Light enough to float

Lauren Seal

Book - 2024

"The story of a teenage girl's recovery, in a psychiatric hospital, from anorexia, told in poetry"--

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Seal Lauren
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Subjects
Genres
Realistic fiction
Novels in verse
Social problem fiction
Published
New York, NY : Rocky Pond Books [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Lauren Seal (author)
Physical Description
343 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12 years and up.
NP
ISBN
9780593700143
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Evie can't quiet the voices in her head telling her to count calories and that she's a burden on her family. After she's dropped off at a treatment hospital for eating disorders, Evie is being watched while she eats, attending therapy sessions, and feeling more alone than ever. As her treatment continues, she slowly opens herself to the people around her and accepts the help she needs. In this raw novel in verse, Evie's concern about food and taking up space is fueled by her anxiety, which also has her picking at her scalp. The story unfolds with sparse details, and while by the end Evie finds hope, things aren't wrapped up in a nice bow. Readers should proceed with caution about the sensitive and painful details shared about Evie's journey, but this could be a good pick for those wanting to understand what others are going through. An emotionally complex novel that that will stick in readers' minds.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A girl's experience of being hospitalized with anorexia illuminates the complicated nature of treating eating disorders. This skillfully crafted verse novel follows white 14-year-old Evie, who's recently been diagnosed with "extreme malnourishment" due to anorexia, as she enters and completes a course of a few months of inpatient treatment. Evie is placed on a strict and steadily increasing calorie regimen, and as she improves, she meets others who are struggling with eating disorders, learning how diverse these patients' backgrounds are and how varied the presentation of their disorders can be. As Evie works through therapy and makes strides toward going home, she worries that she won't be able to maintain her progress on the outside--a not-unfounded fear, which, combined with the range of secondary characters' experiences, gives Seal the opportunity to show readers why eating disorders can be so hard to treat. The story is informed by the author's own life, lending tenderness and understanding to its insights. The spare details support strong characterization: Evie's mother's good (but poorly expressed) intentions and her sister's open, vulnerable conversations illustrate well how family members can hurt or help recovery efforts. Readers who are grappling with these issues may find it difficult to read about specific calorie counts as well as the explicit descriptions of dangerously familiar patterns of thought and unhealthy weight-loss strategies. A realistically complex yet hopeful account of eating disorder treatment. (author's note, resources)(Verse fiction. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

September the psychiatrist dr. mantell, the psychiatrist's nameplate shouts. i fight the urge to ask if his name is printed in loud uppercase letters to drown out us lowercase people and our lowercase lives. his scalpel-gray eyes dissect me, quarter me, sternum to pelvis, left breast to right, wrench me open, reach inside, find all the nothing i've eaten since yesterday. evie, the muscles in my body contract and freeze. i sit, still and staring: portrait of a girl afraid. evie, do you know why you're here? why i'm here because of the tests. they took my height and weight, took my blood, took my heart rate, took my pee, took my family history, then a man in a lab coat took my parents aside to tell them i failed. i've never failed a test in my life. because my mother says this is an important appointment. we are lucky a cancellation let capital- t Them fit me in. because sometimes i get a little sad and overwhelmed. because sometimes i feel like falling asleep and never waking up. because my parents and my sister and my friend darcy and my dog would probably be happier without me. because all i do is try and try to be a perfect daughter and sister and friend and student and person but it doesn't make me any less scared of living. because i would be happier without me. because sometimes i have trouble eating and my mother and i argue over dinner plates just three more bites like i'm a misbehaving toddler. i slouch down in my chair, glare at the doctor, refuse to speak. why i'm really here because of my lies. the first: i'm on a diet. wrong, i've been on all of them: mediterranean, keto, raw food, low-fat, gluten-free, atkins, vegan, paleo, south beach. whatever let me restrict. intermittent eating with frequent fasting. second: it's only one more . . . sit-up, push-up, squat, mile. that i wouldn't add one plus one plus one plus one until my muscles ached, body broke. third: i'm in control. i can stop whenever i want. professional opinion your height and weight are very low for a fourteen-year-old, dr. mantell says same with your hemoglobin, and your electrolytes. you have all the symptoms of extreme malnourishment. pride flutters in my chest. i nod along benignly, glare at the office door my mom stands behind. i missed school to be here. does no one care about my GPA? the results from your EKG indicate bradycardia. bradycardia? a slow heart rate. thirty-eight beats per minute. i nod. i don't want him to think i am a stupid girl. i am not a stupid girl. do you understand? don't blink. yes. evie, your heart is so slow it could stop at any moment. the offbeat drumming of said organ floods my ears. dr. mantell observes my reaction. me the frog, his eyes the scalpel. see the ease with which they slit my pale, white skin, my muscles, my rib cage, until my empty guts spill out. you are, in my professional opinion, anorexic. that word anorexic. it lodges itself in my coronary artery. heart palpitates. thousands of excuses dam up my mouth: i eat, i'm fat, i'm not obsessed with my looks, i eat, that's not the type of girl i am. i come from a good family-- but i eat, i squeak. do you eat enough? i think about the ice cream i don't eat. the chocolate, the potato chips i also don't eat. the avocados, bananas, cookies, french fries, granola, hamburgers, marshmallows, peanut butter, spaghetti, tacos, yogurt, an alphabet of off-limits food. yes? dr. mantell leans back in his chair, scrunches his white face in thought, impatiently tap-tap-taps his pen against the notes he's been taking. i think we should get your mother in here. my mother she barges in with as much restraint as a freight train. this woman who gobbles firewood so she can keep running and running and running along her one-track mind. my diagnosis derails her. she fires coal-hot questions: what does this mean? how does she get better? can she get better? what about her heart? how do i make her gain weight? i think she's really asking, what do i do with this damaged daughter? drowning mom and dr. mantell position me as a problem to solve. say words like program, therapy, refeeding. i'm stuck on anorexic, ANorexIC, ANOREXIC. it floods me, fills my lungs. i can't shout, can't breathe, only flail. fail. drown. too weak to surface. i've drowned before when i was five, at a beach that's more dream than memory. bubble-gum-ice-cream-blue sky, chocolate-brown lake. i ran, reckless, into calf-deep water. splashed in waves left in motorboats' wakes. another girl, eight or nine, joined me, chanted, follow me, follow me, i will lead, so follow me! powerless against this pied piper, i followed, the water reaching my shoulders, my neck, my scalp. i followed, until I couldn't. my feet floundered for lake bottom. my left foot found ground. stepped down and sunk, stuck in deep muck. scared, limbs swinging, i struggled, stomped, trapped my right foot. panic pounded in violent waves. come on, my new friend giggled. my head barely breached the surface. restless ripples muffled my screams. help! only silence answered. my last thought as static clouded in: this is all my fault. warm hands grabbed under my armpits. hauled so hard my side-body ached. evie! you know the rule, don't go in past your waist! my dad hissed through gritted teeth. he carried me to safety, where my rules have kept me ever since. Excerpted from Light Enough to Float by Lauren Seal All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.