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Rosie Girl

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Little Peach meets We Were Liars in this haunting YA debut about a troubled teen searching for her birth mom who uncovers disturbing family secrets along the way.
 
After her father passes away, seventeen-year-old Rosie is forced to live with her abusive stepmom Lucy and her deadbeat boyfriend, Judd, who gives Rosie the sort of looks you shouldn’t give your girlfriend’s step-daughter. Desperate for a way out, Rosie would do just about anything to escape the life she’s been handed. Then she finds a letter her dad wrote years ago, a letter confessing that Rosie's birth mother isn't dead, as she believed, but alive somewhere—having left them when Rosie was a little girl for reasons he won't reveal.
     Rosie resolves to find her birth mom, and she'll put everything on the line to make that happen. She hires a PI paid for by her best friend, Mary, who turns tricks for money. Unlike Rosie, Mary's no delicate flower and when she sees the opportunity to make some cash and help out her closest friend, she takes it. Romance blooms when the PI Rosie hires hands the case off to his handsome nephew Mac, but Rosie struggles to keep her illicit activities with Mary a secret. Things begin to unravel when Rosie starts getting creepy anonymous texts from johns looking for Mary. And then there's Mary, the one person Rosie can count on, who's been acting strangely all of a sudden. As Rosie and Mary get closer to finally uncovering the truth about Rosie's mom, Rosie comes face to face with a secret she never saw coming. A visceral, poignant tale of friendship, sacrifice and identity, Rosie Girl is an unforgettable debut that will leave you guessing till the very last page.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 3, 2017
      Seventeen-year-old Rosie’s best friend Mary has always been her savior. Desperate for cash—Mary wants to leave Miami, and Rosie needs to pay a private investigator to track down her birth mother—they hatch an unorthodox plan, with Mary trading sex for money. The business is both illegal and dangerous, quickly attracting the wrong kinds of attention, while Rosie’s alcoholic stepmother remains oblivious to it all. Through a series of shattering revelations, debut author Shepard unwinds a tale of dark secrets about family, trust, and identity. Clues to a final twist are peppered throughout, becoming more obvious as the story barrels toward an abrupt ending; readers will gradually recognize the unreliability of Rosie’s narration. Shepard paints a painful portrait of a teenage girl living on the fringe with few protections at her disposal. But supporting characters, including wild-child Mary and Rosie’s private investigator–turned–love interest, remain largely one-dimensional, and the novel doesn’t full delve into the issues of mental illness, addiction, and abuse that it raises. Ages 14–up. Agent: Leigh Feldman, Leigh Feldman Literary.

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2017
      A psychological thriller promises scandal and drama. This novel seeks to intertwine two narratives. One is about white 17-year-old Rosie Velvitt and her physically and emotionally threatening home life, which pushes her to extremes (such as booking johns for her best friend, who turns tricks for cash) in order to find a birth mother she thought long dead. The other is about Rosie and her best friend, Mary Perkins (also white), and the truth about why their relationship seems to revolve around instances of explicit sexual violence. While the former enjoys rich development in a nuanced, first-person consideration of family, friendship, and the breaking points for both, the latter feels like a trauma-exploitative gimmick and rests on an implausible (though not impossible) manifestation of mental illness. In what seems to be a collision between Brock Cole's The Facts Speak for Themselves (1997) and Sonya Hartnett's Surrender (2006), the dropped hints and whiplash-inducing twist ending throw the entirety of the narrative prior to the last page into new light. While this may hit the mark for some Shyamalan-enthusiast readers, it will disappoint those less entertained by ugly tropes around mental health stigma or simply expecting an intentional inclusion of mental disability to be more thoughtful than a repellent plot twist. Several of the right ingredients languish under infelicitous execution. (Thriller. 14-17)

      COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • School Library Journal

      June 1, 2017

      Gr 9 Up-Seventeen-year-old Rosie is anxiously awaiting the moment she can escape her emotionally abusive stepmother, Lucy, and Judd, her stepmother's leering boyfriend. Since her father died, Rosie's main support system has been her best friend Mary. Rosie finds a box that her father hid away for her, which reveals a long-held secret: her biological mother didn't die when Rosie was three. Wanting to learn more, Rosie decides to hire a private investigator. Mary raises the PI's fee by having sex with guys for money, much to Rosie's dismay. After meeting Mac, her investigator's nephew, and befriending Elaine while riding the public bus, Rosie continues to grow while Mary begins to pull away. Filled with unforgettable characters and expertly paced, the novel takes readers down many paths to an unexpected and shocking ending that packs a punch. However, there are a few loose threads, leaving readers to fill in the blanks. VERDICT This is a book teens will want to reread. Add to collections where E. Lockhart's We Were Liars is popular.-Stephanie Charlefour, formerly at Wixom Public Library, MI

      Copyright 2017 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2018
      When Rosie learns that her birth mother--who she'd thought was dead--might still be alive, she's desperate to find her. Enter Rosie's best friend Mary, who offers to prostitute herself to help Rosie raise cash for a private investigator. Their ill-conceived plan quickly goes awry and culminates in a shocking--if too abrupt--ending that will have readers looking back for clues.

      (Copyright 2018 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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