I Have The Right To by Chessy Prout
Chessy Prout discusses her sexual assault, her quest to find justice against her perpetrator, and her continued work as an advocate against sexual violence. As a freshman at a private boarding school, Chessy fell victim to an upperclassman "game" in which seniors tried to have sex with as many younger girls as possible before graduation. Based on her assault and the subsequent bullying from students and faculty, Chessy spoke up, took her assailant to court, and started a national campaign to help sexual abuse victims and change the culture of consent.
Review from Publishers Weekly:
In this honest and raw memoir, Prout shares her experience as a 15-year-old victim of sexual assault by an older student at New Hampshire's St. Paul's School in 2014. With a sometimes confusing structure, Prout chronicles her first (and final) year at the boarding school. Leading up to the assault, she writes about battling homesickness, navigating a rocky friendship, and struggling to find her place at a school where, she perceives, "everything was about status, tradition, and hierarchy—and guys ruled all three." She also reflects on surviving a terrifying earthquake in Tokyo in 2011, where she temporarily lived with her family. Prout's descriptions of her assault and its crushing emotional aftermath (involving self-doubt, guilt, shame, peer ostracizing, and cyber-bullying) and the agonizing, widely publicized trial that resulted in her assailant's conviction on some, but not all, charges brought against him, are wrenching and painful. Readers will take away a deep appreciation and admiration for Prout's resilience as she transitions into a resolute crusader for the empowerment of victims of sexual violence—and for its prevention.