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Split
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Split
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Split
Audiobook8 hours

Split

Written by Swati Avasthi

Narrated by Joshua Swanson

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this audiobook

A riveting portrait of life after abuse from an award-winning novelist.

Sixteen-Year-Old Jace Witherspoon arrives at the doorstep of his estranged brother Christian with a re-landscaped face (courtesy of his father's fist), $3.84, and a secret.

He tries to move on, going for new friends, a new school, and a new job, but all his changes can't make him forget what he left behind-his mother, who is still trapped with his dad, and his ex-girlfriend, who is keeping his secret.

At least so far.

Worst of all, Jace realizes that if he really wants to move forward, he may first have to do what scares him most: He may have to go back. Award-winning novelist Swati Avasthi has created a riveting and remarkably nuanced portrait of what happens after. After you've said enough, after you've run, after you've made the split-how do you begin to live again? Readers won't be able to put this intense page-turner down.


From the Hardcover edition.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 9, 2010
ISBN9780307579959
Unavailable
Split

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Reviews for Split

Rating: 4.265516965517242 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A young adult book about a father who abused his family and how they came to escape. Jace, the main character, leaves years after his older brother, but still manages to track him down. They live together and try to get along and get through the childhood they've left behind. Jace struggles to adjust to a new high school and come to terms with the girlfriend he left behind. The book has a good pace of revealing things that happened, and the ending is realistic and not rushed.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I've never read a book quite like this one, it was strangely different, in a good way. It kept me reading, because the plot was exciting and well thought out, it could have been executed better though.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jace's father is an abuser. He beats his wife and his children. After taking beatings for years, Jace's older brother takes off. Now Jace is out of the house after hitting his father back, heading off to find his brother and try to create a life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I absolutely loved this novel and understand why Split by Avashthi was selected as the IRA's YA Book of the Year. Split is the story of 16 year old Jace, as he leaves his abusive father to seek safety with his older brother, Christian. Christian, who had left 6 years before and never returned for Jace, has a new life that may or may not have a place for Jace. As the brothers rebuild a new life together, they must first learn to face their past and forgive each other, and themselves. A powerful story, exceptionally well written.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Amazing story! Excellent narration and writing. So very real and penetrating. So many people live this type of story. The author shared many true facets of abuse, its victims and roads people choose to take when faced with this traumatizing reality. I love the fact the two brothers are bound to break the cycle of abuse and be better, good men!
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I was expecting to enjoy this story very much, mainly because of all the awards it has won. Perhaps my expectations were too high.

    While the plot was strong (with a few unbelievable details, granted), there were a few things about this book which put me off. The first is that Jace doesn't come across as a young man to me; he comes across as a 30 year old woman:

    'I look into Christian's blue eyes. He's leaning forward, his hands together, watching me.' (These guys are brothers, not lovers ffs.)

    'I look at the bare yellow walls; they are nothing but potential.' (He says, with a penchant for home decorating)

    He drinks coffee like a thirty year old executive. Where I come from, sixteen year old boys are drinking coke, not coffee. Maybe it's an American thing.

    Also, what sort of judge calls his kid 'Jace'? Where I come from, judges call their kids 'Victor' or 'Hugo' or 'Charles'. I could almost believe the mother chose it, since she was reportedly from a lower class background, but I can't believe that woman got any say in anything.

    Plus I didn't even like Jace. I can't warm to thieves. I can sympathise to a point with a kid who has anger management issues and bashes his girlfriend, but I can't empathise with a thief when he's had no modelling for that.

    I'm reading a lot of reviews which praise the writing, but I'm not a fan. First, I think you have to have a very strong voice to pull off first person present narration, otherwise that choice can make it seem like you're making up for lack of original voice in your own right, almost like forcing immediacy on the reader.

    Also, after a while the descriptions of body language in between the dialogue really began to irritate me. I just wanted conversations to be conversations, without that writerly way of breaking up chunks of dialogue with beats:

    (from p134)

    ...interior monologue...

    He picks up a piece of gravel and throws it. He collects a handful of pebbles and starts tossing them over the edge one by one.

    talk talk...

    His mouth turns down.

    talk talk...

    He looks down at the rock floor and then tosses another pebble over.

    talk talk...

    He stands up, and this time looks after the pebble as he drops it.

    talk talk

    He snorts. I collect my own handful of gravel, scooping out the broken bits from a divot in the rock floor. I stand up next to him and watch the balloons.

    talk talk...

    I talk a breath and then go ahead and...

    (You get the picture.)

    Also, you can only get away with 'He glances at me aslant' once per novel.

    This is the second YA novel I've read recently in which 16 year olds come across as 23 year old men. The other was The Secret Year, in which the sixteen year old narrator has been having sex with girls for years, not months:

    "Did I tell you about the game?" I'm suddenly a tongue-tied geeky thirteen-year-old who is asking a girl out for the first time.

    Hell, has Jace been honing his wayz-wid-da-wimmen since he was 13? Really?

    I feel so old. And inexperienced.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The sad tale of domestic abuse is told in this dramatic story of two brothers, who have been mercilessly beaten by their father over a period of years, trying to come to grips with their past so they can have a future. Along the way, they need to learn how to forgive their mother who has endured her own share of abuse for 25 years, and accept that she needs to make her own decisions about her future.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book had me from the first line, "Now I have to start lying." Going into a novel cold and catching that line is as close to magic as you can get.

    Jace has lived his entire life in a home where his father took out his aggression on his wife, on his oldest son, then finally his youngest. But this is not the story you'll be reading. As the description says, this is a novel about what happens after. Usually when someone finds a way out, that's the end, but this novel reveals that there is so much more. Even Christian, who escaped years before, continues to struggle with his former life.

    Jace's voice is honest and open. The greatest part of this perspective is that it allows the reader to know not only what he does and says, but what he thinks and feels. This, to me, is one of the most important aspects of this novel. It's clear that his experiences forced him to grow up too soon, but it's also clear that he's still just a kid trying to figure it all out.

    Split takes a serious look at what it's like to be trapped by domestic violence even after you've escaped. I highly recommend it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jace's father is an abuser. He beats his wife and his children. After taking beatings for years, Jace's older brother takes off. Now Jace is out of the house after hitting his father back, heading off to find his brother and try to create a life.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Split covers the most important part of child abuse aside from stopping them in the first place, what happens afterward, an under-explored part of the picture. It does so with believable plot and flawed characters I liked. The narrative and author obviously care about kids in these situations, making for fine story. Split is about recovery. Fucked up, messed up, painful, recovery. The people present don’t drag them down. They build them up. Jace and Christian build relationships. Split is hopeful all the way through, but not so positive as to be a sure thing. Steps forward and steps back, and I read through to the end worried that I would lose my friendships with these characters in one final giant leap backward. Either way, in Ms. Avasthi’s hands, it would have been the right ending.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    It is so refreshing to read a book narrated by a teenage boy whose voice is fresh and hip and real, but isn't a Holden Caufield clone. Frankly, I'm tired of the "Ooooo, look at me, I'm so troubled and cool" copycats out there, so I was happy to read Jace's story, even though it's a dark one.

    The novel is about a teenaged boy who leaves home to escape his physically abusive father. Jace deals with the guilt of leaving his mother behind to face his father's blows alone, as he tries to make a life with his brother, who left home years before.

    It's hard for a novel to keep you interested without really surprising you with the plot. There are no big twists in Split, and people act like real people. I love that. It's wonderfully written and the characters are complex, interesting, and they behave like real people do. Why is it so rare to find a book like that?

    I was very moved by Split, and though this one hasn't even been released yet (I have an advance copy), I'm really looking forward to Ms. Avasthi's next book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Split is a story of a family that is torn apart by domestic abuse. The older brother Christian is no longer able to endure the fathers wrath. He escapes as a young teenager to find a new life. Having to change his name and hide even into adulthood from his father. His father is a Judge and threatened death should he ever find Christian. Christian left behind a younger brother Jace who also makes the choice to stand up for the abused mother and alleviate some of her blows only to find himself kicked out with no where to go. When Jace shows up on his estranged brothers door step these two have a lot of pain that confronts them and needs to be worked out. They embark on a journey to try to save their mother who stayed behind and on this journey they work through the years of pain and abandonment. A powerful look at the damage caused by abuse and the strength it takes to move on.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A captivating look into the lives of Christian and Jace. Two brothers who are the victims of their father's extreme abuse. We also hear about their mother, the main target of their father's rage, through the eyes of her two sons. Its a story about the struggle to overcome abuse, moving on and learning when to let go. Highly recommended!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Jace's dad is a highly respected judge in Chicago, but he mercilessly beats his wife. When 16 year-old Jace tries to step in and stop a particularly nasty beating, his dad kicks Jace out of the house. Jace drives all night to New Mexico, where he arrives on the doorstep of his 22 year old brother Christian. The two haven't seen each other in five years, after Christian left the family to escape the beatings he too was suffering. The two brothers struggle to communicate given their histories, and while they establish a temporary home for Jace, the younger brother holds out hope that they can rescue their mom from the abuses of their ever-watchful father. The suspense of whether the mother will join the siblings in New Mexico mixed with Jace's new (but iffy) outlook keep the book moving. An all-too realistic read with an all-too realistic ending. Highly recommended for high schoolers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I finally finished this one, after many starts and stops. A well written, emotionally tense tale of a high school aged boy named Jace who is kicked out by his abusive father and who drives cross country from Chicago to Albuquerque to live with his brother, Christian, who had run away already prior to that. The two live in fear that their father will discover where they are and also for their mother's safety. Jace is convinced that his mother will also eventually join them if only she can get away. Meanwhile, Jace also lives with the fear that he might become just like his father due to an incident in his recent past when he struck his girlfriend, Alison, in anger.The nightmarish situations of living with domestic abuse are central to this book. The author, prior to writing SPLIT, coordinated a domestic-violence legal clinic according to the "about the author" notes on the dust jacket. This undoubtedly is a large reason why she is able to at times convey the tension and fear Jace and Christian feel at times when thinking about their father and the things they've witnessed him do and their desperate hope to be able to save their mother from the cycle of abuse.I only gave it 3 1/2 stars here purely on a personal level. This type of realistic fiction is not one of those genres that I am especially interested in. However, I would recommend it to those who do find this genre enjoyable.Book is one of the Florida Teens Read 2011-2012 nominee titles.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is excellent. It is very realistic. I like how all of the characters do good and bad things. The characters are rich and well rounded.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Swati Avasthi first novel, Split, is a beautifully written story about a boy trying to deal with his past. Jace leaves his home in Chicago after his extremely abusive father beats him up and kicks him out of the house. Jace travels to New Mexico to live with his older brother, Christian. Christian is 22 years old and left home when he was 17 and Jace was 11. Jace had not seen him since then.I've read a lot of books that have abuse as a common theme, but this one was different in a wonderful way. Some of the story is told in flashbacks but the majority of it is Jace trying to figure out a life without abuse, and also worrying if he will end up just like his father.I borrowed this book from the library, finished it within a few hours, then bought a copy for myself at Amazon. Split is a very emotional and raw read. The author does a wonderful job with Jace's narrative and as a reader, I felt everything Jace felt. She even did a great job developing Christian's character who is also dealing with the abuse. Their father was a sick, disgusting man and the brothers, along with Christian's girlfriend, who knew nothing about the abuse until Jace came along, help each other to deal and move on.This touching novel stays with you weeks after you finished reading it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Ever since his older brother left, Jace's dad's abuse has gotten worse and worse. Jace steps up and tries to take as many of the beatings as he can, in order to spare his mom, but one night things go too far and his dad kicks him out. Jace has nowhere to go except to track down the brother who abandoned him. Together, Christian and Jace must figure out how to find peace and how to rescue their mom... if she'll let herself be rescued. I was drawn into this story by Jace's authentic voice. Swati Avasthi explores they gray areas of family relations. Recommended for teens who like edgy stuff like Nancy Werlin's The Rules of Survival, Barry Lyga's Boy Toy, or Jennifer Brown's upcoming Bitter End.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This one nearly missed my radar. I found the story compelling, the characters very well developed, and the disorders well researched. The author digs in deep and uncovers the contempt, hatred, and love the family members have for one another. She also presents a conundrum. I just love that word.Judge Witherspoon is all about appearances. If you live in his house (and you WILL), you will abide by his rules. A complete narcissistic personality lawyer type. Excellent.The mother is beaten down emotionally and physically. She sees no way out. Interesting symbolism of the Queen chess pieces and Jace's compulsion to save/steal them and what he eventually does with his collection.Christian gets out after careful planning and makes a life for himself with conditions. He will never, ever risk being found by his dad and he will never allow abuse in his home.Jace was one of his father's favorite punching bags. When he left, he also left some secrets. In order or healing to occur, all secrets will be spilled, consequences will follow and Jace may alienate his brother.I loved the complexity of the characters and the circumstances. I loved the exploration of Jace's feelings for himself, Lauren, Dakota, his mom, and his dad. I loved that Jace's appearance is the catalyst for Christian developing true intimacy with Mirriam, the voice of logic in this story.The story is told through Jace's POV, although in third person. The present time is given but Jace's mind flashes back and fills in the holes. Particularly compelling is the detail used to describe the first time Christian is used as a punching bag, the consequences, and the way the Judge responds to each of the characters. It. Was. Incredible.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Jace’s story isn’t an easy one. He is full of conflicting emotions about almost everyone and everything in his life. As Jace reveals more and more of his stormy past, it is obvious that he’s seen and experienced more in his life than anyone ever should. But he doesn’t want to be just another statistic.With this book, Avasthi has taken a horrible reality and turned it into a beautiful and emotional narrative of life after abuse. Though it is beautiful, it is difficult to read.There was one particularly brutal flashback that had me wincing its entire ten pages (and afterward, too – I’m doing it even now just thinking about it). Although the abuse he endured has done a lot to define Jace, he is determined that it won’t control him, even when that sometimes seems inevitable to him. He is forced to deal with the person he will become, to make a conscious choice every moment of the day to be that person.One of the greatest aspects of this book is that every character has texture. Never is someone the cliché they may seem. The dumb jock, vapid popular girl, nosy girlfriend, cheating ex-girlfriend – they all have layered stories that prevent them from being one-dimensional characters. The way Jace interacts with all of them, his feelings about his parents, and how he views himself make him a character that is hard to define but easy to respect.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    16-year old Jace unexpectedly shows up on his brother Christian's doorsteps with bruised up face. He has nothing with him but his car, his camera case and a couple of dollars. So, what's the deal? How did he find Christian who had disappeared years ago? Did he finally manage to escape from his monster father? Did their mother come along with Jace? Is she even alive? And why did Jace break up with his girlfriend and can't date any more?So starts Split. As you can very well guess, this is that type of YA literature, a book about "issues." And the issue here is domestic abuse. How it affects families, the family members who are victims of abuse and those who just witness abuse from a distance. How people escape it or don't. How people become victims or abusers. And how they overcome the aftermath of living in such dysfunctional environment.I admit, never have been abused, I often get frustrated with such stories, with women who accept beating days after day and do nothing to protect themselves and their children. But this story does what many other similar stories fail to do. It makes you understand and witness how many women are conditioned to get used to domestic violence and why some are easier targets than others. Swati Avasthi, having worked with thousands of abused women, knows how such things work very well and, luckily, has strong writing skills to relay this knowledge to the readers. There are some poignant passages of "apologies" and "forgiveness" in Split that literally made my skin crawl. And some passages that made me realize I shouldn't be too quick to judge participants on both sides.I also want to applaud Avasthi for her ability to write from a male POV. It is very convincing and not often properly done in YA fiction.The only reason I am giving this novel 4 stars instead of 5 is that I feel the ending missed some opportunities. I am surprised Avasthi chose not to have a big confrontation with the abuser. Everything in the book was leading to it and it never happened. I think with such scene the novel could have had a bigger impact than what the author offered.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I would never have picked up this book if I hadn't heard two recommendations. I must say that they were right on with this book: it was fabulous.Jace is kicked out of the house by his physically abusive father when he decides to fight back. With nowhere to go, he travels across four states to find the brother who disappeared five years earlier in an attempt to escape the same abuse. This book is about Jace and Christian's new relationship, Jace's struggles with his own anger, and letting go of regret and loss. Okay, that sounds kind of lame. But it really is a great book! Jace is such a good kid and he tries really hard to do the right thing. Which is really difficult. What's also awesome is that the author is a woman. I never would have guessed and was half way through the book before I saw her picture in the back. Her teen, male voice rings true.there is a lot of swearing, including the f-word, and the abuse can get graphic.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I went into Split expecting a thoughtful piece on an abuse victim. I did not expect it to tear my heart out and check it at the door. I did not expect it to keep me enthralled, to keep me up late at night, anxiously flipping pages top find out what would happen next. But it happened. Split is the poster child for what a beautifully-broken story should be like.I can't tell you how much my heart was hurting for Jace. You are seeing a story from the aftermath of the abuse. But through Jace's memories we slowly see bit by bit just how terrible life has been for his family. To be honest, I usually get bored in long memory scenes. Not in Split. I was drawn into Jace's memories, both anxious and afraid to get another piece of the puzzle. Asvasthi did a remarkable job at showing all sides of an abuse case. She showed what abuse does to everyone involved. The characters were all fleshed out wonderfully detailed. Jace is interesting, sad, unique, funny, messed up, sweet, talented and so many other things. It was bitter-sweet learning his story. Bitter, for how he was raised and what he has been through, and sweet, for getting to know the person he is. Jace's brother, Christian, was also a wonderful character. He was so woven into Jace's memories and thoughts that it was impossible not to care for him as well. But besides Jace, Merriam was my favorite character. At first I thought she'd just be Christian's bitchy girlfriend. But she turned out to be a remarkable character. Some of my favorite scenes were the conversations between her and Jace.The ending was perfect. It didn't tie everything up in a big, yellow bow. It answered enough questions to satisfy the reader, yet some remained open with the promise of hope. This unbelievably, yet realistic tale is one no one should miss. This one is going to help many teens to come, I just know it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a really good look at the repercussions of domestic violence. Jace and Christian are brothers raised in a household where the father abuses their mother...then abuses them as they try to protect her. They are very different and get out of the situation in different ways, but they are both affected by their upbringing. I think that Avasthi does a nice job with constructing these emotionally flawed characters, and with the characterization of the friends and loved ones that ultimate help them. It is not a book with a happily ever after, but the end is satisfying. Overall, it is well-written and has a good plot.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The best word to describe this novel is unforgiving. It takes a knife and slices you where your heart is and doesn't even apologize for it. This is one of the most emotional, and raw novels I've read in a long time. Main character Jace is definitely one of a kind. He's a collector of Queen pieces from Chess boards but he doesn't play Chess. He's blunt and has a hard time keeping his mouth shut but I love him for it. Because of his past he's not very good at letting people in. He's one of those guys that can come off as an asshole but he really has good intentions. I get him!Jace has grown up seeing his father hit his mom and then the abuse began to include his older brother Christian. Christian moves out and Jace is left to fill his spot. One night it gets really bad and Jace leaves with hardly any money and his brother's address in hand.Flashbacks of the way things were before he left give the reader piece by piece of the whole picture. These boys went through so much physically and mentally. Their story happens everyday. This is the story of what happens AFTER the abuse and the affects it has. Jace tries to make a new life for himself in Albuquerque with his brother. But everyone knows that the past has a way of catching up with us.Listening to this book literally made me laugh out loud at how sarcastically funny Jace was. Though sometimes it made my heart ache. Living in an abusive home can be the hardest thing to go through and getting out can be even harder.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Jace drove nineteen hours straight from Chicago to Albuquerque with a split lip and the taste of blood still in his mouth. Jace, still a junior in high school, arrived on his estranged brother's doorstop with only an address - he doesn't even know his brother's new last name. His brother, Christian, who left their abusive father a few years before, doesn't ask how what happened, he only wants to know: " Did he kill her?" Jace responds, "Not yet." This is a complex and truthful book about domestic violence and how it effects everyone.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Wow, this was great. I actually bought a copy before my ARC arrived from [personal profile] deepad, and I’m glad I did. The action begins with just the right amount of tension: Jace shows up at his older brother Christian’s, still bleeding. As you find out why, Jace is both sympathetic and legitimately dangerous. Both Jace and Christian have secrets and occasionally behave badly despite their attempts to take care of each other, and as Jace struggles to fit in to his brother’s new life and a new school, he has to deal with what he couldn’t leave behind: himself, and his connections to his mother and father. When is it okay to get out of a terrible situation, knowing that you’re leaving others you love behind to suffer, and knowing that if you reach out to them you’re much more likely to get pulled back in than you are to help? Is forgiveness for terrible acts ever justified, and how does that relate to change in the person who did them? There are no easy answers here; the story was powerful and ultimately hopeful.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ms. Avasthi has done a beautiful job of dealing with the sensitive issue of domestic violence. Her main characters are very real as are their ways of dealing (or not dealing) with their problems. I found both brothers' girlfriends very appealing, and they provided an extra emotional dimension which gave us additional insight into the psychological makeup of both brothers. Highly Recommended!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    After Jace fights back against his abusive father and gets kicked out for his trouble, he drives halfway across the country to find his estranged brother. Christian is not exactly happy to see Jace, but grudgingly lets him stay, and Jace tries to make a new life for himself. But it's not easy to make a clean break when he's always worrying about his mom, and worrying that he's turning into his dad.I really liked this a lot. It's well-written, compelling, and thankfully doesn't suffer from the info-dumpiness that seems to plague most YA books (some authors seem to take first-person narration as permission to give chapter-long rambles about backstory when they should be getting on with the story). I like how we're thrown into the middle of the story and everything is revealed along the way.I thought it dealt with the subject of abuse well. It wasn't sensational or over the top, but very matter of fact. I liked that Christian and Jace were both fucked up but in different ways. I really liked how it wasn't all wrapped up in an unrealistic happy ending, either. One thing that bugged me was the female characters. Jace has some pretty big issues with women (not surprising considering his family situation, but still) and since this is all told in his POV, it's really front and centre. Women are bitches, catty, flirts, cheaters, etc. And since we don't see these people outside of his interaction with them, they're often kind of one-note (and not a good note). Both his old girlfriend and a new girl at school are the same sort of popular girl stereotype who is manipulative and catty. Christian's girlfriend Mirriam probably gets the most characterisation and even Jace eventually sees her as more than the meddling bitch girlfriend, but eh. Jace is pretty unlikable over all (as is Christian and pretty much everyone else in the novel), so if you need to like a character to enjoy the story, you probably won't like this book. He's extremely arrogant, and like I said, has Major Issues with women, and is just generally an asshole overall. Other people in the story apparently find him charming, but they are not subject to his thoughts the way we are. :p
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    In Swati Avasthi's debut novel, Split, Sixteen-year-old Jace Witherspoon just wants to be a normal teenager. He dreams of soccer games, girlfriends, and his love for photography that are not tainted by his past. Growing up with an abusive father, a passive mother and a brother who abandoned him when he needed him the most, Jace is afraid for his future. Finally standing up to his father, he escapes his past that he just can not leave behind and shows up on the doorstep of his estranged brother. New friends, a new school and a new job can not hide his abusive past and the secret he is hoping no one ever finds out. Will Jace escape his horrid past? Will he move on and find the family he always dreamed of? Or will he realize his past has become his future? Read Split by Swati Avasthi to find out for yourself.For me, Split was a story that no one ever wants to tell. The pain, abuse and heartbreak that Jace experiences pops from the pages of this truthful read. Written in first person, Jace is able to tell the readers what he is feeling and how he sees himself. The flashbacks to what Jace had to endure living in a home constantly at war will make even the strongest reader's heart break. I felt that Split was as honest as a work a fiction could be in feeling the pain of an abused child and now abusing teen. The voice of Jace is real of a teen boy going through what he went through. Never did I feel that this was written by an adult woman. It was true to the teenage male heart and the teenage male mind. Avasthi really got into her character of Jace and felt his heart and found his voice. If you are a victim of abuse or someone who has never experienced anything like what Jace went through in this book, you will relate to Avasthi's characters in some way and you will feel the need to protect them. Swati Avasthi completely succeeded with Split and I know she will continue to write great things in the future.Originally posted on my blog Draw A Blank.Disclosure of Material Connection: I received this book free from Random House Publishing. I was not required to write a positive review. The opinions I have expressed are my own. I am disclosing this in accordance with the Federal Trade Commission’s 16 CFR, Part 255 : “Guides Concerning the Use of Endorsements and Testimonials in Advertising.”