Things I Know

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Pub Date Sep 06 2022 | Archive Date Jun 20 2023

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Description

A Raven Award Winning Irish author's North American debut. A moving YA novel about mental illness and recovery. 

18-year-old Saoirse can’t wait to leave school – but just before the final exams her ex-boyfriend dies by suicide. Everyone blames Saoirse – even Saoirse herself, who cheated on him with his best friend. She is shunned by her schoolmates and suffers unbearable levels of anxiety, which her useless counsellor does nothing to alleviate.

On the night of the prom, everything becomes too much and Saoirse makes a decision that lands her in a psychiatric hospital. Slowly, painfully, with the support of a friendly hospital cleaner, her old best friend, her kind and hilarious grandmother, and even her irritating sister, Saoirse regains hope of finding herself again.

A Raven Award Winning Irish author's North American debut. A moving YA novel about mental illness and recovery. 

18-year-old Saoirse can’t wait to leave school – but just before the final exams her...


Advance Praise

Kirkus Reviews (07/15/2022):
A young woman struggles with anxiety and grief in a coastal Irish town in this contemporary novel. Saoirse's father moved their family from Limerick to the small town of Cloughmore after the death of her mother two years before. While her awful, image-conscious younger sister, Eva, has blended in, Saoirse and her younger brother, Aran, find their new town narrow-minded and claustrophobic; 18-year-old Saoirse is glad to be taking her final secondary school exams before returning to Limerick for college. However, it doesn't come soon enough for her to escape being ostracized by the crowd that her ex-boyfriend, Finn, is part of. When he dies by suicide, Saoirse's mental health is stressed to the point of breaking. The unrelenting pressure Saoirse experiences is vividly depicted in her first-person narration, realistically manifesting itself in stomach upset, breathing difficulties, and blackouts. A large cast of secondary characters, including grieving Dylan, who was Finn's best friend but with whom Saoirse is also involved, and Jade, her outspoken, complicated, bisexual best friend, are sketched in broad strokes that flesh out Saoirse's world, grimly but poignantly illustrating how difficult it can be for people to find support. An auspicious ending to this story is both surprising and welcome. Most characters are White. A bittersweet, honest look at loss and trauma. (Fiction. 13-18) COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Foreword (08/27/2022): In Helena Close's contemporary novel Things I Know, a teenage girl battles with grief, memory, and her identity. Saoirse's father relocated her and her two siblings from Limerick to an even smaller town after their mother's death. The sole vegetarian in a population of meat eaters, Saoirse feels like an outcast. She blames herself for her mother's death, and she also shoulders the blame when someone whom she's close to commits suicide. Her sessions with a counselor do not help. She begins to experience troubling bouts of memory loss and disorientation. Immersion in social media and distractions of alcohol and drugs provide an uneasy backdrop for Saoirse's social life. Her best friend Jade is dating an older man who manipulates her, and most of Saoirse's friends reject her after tragedy strikes. Saoirse lies to her family, remaining friends, and counselor, attempting to hide under the cover of normalcy, but a sense of despair encroaches nonetheless. The degree to which Saoirse is lying to herself is unclear, but it is certainly greater than zero. Wrapped in brutal, direct language and Irish slang, Saoirse's story possesses startling immediacy. She tries to unravel the truth behind the suicide, wondering whether one of her friends was supplying drugs to an already disturbed person, even as she struggles with her inevitable draw toward ending her own painful existence. Fascinated by brain science, Saoirse also always asks herself what she knows and how she knows it. What she does not know, however, is whether her grasp of science will help her to find her way back to those whom she loves. Things I Know is a thoughtful psychological novel whose heroine careens toward disaster and languishes in loss, even as her friends and family attempt to mitigate her trauma with their support. COPYRIGHT(2022) Foreword Magazine, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Kirkus Reviews (07/15/2022):
A young woman struggles with anxiety and grief in a coastal Irish town in this contemporary novel. Saoirse's father moved their family from Limerick to the small town of...

Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781915071033
PRICE $11.99 (USD)
PAGES 288

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