![]() ![]() It is only when Logan meets Laurel that he starts opening up. Given that we see them only through Logan’s eyes, they are believable and sympathetic, but by no means perfect. Logan has parents who desperately want to help him, but aren’t sure how. Ryan: Okay, I think I’m going to go back upstairs. Ryan: Why do you sit down here all the time? We were living on Mulholand with the hills and the lake and the freeway and the Minute Man Gas Stop and my best friend, Zyler, ate Twinkies and coke and hated girls, except one. ![]() That’s when there was nothing wrong.Ī year ago, in seventh grade, I was fine. I also loved the way Logan shared his story.Ī year ago I was fine. ![]() Logan doesn’t want to talk about it, so the details of the event is unspooled in the kind of painful way that makes you read faster. His family has recently moved to the new school because of something horrific that happened concerning Logan and his best friend Zyler. ![]() Logan is a target for bullies for a variety of reasons: he’s the new kid and he’s mostly silent. That’s Logan, the thirteen-year-old narrator of Ann Dee Ellis’s compelling and unusual YA novel This is What I Did. Last week Bruce kicked me in the balls at Scouts and all his buddies were there laughing and I started crying. ![]()
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