GIRL, YOU WASHED UP: BROKE, LONELY AND YESTERDAY'S STAR Audiobook By Precious Payne cover art

GIRL, YOU WASHED UP: BROKE, LONELY AND YESTERDAY'S STAR

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GIRL, YOU WASHED UP: BROKE, LONELY AND YESTERDAY'S STAR

By: Precious Payne
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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GIRL, YOU FELL OFF

Once, Kimberly Johnson was America’s sweetheart.

For ten seasons, she grew up on television—smiling, lovable, protected by laugh tracks and a nation that adored her. Every girl wanted to be her. Every boy carried her image into adulthood.

Then the cameras stopped loving her back.

At thirty, Kimberly is no longer a symbol of innocence—she’s a headline, a punchline, and a commodity. Exploited by low-budget films that trade on nostalgia and nudity, judged by strangers who grew up watching her, and reduced to being “still fine” instead of still human, she wakes up one morning in a stranger’s bed and realizes the truth no one warns child stars about:

Fame doesn’t fall off.
It lets go.

When a degrading, high-paying role threatens to permanently define her, Kimberly walks away from Hollywood and returns to the one place she never learned how to perform—her hometown of Gastonia, North Carolina. There, she’s forced to face who she was before the applause, who she became trying to survive it, and who she might still be if she’s brave enough to choose a quieter life.

As whispers follow her, judgment lingers, and the internet refuses to forget, Kimberly finds unexpected grounding in teaching, community, and a man who sees her without consuming her. Love arrives without spectacle. Purpose returns without permission.

And for the first time, she isn’t trying to prove she didn’t fall off.

She’s deciding what’s worth standing up for.

Girl, You Fell Off is a raw, intimate novel about celebrity, womanhood, aging, desire, and dignity—told in a fearless first-person voice that refuses subtlety. It asks what happens when a woman stops auditioning for worth and starts choosing peace, even when the world is still watching.

Sometimes the real comeback isn’t louder.

It’s truer.

African American Genre Fiction Urban
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