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RedMagnolia

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I didn't know this. I'm going to check out the Amazon reviews now.

Edit;

This is the review... I wonder what the bullying was?

This is neither a piece of honest writing nor a great work of fiction by Dawn O'Porter. The author has said in promotional interviews that she based the book on her teenage diary from when she was 15. What you need to know is that during that year at school Dawn bullied a girl in her class and behaved appallingly. To make matters worse, many of the 'fictional' and 'narrative' elements in the book appear to be borrowed from her victim's life story and the tale of their early friendship.

Any of Dawn's circle of friends from the 90's will recognise that only a fraction of the book has actually come from her imagination, this is borne out by the shallow characterisation of all but the main protagonist of the book called Renee, who Dawn says is based on herself. Dawn has not even bothered to change the name of one of the male friends/characters. The following autobiographical details of Dawn's ex-friend that she bullied at school can be found in the book under the guise of Flo - she had a four year old sister when they were friends whom she looked after when at home, was tall with long brown hair, studious and fastidiously tidy, she had a dysfunctional family life and her stepdad was found dead in the garden during their GCSE year at school - to name but a few. Coincidence or total lack of creativity and talent? How many people find their dad dead in the garden when they're growing up, really?

Dawn has said when promoting this book that she thinks bullies are vile and that she's "never been a bully" which is a total lie. She seeks to profit from regurgitating a period in her life when she was the perpetrator of cruelty and has the audacity to be lying to the public about it at the same time.

Before you buy this book you may wish to consider whether your money would be better spent making a donation to an anti-bullying campaign. To make an informed decision about this, I recommend you read the recent correspondence to the author about this matter as can be found on Flo Parrot's Facebook page.


Has anyone read this bit in bold on Facebook?
C&P from Flo’s Facebook page:

Well Dawn, where do I start? It’s Flo here. My mum told me you were bringing out a book and I didn’t really think too much about it until Monday when my husband showed me some reviews/previews. Alarm bells started ringing so I took a look on the internet myself and saw your interview on sugarscape.com. It was like a blow to the stomach, a slap in the face; I sat in my kitchen and cried.
Incredulous is a good way to describe how I feel, along with: hurt, upset, outraged, let down, angry, humiliated, sad…the list goes on. What did you think you were doing? Watching you say one particular part in the interview (about the character Sally) left me breathless, like a vice around my chest:
“I wasn’t bullied and I wasn’t the bully but I’ve experienced bullying if that makes any sense. There was a girl in our year that was bullied and, kind of bullied by everyone. And looking back you realise what she must have gone through and what I kind of did with Sally was made my whole class into one person and to just put all of that evil into her… And it really destroyed Flo because Sally and Flo were best friends before Flo met Renee and I think the idea that you know, that Flo’s going to take this insecurity through her life with her…and what you see is that she’s really damaged by what Sally did.”
I wouldn’t describe myself as damaged by what you did back then Dawn but I agree, I still carry insecurities from the time that you bullied me. And this is the problem I have with the way you are promoting your book, that it “honestly portrays teenage life” when you are lying through your teeth. You, me, the whole of our class from school and many others aside, all know that you bullied me. Perhaps this is a way for you to feel less responsible, trying to blame everyone else and re-write history. It might have been cathartic for you to write and say these things, perhaps it eased your conscience but it was a selfish thing to do to me.
Granted, nobody stood up for me or challenged you when you were bullying me at school but that doesn’t take away responsibility for what you did. How I remember you so clearly stood up in front of the class doing impressions of me and talking about how annoying I was and that you hated me. I would walk into the classroom to get my stuff ready for class and there you were, ridiculing me and everyone laughing at me. Some would be sniggering, a few trying not to laugh as I approached my desk. I tried to keep my eyes down, it hurt less that way. Oh how I wanted to cry, it was so humiliating - sitting at my desk with everyone staring and laughing, their gaze burning through my uniform like acid on my skin. It seeped right through to the core of me, my stomach would flip and I wanted to be sick, to disappear. How could you be so cruel? It was intolerable and you kept on and on…
You said it yourself, “bullies are vile and over the top compared to everyone else and that’s what makes them leader of the pack” which could be a description of you back then. Nobody had the courage to take you on I mean, look at how you treated me. Who would want to risk being on the receiving end of that? Side order of public humiliation anyone? You were always so over the top, wanting…needing to be centre of attention. In the end you stopped, but only because the sisters ‘S and L’ told you to otherwise they’d stop talking to you. That would have been social suicide for you so you packed it in eventually. Not out of guilt or remorse but for popularity.
Everything was about trying to make people laugh – no matter what the cost to me was. You even had to sit at the teacher’s desk in front of the blackboard to eat lunch, in front of the audience of the class. Munching on your bright pink taramasalata white bread sandwiches (wrapped in greaseproof paper) and smirking at my floppy brown bread marmite sandwiches (suffocating in clingflim). That kind of sums up how different we were, like taramasalata and marmite.
And yet despite everything we were great friends in the beginning. I’m still studious Dawn, almost 35 and doing another postgrad course. Studying was my escape, the part of me that my stepdad couldn’t take away or get to. I wanted to succeed academically, it was my escape plan. Mess still stresses me out. In an old diary the entry on 20 Dec 1990 reads:
“Mum and Dad went Christmas shopping. I tidied my wardrobe. Watched Pretty Woman on video. Had the baby. Bed at 10.30”
And on 15 Dec 1990:
“After ballet I went to Dawn’s house to write our disco invitations”
It was all so innocent then. I recall we hung out with some boys one day when we must have been about 12 or 13, the ‘W’ brothers I think. I was so shy. I had no idea how to be around them and you were always so outgoing and confident. Do you remember the time you slept over at my house and we made a cooked breakfast - except that we cocked all the timings up so decided to stick the fried eggs in the oven and they turned to rubber? We packed up laughing in my kitchen, waving these eggs around, tears of laughter in our eyes. I had a Nutella obsession after my mum got me some, she’d read it was what “all the supermodels ate”. You used to say that I looked like Naomi Campbell, that I was really beautiful…if only I didn’t have such big dark circles under my eyes. Nobody else had complimented me like that, you could see that.
I was always tired had had circles under my eyes because my little sister, 10 years younger than us, never slept and I helped out all the time with her care. She was a very difficult infant and young child and was finally diagnosed as on the autism spectrum when she was 10. My mum often relied on my help with her because having an autistic child is hard, never mind having to deal with the domestic violence we lived in. The constant psychological and emotional abuse with drunken outbursts of intimidation and violence from my stepfather (my little sister’s dad) took its toll.
Dysfunctional is a good way to describe my teenage home life. There were so many arguments and fights. I was constantly put down and told I was unlovable, nobody would ever marry me because I was a horrible person. My stepdad would tell me I was ‘nothing’ and criticize every aspect of my appearance. At night, when he had my mum pinned up against the wall by her throat, knife in hand, I would sit next to the phone. I’d memorised the number for the Guernsey police station, just in case. It’s no wonder I was protective of my sister. Her dad was found dead in our garden shortly after our GCSE’s and when my mum had separated from him. His last twisted act of abuse was to kill himself on our doorstep and hide his money, hoping to leave us with nothing.
We bumped into each other late one night in Town Church Square, outside the Albion. Not sure how long ago, several years at least that’s for sure. In the darkness you stopped to talk to me, you said you felt bad about what happened at school because I never retaliated or said anything nasty about you, I just carried on being nice to you. I don’t like to be angry and bitter for too long Dawn, life’s too short for that. And what else could I do? I cared for you because once upon a time you were my friend. You went from being sisterly and taking me under your wing to being my bully, the source of so much pain. You were one of the first to break my heart. Not in a romantic way, I mean that I learned about those feelings of betrayal, hurt and confusion that comes when you really care for someone and they stab you in the back – publicly. You knew how screwed up my home life was, that I was vulnerable and a nice person and you abused that. That’s what bullies are about though, aren’t they?
That was then. I’m not a victim any more, I’m a survivor. Now I have the courage and the means to defend myself and stand up for what I believe in. I have held a long and dignified silence on what you did but I won’t let you continue to abuse my kindness. If I’d wanted ‘revenge’ I could have dished the dirt on you long ago but that’s not what this is about. I have a kind heart Dawn, I know that your childhood was difficult. We were both lonely really, and a bit lost – more lost than your average teenage girl. I can’t imagine what it must have been like for you having your mum wrenched from your life at such a young age. My sister lost her dad at a similar age and I have also watched the affects of separation and loss playing out in my step-children’s lives - so I get that. We were young…I had finally started moving toward a peaceful place of equanimity about you bullying me. Over the years I have felt great compassion for you but this is too much; I can’t keep turning the other cheek, especially when you’re an adult now and can be held accountable for your actions.
You do not have the right to plagiarise my life in this way, to profit from my suffering and not even admit to the part you played in it. You admit that you used your own diary when writing the book and say at the beginning that the characters are fictional. Apart from Renee which is based on you. However, it’s plainly obvious from reading it that it’s based on only a smidgen of fiction. The rest comprises of real events and people just muddled up and switched around a bit. To concentrate on ‘Flo’ here…just look at all those autobiographical details that belong to me. Her name even sounds like mine, her birthday was in the Christmas period and she was skinny with long brown hair. Sticking a big pair of boobs on her and changing her brother does not make it okay. Mmm, let me think – and who was that girl that everyone picked on during our GCSE year? Ah yes, that was me! And everyone will know that. What is it about humiliating me in front of everyone, was once not enough?
You may have left Guernsey for the bright lights but I still live there. I bump into people from school all the time. Even before you doing this it was difficult. When old ‘classmates’ say hi and ask me how I’m doing I still get paranoid and embarrassed. It brings back bad memories. I didn’t stay on at College for my A Levels despite being a promising student. How on earth could I? You’d well and truly ruined that for me, I was the class joke. In fact, I left Guernsey. Desperate for a fresh start at 16 I left home and everything I’d ever known, coming back for school holidays.
Your actions were pivotal in shaping my life and the decisions I’ve made. I spent most of my 20’s drunk because that way, I could find a way to not care or worry about what people might be saying about me. I could push all the feelings of the past aside. But I couldn’t do it forever, I would have self-destructed. I still find it hard to trust women and have hardly any close female friends. I am too afraid to try and resurrect friendships from school, from before you started the hate campaign against me. Unlike you, I am disconnected from those old friends and watch their lives from the outside (their weddings, having children etc) like you forced me to at school. Walking into rooms full of people at social engagements or even bars and restaurants fills me with dread, the old feelings appear from that hot spring of humiliation deep inside me. As you said in your interview Dawn, I have taken this insecurity with me into my adult life. You have had a profound affect on me.
When I went to university I changed my name because I wanted to cut myself off from all the rumours of those school days. My old name was synonymous with lies and insults; all the cruel jibes that people made about me. I remember the day I was taken out of class and carted off to social services to be interviewed. Over the following few days I was also interviewed by police and was absent from school. When I returned there were all these rumours about how I’d got pregnant and had an abortion. I’d lost a bit of weight from the stress and was like a stick. I didn’t know how to handle what had happened, what to say to the rumours and the form tutor wasn’t exactly going to announce to the class at register that I’d been raped in my own home by a man in his late twenties (I was 14). So I just buried my head in my books and got on with it. Dawn, I don’t think that you can write about under-age girls having sex with older guys in such an off-hand way – as you have in the book. It’s a very complex and serious subject.
School had been my safe place, somewhere to get away from the reality of home. It was somewhere I could relax, I enjoyed learning. The bullying changed all that, school filled me with fear and dread. I came to hate it and in the end I was bunking off school. Leaving College was one of the happiest days of my life, I was utterly miserable there by the time we got to our GCSE year. I remember when our form had been moved to the pink room and walking in to find you yet again bad mouthing and making fun of me. Something inside me broke, I’d reached my limit.
Hot Key Books describe your book as “incredibly honest” but how would your publisher and the people buying it feel if they realised that you were a bully? Is it right that you should be gaining money and celebrity from this? Perhaps if you’d ‘fessed up, taken responsibility for what you did and used the book as a way of raising awareness about bullying we could both have used it as a way of getting some closure on what happened between us. Instead, you are being dishonest and present your character as this benign, loyal friend. I was genuinely happy for you when I found out you were getting married, did you get my message? I thought that perhaps now you could be happy, feel loved and secure and not keep going through life as if it’s one big popularity contest. All I want, is to be able to leave the past behind me. Those years at college were so painful for me. Instead, you are thrusting it in front of me - so cock sure that I am still too meek to stand up for myself. I’m not embarrassed or ashamed of the things that have happened to me and I think I deserve the chance to move on with my life. You owe me that much.
Dawn, I’m asking you, woman to woman: before you publish a sequel or take this book any further, spare a thought for me.
 
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Gym&Tonic

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Ive thought Adele was a bit of a knob since she had that awfully bad taste Titanic themed 30th birthday party where all the guests were wearing Edwardian clothes teamed with life jackets. I love the film as much as the next person, but it was a real human disaster/tragedy and nearly 2,000 people were killed ffs. What theme is she going with for her 40th? 9/11?🙄
 
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ouroboros

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That's exactly what I thought - the majority of us are bullied at some stage of our school lives. I got picked on in primary school because my surname was unusual, and in secondary school, for being flat chested until I was 15. I can't even remember now, who the ringleaders were, and I certainly don't bear a grudge against any of them - kids can be cruel and sometimes it's easier to go along with something than speak up and risk the wrath of the bullies on themselves.

To be honest, Flo sounds like she has a massive chip on her shoulder and there's an element of jealousy in there too - Dawn is rich and famous and she's not.
I was bullied and know every name and remember a lot of details. I didn't think it affected me for years, but it definitely did and I've had a lot of therapy (not just for this though), so I don't agree that we all grow up unscathed. Her story talks about a lot of issues during her teenage years and I guess she feels upset because Dawn was once her best friend and has totally whitewashed what she did. My bullies were friends who turned, which makes it even more personal. None of us know the truth, but I get the lingering pain and resentment and I get really fed up with people saying 'jealousy' to everything they don't understand. We all feel envy and it's perfectly normal. but 'jealousy' is constantly bandied around to denigrate a person (usually female to female) as 'hateful and bitter'. It's a very unintelligible argument frankly. Besides, Dawn is a twat and if anyone envies her they're a bit sad really!
 
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PeteM

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It's her personality not her songs that need to change. She let down a festival after getting drunk with the Spice Girls and then there were that restaurant moment when she ranted on social media about not being allowed in even though she was breaking the dress code on their website and she looked homeless.
She's an entitled privileged cunt with a voice that sounds like she's being rogered up the arse by the Duracell bunny.
 
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RedMagnolia

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I had glue thrown over me at school, against other incidents, and I would be angry if someone was making money out of my experiences.
My daughter had LESBIAN written on her forehead in permanent marker pen. The school’s response was ‘we will review our anti-bullying policy and make it more robust.’ Funnily enough, the ringleader of the marker pen gang has a female partner herself now, and has tried to make amends. My daughter just blanks her.
 
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klarakluckbag

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I know that almost everyone experiences bullying at some point in their lives, but that doesn't mean that it doesn't leave a mark.

I was in a group of 4 friends at school, then when a new girl started, we took her under our wing and hung out with her. She then proceeded to bully me, as did the others, to push me out of the group. I'm not going to lie and say that it has affected the rest of my life, but years later, I was working in a pub and she came in, on her own, all glammed up and hot to trot. I didn't serve her but she told my colleague that she was waiting for a guy, she bought him a drink too and sat at a table, all alone, to wait for him. She never gave any indication that she recognised me, but she wouldn't meet my eye, so I'm pretty sure she knew who I was.
2 hours later, he still hadn't turned up. She left the pub, telling my colleague that "he must have got stuck at work". As she walked out of the door, I couldn't help myself, and said loudly "Christ, he's had a lucky escape!" She turned and gave me such a filthy look, that I just had to laugh.
A year or so later, to my horror, another of the "gang" ended up getting a job there, I didn't know until I turned up for work one night. She was nice as pie to me, all "Oh Klara, you look great, it's so good to see you again" etc, etc. Unfortunately for her, Klara has a long memory and is quite good at bearing grudges. I was very close to my landlady and told her that I didn't want to work with her, and why. She fired her after her shift, telling her that "I don't want your sort working with my staff, you can sling your hook". Revenge is sweet! 🤣🤣🤣
 
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Eirawen

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That's exactly what I thought - the majority of us are bullied at some stage of our school lives. I got picked on in primary school because my surname was unusual, and in secondary school, for being flat chested until I was 15. I can't even remember now, who the ringleaders were, and I certainly don't bear a grudge against any of them - kids can be cruel and sometimes it's easier to go along with something than speak up and risk the wrath of the bullies on themselves.

To be honest, Flo sounds like she has a massive chip on her shoulder and there's an element of jealousy in there too - Dawn is rich and famous and she's not.
I don't think she is jealous but hurt that Dawn is using her to make money I can empathise with that.
 
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DeluxeTruffles

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Adele's stunning new album 33 featuring the hit songs:

"No I Won't Sing in a Fucking Swimming Pool",
"You Love Your Sport More Than You Love Me" and introducing
"I want Rich (But I Don't Need His Money)"

Plus the Number 1 Hit: "It Just Ain't Ready"
 
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JE172

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I hope Jet2 drop her now too, proper spoils my holiday having her blasting out when you’re on the plane 😡
 
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DeluxeTruffles

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Brooklyn is such a loser.

These arseholes thinking they have something special about them and going on programmes expecting everyone to fawn all over them.
He is a dull little twat who was fortunate to be born into money.

James Corden is a twat too for having him on. Fuck him too.

They have both put me in a shitty mood now. Fucking Brooklyn Beckham.
 
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Reverend

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He is repulsive. How on earth Billie Piper fell for him, is baffling.
Billie Piper has dated/married Richie from 5, Chris Evans (the Ginger one), Laurence Fox and Danny Dyer(!), but despite several pathetic begging letters, she still hasn't dated me.
 
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Reverend

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I was bullied and know every name and remember a lot of details. I didn't think it affected me for years, but it definitely did and I've had a lot of therapy (not just for this though), so I don't agree that we all grow up unscathed. Her story talks about a lot of issues during her teenage years and I guess she feels upset because Dawn was once her best friend and has totally whitewashed what she did. My bullies were friends who turned, which makes it even more personal. None of us know the truth, but I get the lingering pain and resentment and I get really fed up with people saying 'jealousy' to everything they don't understand. We all feel envy and it's perfectly normal. but 'jealousy' is constantly bandied around to denigrate a person (usually female to female) as 'hateful and bitter'. It's a very unintelligible argument frankly. Besides, Dawn is a twat and if anyone envies her they're a bit sad really!
I had glue thrown over me at school, against other incidents, and I would be angry if someone was making money out of my experiences.
 
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Georgia1970

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C&P from Flo’s Facebook page:

Well Dawn, where do I start? It’s Flo here. My mum told me you were bringing out a book and I didn’t really think too much about it until Monday when my husband showed me some reviews/previews. Alarm bells started ringing so I took a look on the internet myself and saw your interview on sugarscape.com. It was like a blow to the stomach, a slap in the face; I sat in my kitchen and cried.
Incredulous is a good way to describe how I feel, along with: hurt, upset, outraged, let down, angry, humiliated, sad…the list goes on. What did you think you were doing? Watching you say one particular part in the interview (about the character Sally) left me breathless, like a vice around my chest:
“I wasn’t bullied and I wasn’t the bully but I’ve experienced bullying if that makes any sense. There was a girl in our year that was bullied and, kind of bullied by everyone. And looking back you realise what she must have gone through and what I kind of did with Sally was made my whole class into one person and to just put all of that evil into her… And it really destroyed Flo because Sally and Flo were best friends before Flo met Renee and I think the idea that you know, that Flo’s going to take this insecurity through her life with her…and what you see is that she’s really damaged by what Sally did.”
I wouldn’t describe myself as damaged by what you did back then Dawn but I agree, I still carry insecurities from the time that you bullied me. And this is the problem I have with the way you are promoting your book, that it “honestly portrays teenage life” when you are lying through your teeth. You, me, the whole of our class from school and many others aside, all know that you bullied me. Perhaps this is a way for you to feel less responsible, trying to blame everyone else and re-write history. It might have been cathartic for you to write and say these things, perhaps it eased your conscience but it was a selfish thing to do to me.
Granted, nobody stood up for me or challenged you when you were bullying me at school but that doesn’t take away responsibility for what you did. How I remember you so clearly stood up in front of the class doing impressions of me and talking about how annoying I was and that you hated me. I would walk into the classroom to get my stuff ready for class and there you were, ridiculing me and everyone laughing at me. Some would be sniggering, a few trying not to laugh as I approached my desk. I tried to keep my eyes down, it hurt less that way. Oh how I wanted to cry, it was so humiliating - sitting at my desk with everyone staring and laughing, their gaze burning through my uniform like acid on my skin. It seeped right through to the core of me, my stomach would flip and I wanted to be sick, to disappear. How could you be so cruel? It was intolerable and you kept on and on…
You said it yourself, “bullies are vile and over the top compared to everyone else and that’s what makes them leader of the pack” which could be a description of you back then. Nobody had the courage to take you on I mean, look at how you treated me. Who would want to risk being on the receiving end of that? Side order of public humiliation anyone? You were always so over the top, wanting…needing to be centre of attention. In the end you stopped, but only because the sisters ‘S and L’ told you to otherwise they’d stop talking to you. That would have been social suicide for you so you packed it in eventually. Not out of guilt or remorse but for popularity.
Everything was about trying to make people laugh – no matter what the cost to me was. You even had to sit at the teacher’s desk in front of the blackboard to eat lunch, in front of the audience of the class. Munching on your bright pink taramasalata white bread sandwiches (wrapped in greaseproof paper) and smirking at my floppy brown bread marmite sandwiches (suffocating in clingflim). That kind of sums up how different we were, like taramasalata and marmite.
And yet despite everything we were great friends in the beginning. I’m still studious Dawn, almost 35 and doing another postgrad course. Studying was my escape, the part of me that my stepdad couldn’t take away or get to. I wanted to succeed academically, it was my escape plan. Mess still stresses me out. In an old diary the entry on 20 Dec 1990 reads:
“Mum and Dad went Christmas shopping. I tidied my wardrobe. Watched Pretty Woman on video. Had the baby. Bed at 10.30”
And on 15 Dec 1990:
“After ballet I went to Dawn’s house to write our disco invitations”
It was all so innocent then. I recall we hung out with some boys one day when we must have been about 12 or 13, the ‘W’ brothers I think. I was so shy. I had no idea how to be around them and you were always so outgoing and confident. Do you remember the time you slept over at my house and we made a cooked breakfast - except that we cocked all the timings up so decided to stick the fried eggs in the oven and they turned to rubber? We packed up laughing in my kitchen, waving these eggs around, tears of laughter in our eyes. I had a Nutella obsession after my mum got me some, she’d read it was what “all the supermodels ate”. You used to say that I looked like Naomi Campbell, that I was really beautiful…if only I didn’t have such big dark circles under my eyes. Nobody else had complimented me like that, you could see that.
I was always tired had had circles under my eyes because my little sister, 10 years younger than us, never slept and I helped out all the time with her care. She was a very difficult infant and young child and was finally diagnosed as on the autism spectrum when she was 10. My mum often relied on my help with her because having an autistic child is hard, never mind having to deal with the domestic violence we lived in. The constant psychological and emotional abuse with drunken outbursts of intimidation and violence from my stepfather (my little sister’s dad) took its toll.
Dysfunctional is a good way to describe my teenage home life. There were so many arguments and fights. I was constantly put down and told I was unlovable, nobody would ever marry me because I was a horrible person. My stepdad would tell me I was ‘nothing’ and criticize every aspect of my appearance. At night, when he had my mum pinned up against the wall by her throat, knife in hand, I would sit next to the phone. I’d memorised the number for the Guernsey police station, just in case. It’s no wonder I was protective of my sister. Her dad was found dead in our garden shortly after our GCSE’s and when my mum had separated from him. His last twisted act of abuse was to kill himself on our doorstep and hide his money, hoping to leave us with nothing.
We bumped into each other late one night in Town Church Square, outside the Albion. Not sure how long ago, several years at least that’s for sure. In the darkness you stopped to talk to me, you said you felt bad about what happened at school because I never retaliated or said anything nasty about you, I just carried on being nice to you. I don’t like to be angry and bitter for too long Dawn, life’s too short for that. And what else could I do? I cared for you because once upon a time you were my friend. You went from being sisterly and taking me under your wing to being my bully, the source of so much pain. You were one of the first to break my heart. Not in a romantic way, I mean that I learned about those feelings of betrayal, hurt and confusion that comes when you really care for someone and they stab you in the back – publicly. You knew how screwed up my home life was, that I was vulnerable and a nice person and you abused that. That’s what bullies are about though, aren’t they?
That was then. I’m not a victim any more, I’m a survivor. Now I have the courage and the means to defend myself and stand up for what I believe in. I have held a long and dignified silence on what you did but I won’t let you continue to abuse my kindness. If I’d wanted ‘revenge’ I could have dished the dirt on you long ago but that’s not what this is about. I have a kind heart Dawn, I know that your childhood was difficult. We were both lonely really, and a bit lost – more lost than your average teenage girl. I can’t imagine what it must have been like for you having your mum wrenched from your life at such a young age. My sister lost her dad at a similar age and I have also watched the affects of separation and loss playing out in my step-children’s lives - so I get that. We were young…I had finally started moving toward a peaceful place of equanimity about you bullying me. Over the years I have felt great compassion for you but this is too much; I can’t keep turning the other cheek, especially when you’re an adult now and can be held accountable for your actions.
You do not have the right to plagiarise my life in this way, to profit from my suffering and not even admit to the part you played in it. You admit that you used your own diary when writing the book and say at the beginning that the characters are fictional. Apart from Renee which is based on you. However, it’s plainly obvious from reading it that it’s based on only a smidgen of fiction. The rest comprises of real events and people just muddled up and switched around a bit. To concentrate on ‘Flo’ here…just look at all those autobiographical details that belong to me. Her name even sounds like mine, her birthday was in the Christmas period and she was skinny with long brown hair. Sticking a big pair of boobs on her and changing her brother does not make it okay. Mmm, let me think – and who was that girl that everyone picked on during our GCSE year? Ah yes, that was me! And everyone will know that. What is it about humiliating me in front of everyone, was once not enough?
You may have left Guernsey for the bright lights but I still live there. I bump into people from school all the time. Even before you doing this it was difficult. When old ‘classmates’ say hi and ask me how I’m doing I still get paranoid and embarrassed. It brings back bad memories. I didn’t stay on at College for my A Levels despite being a promising student. How on earth could I? You’d well and truly ruined that for me, I was the class joke. In fact, I left Guernsey. Desperate for a fresh start at 16 I left home and everything I’d ever known, coming back for school holidays.
Your actions were pivotal in shaping my life and the decisions I’ve made. I spent most of my 20’s drunk because that way, I could find a way to not care or worry about what people might be saying about me. I could push all the feelings of the past aside. But I couldn’t do it forever, I would have self-destructed. I still find it hard to trust women and have hardly any close female friends. I am too afraid to try and resurrect friendships from school, from before you started the hate campaign against me. Unlike you, I am disconnected from those old friends and watch their lives from the outside (their weddings, having children etc) like you forced me to at school. Walking into rooms full of people at social engagements or even bars and restaurants fills me with dread, the old feelings appear from that hot spring of humiliation deep inside me. As you said in your interview Dawn, I have taken this insecurity with me into my adult life. You have had a profound affect on me.
When I went to university I changed my name because I wanted to cut myself off from all the rumours of those school days. My old name was synonymous with lies and insults; all the cruel jibes that people made about me. I remember the day I was taken out of class and carted off to social services to be interviewed. Over the following few days I was also interviewed by police and was absent from school. When I returned there were all these rumours about how I’d got pregnant and had an abortion. I’d lost a bit of weight from the stress and was like a stick. I didn’t know how to handle what had happened, what to say to the rumours and the form tutor wasn’t exactly going to announce to the class at register that I’d been raped in my own home by a man in his late twenties (I was 14). So I just buried my head in my books and got on with it. Dawn, I don’t think that you can write about under-age girls having sex with older guys in such an off-hand way – as you have in the book. It’s a very complex and serious subject.
School had been my safe place, somewhere to get away from the reality of home. It was somewhere I could relax, I enjoyed learning. The bullying changed all that, school filled me with fear and dread. I came to hate it and in the end I was bunking off school. Leaving College was one of the happiest days of my life, I was utterly miserable there by the time we got to our GCSE year. I remember when our form had been moved to the pink room and walking in to find you yet again bad mouthing and making fun of me. Something inside me broke, I’d reached my limit.
Hot Key Books describe your book as “incredibly honest” but how would your publisher and the people buying it feel if they realised that you were a bully? Is it right that you should be gaining money and celebrity from this? Perhaps if you’d ‘fessed up, taken responsibility for what you did and used the book as a way of raising awareness about bullying we could both have used it as a way of getting some closure on what happened between us. Instead, you are being dishonest and present your character as this benign, loyal friend. I was genuinely happy for you when I found out you were getting married, did you get my message? I thought that perhaps now you could be happy, feel loved and secure and not keep going through life as if it’s one big popularity contest. All I want, is to be able to leave the past behind me. Those years at college were so painful for me. Instead, you are thrusting it in front of me - so cock sure that I am still too meek to stand up for myself. I’m not embarrassed or ashamed of the things that have happened to me and I think I deserve the chance to move on with my life. You owe me that much.
Dawn, I’m asking you, woman to woman: before you publish a sequel or take this book any further, spare a thought for me.
So much of what you've written could of been my school life, unless you've been bullied and beaten up for no reason whatsoever (I now understand it was jealousy) nobody understands the humiliation you carry with you for the rest of your life. I too changed my name after leaving school to detach myself from the 'old' me. Funnily enough I'm having to renew my passport tomorrow and I've been informed the ring-leader works in the post-office I'll be attending... petty, but I've already got my outfit planned, my Range Rover keys will be on display, Gucci handbag clutched to my side, skin tight leatherette trousers and 4" heels clicking across the lino she walks everyday. I've heard she's fat and has skin like leather - I can't wait... do I acknowledge her, do I pretend I wouldn't know her from Adam or do I look down my nose at her and treat her as nothing more than a shop-girl (no offence to front-line workers, this person made 6 years of my life a misery) who's only there to fill out paperwork on my behalf?
I hope you've worked through the demons this vile creature created for you, I wish you the best in life and remember, they know what they did, we shouldn't be ashamed about it - they should.
 
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