WHAT I THOUGHT WAS TRUE

 

be a young one, leaning back on her glider, rocking her feet against the floorboards, looks out over the water, the ocean that changes and never changes. Horizons that seem like end-ings but only bend farther into the sky, curving into something new, beginning all over again.

 

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

Published Book Two is a whole different experience than book one. Most of all, this time around I am incredibly aware of how much talent, hard work, and good will go into making my manuscript into the book you hold in your hands.

 

Thanks beyond the scope of words to: Christina Hogrebe, my savvy, smart, and incredible agent, who works tirelessly to ensure that no one puts Baby (in the form of either my books or me) in a corner. And Meg Ruley, Jane Berkey, Annelise Robey, Christina Prestia, Andrea Cirillo, Danielle Sickles, and Liz Van Buren . . . all my friends at JRA.

 

To Jessica Garrison, whose story sense and editorial exper-tise are matched by her dedication and kindness, and who more than once worked over vacations and into the wee hours of the night (2:30 a.m. editorial letters, honest) to make this story as good as it could be.

 

To Vanessa Han and Jasmin Rubero, for making WITWT

 

beautiful outside and inside. To Molly Sardella, my publicist, who threw her heart into promoting My Life Next Door and did the same for this book. To Jackie Engel, Doni Kay (and the entire awesome Penguin sales team), Lily Malcom, and Claire Evans, for their support and enthusiasm for this book. Donne 409

 

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Forrest and Draga Malesevic, who work hard to send my books beyond borders. To Regina Castillo—fortunately my copyedi-tor once again, who ensures my grammar, my story logic, and that Cass’s shirt won’t change color—or cease to exist—mid-scene. And huge thanks to Lauri Hornik for her faith in me and my books. And Kristen Tozzo, who kept this baby on schedule.

 

Virtual bouquets and champagne toasts to everyone in CTRWA, the best friends any writer could ever have, who pro-vided everything from computer savvy to handholding to plot suggestions at a moment’s notice. And most especially to the plot monkeys: Karen Pinco, Shaunee Cole, Jennifer Iszkiewicz, and Kristan Higgins, who radiate imagination and general awesomeness, and who make me laugh until my stomach hurts on a regular basis. You all kept me from the looming danger pro-vided by a certain dwarf.

 

And yeah, about that Kristan Higgins. You, my friend, get a double dose of thanks. I could not have gotten through this one without your suggestions, your reads, your advice, your borrowed bling, and your endless kindness: true friend, men-tor, muse, fairy godsister, and just the person who, like her books, always makes me laugh. And cry.

 

Also my beloved Gay Thomas, a friend for life, and Jessica Anderson, both of whom read and counseled and calmed when I’d completely lost all perspective on this book.

 

My family and friends. Father, the best of men, Georgia, the best of stepmothers, my brother Ted and sister deLancey, all my Thomas cousins, Patricia and Kramer, my Concord buddies and friends far and near, who gave me sailing tips, and Colette, Matthew, and Luke. Because because because.

 

 

 

The eternally awesome Apocalypsies, the talented team whose books, warmth, and wisdom rocked 2012 and kept me as sane as possible. The best club of all.

 

MLND, WITWT, and I owe the world to the bloggers, readers, booksellers, teachers, and librarians who so tirelessly read and recommend for the sheer love of a good story. Thank you for reading, for writing reviews and blogs and letters, and for caring.

 

 

 

HUNTLEY FITZPATRICK always wanted to be a writer, but worked in academic publishing and as an editor at Harlequin before settling down to what she’d always wanted, a book of her own. Her debut novel, My Life Next Door, was a RITA Award finalist, a YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults title, and was picked as one of the best YA novels of 2012 by Barnes & Noble and The Atlantic Wire. Huntley is currently a full-time writer, wife, and mom to six children.

 

She lives in South Dartmouth, MA, a small coastal town much like the one in My Life Next Door, just across the bridge from the one in What I Thought Was True. Visit Huntley online at www.huntleyfitzpatrick.com.

Huntley Fitzpatrick's books