1
0
Support keeps this going.
If you find value here, a small tip makes a big difference ❤️
📍 Noticed
Bad Kid (A Graphic Memoir): My Life as a "Troubled Teen"
by Sofia Szamosi
Sponsored
Synopsis
A searing personal account of the so-called troubled teen industry, this graphic memoir exposes and humanizes the harrowing experience of so many young people in behavioral correction facilities. When she was just thirteen years old, Sofia was taken—by two people she had never seen ...
A searing personal account of the so-called troubled teen industry, this graphic memoir exposes and humanizes the harrowing experience of so many young people in behavioral correction facilities.
When she was just thirteen years old, Sofia was taken—by two people she had never seen before—to a “therapeutic wilderness program” three states away. Her own mother, terrified that Sofia was spiraling out of control, had enrolled her in an institution for “troubled teens.” But instead of finding healing, Sofia found herself trapped. Trapped inside an unregulated industry that used promises of intervention and reform to prey upon panicking parents and kids with court orders.
Over the next two years, Sofia would cycle through four different residential programs. In these places, school hours were a privilege, not a right. Contact with the outside world, including her mother, was strictly monitored. Teenage inmates were encouraged to call one another out. Still a child—ripped from her home, stripped of basic freedoms, and severed from her family and friends—Sofia struggled to understand who she really was beneath the crushing weight of the label BAD KID.
A darkly funny and intimate coming-of-age tale, this graphic memoir exposes the harrowing realities of adolescence in and out of the "troubled teen" industry of the early 2000s. And in doing so, Bad Kid explores the lasting impact of the labels we’re given—and how making art can help transmute them.
When she was just thirteen years old, Sofia was taken—by two people she had never seen before—to a “therapeutic wilderness program” three states away. Her own mother, terrified that Sofia was spiraling out of control, had enrolled her in an institution for “troubled teens.” But instead of finding healing, Sofia found herself trapped. Trapped inside an unregulated industry that used promises of intervention and reform to prey upon panicking parents and kids with court orders.
Over the next two years, Sofia would cycle through four different residential programs. In these places, school hours were a privilege, not a right. Contact with the outside world, including her mother, was strictly monitored. Teenage inmates were encouraged to call one another out. Still a child—ripped from her home, stripped of basic freedoms, and severed from her family and friends—Sofia struggled to understand who she really was beneath the crushing weight of the label BAD KID.
A darkly funny and intimate coming-of-age tale, this graphic memoir exposes the harrowing realities of adolescence in and out of the "troubled teen" industry of the early 2000s. And in doing so, Bad Kid explores the lasting impact of the labels we’re given—and how making art can help transmute them.
You May Also Like
The ChatGPT Handbook for Beginners: Automate Tasks and Boost Your Productivity With AI - Quick and Easy
Jakob Huber
The Burning God
R.F. Kuang
What to Think About Machines That Think: Today's Leading Thinkers on the Age of Machine Intelligence – Essays on Artificial Intelligence and Human Destiny (Edge Question Series)
John Brockman
Il libro di Natale
Selma Lagerlöf
Merry Little Secrets
Alicia Ramos
The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door
H.G. Parry
Philosophy Picks
View All
Courage Is Calling: Fortune Favors the Brave
Ryan Holiday
The Cat Who Taught Zen: A Beautifully Illustrated Exploration of Self-Discovery
James Norbury
Blank Space: A Cultural History of the Twenty-First Century
W. David Marx
The 5 Types of Wealth: A Transformative Guide to Design Your Dream Life
Sahil Bloom
The Art of Spending Money: Simple Choices for a Richer Life
Morgan Housel
The Bible Says So: What We Get Right (and Wrong) About Scripture’s Most Controversial Issues
Daniel McClellan

