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Split

Split, by Michael Swartz, is a haunting story about Ethan, a boy born with genetic chimerism, carrying two sets of DNA and the confusion, pain, and strength that come with it. The novel follows him through a gauntlet of bullying, identity crises, and family wounds, all while his body betrays him with asthma, and his mind struggles with the fear of becoming like his violent father. Along the way, friendships bloom, love steadies him, and the truth of his condition forces him to question who he really is and who he wants to become. It is both a coming-of-age tale and a raw look at survival when the world tells you that you are broken.

The writing is sharp and urgent, with scenes that left me squirming in discomfort, not because they were bad, but because they were so brutally real. The cafeteria humiliations, the suffocating asthma attacks, the relentless bullying, all of it dropped me straight back into the shaky insecurity of youth. Swartz doesn’t soften the edges. He makes you sit with the pain, and in that pain, I found a strange kind of beauty.

At the same time, there’s a tenderness here that surprised me. Moments with Mo and Aia glowed like little lanterns in the dark, and those relationships kept the story from sinking into despair. I loved how the book didn’t give easy answers about identity or fate. Ethan’s split nature felt like a metaphor for all of us who feel divided between who we are and who we’re supposed to be. I kept thinking about genetics versus choice, destiny versus defiance, and it made me restless in the best way. I didn’t agree with every decision Ethan made, but I understood them, and that made the story hit harder.

I would recommend Split to readers who want more than just a story, to anyone who likes books that dig under your skin and refuse to let go. Teenagers who feel out of place, adults still wrestling with family scars, and anyone who has ever carried the weight of being different will find something of themselves in these pages.

Pages: 264 | ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0F9MWLMNY

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The Importance of Friendship

Author Interview
Samantha Cooke Author Interview

Love Always, Bailey follows five friends who spend five days at a beach house where they discover the importance of friends and how quickly they can slip away. What was the inspiration for the setup of your story?

The inspiration for the setup of this story was taken from my personal life. The Highview, the house the friends go to, is a real house in Manasota Key where I used to spend one week each summer with my friends. The friend group is based off of my own childhood friends, and many of the scenarios in the story were inspired by real-life scenarios.

Was there anything from your own life that you put into the characters in your novel?

No character in this story is a carbon copy of anyone I know, but they each have some of the best and worst qualities of my childhood friends. I think when pulling from inspiration, it is important to keep the element of fiction. In this case, I imagined how I thought the real-life friends would react to the major event and loss in this story. I know these characters so well because I crafted them to be fictionalized versions of people I know so well.

What were some themes that were important for you to explore in this book?

Friendship and found family are the most important themes that I explored in this book. I think it is so important to share with YA readers the importance of friendship. In adulthood, I find that so many adults don’t value their friendships, and I find that to be a huge loss.

What is the next book you are working on, and when will it be available?

I am currently shopping around 2 YA novels. One is about a young girl who has to move into a motel after her family suffers a loss due to addiction. The other is a YA version of The Wedding Planner meets The Wedding Singer: basically, a wedding planner’s very type-A daughter falls for the lead singer of a wedding band.

Author Links: Goodreads | Amazon

It’s been seven months since Morgan has heard from Bailey, not since a fight on New Year’s Eve that may have ended their friendship forever. To figure out what went wrong, Morgan has some serious retracing to do, starting with a five-day stay at the beach house that started it all.

Morgan reunites with her friend group at The Highview, an oceanfront house where they’ve spent every summer since they were kids. There’s Noah, who hopes that his friends trust one of his plans one final time. Ethan, who mourns the loss of the girl he loved and never got to tell. Allie’s anger overpowers her desire to heal. And Ryder still holds out for one final game of Rock Paper Scissors with Morgan, hoping it can spark their once-picture-perfect love story.

Over the course of five days, the friends learn their friendship has changed, and they can no longer take for granted the closeness they once shared. Instead, they must learn to love and grieve simultaneously.