Author | Laurie Halse Anderson |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Fiction |
Publisher | Viking |
Publication date
|
2009 |
Media type | Hardback and paperback |
Pages | 278 pp (first edition, hardback) |
ISBN | (first edition, hardback) |
OCLC | 255902817 |
LC Class | PZ7.85 Wi 2009 |
Wintergirls is a fiction novel by Laurie Halse Anderson. It tells the story of a girl, Lia Overbrook, who suffers from anorexia and self harm. She struggles to fight her mental illness while balancing everything else in her life. Months after a fall out with her best friend Cassie, Lia receives news that she has died from bulimia. Lia's fight for her life becomes even more difficult.
Melvin Burgess of The Guardian says, "The true nature of anorexia is made painfully clear. Lia starves herself because it is the only control she has over her disintegrating personality; anyway, why feed something so hateful? She cuts herself not to cause pain, but to let the pain – and the dirt – out. The dirt in this case is, of course, herself. As with the plotting, this fractured and utterly convincing interior monologue is intercut with the rather bored face she presents to the world around her.
And yet, throughout, there is the feeling that if somehow you could only reach in and talk to this girl, you could save her life. It's an exhausting novel to read: brilliant, intoxicating, full of drama, love and, like all the best books of this kind, hope. It would be rare to find a novel in mainstream adult fiction prepared to pull out the dramatic stops this far, and difficult to imagine one in recent years that was prepared to be so bold stylistically. It's a book that will be around for many years. It may not be an original piece, as these tricks have been pulled before in teen fiction. Yet it pulls them off with more skill and effect than anything I have ever read."
The Washington Post called the book "both painful to read and riveting". The New York Times said that "We recognize Lia, but it's sometimes hard to relate to her."
18-year-old Lia Overbrook has just found out that her ex-best friend Cassie is dead. Cassie had called her 33 times the night of her death, but Lia didn't answer. She was found in a hotel room, killed by her illness: bulimia. Lia, who has a history of anorexia, falls into a downward spiral of self-harm and calorie counting. Trying to hide her illness from her family, she worsens and recovery seems impossible.
Her relationship with her step-mother, Jennifer, is complicated, but Jennifer's eight-year-old daughter, Lia's step sister, Emma, is one thing that keeps Lia happy. She has been dealing with this eating disorder for quite some time and none of the help she received has made much of a difference. Lia finds it hard to get close to her father and step-mother because they forced her into the hospital in the past.
Soon, Cassie's ghost starts haunting Lia, making her feel guilty for not picking up the phone that night and not being there for her ex-best friend the night she died. Lia believes that if she had picked up, Cassie would still be alive. As Lia's self-harm gets increasingly worse, Cassie's haunting becomes more aggressive.