Check out my free ecourse Ignite Your Passion for Reading: Fall in Love With Books!
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Better Than Dreams

  • About Me
  • Archives
  • Courses
  • Newsletter
  • YouTube
  • Unlucky in Lockdown
  • Christmas Book Finder
  • Navigation Menu: Social Icons

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • Twitter
    • Vimeo
    • YouTube
You are here: Home / Archives for romantic comedy

romantic comedy

Book Review: Girl Meets Cake, by Susie Day

13th February 2011 By Julianne 2 Comments

Photo by Paul Jerry

Heidi Ryder is fifteen, single, and a pupil at a boarding school. Unlike her friends, she goes home every night, because her parents work there. Heidi has spent the whole summer working in the Little Leaf Café, waiting for her friends to return. When term begins, they find themselves at the first party of the year, despite their outcast status, and there, they all find boyfriends. Goth Fili meets the newly darkly-inclined Simon, Ludo pairs off with the pierced Peroxide Eric, and Dai catches the eye of popular Henry. Heidi, however, is alone until Etienne Gracey sits down with her. Her hopes go up, but he’s only there to ask her to distract her dad so they can start the real party. Heidi is embarrassed, but her friends assume that she turned Etienne down because she already has a boyfriend. She doesn’t want to correct them, and before long she finds herself designing Gingerbread Ed, the perfect guitar-playing, motorbike-riding boyfriend, social networking profiles and all. Heidi enjoys pretending to be a girl with a boyfriend, but then her friends start sending Ed messages, and she finds herself juggling secrets, and struggling to keep her own.

I usually find books in which the heroine Keeps Getting It Wrong a bit annoying, but I really enjoyed Girl Meets Cake. It’s got enough quirk to compensate for the more predictable consequences, and when, about halfway through the book, Heidi starts getting e-mails from Mysterious E, I spent ages trying to guess who he might be. I wasn’t quite happy with who he turned out to be in the end, but I can’t discuss that here without spoiling the book!

I liked the character details. Heidi’s obsession with Mycroft Christie, a Doctor Who-esque time-travelling detective, was quite funny. I really enjoyed the conversations she had with him in her head. I liked that although Ludo was quite over the top, being one of those constantly energetic people, nobody described her as annoying. I wished that we got to see more of the friends interacting before they fell out, I felt that I just had to take Heidi’s word for it that they were really close, as they were all quite secretive throughout the novel, and spent much more time with their boyfriends than with each other. I also felt that the characters moved in and out of relationships a bit easily – I would have been exhausted by it!

This novel includes some great locations. It’s rare that the scenery gets this much attention in a teen novel. I loved being able to imagine Heidi’s attic bedroom, the school auditorium, the party by the lake, and of course, the Little Leaf Café, with its red bus teapots, bright walls, and Daily Wisdom on the chalkboard. I was a bit bemused at Heidi’s description of the Goldfinch school as being ‘where you get sent when you’ve been kicked out of everywhere else – if your parents can afford it’, because her friends seemed quite well-behaved, in school at least, but it did fit with the occasionally decadent atmosphere of their social events.

I have to confess that I’m not a fan of the UK edition’s cover. I think it’s a bit young, I tend to associate covers of this style with books for 9-12 year olds (you can tell I’ve worked in a bookshop, right?) more than with teenagers. I think Girl Meets Cake is intended for younger teens rather than older teens, but still. Then again, I used to read Ros Asquith‘s books when I was in secondary school, and I had to visit the library almost daily to make sure I could get hold of the next one I wanted before someone else did, they were so popular – probably because of the bright colours and cartoons on their covers rather than in spite of them. That was the early noughties though.

However, in my opinion, the worst thing about the cover is the blurb. Which is far too short in any decade. I don’t think it does enough justice to all the action that goes on in the book and the fabulous settings and range of characters. Girl Meets Cake has only 215 pages of story (although the typeface is quite small), but an enormous amount happens in that space, and it’s all a lot of fun. I would recommend this novel to everybody looking for a quirky, warm-hearted read, especially if you ever considered making up an imaginary boyfriend of your own. Did you? I did, but only for one second or two, before I realised that I’d have to deal with even more questions from the gossipy-girls who wanted to know all about my non-existent love life.

I first read about Girl Meets Cake at Chicklish.

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, British, I ramble on for a couple of paragraphs, review, romantic comedy, Susie Day, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

Book Review: Jumping to Confusions, by Liz Rettig

15th July 2010 By Julianne 1 Comment

Warning: This review contains minor spoilers.

Cat is the ‘plain one’. Whilst her non-identical twin sister Tessa is out on dates and attracting compliments nearly all the time, she spends her time trying to matchmake for her friends and longing for Mr Brown, her English teacher. When Cat’s dad’s new boss arrives from the USA and comes to their house for dinner, he brings his gorgeous son Josh with him. Tessa immediately sets her sights on Josh, but despite Tessa’s best efforts, he turns her down, so Tessa and Cat conclude that he must be gay. Every straight boy on Earth would fancy Tessa, so there’s no other reasonable explanation, or is there?

Jumping to Confusions is the kind of book I would have read happily when I was in my earliest teens. I did read quite a few novels like this, then, romantic comedies for age 11 upwards. What am I saying? I used to get eight out, which was the maximum I could have on my library card, on a Saturday, and have read six or seven of them by Sunday, and then try to drag reading the couple that were left out over the rest of the three weeks’ borrowing time. There were also a few of this kind in my school library. After the Harry Potters and the Jacqueline Wilsons, they were the most fought over. So I’m sure lots of girls have really enjoyed this book and I’m sure I would have liked it when I was 12/13, but this was only, I’m afraid, an okay read, by my current standards. I don’t think I’ll read another book by this author.

It was difficult for me to get into Jumping to Confusions, partly because the voice of the narrator didn’t draw me in. Usually I don’t like teen fiction, like this, in which the humour relies on the protagonist making lots of very mildly funny mistakes. I think this is because I was never the kind of teenager who saw her life as a series of embarrassing moments. I was shy and thoughtful and when you only have a couple of friends and avoid boys because they shout rude things at you the odds are you won’t do ever do anything particularly embarrassing! I essentially couldn’t relate to Cat’s silliness.

Occasionally the tenses switched, from past to present and then back again, and the way in which it was done annoyed me. Also, there was no mystery about the main plotline. My synopsis does not really contain any more information in it than the blurb does, and I think it’s pretty obvious from that how the story will turn out. It’s clear, from the reader’s point of view, that Josh is not gay, and it’s only Cat’s low self-esteem and misplaced trust in her sister’s judgement that stops her from seeing what is obvious to everyone else.

However, I liked Cat as a character. She had many contradictions – she’s obsessed with everyone else’s romantic lives, but is convinced that boys her own age don’t fancy her. She resents her sister for being pretty and popular, but at the same time is very protective of her. I wanted to see Tessa taken down a peg or two, or at least to fall in Cat’s opinion. I was most interested in how Cat develops over the story, and this kept me reading on despite the plot. Jumping to Confusions is first and foremost a romantic comedy, the body image issues are of secondary importance to the romantic story, so it was interesting to compare the light touch of this novel with the deeper explorations found in most of the other books I have read for Body Image and Self Perception month.

Cat is only a size 14 (12 by the end of the book, after regular tennis lessons), but when she compares herself with her size six sister and mother, she feels fat. She doesn’t spend a lot of time worrying about the way she looks, but she wishes that she got the attention and approval that Tessa and her mum get. She doesn’t have the willpower to diet, and she has accepted this. Cat learns that other people don’t necessarily have the same ideals of beauty as her sister and Mum do, and that some consider her to be more beautiful than Tessa is. I liked that the sibling rivalry wasn’t serious, but I did want to see Tessa change a bit, and she doesn’t really.

I would recommend this book to fans of light romantic comedies. I think that the problems I had with it were mostly down to my personality, so I’m going to link to a few more positive reviews:

Review of Jumping to Confusions by Liz Rettig at Trashionista
Review of Jumping to Confusions by Liz Rettig at Wondrous Reads
Review of Jumping to Confusions by Liz Rettig at Chicklish

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: body image and self-perception month, book review, books, British, Liz Rettig, romance, romantic comedy, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

Primary Sidebar

Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

Explore By Category

Explore By Date

Search

Footer

Privacy Notice
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Vimeo
  • YouTube

Copyright © 2025 · Foodie Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in