Książka The Version I Told Aeressa

The Version I Told

Autor: Aeressa
Język: Angielski
Oprawa: Miękka
Wydawca: Aeressa
Dostępność: Zapowiedź
Wydanie 29. 06. 2026
69.40
"She'd spent ten years perfecting the version of the story where she wasn't the villain."Elena Vasqu...

Informacje o książce

Autor
Język
Angielski
Oprawa
Książka - Miękka
Data wydania
2026
strony
114
EAN
9798235810013
Enbook ID
53017829
Wydawca
Waga
143
Wymiary
140 x 216 x 7

Pełny opis

"She'd spent ten years perfecting the version of the story where she wasn't the villain."

Elena Vasquez has the narrative down. Her marriage ended because of circumstances, because of timing, because of the quiet, magnetic presence of Sarah Oduya - her ex-wife's best friend - who always seemed to take up more space than was fair. It's a clean story. A manageable one. Elena has told it so many times she almost believes it.

Then she walks into a women's networking event and finds herself standing three feet from Sarah, who is exactly who Elena remembered and nothing like the version she'd been carrying.

What begins as an obligatory professional exchange slowly becomes something Elena has no framework for: a genuine reckoning. Sarah doesn't carry the anger Elena expected. She carries something more unsettling - clarity. And as proximity forces honesty, Elena's carefully constructed account of her own past starts to come apart at the seams.

Elena is not a woman who lets things fall apart. She manages. She controls. She performs growth the same way she performed competence in her marriage - efficiently, from a safe distance. But Sarah isn't interested in the performance. She wants the person underneath it. And Elena is terrified that person is exactly who she's always been afraid she was.

The Version I Told is a slow-burn WLW contemporary romance for readers who want messy, accountable women in their late thirties figuring out - late, unglamorously, at real cost - how to stop lying to themselves long enough to want something real. It is steamy, emotionally precise, and does not offer easy absolution. But it does offer something harder and more durable: the specific, bone-deep relief of finally being seen.

Do you keep telling yourself the story that makes you the one who survived - or do you face the version that makes you the one who caused damage?