Sophia Collins is not your typical teenager. She has a superpower! Or at least that is what she and her psychologist call her disability. Sophia suffers from a form of autism that makes her despise both literary contractions and any sudden changes in her pre-existing agendas. Feeling like a burden to her overprotective mother, one of Sophia's ways of coping is by creating characters she can relate to. Equipped only with pen and paper, she creates August Parker, her novel's protagonist that she can relate with. Sophia ...
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Sophia Collins is not your typical teenager. She has a superpower! Or at least that is what she and her psychologist call her disability. Sophia suffers from a form of autism that makes her despise both literary contractions and any sudden changes in her pre-existing agendas. Feeling like a burden to her overprotective mother, one of Sophia's ways of coping is by creating characters she can relate to. Equipped only with pen and paper, she creates August Parker, her novel's protagonist that she can relate with. Sophia defines herself as a "Lonely", people who consider themselves more advanced than everyone else - more superior if you will. However, each of them lack heavily in at least one major area, whether it be mind, body, or soul. In her particularly, it's the regions of the soul and mind.
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