Ratings6
Average rating4.2
ALL THE TRUTH THAT'S IN ME is many things. It is a true romance, a story of desperate yearning and unrequited love. It's a page-turning mystery full of twists and turns that will keep you guessing until the very end. But most of all, it's an empowering drama about a girl's journey from victim to hero. Judith can't speak. Ever since the horrifying trauma that left her best friend dead and Judith without her tongue, she's been a pariah in her close-knit community of Roswell Station; even her own mother won't look her in the eye. All Judith can do is silently pour out her thoughts and feelings to the love of her life, the boy who's owned her heart as long as she can remember - even if he doesn't know it - her childhood friend, Lucas. But when Roswell Station is attacked by enemies, long-buried secrets come to light . . . and Judith's world starts to shift on its axis. Before she knows it, Judith is forced to choose: continue to live in silence, or recover her voice, even if what she has to say might change her world, and the lives around her, forever.
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I'm giving this book five stars because I can't give it six.
Want to read a good book? A book that you can't put down? This is THAT book. I started it one night, barely slept, and finished it the next. Yes, all 274 pages are that good.
I'm not sure who decided to categorize it as young adult, but because it has some very adult subject matter. The heroine is young (14) when the book starts but it covers a number of years, putting her near 20 when it ends. Almost all the other characters are older, including her love interest, four years her senior.
Judith, we eventually learn, was kidnapped, and not can't speak. Literally. It's a physical impossibility because most of her tongue was cut out. We eventually learn why, but the storyteller's strength in this book is her ability to give you just enough information to keep you reading another page and another chapter.
This vaguely historical fiction is set in an undefined time period where women were barely considered people and religion ruled people's lives. (It makes today sound scarier than it already is.)
The author handily leapt back in forth in time without giving the reader whiplash. There's a lyrical, almost poet phrasing used as well as mini-sections that almost act like diary entries. One of my favorite things about this story was that it never sounded trite or unbelievable.
READ IT, even if you never read young adult fiction.