Every Body Looking By Candice Iloh

Every

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I have just started reading this book, and I love to read it in spurts because every page is a reflection/lesson.I wish I had read a book like this when I was younger.Amazing, beautiful work. Every Body Looking What a crystal clear voice. YA readers need to give this one a standing ovation. Every Body Looking The first three quarters of the book were so sad. The main character experienced so much pain and disappointment. Her relationships with her mother, her Aunty, and her classmates were so troubled. I found myself enjoying the last quarter of the book when she began to focus on her passion to dance. Overall, it was a decent enough read to keep my attention. It was a quick, easy story but I wouldn’t read this again. Every Body Looking Was recommended by another reader. Glad I did, Every Body Looking when you start growing further away from what used to be home you go looking for somewhere that lets you be what’s inside your headTW: rape, fatphobic comment,This is a coming of age story about young Ada, who is getting ready to go to college. This story is told entirely in verse. The story oscillates between her personal development and self discovery during her first semester in college, and the events that defined her throughout her childhood. We see her as a new adult and as a child and then a teen and then a highschool graduate. You don't know all the details at first, every section adds a new piece to the puzzle like a slow unveiling of the whole picture.I got the impression her childhood was really sheltered by her religious father, and also really toxic that were defined by the moments she spent with her mother. Fortunately, her mother didn't live with Ada and her father. But even living with her father had its down side. Ada grew up learning from her father that money was so important and he never really taught her to be happy.For all of Ada's life, she loves to dance and hides that fact from her father as she pays for dance classes that she never talks about.This is a story about learning how to validate your own actions by doing what makes you happy. When she is first learning about boys, she learns what it means for boys to have expectations of her. But she slowly matures into finding out what makes her happy.The self talk of the main character was very raw and full of the weight you feel when you have to make the people around you happy. I loved how honest it was and how much I found it emotionally engaging.Overall I really enjoyed this story and I loved the feminist quality this had as well as the blooming independence of our protagonist. Every Body Looking