You Are Enough
- 336 pages
- 12 hours of reading
By an eating disorder survivor, an inclusive nonfiction book about recovering from eating disorders and dealing with body image issues.
Jen Petro-Roy is the author of the contemporary middle grade novel P.S. I MISS YOU. As a teen librarian, she brings a deep understanding of adolescence and its challenges to her writing. Her work often explores themes of connection, loss, and finding one's place in the world, capturing the authentic emotions and thoughts of young readers. Petro-Roy crafts stories that are not only engaging but also resonate with the complex feelings of adolescent characters.



By an eating disorder survivor, an inclusive nonfiction book about recovering from eating disorders and dealing with body image issues.
Forbidden to contact her pregnant sister after her strict Catholic parents send her to stay with a great-aunt, Evie secretly sends her letters, writing about their family, her life, and the new girl in school, June, who may be more than a friend.
A young girl with an eating disorder must find the strength to recover in this moving middle-grade novel from Jen Petro-Roy Before she had an eating disorder, twelve-year-old Riley was many things: an aspiring artist, a runner, a sister, and a friend. But now, from inside the inpatient treatment center where she's receiving treatment for anorexia, it's easy to forget all of that. Especially since under the influence of her eating disorder, Riley alienated her friends, abandoned her art, turned running into something harmful, and destroyed her family's trust. If Riley wants her life back, she has to recover. Part of her wants to get better. As she goes to therapy, makes friends in the hospital, and starts to draw again, things begin to look up. But when her roommate starts to break the rules, triggering Riley's old behaviors and blackmailing her into silence, Riley realizes that recovery will be even harder than she thought. She starts to think that even if she does "recover," there's no way she'll stay recovered once she leaves the hospital and is faced with her dieting mom, the school bully, and her gymnastics-star sister. Written by an eating disorder survivor and activist, Good Enough is a realistic depiction of inpatient eating disorder treatment, and a moving story about a girl who has to fight herself to survive.