What if you found out your life has been threaded with secrets -- ones
that rocked you to your core? An affecting page-turner written in a
brave, memorable language all its own.
Some words are hard to get out of your mouth. Because they spell out
secrets that are too huge to be spoken out loud. But if you bottle them
up, you might burst. So here's my story. Told the only way I dare tell
it.
Sophie Nieuwenleven is sort of English and sort of Belgian. She and her
family came to live in Belgium when she was only four or five, but she's
fourteen now and has never been sure why they left England in the first
place. She loves her international school, adores her friend Comet, and
is protective of her little brother, Hercule. But it's hard to feel
carefree when her mom never leaves the apartment -- ordering groceries
online and blasting music in her room -- and her dad has a dead-end job
as a car mechanic. Then one day Sophie makes a startling discovery, a
discovery that unlocks the mystery of who she really is. This is a novel
about identity and confusion and about feeling so utterly freaked out
that you can't put it into words. But it's also about hope. And trust.
And the belief that, somehow, everything will be OK. Sophie Someone is
a tale of good intentions, bad choices, and betrayal -- and ultimately,
a compelling story of forgiveness.