My So-Called Ruined Life (Tate McCoy #1)

My So-Called Ruined Life (Tate McCoy #1)
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Age Range
12+
Release Date
January 01, 2014
ISBN
978-1937226213
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Sixteen-year-old Tate McCoy's mother is killed--and her father is the prime suspect. Convinced of his innocence and her own resilience, she sets out to prove her life is not ruined by filling the summer of her dad's trial with volunteer work, the great outdoors, and a wicked crush on her swim instructor. But after discovering a horrible secret, Tate questions everything she thought she knew about her parents.

Sixteen-year-old Tate McCoy's mother is killed--and her father is the prime suspect. Convinced of his innocence and her own resilience, she sets out to prove her life is not ruined by filling the summer of her dad's trial with volunteer work, the great outdoors, and a wicked crush on her swim instructor. But after discovering a horrible secret, Tate questions everything she thought she knew about her parents.

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3 reviews
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Great for Teenage Girl
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My So-Called Ruined Life, Book 1 by Melanie Bishop brings together characters who are both complex and full of positivity. Its carefully-driven plot is both young adult safe and generous with its details, despite the murder mystery around which the story revolves. The way in which Tate McCoy’s psychology is slowly revealed over the course the novel makes for a quite a hook. A reader may wonder whether Tate will crack from the chaos around her. Bishop provides the emotional support Tate (and the reader, too) need to come through on the other side. This is a wonderfully realistic tale of teenage redemption, full characters who continue to evolve, all in just 210 pages.
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Gobbled it up
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In Melanie Bishop's My So-Called Ruined Life, protagonist Tate McCoy struggles to find buoyancy, "that place right below the surface" where she can float enough to swim tirelessly. Her alcoholic mother has been murdered, her doting father is being charged for the crime, yet Tate doesn't allow herself to drown in self-pity. She has a list of plans, a saucy best friend, an adventurous aunt, and a dreamy boy giving her swimming lessons. In short, in an age when so many narratives revolve around damaged protagonists making horrible decisions, Tate McCoy is a welcome anomaly—a wise, resilient young woman whom readers will not only root for, but admire. Unlike Tate, whose buoyancy is so hard-won, readers will be immersed and swept up in the first few pages. So deeply engrossed are we in the tightly-plotted story, so happy to be carried through Tate's difficult yet inspiring journey, when we reach the end of Bishop's streamlined, graceful novel we hardly notice that we never wanted to come up for air. Lucky for us, My So-Called Ruined Life is only the first book in an on-going Tate McCoy series forthcoming from Torrey House Press, and writer and educator Melanie Bishop is at the top of her game.
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Can't-put-it-down yummy read
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5.0
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In Melanie Bishop's My So-Called Ruined Life, protagonist Tate McCoy struggles to find buoyancy, "that place right below the surface" where she can float enough to swim tirelessly. Her alcoholic mother has been murdered, her doting father is being charged for the crime, yet Tate doesn't allow herself to drown in self-pity. She has a list of plans, a saucy best friend, an adventurous aunt, and a dreamy boy giving her swimming lessons. In short, in an age when so many narratives revolve around damaged protagonists making horrible decisions, Tate McCoy is a welcome anomaly—a wise, resilient young woman whom readers will not only root for, but admire. Unlike Tate, whose buoyancy is so hard-won, readers will be immersed and swept up in the first few pages. So deeply engrossed are we in the tightly-plotted story, so happy to be carried through Tate's difficult yet inspiring journey, when we reach the end of Bishop's streamlined, graceful novel we hardly notice that we never wanted to come up for air. Lucky for us, My So-Called Ruined Life is only the first book in an on-going Tate McCoy series forthcoming from Torrey House Press, and writer and educator Melanie Bishop is at the top of her game.
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