![]() ![]() Fipps’s use of verse is as effective as it is fitting Ellie dreams of becoming a storyteller and poet “to help people feel what it’s like/ to live in/ someone else’s skin.” A triumphant and poignantly drawn journey toward self-acceptance and self-advocacy. Ever since Ellie wore a whale swimsuit and made a big splash at her fifth birthday party, shes been bullied about her weight. ![]() ![]() ![]() With support from new friends, her father, and a therapist who acknowledges her feelings and helps her discover her voice, Ellie finds the strength to stand up to her bullies, including her mother, who pressures Ellie to undergo bariatric surgery, and verbally abusive older siblings. A Printz Honor winner Ellie is tired of being fat-shamed and does something about it in this poignant debut novel-in-verse. When her best friend Viv moves away, Ellie feels alone at her Dallas, Tex., school, but she soon forms a tentative bond with her new neighbor, Catalina Rodriguez, whose boisterous, loving Mexican family makes her feel accepted for who she is. Told in verse, this affirming representation of fatness stars Ellie Montgomery-Hofstein, 11, who, to avoid the bullying she’s endured since the age of five, lives by the Fat Girl Rules-the unspoken rules one learns “when you break them-/ and suffer/ the consequences.” Finding solace from taunts and judgment in her fenced-in backyard’s pool, Ellie, who is half-Christian, half-Jewish, and presumed white, enjoys sprawling in the water like a starfish, weightless and free. ![]()
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