A review by karrama
Confessions of an Imaginary Friend by Michelle Cuevas

4.0

Everyone hates Jacques. Especially the evil wiener dog, who might as well be the only person besides his twin sister Fleur who even notices him. Sure his parents give him a seat in the car, a bed to sleep in and a spot at the table, but do they ever listen to him? Poor Jacques. And then one day he meets a rollerskating cowgirl who breaks the bad news: he's imaginary. He's not ready to accept that. Neither is Fluer. But it isn't until he joins Imaginaries Anonymous that the story picks up some heat. Just because a friend is imaginary doesn't mean that he's not part of you.

What begins as an imaginary friend's existential crisis turns into something more complex. The story may not end the way Jacques wanted in his first diary entry after discovering his true nature, but it is very satisfying.

Additionally, my own second grader laughed herself silly at the early chapters and gives it five stars.