Itching for more great reads? You’ll want to dig into these hard-hitting YA novels. But if you’re craving more, a few additional titles for your ever-growing TBR include Girl in a Bad Place by Kaitlin Ward, Karma for Beginners by Jessica Blank, The Liar’s Daughter by Megan Cooley Peterson, The Patron Saint of Butterflies by Cecelia Galante, Shallow Graves by Kali Wallace, The Sisterhood by AJ Grainger, The Right and the Real by Joelle Anthony, The Special Ones by Em Bailey, Starbird Murphy and The World Outside by Karen Finneyfrock, and The Virtue of Sin by Shannon Schuren. Today, I share my thoughts on Jessica Blank’s novel Karma For Beginners (as well as discuss the problematic plot lines)BookReviewKarma For Beginners:https:/. There, unsupervised Tessa finds comfort in the arms of 20-year-old Colin, who introduces Tessa to sex and drugs. Sarah swears the Ashram in the Catskills will be different. Fourteen-year-old Tessa trails after her hippie mother, Sarah, from town to town, boyfriend to boyfriend, searching for meaning. This is a bloody, dark, and twisted thriller for readers who want a gory, gruesome cult read.īecause this list is limited to 20 titles (okay, 21!), of course it doesn’t include every YA book about cults. After a promising debut in 2007’s Almost Home, Blank strikes out. Harlow is the adopted daughter of the leader of VisionCrest, and while she’s regularly under the eyes of others and needs to be perfect, polished, and ready to take on a leadership role within the group at any time, the voice in her head is something all together different.
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