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Invincible

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

The Fault in Our Stars meets Go Ask Alice in this dramatic romance about a teenage girl who survives a terminal cancer diagnosis, only to get trapped in the deadly spiral of addiction. Fans of Gayle Forman and Sara Zarr will be swept away by this gritty romance, the first in a duology.

Evie is living on borrowed time. She was diagnosed with terminal cancer several months ago and told that by now she'd be dead. Evie is grateful for every extra day she gets, but she knows that soon this disease will kill her. Until, miraculously, she may have a second chance to live.

All Evie had wanted was her life back, but now that she has it, she feels like there's no place for her in it—at least, not for the girl she is now. Her friends and her parents still see her as Cancer Girl, and her boyfriend's constant, doting attention is suddenly nothing short of suffocating.

Then Evie meets Marcus. She knows that he's trouble, but she can't help falling for him. Being near him makes her feel truly, fully alive. It's better than a drug. His kiss makes her feel invincible—but she may be at the beginning of the biggest free fall of her life.

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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2015
      Evie, 17, bravely faces terminal illness along with her fellow teen sufferers, until fate intervenes; unlike Stella and Caleb, Evie miraculously recovers: "There has been a mistake. Or a miracle."Thrown into limbo and unable to resume her picture-perfect cheerleader's life, complete with football-playing boyfriend Will, Evie writes to now-dead Stella: "If I'm not Cancer Girl, who am I exactly? Crutches Girl?...No one knows what to do with me now that I'm alive." Trapped in her life and her still-weak body, Evie experiments with painkillers, alcohol and a relationship with rebellious teen Marcus (foil to steady Will and sweet Caleb), whom she meets while high on pot. Her connection to Marcus is defined by a mutual commitment to bad decisions, though even stoner Marcus urges Evie to avoid Oxycontin. Like Evie's puzzled and hurt friends and family (who feel she's ungrateful and manipulative), readers may find themselves alienated by Evie's bad behavior, a gutsy move for Reed. The book's epiphanic ending may come too late to salvage readers' relationships with her-or Evie's life. Or not. Readers will be intrigued or vexed by the ambiguity of the ending, depending on their tolerance for plot twists. Offering a provocative spin on the typical teen-with-cancer plotline, Reed risks her protagonist's likability to explore the aftermath of life-altering second chances. (Fiction. 14-18)

    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      Gr 9 Up-Evie, a self-described Cancer Girl, transitions from palliative care with end-stage Ewing's sarcoma to miracle girl. Instead of shuffling off her mortal coil after being taken on a last mad adventure from the hospital by goth girl Stella, who with her signature fedora and red lipstick is also battling cancer, Evie unaccountably rallies. Perhaps it is the shock of losing friends made in the cancer ward, the new lease on life, or the carpe diem philosophy shared by rebel Stella, but miracle Evie has lost her taste for cheerleading, her best friend, and even Will, the boyfriend who never let her down through the long months of her illness. It's difficult to care much for Evie as a character, beyond basic sympathy for any person dealing with a painful illness, because she doesn't ever really emerge beyond the page. When Evie's back to her pre-cancer life, she meets new romantic interest Marcus on an escape from her intolerably loving home. He's different and happy to share the pot bequeathed by a cancer comrade; and compared to tame Will, Marcus seems like a fascinating bad boy. Yet it's Evie who attempts to numb herself with pills, weed, and booze, leading to a crisis cliff-hanger ending. VERDICT A decent choice for readers with a craving for "dying teen" stories.-Suzanne Gordon, Lanier High School, Sugar Hill, GA

      Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 15, 2015
      Grades 9-12 Evie's aggressive case of Ewing's sarcoma has left her with only weeks to live, and she has resigned herself, to her parents' dismay, to palliative care. But miraculously, seemingly overnight, her cancer disappears. It's an abrupt change that's hard to handle, and it gets worse after her best friend in the ward, larger-than-life Stella, succumbs to leukemia. Evie doesn't know what to do with all her emotions about her second chance nor the survival guilt she feels after Stella dies. Everything her peers care about now seems trivial, and her life becomes a downward spiral of drugs, drinking, and bitterness, all in an effort to block the feelings she is terrified to face. When she meets alluring Marcus, who sympathizes with her pain, Evie loses all interest in anything else, until her anger and fear lead her to alienate even him. Though some readers might be frustrated by Evie's protracted refusal to accept help or love, Reed nonetheless builds a compelling first-person narrative and sensitively explores Evie's effortsand failuresto rebuild her life after a serious trauma.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2015
      Evie surprises everyone by miraculously beating terminal cancer; her best friend in the hospital is not as lucky. As she grieves, Evie attempts to readjust to "normal life," but ends up addicted to painkillers and alienated from everyone in her life except Marcus, a guy who's similarly emotionally broken. Evie's downward spiral is unflinchingly and honestly portrayed in Reed's expressive prose.

      (Copyright 2015 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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