It’s
been two years since the night that changed Ashley's life and two
years of hell for Derek.
When
it all comes to a head at Thanksgiving, will these siblings be able
to salvage their relationship? From
the award-winning author of Some
Boys comes
an unflinching examination of rape culture that delves into a family
torn apart by sexual assault.
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Used To Know First
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I Used to Know.
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About
Someone
I Used To Know:
Title:
Someone
I Used To Know
Author:
Patty Blount
Genre:
Young Adult Contemporary
Release
Date: August
7, 2018
Publisher:
Sourcebooks
Fire
Format:
Digital eBook / Print
Digital
ISBN:
B07C933LP6
Print
ISBN:
9781492632818
Synopsis:
It’s
been two years since the night that changed Ashley’s life. Two
years since she was raped by her brother's teammate. And a year since
she sat in a court and watched as he was given a slap on the wrist
sentence. But the years have done nothing to stop the pain.
It’s
been two years of hell for Derek. His family is totally messed up and
he and his sister are barely speaking. He knows he handled it all
wrong. Now at college, he has to come to terms with what happened,
and the rape culture that he was inadvertently a part of that
destroyed his sister's life.
When
it all comes to a head at Thanksgiving, Derek and Ashley have to
decide if their relationship is able to be saved. And if their family
can ever be whole again.
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Excerpt:
Copyright©
2018 Someone I Used To Know
Patty
Blount
Long
Island, New York
My
sister hates me.
Ashley’s
hated me for a couple of years now and it’s okay. I wanted
her
to hate me and did whatever I could to make it happen. Of course,
that was before I knew what hate
really
meant. Now that I get it, I can’t change it, can’t undo all the
shit I did, can’t fix what went wrong. So I suffer.
See,
hate is
a meaningless word. Everybody tosses the word around like it’s
confetti, diluting it, rendering it about as effective as a Band-aid
over an amputated limb to describe how they feel about every little
thing that annoys them. They hate this song, that food, that person,
or this movie. They hate homework, hate their teachers, hate their
parents. They hate this team and that game. They hate
every
damn thing but nobody has even the smallest clue what hate
really
means unless they’re the object of it.
The
focus
of
it.
Hating
somebody is more than you stop caring about them, and it’s more
than not wanting to see that person ever again. It’s this need—an
urge you can barely control—to make that person suffer. True hate
goes all the way down to your bone marrow. Sometimes, it’s glacier
cold and infinitely patient; other times, it’s surface-of-the-sun
hot and bullet fast.
Ashley
hates me in that glacier cold, slow-moving kind of hate. It leaves me
permanently frost-bitten and has this really annoying habit of
shadowing me around even when she can’t. Like right now—I’m
surrounded by flyers. One was slipped under my dorm room door,
another was stuck on the exit door of my building, the third was
stuffed into my hand when I ordered some breakfast and this one is
folded into one of those little tent cards and placed on top of every
single table in the dining hall. I’ve been on campus at Rocky Hill
University—several states and hundreds of miles away from my
sister—for a few weeks, relieved to be away, to be anonymous, to be
on my own. Mom and Dad wanted to come with me, set up my dorm room,
have the big sloppy farewell like they did when Justin left for
college four years before, but I wanted no part of that. I just
wanted to be gone. Free. When Dad got the last of my crap into the
car and asked if I’d said my goodbyes to everybody, I’d said yes.
But
I hadn’t.
I’d
tried to say goodbye to Ashley. She held up a hand and said. “Just
go.” It had cut deeply, but I knew I deserved it, so I did.
I’d
climbed into the passenger seat. Mom came to the front door and waved
as Dad pulled out of the driveway. Ashley stood behind her, freezing
me with that same cold, dead stare she’d been saving just for me
since the trial. I kicked back, happy to be rid of her for the next
four years.
And
what happens?
Everywhere
I look…reminders of her.
The
flyers announce, You
Can Stop Campus Sex Assault! Blue
paper, white text, announcing we’re gonna Take
Back The Night.
Great.
There’s
a huge rally being planned for Homecoming week—Rock
Stock here.
Because we’re the Rockets.
Of
course, it would be homecoming week, because, like I said, I must
suffer.
There
will be guest speakers and live music and a candlelight vigil for all
the survivors of sexual assault. I flip it over to read my favorite
part: Are
you a guy against rape? Join GAR today!
GAR.
I
wonder if people say it with a rolling R, like a pirate. Garrrrrrrr.
Oh,
and the coach informed us the entire football team would don special
uniforms for that game, showing our support.
Awesome.
I
crumble up the collection of flyers into a single giant ball and
shove my breakfast aside, my stomach churning up acid. I was already
planning on being hurt, injured, or maybe both that day.
“Hey,
Derek.”
I
glance up into the smiling face of Brittany Meyers, my girlfriend. We
actually met in high school but didn’t hook up until we both
arrived here. “Hey, Britt.” I sit up a little straighter, shove
thoughts of my sister the hell out of my brain. Brittany’s hot in
that girl-next-door way. Her long blond hair’s tied up in a loose
knot with strands hanging loose. She’s wearing a tank top, shorts
and flip-flops and her toes are painted an electric green and my
mouth goes suddenly sand-paper dry. Happens every time.
Quickly,
I take a sip of orange juice. A big one.
“What’s
this?” She indicates my balled up collection of flyers and I shrug.
Understanding dawns a second later. “Oh. The rally.”
“Yeah.
That.” I rub the side of my face, scratch at the scar near my
temple.
“You’re
gonna go, right?”
Hell,
no. I shake my head. “No way. I’m the last person who should be
there.”
She
slides into the chair opposite mine, covers my hand with hers and my
whole body heats up. “Derek, you’re the best
person
to be at that rally. You get it. A lot of guys claim they get it and
have no clue. But you do.”
I
look into her big blue eyes for a minute and finally decide she
believes her own bullshit. And then I decide she’s right. I do
have
a clue. In fact, I have the whole mystery solved. And because I do,
there’s no way in hell I’m going anywhere near that rally because
I don’t need the entire university knowing I’m Derek Lawrence,
the guy whose sister is the Bellford
High School Rape Victim.
That’s
what the media called her.
Ashley
was barely fourteen when it happened. A minor. So her identity was
protected. But she took her story public, posting a detailed account
to her do-it-yourself website. And she included my role in it. Now,
everybody from feminist bloggers to Matt Lauer knows our names.
So,
yeah. I don’t want my whole school saying, “Oh! You’re that
Derek
Lawrence.”
Yep.
The Derek Lawrence that played a stupid game that got his sister
raped and then told a court of law that to go easy on her rapist. The
same Derek Lawrence who drove away and left her standing alone in an
empty parking lot, putting the whole friggin’ ordeal into motion.
Self-hatred
runs another ice cold finger across my bare skin and I shiver,
reminding myself I deserve this…deserve every second of it.
Book
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About
Patty Blount:
Patty
Blount grew up quiet and somewhat invisible in Queens, NY, but found
her voice writing smart and strong characters willing to fight for
what’s right. Today, she’s the award-winning author of edgy,
realistic, gut-wrenching contemporary and young adult romance. Still
a bit introverted, she gets lost often, eats way too much chocolate,
and tends to develop mad, passionate crushes on fictional
characters…and actors like Gilles Marini….and Sam Heughan. Okay,
so Patty’s not nearly as cool as her characters, but she is a solid
supporter of women’s rights and loves delivering school
presentations.
Patty
is best known for her internet issues novels, including SOME
BOYS, a 2015 CLMP Firecracker winner
and RWA Rita Finalist, and SEND,
a 2012 Junior Library Guild Fall Pick. Her upcoming release, SOMEONE
I USED TO KNOW, has already been
selected as a 2018 Junior Library Guild Fall Pick. Visit her website
at pattyblount.com,
where you can sign up for her newsletter. She blogs at YA
Outside the Lines and
is also active on Twitter and Facebook. When she’s not writing,
Patty loves to watch bad sci-fi movies, live tweeting the hilarity,
and scour Pinterest for ideas on awesome bookcases. Patty lives on
Long Island with her family in a house that, sadly, lacks bookcases.
She loves hearing from readers, especially when they tell her she’s
cool (even though she knows it’s not true), and is easily bribed
with chocolate. Never underestimate the power of chocolate.
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