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Summary
Summary
A 2015 Schneider Family Book Award Winner
With gentle humor and unflinching realism, Gail Giles tells the gritty, ultimately hopeful story of two special ed teenagers entering the adult world.
We understand stuff. We just learn it slow. And most of what we understand is that people what ain't Speddies think we too stupid to get out our own way. And that makes me mad.
Quincy and Biddy are both graduates of their high school's special ed program, but they couldn't be more different: suspicious Quincy faces the world with her fists up, while gentle Biddy is frightened to step outside her front door. When they're thrown together as roommates in their first "real world" apartment, it initially seems to be an uneasy fit. But as Biddy's past resurfaces and Quincy faces a harrowing experience that no one should have to go through alone, the two of them realize that they might have more in common than they thought -- and more important, that they might be able to help each other move forward.
Hard-hitting and compassionate, Girls Like Us is a story about growing up in a world that can be cruel, and finding the strength -- and the support -- to carry on.
Author Notes
Gail Giles is the author of several books for young adults, including Shattering Glass, What Happened to Cass McBride?, and Right Behind You. She lives near Houston, Texas.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 8 Up-Biddy and Quincy have recently graduated from their high school's special education program and now need to learn how to hold a job, pay rent, and make a life for themselves. Through the intervention of their guidance counselor, the girls, though never friendly at school, are paired to live together in a small apartment. Biddy is sweet and likable, while Quincy is hard and suspicious of everyone. Written in alternating first-person perspectives, the story gives listeners unique perspectives into the same situation seen through two very different sets of eyes. While the surface of the story is about adapting to change, the core is about overcoming horrific odds. Both girls were constantly made fun of as children and never given the love they needed from the adults in their lives. Additionally, Biddy was gang-raped in middle school, and the subsequent pregnancy ended in adoption. When Quincy survives her own rape, Biddy provides the unquestioning support that Quincy has never had. Narrators Lauren Ezzo and Brittany Pressley ably voice the characters. VERDICT Recommended. ["A unique, hard-hitting yet refreshing story with well-developed characters free from expected clichés or caricatures": SLJ 6/14 review of the Candlewick book.]-Suzanne Dix, The Seven Hills School, Cincinnati, OH © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Following graduation from their high school's special education track, two girls become wards of the state and are placed in an apartment where they live independently and cook and clean for their neighbor/employer, an older woman named Elizabeth. Sharp-tongued and aggressive, Quincy is defensive about her learning difficulties and the physical scars left by the source of her brain damage, "when my mama's boyfriend hit my head with a brick." Sensitive Biddy, who describes herself as having "moderate retardation," overeats to mask past traumas, which include having given up her baby. Giles's (Dark Song) background teaching special education students informs this blunt, honest, and absorbing story about two young women overcoming challenges that have less to do with their abilities to read or write than with how society views and treats them. In short, alternating chapters, the girls narrate in raw and distinct voices that capture their day-to-day hurdles, agony, and triumphs. The "found family" that builds slowly for Quincy, Biddy, and Elizabeth-with no shortage of misunderstandings, mistrust, or tears-is rewarding and powerful. Ages 14-up. Agent: Scott Treimel, Scott Treimel NY. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Horn Book Review
Although they're both "Speddies" (short for special ed), high school classmates Biddy and Quincy aren't friends. Quincy -- prickly, mistrustful, physically scarred, and left with brain damage after her "crack ho" mother's boyfriend hit her with a brick when she was six -- is a product of the foster care system; Biddy -- angelic, overweight, illiterate, diagnosed with "moderate retardation" -- has been raised by a cruel grandmother who kicks her out immediately after graduation. The two girls, both wards of the state, are assigned to live together, helping to cook and clean for well-meaning (but sometimes way-off-the-mark) Miss Lizzy. Quincy also gets a job at a grocery store where, on her first day, she's accosted by a coworker who later rapes her. Biddy, too, has been brutally raped and was tricked by her grandmother into giving up her baby. "Police or nobody else care what happen to girls like us," the normally sunny Biddy tells Quincy when she finally reveals what occurred. Small moments and poignant encounters throughout the book prove Biddy wrong, and each girl gradually starts to let down her guard. The teens' friendship -- slow to develop but life-altering -- and their relationship with Miss Lizzy are believably volatile yet ultimately rewarding. For most of the book, very short chapters alternate between Biddy and Quincy's first-person narrations. At the end, when Quincy struggles with the decision about whether to speak out or remain silent, she takes over the telling. The book gives memorable voice to underrepresented young women. elissa gershowitz (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Review
Two "Speddies"special ed studentsgraduate high school and move in with a kind but sometimes misguided older woman.At first, prickly Quincy, who is mixed-race, and fearful but kind Biddy, who is white, seem to have little in common besides their special ed designation. After they finish high school, the two girls are placed in a living situation together. Biddy has a job cooking and cleaning for the elderly woman in whose home they are staying, and Quincy will work at a grocery store. The girls narrate alternate chapters, a page or two long each and related in readable but distinct dialect. The story is told with both gentleness and a humor that laughs with, not at, the two girls. (Quincy's recurring joke about Biddy catching "the duck rabies" from a family of ducks she's started feeding is particularly charming.) Sexual, institutional and family violence against both Quincy and Biddy are treated frankly, with realistic but not sensational detail. One plot point involving the daughter who was taken from Biddy years earlier feels contrived, but otherwise, the warmth, conflict and mutual caring that develop among Quincy, Biddy and elderly Miss Lizzy are authentic and genuinely moving.A respectful and winningly told story about people too often relegated to the role of plot devicebravo. (Fiction. 12-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* In compelling, engaging, and raw voices, 18-year-olds Biddy and Quincy, newly independent, intellectually disabled high-school graduates, narrate their growing friendship and uneasy transition into a life of jobs, real world apartments, and facing cruel prejudice. Obese and illiterate Biddy has more emotional intelligence than Quincy, whose normal brain development was shattered when her mother's boyfriend hit her with a brick when she was six. Biddy's limited cognitive capacities spring from oxygen deprivation during birth as well as lifelong deprivation of nurturing. Paired by a social service program, the girls are made roommates in a live-work placement where they share a small apartment at the home of a wealthy, sensitive, and supportive widow, Elizabeth. Biddy cleans and provides physical assistance for Elizabeth, while Quincy, who loves cooking, works at a market. Biddy and Quincy share deep secrets and narrate lives heartrendingly full of anger, abandonment, and abuse, including explicit, realistic descriptions of two rapes. But with the help of patient Elizabeth and the support they gain from each other, they are empowered to move forward with strength and independence. Giles (Dark Song, 2010) offers a sensitive and affecting story of two young women learning to thrive in spite of their hard circumstances.--Goldsmith, Francisca Copyright 2010 Booklist