![]() ![]() ![]() As the group grows steadily larger, the Nowhere Girls may just end up changing the lives of their friends, family, and community. When Grace learns that she moved into Lucy Moynihan’s house, who had to leave town after accusing several popular students at Prescott High of gang rape, she, Rosina, and Erin lead a movement to protest the culture at their school and in their town at large. Erin DeLillo, whose two passions are marine biology and Star Trek: The Next Generation, can’t shake the feeling that her family is falling apart and there’s nothing she can do to stop it. Rosina Suarez would love nothing more than to start her own band rather than waitress at her uncle’s restaurant, but her conservative Mexican family has other ideas. Here’s a brief overview of the plot: Grace Salter has just moved to the small town of Prescott, Oregon, after her pastor mom had a political awakening that drove them out of their Southern Baptist community. So this review won’t exactly be current, per se, but I think there’s a lot of stuff in here that’s still topically relevant! Let’s dive right in. Then I read all 404 pages in one sitting. The Nowhere Girls has been on my TBR list for…eight months, I think? For some reason, I just never picked it up until a couple days ago. ![]()
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