<B>Alikay Wood’s <I>Thirty to Sixty Days</I> is a hilarious and irreverent coming-of-age YA novel in which three teens facing uncertain futures embark on a madcap adventure that challenges each of their identities.</B><BR/><BR/> Hattie Larken doesn’t know if she’s ever really been <I>real</I> in her life. A compulsive liar with a quick-witted response to everything, she’s willing to do whatever it takes to just skate through the rest of high school until she can graduate and escape it all: the mind-numbing monotony of this town, the guilt of everything that happened with her dad, and the debt her mom’s dealing with that she feels responsible for.<BR/><BR/> But then Hattie finds out she’s dying. Not like in that overdramatic way that people sometimes say they’re dying. She’s <I>literally</I> dying. Apparently, she was exposed to a parasite because of a mistake her mom’s company made. (And no, the irony of that all is not lost on