Lessons From a Dead Girl

LESSONS FROM A DEAD GIRL
By Jo Knowles
Candlewick, 2007

Category: Young Adult Fiction

As you will recognize from my earlier post, today is a thinking day. In addition to thinking about my personal Everest and my favorite nonfiction first lines, I am thinking about this amazing book. I read it over the weekend in two intense sittings. And it is one of those books—one of those rare and unforgettable books—that makes you think.

Laine McCarthy and Leah Greene were childhood friends. Unlikely friends—Laine was quiet and awkward, Leah was popular and beautiful—but friends nonetheless. When the book opens, Leah is dead, and Laine (brave, beautiful Laine!) is not sure how to feel about it. After reading their story, I don’t know how to feel about it either. I am left wondering about cruelty and secrets and resilience. Especially about resilience. (Why are some people instinctually resilient and others not? Why? WHY?)

LESSONS FROM A DEAD GIRL will break and heal your heart at the same time. It is hard to read and impossible to put down. It is sad and liberating and scary and comforting all at once. It will make you think.