I Will Find You Again
I Will Find You Again
Select a format:
Publisher's Hardcover ©2023--
Paperback ©2024--
To purchase this item, you must first login or register for a new account.
Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Annotation: Contains Mature Material
 
Reviews: 4
Catalog Number: #351909
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Special Formats: Adult Language Adult Language
Copyright Date: 2023
Edition Date: 2023 Release Date: 03/14/23
Pages: 298 pages
ISBN: 1-534-46515-4
ISBN 13: 978-1-534-46515-2
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2022041936
Dimensions: 22 cm
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Mon Apr 03 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Seventeen-year-old Chase ("equal parts Japanese, Vietnamese, Chinese, and Taiwanese") wants to have it all: a girlfriend, a Stanford education, and control over her own life. And she has most of it, until her girlfriend Lia (a Korean adoptee) breaks up with her and then shows up dead in the water a few months later. As Chase works to find out why Lia died and how, her world and her mind begin to unravel. Suddenly, Hunter e rich, white girl Lia left her for comes an unlikely and sometimes unwilling ally in the search for answers. Chase's story is one of obsession, lies, and addiction, exploring the many ways the human mind will try to block out trauma. Lyu's novel speaks to the social and familial pressures teens often face in high school, and the sometimes self-destructive coping mechanisms they will turn to for a sense of control. Though the combination of melodrama, mystery, and emotional nuance sometimes leave the narrative feeling unbalanced, its compelling, twisty plotting will keep readers guessing to the end.

Kirkus Reviews

Chase Ohara, a 17-year-old overachiever, grapples with her ex-girlfriend's death while battling addiction."Meet me in Montauk." That was the last text Lia Vestiano sent Chase. It was the SOS signal they used whenever they needed to escape Meadowlark, the Long Island town they called home. The two girls shared outsider status in their predominantly White community: Chase is Japanese, Vietnamese, Chinese, and Taiwanese, while adopted Lia described herself as "ethnically Korean, culturally Italian." But now Lia is gone. The novel flashes back as Chase tries to piece together the facts: Did their breakup tear Lia apart? Did parental pressure push her over the edge? Was it an accident, or did she die by suicide? Chase teams up with Hunter van Leeuwen, Lia's new White girlfriend, for answers. An unreliable narrator, Chase's dependence on fictional drug Focentra-like Adderall, but stronger-distorts her grasp of reality. Overcome by guilt over their breakup and jealousy of Hunter, she tries to make sense of what happened. Muddling through college admissions, Chase wrestles with the mental strain of relentlessly seeking money, power, and status in her affluent community where students stoop to underhanded means of ensuring success. Unable to make space for grief, Chase emotionally unravels. Though this mind-bending novel features skillful character development, the tone shift from tragic romance to school cheating ring scandal is jarring, undermining the cohesiveness of the whole.An impassioned and bold psychological drama that loses focus. (resources) (Thriller. 14-18)

School Library Journal (Sat Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Gr 9 Up —Chase O'Hara is driven, ambitious, athletic, and deemed most likely to succeed by her peers. But the mask she wears is slipping and she knows she isn't what people believe. She takes amphetamines to stay focused for marathon study sessions and rarely sleeps, plagued by debilitating migraines. Now her relationships are imploding under the stress of it all. After a brutal break-up, her ex-girlfriend Lia goes missing, showing up dead a few days later. Chase crumbles, desperate to find out how this happened and who is to blame. Promoted as a romantic thriller, this novel takes readers on a dramatic journey through the eyes of teens struggling with serious mental health issues, incredible academic pressure, and dysfunctional family lives. Ultimately, Chase must face her inner demons, her addiction, and her grief in order to survive. Much less a mystery or thriller, this is realistic fiction drama dealing with mental health and its serious, sometimes deadly, impact. Readers expecting an actual murder mystery or romantic thriller will be disappointed. The heavy focus on suicidal ideation is problematic and could be very triggering. Definite trigger warnings for suicide, severe depression, and parental neglect. The author provides great resources at the end for those seeking mental health help including phone numbers for suicide hotlines. The main characters are Asian American. VERDICT Purchase only where additional realistic fiction covering depression and suicide is needed.—Kristen Rademacher

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly (Tue Feb 07 00:00:00 CST 2023)
ALA Booklist (Mon Apr 03 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal (Sat Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Reading Level: 6.5
Interest Level: 9+
Chapter 1

1.


I'd give anything to be the girl people see when they look at me: Chase Ohara, student council president, captain of the best cross-country team in the state, and clear favorite of her teachers. Expected valedictorian, voted most likely to succeed. A future with her last name etched in gold atop skyscrapers, multimillion-dollar bonuses, Congress or the Supreme Court perhaps. Or insider trading scandals if she goes astray.

They look at me like I have this--this power. Like I'm in control.

What they don't know: It's 2 AM on the fifth night in a row that I haven't been able to sleep and the world feels like it's spinning away from me. I get up from bed and the ground sways.

I think about that Chase, the one people think they know. I used to feel like her, or more like her. Like I could do anything, be anything. Like life was laid out for the taking and all I had to do was reach.

Now I reach for the Altoids tin in my bag, shake it. I'm low, but not desperately so. I pop it open and drop a small pink pill onto my tongue, swallow it dry.

At my desk I wait for it to take effect, hoping for the rush, that small burst of electricity. For it to lend me its strength as I stare past my laptop screen to the printout pinned to my wall. "It's not the end of the world," my mom had told me when she found out, but she didn't know what she was talking about. "We won't tell your dad."

I told him myself on our next weekend together. Dad remained silent, but his expression said it all, and in that instant, I knew I wasn't the girl people see when they looked at me, the one who could do anything, be anything. Or at least I wasn't that person to my father--not anymore.

I slip out quietly to avoid waking Mom and my little sister, Aidan, and hit the pavement for a run. All the houses are shuttered and dark, the streetlights alone guiding me under the black sky. I like the solitude, no music, just the strike of my heel against concrete. I run three miles before my mind calms to a soft hum and it's just me and the night, the early November air cold against my skin. I'm not Chase Ohara, future power broker, but just me, a girl alone, as lost as everyone else.

But then I turn onto a bigger street and see a large grocery truck make a tight corner ahead. An image flickers into mind. It only lasts half a second, but it's mesmerizing--I can see myself taking a single misstep, my foot striking the edge of the curb at just the wrong angle.

I trip.

Fall in front of the truck.

And I'm no longer Chase Ohara, expected valedictorian, voted most likely to succeed. No longer obsessed with SATs, grades, Stanford.

That glittering future with my name atop skyscrapers, gone. This pain inside me, gone.

I let the truck fly past me, feel a blast of cold air in its wake, and I'm left unsteady on my feet. I try to push on, shake the image from my mind and force my legs to move, but at the end of mile six, my chest seizes. Hands on thighs, I can't drink in enough air to keep the bile from burning its way up.

Coughing, I collapse to the curb less than two miles from my house, head hung heavy between my knees. I walk the rest of the way back, panting the whole time.

Sometimes, I think there isn't enough air in this town. Not enough air in the world for a girl like me.


Excerpted from I Will Find You Again by Sarah Lyu
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.

All the Bright Places meets Ace of Spades in this “compelling, twisty” (Booklist) teen thriller about a girl who can’t stop pushing herself to be the best—even after losing her best friend and the love of her life.

Welcome to Meadowlark, Long Island—expensive homes and good schools, ambition and loneliness. Meet Chase Ohara and Lia Vestiano: the driven overachiever and the impulsive wanderer, the future CEO and the free spirit. Best friends for years—weekend trips to Montauk, sleepovers on a yacht—and then, first love. True love.

But when Lia disappears, Chase’s life turns into a series of grim snapshots. Anger. Grief. Running. Pink pills in an Altoids tin. A cheating ring at school. Heartbreak and lies. A catastrophic secret.

And the shocking truth that will change everything about the way Chase sees Lia—and herself.


*Prices subject to change without notice and listed in US dollars.
Perma-Bound bindings are unconditionally guaranteed (excludes textbook rebinding).
Paperbacks are not guaranteed.
Please Note: All Digital Material Sales Final.