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Jennifer Longo

    L'écriture de Jennifer Longo explore le paysage nuancé de l'expérience humaine, créant des récits riches en profondeur émotionnelle et en perspicacité. Son travail explore souvent les complexités des relations, la croissance personnelle et la recherche de l'identité. La voix distinctive de Longo apporte une sensibilité à sa narration, éclairant les courants subtils qui façonnent nos vies. Elle est connue pour sa capacité à transmettre des représentations vives et convaincantes de personnages naviguant à travers des passages importants de la vie.

    Six Feet Over It
    Up To This Pointe
    What I Carry
    • What I Carry

      • 352pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      4,3(238)Évaluer

      "A deeply touching story about survival, hope, and love." --Kathleen Glasgow, New York Times bestselling author A powerful and heartwarming look at a teen girl about to age out of the foster care system. Growing up in foster care, Muir has lived in many houses. And if she's learned one thing, it is to Pack. Light. Carry only what fits in a suitcase. Toothbrush? Yes. Socks? Yes. Emotional attachment to friends? foster families? a boyfriend? Nope! There's no room for any additional baggage. Muir has just one year left before she ages out of the system. One year before she's free. One year to avoid anything--or anyone--that could get in her way. Then she meets Francine. And Kira. And Sean. And everything changes.

      What I Carry
    • Up To This Pointe

      • 360pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,9(148)Évaluer

      Devastated when her dream of becoming a professional ballerina falls through, seventeen-year-old Harper Scott takes a job as a research assistant, wintering over at McMurdo, a U.S. science station at the tip of Antarctica where, for the first time, she considers other possible futures.

      Up To This Pointe
    • Six Feet Over It

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture
      3,7(55)Évaluer

      No one is more surprised than Leigh when her father buys a graveyard. Less shocking is the fact that he’s too lazy to look farther than the dinner table for employees. Working the literal graveyard shift, she becomes great at predicting headstone choice (mostly granite) and taking notes with one hand while offering Kleenex with the other. Sarcastic and smart, Leigh should be able to quit this stupid after-school job. But her world’s been turned upside down by the sudden loss of her best friend and the appearance of Dario, the slightly-too-old-for-her gravedigger. Can Leigh move on, if moving on means it’s time to get a life?

      Six Feet Over It