"She knew it was wrong. She kept saying so. And eventually, she built an entire life out of the clarity nobody believed she had."The Little Sister is a memoir about what happens to a child when her own family cannot fully see her - and what happens to the woman she becomes when she finally decides to stop asking permission to be real.Victoria Cortez grew up in San Jose as the youngest child and the only one who looked like her father: a Black man from Arkansas who carried Jim Crow in his body and Silicon Valley in his paycheck. Her mother was the daughter of a Spanish immigrant, a fiery liberal who loved her and could not fully claim her. Her siblings were five years older, olive-skinned, and clear-eyed about where the family's edges were.She was outside those edges from the beginning.What followed was a childhood defined by: - A sister with undiagnosed schizophrenia who chased her through the house with knives- A family emergency system built from a pager code: 911. 9264702. 911. 911.- Years of being told her Blackness was something to manage and be ashamed of- A body she learned to hide inside as the hunger for belonging became literal weight- Self-harm at twelve - anger with nowhere else to go- And the relentless, exhausting clarity of a child who kept seeing the truth when every adult around her agreed not toThe Little Sister does not offer resolution. It offers something harder and more valuable: precision. The exact words for things that have been left unnamed. The accounting of what harm costs when it lives inside a family that loves you. And the portrait of a woman who stopped waiting for apology and started building accountability infrastructure instead - in her home, in her parenting, and in the news agency and consumer protection organization she created to ensure the receipts are always on record.This memoir is for: - Readers of Roxane Gay's Hunger, Kiese Laymon's Heavy, and Leslie Jamison's The Recovering- Adult survivors of childhood trauma seeking language for experiences that were never named- Readers navigating the intersection of race, family, mental illness, and identity- Anyone who has ever been the one in the room who saw it clearly and was told they were wrongHave courage. Forward always.
AmazonPages: 110, Paperback, Independently published
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