
Reach for this book when your teenager is grappling with the invisible weight of a chronic illness or feels like their health is isolating them from their peers. It is an essential choice for families navigating a new medical diagnosis or for those who need to see that strength often comes from the most unlikely friendships found in shared vulnerability. The story follows two teenage girls, Chess and Shannon, who are forced to share a hospital room while dealing with Crohn's disease. Through its unique verse format, the book explores the raw realities of hospital life, the loss of privacy, and the evolution of self-identity during a health crisis. It is emotionally honest and perfectly pitched for ages 12 and up, offering a hopeful perspective on finding connection when your world feels reduced to four sterile walls.
Your experience helps other parents find the right book.
Sign in to write a reviewMedical procedures and complications can create moments of tension.
The book deals directly and realistically with chronic illness and bodily functions. It is a secular approach that focuses on the physical and psychological toll of disease. The resolution is realistic: it doesn't offer a 'cure,' but it offers a path forward through emotional resilience and peer support.
A middle or high schooler who feels 'othered' by a medical condition or someone who enjoys experimental poetry and stories about complicated female friendships.
Parents should be aware that the book discusses medical procedures and bodily functions (related to Crohn's) with total honesty. It is best read after the initial shock of a diagnosis has settled. A parent might notice their child becoming withdrawn after a diagnosis, expressing shame about their body, or feeling like their 'healthy' friends no longer understand their life.
Younger teens will focus on the drama of the 'roommate' dynamic, while older teens will appreciate the sophisticated verse structure and the nuanced exploration of losing one's autonomy.
The layout of the text is unique: the words literally sit on opposite sides of the page to represent the hospital curtain, making the physical act of reading part of the emotional journey.
Chess is hospitalized with a flare-up of Crohn's disease, sharing a semi-private room with Shannon, a girl who seems like her polar opposite. Separated only by a thin curtain, the two girls navigate the indignities of chronic illness, from IV poles to invasive tests. The narrative, written in verse, physically represents the hospital layout on the page, showing their gradual movement from isolation to a shared, supportive reality.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.