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You are here: Home / Archives for YA

YA

Book Review: Guitar Girl, by Sarra Manning

5th June 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Picture by leochi

Molly Montgomery is being sued for 5 million pounds by her former record company, and she’s suing them back, despite not being even 20 years old yet. Her lawyer, confident they will win, asks her to write down the whole story of how she went from uncool teenager to front woman of The Hormones, so that he can build a case. This account makes up the bulk of this book.

It’s not the most original story – teenage fiction as a genre is filled with fantasies about ordinary teenagers who becomes celebrities – but it is unusually realistic. Molly forms the band with her best friends Jane and Tara, in the hope it would make them a little cooler, writing songs about Hello Kitty and magic markers, but it is soon hijacked by Dean and T, two boys who worm their way into the band by insulting them and promising that they could make the group sound better. Molly hates Dean at first but starts to fall for him as they are signed up by a record company and taken around the world to tour. But their manipulative manager doesn’t want them to date, and soon he starts to make other demands too, and things go from bad to worse as Molly’s virginity becomes hot gossip and Jane tries to live the rockstar stereotype.

I have enjoyed all of Sarra Manning’s books, but Guitar Girl is not one of my favourites – my favourites being Let’s Get Lost, and Diary Of A Crush 2: Kiss And Make Up, and Fashionistas: Irina. The plot of Guitar Girl was a bit predictable compared to the other stories, and I don’t think Dean makes an alluring enough romantic interest. What can I say? He’s not Dylan, and I’ll always love Dylan the best, although Noel from the Ruby Oliver series is giving him a run for his money these days. Dylan is all mixed up with nostalgia as I read the Diary of a Crush series in J-17 as an actual teenager, and was thereby hooked on art boys for life. But I think even if I was fourteen right now Dylan would beat Dean in the Sarra Manning Toxic Boy Showdown, although the contest is kind of rigged as Dylan gets three books and is essentially nicer.

Anyway, back to Guitar Girl. I thought it was more down-to-earth, with more details about the music business, than any other book about teenagers becoming pop stars that I have read. The characterisation is strong, although I wanted to know more about the histories of the various members of the band than the book includes, and Molly makes a believable teenage narrator. I loved the fast pace and thought that it captured the feeling of being a teenager really well. Despite my criticisms, I have read and enjoyed Guitar Girl more than once.

If you read and enjoy this book, you will also want to check out two of Sarra’s other books – Let’s Get Lost, and Irina from the Fashionistas series, because they feature appearances from characters in Guitar Girl, and you can see what happened next…

The BookDepository

Here’s my review of Pretty Things, also by Sarra Manning.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, music, musicians, Sarra Manning, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

Book Review: Diving In, by Kate Cann

4th June 2010 By Julianne 2 Comments

Photo by ajari

Every Thursday, Collette goes swimming. She loves the water, the exercise, the way it makes her feel. But most of all she loves watching a boy, whom she calls Achilles, because he has the body of a Greek god. She’s too nervous to speak to him – until one week she literally runs into him in the changing rooms. Next time they get talking, and it turns out his real name is Art, short for Arthur, and he likes Coll.

They start going out on dates, and Coll is swept up into Art’s world. She can’t spend enough time with him. He’s got looks, money and confidence, but horrible friends and a messed up family. Coll’s friends don’t like Art much, and neither does her proudly feminist mother. Coll manages to ignore all the negatives until Art starts to expect too much too fast. Coll has never had sex before and wants to feel completely ready for it, whereas Art has had dozens of meaningless sexual relationships…

I enjoyed reading Diving In. The characterisation is strong, especially when it comes to the main characters’ family backgrounds. Coll and Art have very different families and the way their upbringing impacts on their relationship is brought into the story really well. Coll’s feelings develop at just the right pace, and there are also some funny moments to lighten the tone when it starts to get issue heavy. The central issues of this novel are teenage relationships and sex, and this book has the potential to help teenage readers in relationships to know when they are ready, and to recognise when they are being pressured into going further than they want to go.

Being an old fogey in my twenties now, I’ll admit, I didn’t get as much out of Diving In as teenagers could and I did find myself getting a little tired in places as the plot revolves around Coll’s relationship with Art so much.

Diving In is the first book in a print trilogy, the first in a quartet if you include Art History, which is partly a retelling of the books from Art’s point of view as well as the conclusion to their story. Diving In doesn’t really stand on its own, to get the full story you have to read – and should want to- the other books. Art History used to be available to read free on Kate Cann’s website, but it’s been taken down as Kate is going to add more material to it before it is published! Exciting! Kate Cann writes brilliantly from the point of view teenage boys, I absolutely loved the Hard Cash/Moving trilogy when I read them as a teen. I need to re-read those, but I’m not sure my library still stocks them and I don’t like the new pinkified covers!

The BookDepository

My review of Leader of the Pack, also by Kate Cann.

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, British, Kate Cann, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

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

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