Deeply moving and authentic, this debut novel-in-verse follows teenage Evie through her eating disorder treatment and recovery―a Wintergirls for a new generation. Light Enough to Float by Lauren Seal is coming to shelves October 8, 2024!
Evie has just barely acknowledged that she has an eating disorder when she’s admitted to an inpatient treatment facility. Now her days are filled with calorie loading, therapy sessions, and longing—for home, for control, and for the time before her troubles began. As the winter of her treatment goes on, she gradually begins to face her fears and to love herself again, with the help of caregivers and of peers who are fighting their own disordered-eating battles. This insightful, beautiful novel will touch every reader and offer hope and understanding to those who need it most.
Scroll down to see the cover and read a sneak peek! And remember to preorder your copy here.
Cover design by Kaitlin Yang; Cover illustrations by Holly Stapleton
Content warning: This book contains content about eating disorders, self-harm, suicidal ideation, hospitalization, and near-drowning.
the psychiatrist
dr. mantell,
the psychiatrist’s
nameplate shouts.
i fight the urge
to ask if his name is
printed in loud uppercase
letters to drown out us
lowercase people and our
lowercase lives.
his scalpel-gray
eyes dissect me,
quarter me, sternum
to pelvis, left breast
to right,
wrench me open, reach
inside, find all the
nothing
i’ve eaten since yesterday.
evie,
the muscles in my body contract
and freeze. i sit, still and staring:
portrait of a girl afraid.
evie,
do you know why you’re here?
why i’m here
because of the tests.
they took my height and weight,
took my blood, took my heart
rate, took my pee,
took my family history,
then a man in a lab coat took
my parents aside
to tell them i failed.
i’ve never failed a test in my life.
because my mother says
this is an important
appointment. we are lucky
a cancellation let
capital-t Them
fit me in.
because sometimes
i get a little sad and overwhelmed.
because sometimes i feel
like falling asleep and never waking up.
because my parents and my sister and my friend darcy and my dog
would probably be happier without me. because all i do is try and try
to be a perfect daughter and sister and friend and student and person
but it doesn’t make me any less scared of living. because i would be
happier without me.
because sometimes
i have trouble
eating
and my mother and i
argue over dinner plates
just three more bites
like i’m a misbehaved toddler.
i slouch down in my chair,
glare at the doctor,
refuse to speak.
why i’m really here
because of my lies.
the first:
i’m on a diet.
wrong,
i’ve been on all of them:
mediterranean,
keto,
raw food,
low-fat,
gluten-free,
atkins,
vegan,
paleo,
south beach.
whatever let me
restrict.
intermittent eating with frequent fasting.
second:
it’s only one more . . .
sit-up,
push-up,
squat,
mile.
that i wouldn’t add
one
plus
one
plus
one
plus
one
until
my muscles ached,
body broke.
third:
i’m in control.
i can stop whenever
i want.
professional opinion
your height and weight
are very low
for a fourteen-year-old,
dr. mantell says
same with your hemoglobin,
and your electrolytes.
you have all the symptoms of
extreme malnourishment.
pride flutters in my chest.
i nod along benignly, glare
at the office door my mom
stands behind. i missed school
to be here. does no one
care about my GPA?
the results from your EKG
indicate
bradycardia.
bradycardia?
a slow heart rate.
thirty-eight beats per minute.
i nod. i don’t want him
to think i am a stupid girl.
i am not a stupid girl.
do you understand?
don’t blink.
yes.
evie,
your heart is so slow
it could stop
at any moment.
the offbeat drumming of said organ
floods my ears.
dr. mantell observes my reaction.
me the frog, his eyes
the scalpel. see the ease
with which they slit
my pale, white skin,
my muscles,
my rib cage,
until my empty guts
spill out.
you are,
in my professional opinion,
anorexic.
that word
anorexic.
it lodges itself
in my coronary artery.
heart palpitates. thousands
of excuses
dam up my mouth:
i eat,
i’m fat,
i’m not obsessed with my looks,
i eat,
that’s not the type of girl i am.
i come from a good family—
but i eat,
i squeak.
do you eat enough?
i think about
the ice cream i don’t eat.
the chocolate,
the potato chips
i also don’t eat.
the avocados,
bananas,
cookies,
french fries,
granola,
hamburgers,
marshmallows,
peanut butter,
spaghetti,
tacos,
yogurt,
an alphabet of off-limits food.
yes?
dr. mantell leans back in his chair,
scrunches his white face in thought,
impatiently tap-tap-taps his pen against
the notes he’s been taking.
i think we should get
your mother in here.
my mother
she barges in
with as much restraint
as a freight train. this woman
who gobbles firewood
so she can keep
running and running and
running along
her one-track mind.
my diagnosis derails her.
she fires coal-hot questions:
what does this mean?
how does she get better?
can she get better?
what about her heart?
how do i make her gain weight?
i think she’s really asking,
what do i do
with this damaged daughter?
drowning
mom and dr. mantell
position me as a
problem
to solve.
say words like
program,
therapy,
refeeding.
i’m stuck on
anorexic,
ANorexIC,
ANOREXIC.
it floods me, fills my lungs.
i can’t shout, can’t breathe,
only flail. fail.
drown.
too weak to
surface.