Ice: Careful don’t burn yourself

Author: Candace Watson
Reviewed by: Cheryl Smith
October 10, 2007

Ice does what many parents can’t do—it provides a candid, in-your-face and realistic look at the violence many young girls are subjected to at the hands of their boyfriends.

Author Candace Watson tells the story of Mandy, a young girl who looks for love in the form of a good-looking drug dealer who she just has to have.

When Mandy, better known as “Ice,” sees Tyler at the skating rink, she knows he is the man for her. Never mind that she is jailbait to him, she begins a plan to become his “woman.”

Little does she know that she is in way over her head and she is entering into a relationship that will eventually turn abusive and possibly deadly.

Sure Tyler lavishes Ice with gifts. He knows just how to give her what she wants: fancy clothes, cars and a big beautiful house. But with all those trappings comes public humiliation and numerous beatings.

And Ice continues to live with the threat of death.

While death comes first in the form of her unborn child, Ice should be equally concerned about her own life as Tyler has already told her that she is his for life.

Young readers may learn from Ice’s story as she continues to return to Tyler, no matter how abusive he is.

To their credit, Ice’s friends are unlike many girlfriends who encourage their friends to stay with their boyfriends despite infidelity and abuse. Ice’s friends don’t appreciate the abuse.

Ice will keep the reader enthralled, wondering what will happen to this young lady as she attempts to get her life together.

And Tyler is like a bad penny, forever surfacing and wreaking havoc in Ice’s life, until the end.

The author provides an honest look into the life so many young girls and older women are subjected to. Abuse is no laughing matter as more and more accounts of abuse are being reported and the victims are getting younger and younger.

Ice is about choices and how those choices can become deadly. If you know of young girls, put Ice on the top of your gift-buying list. Just remember that you shouldn’t wait until her birthday or Christmas to give this all-important gift.

Upon completion, I immediately took the book and gave it to 18-year-old Alayna, encouraging her to read it.

We need to let others learn from Ice’s story.

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