The envelope was thick enough to feel wrong in Fern's hand.Inside it: a poem she copied from her dead mother's notebook seventeen times, until the handwriting almost matched.Almost. The r's were never quite right.Fern Delaney's mother won the Port Iris Poetry Prize when she was Fern's age.The winning poem still hangs framed in the library's local history room — What the Tide Brings Back, her name in faded ink beneath it.She wrote it the summer before she met Fern's father, when she was still young enough to believe words could change things.Fern wants to stand on that same stage and prove her mother's daughter learned to speak, too.So she enters a poem that isn't really hers.Then the lines start to surface elsewhere.Too similar. Too close.And there's a rival who knows exactly what Fern did.Her friends go quiet. A box of letters reveals a father's secret. And the harbor town that smelled like cinnamon rolls and salt starts to feel like a place where everyone is watching her drown.Her brother Leo carries their grief like the tools in his oiled leather pouches — worn, practical, silent.Her stepmother Sage is trying. Fern can barely look at her."She's trying, Fern," Leo says."I know," Fern answers, and means none of it.She has spent a year reading her mother's old drafts by flashlight.Crossing out words. Starting over.Trying to make something that wouldn't dissolve the moment she looked away.Now, with an empty chair waiting at the finals and the truth pressing through the canvas of her backpack, Fern has to decide what kind of person she wants to be — the girl who borrows her mother's voice, or the one brave enough to find her own.The Year My Life Became a Metaphor is a tender, literary YA coming-of-age story about grief, a poetry contest, a borrowed voice, family secrets, blended-family wounds, and learning to make something true out of loss.Perfect for readers who love literary YA, grief and healing stories, complicated families, second chances, and quiet coming-of-age novels. A moving standalone.