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Honor Roll titles

Photo of Jackie Morse Kessler
May 24, 2015

Interview with Jackie Morse Kessler about the Riders of the Apocalypse series

After the first two books in Jackie Morse Kessler’s Riders of the Apocalypse series — Hunger, about a girl with anorexia, and Rage, about a girl with depression — were so positively reviewed on the blog, we were incredibly excited to invite the author over for a joint interview.

Cover for Rage
May 24, 2015

Review: Rage by Jackie Morse Kessler

I highly recommend Rage for anyone with depression, who wants to learn about depression, or anyone who just enjoys a good story. It’s moving, it’s clever, and despite its fantasy elements it’s incredibly realistic.

Cover for Hunger
May 24, 2015

Review: Hunger by Jackie Morse Kessler

Hunger sings with authenticity. Lisabeth’s anorexia is visceral, bordering on uncomfortable, exactly as it should.

May 23, 2015

Discussion: Romanticizing Mental Illness

Romanticization is a common element of mental illness narratives, including many in the YA category; what kind of message does that send?

Photo of Corey Ann Haydu
May 22, 2015

Interview with Corey Ann Haydu about OCD Love Story

A Q&A with author Corey Ann Haydu about the origins of OCD Love Story and the many and varied ways anxiety can manifest.

Cover for OCD Love Story
May 22, 2015

Review: OCD Love Story by Corey Ann Haydu

Some people call OCD a doubting disease. Corey Ann Haydu infuses her story with the back-and-forth, pulsing presence of this doubt, resulting in a first-person, insider’s account of what the condition feels like for many.

May 21, 2015

Discussion: Stigmatizing Treatment of Mental Illness in Fiction

Many characters who may be mentally ill reject treatment out of hand, considering therapy a waste of time and suspecting medication will turn them into a zombie. Why are these narratives so popular? What are the alternatives?

Photo of Cindy Rodriguez
May 20, 2015

Interview with Cindy L. Rodriguez about When Reason Breaks

After our rave review of Cindy Rodriguez’s debut When Reason Breaks — about two very different girls who are both dealing with depression — we were excited to invite both reviewer and author to the website this week to discuss the book further.

Cover for I Was Here
May 20, 2015

Review: I Was Here by Gayle Forman

I Was Here is full of wasted potential; Meg is as much of a prop to the story as Mr. Body is to Clue.

May 19, 2015

Discussion: The Challenges of Writing About Mental Illness

Writing about characters with mental illness can be challenging in various ways. How do you accurately convey a character’s state of mind, without compromising on clarity or excitement? How do you show a character’s skewed perceptions of the world?

Photo of Kelly Jensen
May 18, 2015

Depression Has No Straight Lines, Only Lies

What about readers like me, who never see their own illnesses depicted? To see story after story where depression draws a straight line to suicide is, for better or for worse, expressing that depression only functions in one way.

Cover for This Is Not a Test
May 18, 2015

Review: This Is Not a Test by Courtney Summers

A girl who didn’t want to survive in the regular world is one of a few survivors of the zombie apocalypse, trapped with classmates in their school. But the warped perspective that Sloane’s depression gives to her situation is what makes this book special.

May 13, 2015

Wrapping Up One Event, Announcing the Next

We’re wrapping up Autism on the Page, and announcing our next exciting event — a week of posts focusing on representation of mental illness.