
Letters to Aly: Surviving My BFF's Suicide
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- Praise
- About the Author
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Shortlisted for the Hedwig Anuar Childrenâs Book Award 2015
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How do you survive your best friendâs suicide?
Alyessa jumps to her death two days after her 16th birthday. Her best friend Lee-Ann blames the tragedy on her failure to answer Alyâs last phone call. Haunted by what-ifs, stressed out by the looming âOâ Levels, and troubled by fraught relationships with her parents and on-off boyfriend Nate, Lee-Ann begins to contemplate suicide too.
In Lee-Annâs searingly honest diary entries, she exposes the wound of having a loved one gone too soon. This true account of a teenagerâs journey reveals anger and despair at its most raw, and eventually hope as she begins the slow and painful recovery to live again.
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âA first-hand account of an adolescent's life, Lee-Ann's book brings the reader through her journey of unfortunate events until she learns to find hope...the young author's literary creation remains an avenue of comfort and awareness that is easily relatable to her fellow audience.â
âKatherine Arteche, Time Out Singapore -
ï»żLee-Ann went on to finish junior college and university. She is now in her mid-twenties. he still thinks of Aly and once in a while she smiles when she does so. The sadness has been compartmentalised inside a âchest boxâ in her memory that she can visit when she wants to. The hole in her heart left has not been fully healed but she feels different now and is looking forward to life and what it has to offer next.
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Description
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
Shortlisted for the Hedwig Anuar Childrenâs Book Award 2015
Look inside the book  |  Get the E-book
How do you survive your best friendâs suicide?
Alyessa jumps to her death two days after her 16th birthday. Her best friend Lee-Ann blames the tragedy on her failure to answer Alyâs last phone call. Haunted by what-ifs, stressed out by the looming âOâ Levels, and troubled by fraught relationships with her parents and on-off boyfriend Nate, Lee-Ann begins to contemplate suicide too.
In Lee-Annâs searingly honest diary entries, she exposes the wound of having a loved one gone too soon. This true account of a teenagerâs journey reveals anger and despair at its most raw, and eventually hope as she begins the slow and painful recovery to live again.
-
âA first-hand account of an adolescent's life, Lee-Ann's book brings the reader through her journey of unfortunate events until she learns to find hope...the young author's literary creation remains an avenue of comfort and awareness that is easily relatable to her fellow audience.â
âKatherine Arteche, Time Out Singapore -
ï»żLee-Ann went on to finish junior college and university. She is now in her mid-twenties. he still thinks of Aly and once in a while she smiles when she does so. The sadness has been compartmentalised inside a âchest boxâ in her memory that she can visit when she wants to. The hole in her heart left has not been fully healed but she feels different now and is looking forward to life and what it has to offer next.












