well, you should be.

He’s still giving me The Look, and then he gets on his knees. Forgive me, Annemarie! Please, please forgive me! he begs, swaying back and forth with his hands clasped in prayer.

He is so dumb.

The thing I hate worst about Mark is that I can never, ever stay mad at him. I can hold a grudge better than anybody I know, but with Mark it is truly impossible. He always finds a way to make me laugh.

Oh, get up. Trying to hide my smile, I tear a handful of grass out of the ground and throw it at his head.

He sees the smile that got away and looks satisfied. Then he shakes the grass out of his hair the way my dog Meeks does after a bath. Where is Celia, anyway? Mark asks oh-so-casually, falling back onto the ground.

Mark has had a crush on Celia since we were little kids. He’s never said so, but he doesn’t have to. He knows I know.

She’s at the mall with Margaret Tolliver, and then they’re having a sleepover at Margaret’s house. Margaret Tolliver is Celia’s best friend, and sometimes they let me come along. Today was not one of those times.

Oh, he says. It hurts to hear so much disappointment in that one little word and I know he still likes her. Celia’s sixteen, and we’re twelve, so you’d think Mark would know he doesn’t have a prayer. And I guess he does know, but he still hopes. Next to the high school guys that like Celia, Mark looks like a little kid. I guess he knows that too. But he still follows Celia around the same way old Meeks does when he’s hoping for scraps.

We don’t say anything for a minute; we just watch the sun disappear. Then Mark stands up. I guess I’d better go home, he says. You wanna come over for dinner? I think Mom’s making spaghetti tonight.

Mrs. Findley’s spaghetti is the Best Ever, capital B, capital E. She makes the sauce from scratch and everything—roasted tomatoes, fresh basil from her garden, sweet Italian sausage. Her secret ingredient is honey; it adds a sweetness to the sauce. Mrs. Findley’s spaghetti is my favorite. I know this is Mark’s way of making it up to me, and I want to say yes, but instead I say, Nah, Mama’s probably already fixed somethin’ special for me.

This is a bald-faced lie, and we both know it. Mama hates to cook, and the only time she ever really bothers is when my daddy is at home. Daddy is in Atlanta on business for another week, so the best I can hope for is a peanut butter sandwich. And that’s only if Celia bought bread today.

But I sure as heck won’t admit any of that to Mark. I’ll probably be dining on Extra Crunchy Jif tonight, but at least I won’t have shamed my mama. Not that she would even be ashamed, but I know for a fact that she doesn’t like the neighborhood knowing our family business. Mama’s big on pride. She’s always telling me that a woman without pride is no woman at all. I know that I’m not a woman in the places that really count, but I can at least get the pride part right.

Mark shrugs, and says, Are you gonna go to Sherilyn’s pool party next Saturday?

Yup. Our friend Sherilyn Tallini has a pool party at the end of every summer, right before school starts. It used to be typical kid stuff—hot dogs and Sharks and Minnows and neighborhood moms wearing one-pieces with terry cloth cover-ups and matching terry cloth slippers. All except for Sherylin’s mom, who only wears string bikinis with maybe a sarong. All the other mothers smile and pretend to like Mrs. Tallini, but really they think she is attractive in a used up, tanning bed kind of way. I know because I heard Mairi Stevenson’s mom say it at the Fourth of July parade last year.

Mrs. Tallini does have a tanning bed but, as I’ve heard my daddy say, she is still one good-lookin’ woman. If my mother heard him say this, she would skin him good, but fortunately for us all, Mama does not attend neighborhood functions.

I know what the other mothers think of Mama. They think she is stuck-up and pretentious. They think she thinks she is better than they are. And it’s true; she does. My mother, Grace, is very tall and very beautiful in an intimidating sort of way, the kind of way that says she knows it but doesn’t give a hoot. Mama’s hair is the color of wheat, the kind that gleams red and gold in the sunlight, and her eyes are dark green. My daddy calls her Grace Kelly, which Mama turns her nose up at because according to her, it’s far too conventional, but I know she secretly enjoys it. She says that Daddy is no prince, and if she’s gonna be compared to anyone, it had better be Lauren Bacall.

Daddy thinks that Mama is everything a woman should be: beautiful, clever, charming. Beauty has a way of making the bad things tolerable. When Mama tilts her green eyes at you, it’s hard to remember why you were mad in the first place. That’s her special gift.

My mother is unlike every other mother in our neighborhood—she went to college up North, and she had the nerve to come back all citified, puttin’ on airs like she’s Princess Diana. (If you’re wondering how I know all this, it’s because adults think that kids can’t play and listen at the same time.) Mama grew up with a lot of the other mothers in our town, and you can just bet they were smug when she had to come back home.

Mama reads Foucault, not Danielle Steel, and she makes martinis, not green bean casserole. In the kitchen, there are poetry books where the cookbooks should be, and she doesn’t have a dish towel with mallard ducks on it or a ceramic magnet that says Home Sweet Home on our refrigerator. Mama is always telling Celia and me that we are worth twelve of this town, and that she’ll disinherit us if we don’t leave as soon as we graduate high school. Mama is halfheartedly invited to neighborhood parties like the Tallini’s, but she never fails to graciously decline and the other mothers never fail to be relieved.

Last year was the first year Sherilyn’s pool party was different. None of the other mothers were there, and Mrs. Tallini only came outside to serve lunch. I ate two pieces of fried chicken as opposed to my standard four, because none of the other girls were eating anything. We didn’t play Sharks and Minnows, and all the other girls wore two-piece bathing suits and lay on deck chairs while the boys tried to splash them. I was the only one who wore the same one-piece bathing suit I had worn the year before. I told the other girls it was because I think bikinis are offensive and degrading to women, so I guess that means I’m stuck wearing my one-piece again this year.

You wanna walk over to Sherilyn’s together? Mark asks.

"Yeah,

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