Pieces of Me
Book Information
- girls
- boys/girls
- artists
- being embarrassed
- birds
- Canada
- choices
- city living
- colors
- coming of age
- differences
- divorce
- drawing
- dysfunctional families
- family
- fathers/daughters
- feelings
- finding your voice
- finding yourself
- friends
- friendship
- girls boys
- high school
- If You Liked Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
- insights
- jealousy
- journal
- kisses
- loneliness
- mature readers
- mental illness
- mothers/daughters
- realistic fiction
- self-confidence
- sexuality
- single parent
- social skills
- teachers
- very mature readers
- wildlife biologists
- winter
- Heart/Home/Friends Forever
- Joan of Arc/Empath
- Investigator/Analyst
At 14, Mirabelle feels separated from real life – trapped in the basement apartment by her divorced mother who knows to the minute how long it takes Mira to walk home from school, reading in the school library so she doesn’t have to talk to anyone at lunch, hiding behind her long golden hair so no one sees her sketches.
Then Catherine arrives at school, and Mira’s life moves out of its dark cloud, bit by bit. They invent a club so that they can meet after school in the café once a week. Cath brings Mira to a table of friends at lunch. And they both work hard at the challenging assignments in art class.
Cath gets a boyfriend and drifts away, just a little, as Mira’s admiration of her art teacher becomes infatuation, and life becomes more complicated. Her wildlife biologist father returns to the city, asking about her plans for college – a startling idea for Mira, who isn’t sure how her mother would survive without her.
Discerning older teen readers will remember Mira’s love of color, her worries about her first kiss, and her dreams of escaping the basement apartment long after they close this slim volume, lyrically translated from the French by Susan Ouriou. 144 pages Ages 14 and up
Recommended by: Katy Manck, Librarian-at-Large (retired academic/corporate/school librarian), Gilmer, Texas, USA





