
Reach for this book when your pre-teen is struggling to find their place after a major family shift or feeling the heavy weight of social 'imposter syndrome.' It is a poignant resource for children who feel invisible at home due to divorce and are tempted to reinvent themselves through lies just to feel valued by peers. The story follows twelve-year-old Agnes as she navigates the lonely space between her parents' new lives, eventually creating a false persona to fit in with a musical crowd. It delicately explores themes of self-acceptance, the anxiety of being found out, and the restorative power of honesty. This is a compassionate choice for 9 to 12-year-olds who need to see that their true self, while perhaps feeling 'plain,' is actually their greatest strength. It provides a safe space to discuss why we lie and how to come back to the truth.
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Sign in to write a reviewThe protagonist engages in extensive lying to build a new social identity.
The book handles divorce and identity in a direct, realistic manner. It avoids sugar-coating the loneliness Agnes feels or the frustration she has with her parents. The resolution is hopeful but grounded in reality: it doesn't fix the divorce, but it fixes Agnes's relationship with herself. It is a secular narrative.
A middle-schooler who feels like they don't 'fit' the mold of the popular kids and is currently experiencing the fractured reality of a recent parental separation.
Read cold. Parents might want to pay attention to the scenes where Agnes's parents are preoccupied with their own lives, as these are excellent discussion starters about family dynamics. A parent might notice their child becoming unusually secretive about new friends or witness a 'performance' where the child acts like a completely different person in public.
Younger readers (9-10) will focus on the 'oops' factor of the lies and the fear of getting caught. Older readers (11-12) will better grasp the deeper psychological motivations: the desire for a clean slate and the pain of feeling replaceable at home.
Unlike many 'new girl' stories, this focuses intensely on the internal shame of the lie rather than just the external drama, making it a powerful study of integrity.
Agnes is a twelve-year-old girl caught in the middle of a messy divorce, feeling like an afterthought in both of her parents' new lives. When she moves to a new town, she seizes the chance to be someone else: Chloe, a sophisticated girl with a much more exciting life. As she integrates into a group of artistic, musical friends, her web of lies grows increasingly complex. The story culminates in the inevitable collision of her two worlds, forcing her to confront the shame of her deception and rediscover her authentic voice through music and genuine connection.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.