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Emily For Real

by (author) Sylvia Gunnery

Publisher
Pajama Press Inc.
Initial publish date
Apr 2012
Subjects
Friendship, Adoption, Alternative Family
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781927485033
    Publish Date
    Apr 2012
    List Price
    $14.95

Library Ordering Options

Out of print

This edition is not currently available in bookstores. Check your local library or search for used copies at Abebooks.

Description

Seventeen-year-old Emily's world crumbles when her boyfriend dumps her and when she thinks her life can't possibly get any worse, a series of secrets are revealed that threaten to tear her beloved family apart. Emily feels like she has no one to turn to, until an unexpected friendship blossoms with a troubled classmate named Leo. Sometimes despondent but always supportive, Leo is Emily's rock in an ocean of confusion and disbelief.

Leo's life isn't easy either, and he struggles to be both mother and father to his little sister while his mom battles her alcohol addiction. The two friends lean on each other, and in the end discover the inner strength to face whatever life throws at them.

With incredible insight into the teenage psyche and speckled with pitch-perfect humour, author Sylvia Gunnery has created a heart-warming coming of age story that is sure to connect with young adult readers.

About the author

Sylvia Gunnery is the author of nearly a dozen books for teens and younger readers. A retired teacher, she has been inspired by her students to create authentic and engaging stories. Out of Bounds was a Best Books for Kids and Teens Selection and was nominated for the Hackmatack Award. Her most recent novel is Emily For Real. Sylvia gives writing workshops in her home province of Nova Scotia and across Canada, encouraging young writers to find their own voices and tell their own stories.

Sylvia Gunnery's profile page

Excerpt: Emily For Real (by (author) Sylvia Gunnery)

“What?” They’re all looking at me and I can tell I’ve just caught them talking about something they don’t want me to know about. I hate that. “What?” I say again. Mom leaves the room. Aunt Em looks at Dad. “She is seventeen, Gerry.” Dad looks at me as if he’s trying to decide if I actually am seventeen. “What?” I say again. Now I really have to know what’s going on. In the back of my mind I’m thinking it has to do with Ronny and Friday night, but there’s no way they could know about that. As if Ronny’s going to call and say, I think I had sex with Emily on Friday night but I can’t remember much about it because I passed out. “But—,” says Dad and looks at the doorway where Mom just made her exit. Then I suddenly think that something’s wrong with Mom and they don’t want me to know. “Is something wrong with Mom?” I’m very worried and they can see it. “Okay, tell her if you want,” says Dad and he leaves the room too. It can’t be anything about Mom because of the way he said “if you want,” like it’s nothing that he has to tell me. It’s a choice. Aunt Em’s choice, for some reason. I don’t say What? again, but I’m thinking it. Aunt Em looks at her hands spread on the kitchen table like someone’s about to paint her fingernails. Then she looks at me. “You remember Cynthia Maxwell.” It isn’t a question, so I don’t say anything. “Well, she phoned this morning. I was surprised she wasn’t back in Montreal by now. Anyway, she invited me to tea at her hotel.” I just stand there because that bit of information sounds like only the beginning. Aunt Em sighs and stops looking at her hands. “She told me she and Dad had an affair for twenty-three years. A relationship, she called it.” My brain just can’t handle that information. Any of it. It’s just too weird. Granddad and Cynthia Maxwell? Twenty-three years? Twenty-three! “I agree,” says Aunt Em, even though I haven’t said anything. She read my face. “That’s too weird,” is all I can manage to say. I don’t like to think of my grandfather having sex so I’m blurring all the images that are trying to form in my mind. “And no one knew? What about Meredith?” “We’ll never know,” she says, and I guess that’s true. “But Mrs. Maxwell lives in Montreal.” “Dad went to conferences all over the place. She went too.” I still can’t picture this. “So why’s she telling us now?” “I think she needed us to know, to finally say that she used to be an important part of his life too. Knowing Dad, he would have insisted that she keep their secret. Not that it matters anymore.” Over my dead body, I hear him say. Then I think about Mom leaving the room like that and it makes sense. Just one more thing Granddad did to make her dislike him even more. If Mom had known about that affair, there would have been a million turkey dinners he would never have been invited to at our house, that’s for sure. Then I think about how I might feel if Dad had an affair and I didn’t know. “Are your feelings hurt?” “Not really.” But she sighs again, and when she looks up at me her face is all wobbly. “Emily,” she says, “life isn’t simple.” If I hadn’t come into the kitchen like that just when they were talking about Cynthia Maxwell’s secret life with Granddad, I don’t think I’d know any of this stuff. So I say, “Brian broke up with me.” I tell her this because I want her to know that I know life isn’t simple. Her face changes and I can see she’s surprised. “When?” “Last week. I can’t believe he’d be that cold-hearted. He has a new girlfriend. She’s French and goes to McGill and I guess she’s in one of his classes.” I can’t hold it in any longer and I start to cry.

Editorial Reviews

About Emily for Real

"[G]enuinely touching at its tear-inducing, hopeful end."—Kirkus Reviews

"Gunnery gives Emily a thoughtful, introspective, and easily relatable voice."—School Library Journal

"Gunnery's style is enjoyably terse and direct...observations like 'crying is not cathartic' are short on words but high on impact."—Quill & Quire

"Young adult readers, especially females, will enjoy reading about the challenges Emily faces and will cheer her on throughout the book, and she attempts to unravel the secrets which have been woven around her."—CM Magazine

"Emily's genuine characterization keeps the situation grounded in real emotion that readers will be able to relate to."—Resource Links Magazine

"Gunnery nicely captures the way families really are, the sweet, mundane and strained interactions of everyday life...Emily for Real is a satisfying read for teens who will root for Emily as she faces the challenges of friendship and families and growing up."—The Chronicle Herald

"As the narrator who shares her responses to a stream of stupefying revelations, Emily becomes a real girl, not a cardboard cut-out of a teen."—CanLit for LittleCanadians