



Is it paranoia or.reality? Readers will draw their own conclusions, but the question will linger in their minds long after they finish this book. Is there really a conspiracy? Will he ever be able to get well and go back to his mother, or is he doomed to be another guinea pig for Doctor De Klerk?īy the author of Tattooed Teardrops, winner of the Top Fiction award in the 2016 In the Margins Top Ten Best Books for Teens literary award, Mito will open your eyes to a dark secret that the medical community would rather you didn't know. But when Renata tells Gabriel her crazy conspiracy theories, Gabriel feels the first pangs of doubt. Just when he finally thought that they had all of the answers and he was on the road to good health, he is apprehended by DFS on the grounds of medical neglect.Īt first, he thought that he would be back home in a few days, once the misunderstanding was cleared up. Gabriel has dealt with mysterious medical issues his whole life. Workman brings you Gabriel Tate's discovery of the dark and light sides of human nature in Mito, Medical Kidnap Files #1. Looking for something new in young adult literature? A fast-paced adventure with diverse characters that will keep you turning the pages.In a tale ripped from the headlines, award-winning author P.D. Although the friends have a lot more symptoms that the main character in the story I feel like the author got a lot of this condition correct. They complain that anytime EDS is featured in a book or on TV the writers just don't get it right. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I was drawn to these books because I have two friends with EDS.

Can they get the answers they need before it is too late? Can they get the answers and get Katt back home? When she is admitted to hospital with yet another broken bone, they do the only logical thing to protect her, removing Katt from her mother’s custody.īut Katt and her mother know that something is wrong, and it has nothing to do with abuse, and the longer Katt stays in foster care, the worse her health gets. With a long string of unbelievable stories to explain her frequent injuries, Social Services sees Katt is the stereotypical abused child.
