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Beatrice Sparks

    Beatrice Sparks was an American author known for her books presented as the 'real diaries' of troubled teenagers. These works delve into topical issues such as drug abuse, Satanism, teenage pregnancy, or AIDS, serving as cautionary tales. Sparks positioned herself as the discoverer and editor of these diaries, though records indicate she was credited as their sole author. Driven by her experiences with adolescents, she aimed to create narratives that would caution other young people against falling into similar pitfalls.

    Kim
    Annie's Baby
    Go Ask Alice
    It Happened to Nancy
    • It Happened to Nancy

      • 241 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.9(3843)Add rating

      The editor of the classic GO ASK ALICE has compiled the poignant journals of a 14-year-old date-rape victim who contracted AIDS and died.

      It Happened to Nancy
    • Go Ask Alice

      A Real Diary

      • 185 pages
      • 7 hours of reading
      3.8(263296)Add rating

      More compelling than ever, this classic real-life diary charts an anonymous teenage girl's struggle with the seductive--and often fatal--world of drugs.

      Go Ask Alice
    • Annie's Baby

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading
      3.6(2657)Add rating

      When Annie discovers she's pregnant by her boyfriend, she's devastated. She has never felt so alone. With no one she can talk to, she pours her heart out to her diary, confiding her feelings of panic, self-doubt, and the desperate hope that some day she can turn her life around. She decides she wants to keep her baby and dreams of loving and caring for this little person. But after the baby is born, it's in her diary that she faces the agonizing question: Can she really raise this child on her own?

      Annie's Baby
    • Kim

      Empty Inside

      • 165 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      When Kim can't handle things, she eats. Then she purges. Sometimes she fasts. She knows she isn't as thin as the other girls on her gymnastics team, and she's worried that now, away from home for the first time as a college freshman, she won't be able to live up to expectations -- especially her own. Eating is the one thing she can control -- or can she?

      Kim