Becoming Ella
  • Reads 39
  • Votes 3
  • Parts 2
  • Time 10m
  • Reads 39
  • Votes 3
  • Parts 2
  • Time 10m
Ongoing, First published Jul 27, 2015
When Ella got to her new school, she didn't care what others thought of her. She just stayed in her house with her handy dandy computer, Netflix, pizza, and most importantly, her wifi. 
The year went by with ease; getting good grades in every class, nice friends, good homemade lunches, nice teachers, and most of all no drama. 
Then that summer things changed. 
She was social, she lost some weight, got a new wardrobe and a new phone. 
With the sudden change in what she looked like, her whole life turned upside down. 
New friends, new reputation, new opinions, less Netflix and more movie theatre dates, more pizza, more texting, and most of all; a ton of more drama. 
She didn't know how to handle it. 
So she didn't. 

Which only made things more different and even more difficult.
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The Opposite of Falling Apart

66 parts Complete

WATTPAD BOOKS EDITION There are imperfect moments in every life-but sometimes, there are perfect accidents . . . What's the point of pretending nothing has changed when everything has? It's the last summer before college, and Jonas Avery knows he should be excited. Instead, he hides out at home, avoiding his friends, his family, and everything that resembles his old life. Because nothing will be normal again-because of The Accident, when everything started falling apart. Brennan Davis knows she needs to stand up and face her anxiety-the deep, dark, debilitating dread that rules her everyday life. Because what stops her from going out into the world and just living is going to get a whole lot worse. She's leaving for college in the fall, where she'll be confronted with even more to worry about. To get back up sometimes you have to fall down, hard . . . When Jonas crashes into Brennan-in a harmless, albeit embarrassing fender bender-the two teens connect in ways they never expected. As friends, they help each other overcome their biggest falls and faults, and soon discover that while love can't fix everything, it's sometimes a place to start. Sensitive, wry, and unabashedly authentic, The Opposite of Falling Apart isn't about finding perfection in another person or fixing the things we think are broken. Instead, Micah Good has penned an enchantingly honest novel about accepting the very pieces of ourselves that make us unique, whole, and undeniably human.