About the Author:
Suzanne Phillips is a special education English teacher in San Diego, CA. Chloe Doe is her first novel.
From Booklist:
Chloe is a 17-year-old prostitute who, after propositioning an undercover police officer, is sent to the Madeline Parker Institute for Girls. There, she adopts the last name "Doe," signifying her feelings of alienation and loss. During therapy sessions, Chloe slowly reveals the main reason she left home: her negligent mother chose to stay with and support Chloe's abusive stepfather, even after he was accused of murdering Chloe's older sister. In a style reminiscent of E. R. Frank's America (2002), Phillips effectively uses flashbacks, stream-of-consciousness prose, and gritty, Spanish-infused dialogue (Chloe is a gringa, a white girl from a Hispanic neighborhood) to create a blisteringly honest portrayal of a good girl who loses, then finds, her way. By novel's end, with the help of a sympathetic therapist, Chloe decides, "I can do better than Doe," and chooses a new name for herself ("Aimes") that showcases her positive, new direction. Give this intense and emotional debut to fans of Ellen Hopkins and Patricia McCormick, as well as E.R. Frank. Hubert, Jennifer
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.