Friday, April 28, 2017

Girl in Pieces by Kathleen Glasgow

Girl in Pieces by Kathleen Glasgow
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Have you ever feel in pieces? Can you imagine a teenager harming herself?

Girl in Pieces tells the story of a girl who self-harms to forget painful situations she has experienced in life.  At the age of seventeen, Charlotte Davis is broken by her personal losses: her father drowned himself, the mother simply stop caring, bad experiences from living in the streets, and her best friend, Ellis tried cutting; she cut too deep, and bled out to the point of brain damage. Charlotte has almost no reason to live, she self-harms, including cutting and burning. After surviving a suicide attempt, Charlotte was omitted to a clinic, where she received treatment. She gets released when the insurance discontinued paying for her medical care.  Charlotte opted to leave the Twin Cities and heads to Tucson to meet the guy she likes, Mikey. When Charlotte arrived to Arizona, she realized that Mikey only wanted to be her friend, he liked Ellis. Very disappointed, Charlotte is drawn into a disastrous relationship with her co-worker Riley, who is an alcoholic. As Charlotte tries hard not to cut herself, she makes bad choices by being with Riley. A positive thing that happens to Charlotte during this time, is that she finds her solace in drawing, which leads to display her art in a show. This activity helps her socialized with her surroundings little by little. Charlotte meets good people who cares for her and helps her. She realizes that it is possible to leave behind the people and things that are not healthy and form a family with new people.



Girl in Pieces is not an easy read. Ms. Glasgow intension is for readers to see Charlotte’s scars as seeking for a way out, not as a cutter. Charlotte cuts herself as a way to ignore her painful life situation. The author brings up issues of self-harm, suicide, sexual abuse, drug abuse, parent neglect and homelessness. Ms. Glasgow narrative description on a Girl in Pieces makes the reader see and feel Charlotte’s struggles as a teenager. The author exposes the reader to experience existing life problems; loneliness, belonging and identity. Teenagers may read the book and gain a sense of clarity, solace and hope.



Author words: “Is estimated that one in every two hundred girls between the ages of thirteen and nineteen self- harms.  Over 70 percent of those are cutters. It’s important to remember, though, that this statistics only come from what’s reported, and they do not account for the increasing percentage for boys who self-harm. Self –harming is the delivery act of cutting, burning, poking or otherwise marring your skin as a way to cope with emotional turmoil.  It can be the results of many things such as sexual, physical, verbal or emotional abuse, buying helplessness, sadness, and addiction. Self-harm is not a grab for attention.  It does not mean that you are suicidal.  It means that you are struggling to get out of a very dangerous mess in your mind and heart and this is your coping mechanism.  It means that you occupy a small space in the very real and very large canyon of people who suffer from depression or mental illness” (pg399).


Pros– Short paragraphs, complexity of the book is appropriate to age level.

Just as Charlotte was going through a rough situation in life, there might be teenagers facing similar problems. The story exposes the reader to see real life problems that affected a person’s life radically, but also it gives hope to seek a way out!



Cons- A lot of swearing! I can understand that the swearing fits to describe the character’s point of view on each given situation, but is a bit too much.



Quotes from the book:




Girl in Pieces by Kathleen Glasgow – INTERVIEW




Self-harm tips and tricks to help better manage it




Get HELP

Text 741741

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CALL 1 800 DON’T CUT










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