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Comeback
Comeback
Comeback
Ebook97 pages1 hour

Comeback

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this ebook

Ria is rich, slim, pretty, and popular. If you only knew her at school, you'd think she led a charmed life—and until recently you'd have been right.

But her situation has taken a sudden, unfortunate change. Her parents' seemingly perfect marriage has broken up, and before she's had a chance to absorb the blow, her beloved father disappears in a plane crash. What's worse, rumors begin to surface that he may have perpetrated a multimillion-dollar investment scam and everybody—Ria's mother, her best friends, even her boyfriend—believes them. Ria sees no choice but to take her little brother and run. She vows to keep the memory of her father alive. Soon, though, she begins to wonder: is her memory playing tricks on her—or is he?

Also available in Spanish or French. The epub edition of this title is fully accessible.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherOrca Book Publishers
Release dateMar 1, 2010
ISBN9781554694525
Comeback
Author

Vicki Grant

VICKI GRANT left her career in advertising and television to write her first novel, The Puppet Wrangler, in 2004. She has written many books for young readers, including Not Suitable for Family Viewing, winner of the Red Maple Award, Quid Pro Quo, winner of the Author Ellis Award for Best Juvenile Crime Fiction, Betsy Wickwire’s Dirty Secret, Pig Boy and B Negative. She lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Web: vickigrant.com Twitter: @VickiGrantYA Instagram: @vicki_grantya  

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Reviews for Comeback

Rating: 3.6363635909090912 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

11 ratings3 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5

    Apr 18, 2013

    Vicki Grant pulls off a neat trick in this novel. She tells quite a sophisticated and provocative story, keeps it believably ambiguous and messy, moves it along at a dramatic pace, and does all of this with language and structure that make it accessible to readers with a variety of reading levels.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Nov 26, 2010

    Part of the Orca Soundings series for reluctant readers, this novel folds drama and suspense into a story that carries echoes of our country's current marital and financial woes. Rich pretty popular high-school senior Ria has led a charmed life, but now her parent's seemingly perfect marriage has broken up and, before she has a chance to absorb the blow, her father disappears in a plane crash. Rumors begin to surface that her dad has scammed his clients, including Ria's boyfriend's parents , out of millions of dollars of savings. Disillusionment and split-second bad decision-making lead Ria to run away from home with her five-tear-old brother in tow, but the realities of being on her own soon sink in. The premise of the story will quickly grab readers who will emphasize with Ria and her crisis.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    Oct 23, 2010

    To me, this book "come back" is better than the other one that i read, "house party." I say that because this one focus more on the characters emotion. The other book did too, but in my opinion, the other one didn't seem as touching. It's another one of those books that has scenarios of what can or is happening to certain teens now a days. Overall, this is a great book and i would recommand it to people who like to read a shorter book that has not as much pages.

Book preview

Comeback - Vicki Grant

Chapter One

My boyfriend is trying to make me feel better. He’s leaning against his locker, one arm over my head, making a little cocoon for me. He tucks a wisp of hair behind my ear and says, It’s not the end of the world, Ria. Who knows? You might even end up liking it. So smile, would you? C’mon. Just a little…Please?

I appreciate the effort. I really do. Colin’s sweet—but it’s not helping. He doesn’t know how I feel.

How could he?

His life’s right off the Disney Channel. The mom. The dad. The three kids. The mischievous but lovable dog. Everyone sitting around the kitchen table, laughing at dumb jokes and flicking corn niblets at each other.

Colin couldn’t possibly understand what it’s like to live without all that—any more, I guess, than I could have three months ago.

The weird thing is I didn’t even know my life was perfect until suddenly it just wasn’t anymore. It was like waking up after a car crash and realizing your legs aren’t there. Who even thinks about how great walking is before something like that happens?

The word crippled pops into my head, and that’s enough to get me started again. I have to close my eyes.

Colin says, Oh, no. Ria… I feel the air go out of him.

This isn’t fair. I shouldn’t make him miserable just because I am. That’s the type of thing my mother would do.

What am I saying? That’s the type of thing my mother did do.

This whole thing is all about her. Her life, her happiness, her whatever.

It’s as if one morning she just decided she didn’t want to be married anymore, and that was that. No explanation. No apology. No nothing.

Next thing we knew, she’d kicked Dad out. She’d fired the housekeeper, cut up our credit cards, took a pathetic little job at an office somewhere and jammed the freezer full of these Styrofoam disks that she insists on calling pizza.

I don’t get it. If we’re suddenly so poor, why won’t she cash the checks Dad keeps leaving for her? He’s a big stockbroker. He’s got tons of money. He doesn’t mind giving it to us. He wants to.

Mom’s trying to embarrass him. That’s what she’s doing. She knows it’s going to look bad for him to be wining and dining his clients at the best restaurants in town when his own kids can’t even afford take-out pizza anymore.

I’m sure I sound mad and childish and spoiled—and I probably am—but I can’t help it. When this whole thing started, I tried to be supportive. I choked down the frozen pizza. I didn’t complain when Mom canceled our trip to Italy. I looked after my little brother Elliot. I even attempted to be sympathetic.

I mean, I’m not totally blind. I can see Dad isn’t the easiest guy to be married to. He’s away on business too much. He’s involved in too many organizations. He’s got too many friends, clients, acquaintances, whatever—and they all want to go golfing with him. I can understand how that would get to Mom.

I figured she just needed a break. After a couple of weeks—and maybe jewelry and a romantic dinner somewhere—she’d remember the good things about Dad, and then we could all just go back to being a family again. That’s what I thought.

At least until this morning, when I found out Mom went and sold our house. Now, on top of everything, she’s making us move into some gross little condo, miles from all our friends and our schools and—oh, yeah, what a coincidence—our father.

I can’t be sympathetic anymore. This is her midlife crisis. We shouldn’t all have to suffer from it.

I’m not going to be like that.

I open my eyes and smile at Colin. I’m fine, I say. My contacts were just bothering me.

There’s no way Colin believes that, but by this point, he’s probably had enough of my honesty. He kisses me on the forehead and then starts manhandling me toward the cafeteria. I laugh as if it’s all fun and games, but I’m not sure how long I can keep up the act. The thought of having to do my Miss Congeniality thing for the entire lunch-eating population of Citadel High exhausts me.

My phone rings just as we get to the burger lineup. Ms. Meade glares at me and says, Cell phones. Outside. Normally, I think that rule’s totally unfair, but today it strikes me as proof that God just might exist after all. I mumble Sorry and slip out the side door onto the parking lot. I can see Colin is torn between keeping an eye on me and placing his order, but he follows me out anyway.

Hey, I say into the phone.

Hello, Princess.

Dad! I smile for real. I can’t remember the last time I did that. Where are you?

Guess.

I don’t have to. Colin has already spotted him and is dogging it across the parking lot toward the biggest, shiniest old convertible I’ve ever seen. It’s turquoise and white and has these giant Batmobile fins on the back. Dad’s leaning up against it. He’s got his tie loosened and his jacket slung over one shoulder as if he’s auditioning for Mad Men.

I have to laugh. Where did you get that thing?

"Thing?! I’ll

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