One thing: the Kindle version of this novel is called "Split." Apparently, it is either a re-issue or re-working of the book. I like this title better.
With "Split," Tina Laningham has written a novel that beautifully explores what happens when anyone--not just a teen--feels empty inside. I was struck by a quote from Chapter 22, after the protagonist Abby, her parents divorced, has been forced to move from the huge house that she shared with her parents. She is moving from a five bedroom house to one with three: "With no dad and no more friends, I had lots of empty space inside me and didn't need more all around." This expresses the essence of the tale. Abby, devastated by her parents' split, feels empty and desperately clutches at anything that can fill her up again. And what she chooses is harrowing--she turns to alcohol. But this is not just a tale of a teenage drinker. It is a fast-moving examination of how one thing leads to another and another and another. Laningham develops her story with great skill, not only giving us a story that is at times heartbreaking, but also managing to use humor to deal with Abby's frustrations. Abby is a confused fourteen year old with parents who don't have a clue, friends who torment her, and a life that is falling apart at the seams. The author tackles all of this with aplomb. My only reservation--and this is tiny--is that I wish Laningham had given us more reason for parents, who have already dealt with one incident of their daughter's extreme drinking, to allow her, a fourteen year old, to go off to Spring Break with little or no supervision. Abby's parents are, for most of the novel, neglectful and self-centered, but even taking that into consideration, I would have thought that they would exercise more caution before sending such a young girl off to a notorious Spring Break location under the supervision of a family friend who had already proven to be untrustworthy. But that's a minor concern, for the entire incident leads to greater understanding for both Abby and her parents. This is a tale worth reading.