Let Me Go |
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Author:
| Akers, L. |
Series title: | Let Me Go Ser. |
ISBN: | 978-1-4909-6195-8 |
Publication Date: | Jul 2013 |
Publisher: | CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform
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Book Format: | Paperback |
List Price: | USD $12.99 |
Book Description:
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Approx. 81,000 words. Fiction. New Adult genre: this book contains material not intended for readers under the age of 17.A Scarlet dragonfly tattoo-meant to be a beautiful family mark of freedom, instead becomes a prophetic brand for those who wear it, to forever be suffering. Wounded and broken, twin sisters, Gabriella and Olivia, find themselves flittering back into the cycle of abuse that relentlessly clings to their family, a reality they can never seem to escape. Deeply evocative,...
More DescriptionApprox. 81,000 words. Fiction. New Adult genre: this book contains material not intended for readers under the age of 17.A Scarlet dragonfly tattoo-meant to be a beautiful family mark of freedom, instead becomes a prophetic brand for those who wear it, to forever be suffering. Wounded and broken, twin sisters, Gabriella and Olivia, find themselves flittering back into the cycle of abuse that relentlessly clings to their family, a reality they can never seem to escape. Deeply evocative, Let Me Go is a coming-of-age story: the struggles of one mother and her daughters trying to survive life--marred by abuse and misplaced blame--and their need to reach peace, forgiveness, and reconciliation.Bound by blood--torn apart by abuse. They begin their lives intertwined but are forced to fight for their survivals separately, struggling to hide their fear and shame from each other and the world.One of these women finds herself trapped--alone--and she battles to survive in the terrifying darkness. With long hours of nothing to do but wait in fear, she grapples through her obscure dreams and memories of the past, sorting which memory belongs to whom: physically harmed, mentally damaged, raped, sexually abused, an unwanted pregnancy... and even the vivid memory of a dangerous dance with death in a last attempt to escape the shambles and horrors of a seemingly unchangeable situation. The twins dive blindly--and much too early--into adulthood. They are soon followed by their younger sister, Emma, all running from a not-so-idyllic past; chasing the happiness they believe they will find, by abandoning their childhoods to be 'grown-up' and start their new lives.