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Breaking Bailey

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In the tradition of Go Ask Alice and Lucy in the Sky, this heart-wrenching story chronicles a girl's fatal experience with testing her moral limits and the dangers of addiction.
Bailey welcomes a fresh start at the prestigious boarding school, Prescott Academy, far away from the painful memories of her mother's death and the unendurable happiness of her father and his new wife. She expects rigorous coursework and long hours of studying—what she doesn't expect is to be inducted into the Science Club, a group of wealthy and intelligent students who run a business cooking up drugs in their spare time.
Suddenly, Bailey has everything she's ever wanted, including a sweet and handsome boyfriend named Warren, the brainy lead chemist in the Club. But as she wades deeper into the murky waters of their business, Bailey finds herself struggling to reconcile her new lifestyle with moral dilemmas she just can't ignore.
Can she have it all without breaking?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 6, 2019
      The latest novel in the Anonymous Diaries series, all written and produced in the style of Go Ask Alice, is a stark reminder that even when things are bad, they can always get worse. Bailey, 17, lost her mother two years earlier in a horrific car accident that Bailey survived. Her father quickly remarries, and he and her new stepmother send a still-grieving Bailey to boarding school, where she demonstrates her exceptional skills in chemistry, scoring an invite to an elite group on campus: the Science Club, which makes and sells crystal meth. Brooding genius Warren, who becomes Bailey’s love interest, convinces her that helping the club will make drugs safer for addicts. The group’s camaraderie draws Bailey into a simmering vortex of addiction mixed with a desire not to disappoint her friends or fail in her schoolwork. The subject of addiction, the first-person voice, and the theme of how good intentions can go horribly awry may initially hook teen readers, but the range of implausible circumstances (paying off a security guard to look the other way, being able to use one of the school’s abandoned buildings) and the narrator’s limited emotional range quickly become distracting. Ages 14–up.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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