I’m hosting a contest over on my other blog, The Book Jacket. In honor of my recent post about the role of parents in young adult literature, I’ve asked people to think about young adult books they’ve read and choose the one where the author got the parents out of the way CREATIVELY. 

My choice is one I’ve reviewed a couple of months ago. 

DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS by C.J. Omololu

Everyone has secrets. Some are just bigger and dirtier than others.

For sixteen years, Lucy has kept her mother’s hoarding a secret. She’s had to — nobody would understand the stacks of newspapers and mounds of garbage so high they touch the ceiling and the rotting smell that she’s always worried would follow her out the house. After years of keeping people at a distance, she finally has a best friend and maybe even a boyfriend if she can play it right. As long as she can make them think she’s normal.

When Lucy arrives home from a sleepover to find … she starts to dial 911 in a panic, but pauses before she can connect. She barely notices the filth and trash anymore, but she knows the paramedics will. First the fire trucks, and then news cameras that will surely follow. No longer will they be remembered as the nice oncology nurse with the lovely children — they’ll turn into that garbage-hoarding freak family on Collier Avenue.

With a normal life finally within reach, Lucy has only minutes to make a critical decision. How far will she go to keep the family secrets safe?

I took out a tiny bit in the synopsis.  (The  part that would give away the creative way the author got rid of the parent.)

Go over to The Book Jacket to enter the giveaway.  You could win a copy of DIRTY LITTLE SECRETS for yourself.