Children's Literature Reviews
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Perfect you
Elizabeth Scott.
Contributor biographical information
Publisher description
Sample text
New York : Simon Pulse, 2008.
282 p. ; 21 cm.

Best Books:

Middle and Junior High Schoool Library Catalog, Ninth Edition Supplement 2008, 2008 ; H.W. Wilson Company; United States

Awards, Honors, Prizes:

Cybils, 2008 Nominee Young Adult Novels United States

Reading Measurement Programs:


Accelerated Reader
Interest Level Middle Grade
Book Level 4.7
Accelerated Reader Points 10

Lexile, MetaMetrics, Inc.
Lexile Measure 750

Reading Counts-Scholastic
Interest Level High School
Reading Level 4
Title Point Value 17
Lexile Measure 750

Reviews:

Amanda MacGregor (KLIATT Review, July 2008 (Vol. 42, No. 4))
Kate’s sophomore year is shaping up to be a spectacular mess. Her former best friend is now popular and acts like Kate doesn’t even exist. Kate’s father suddenly quits his job to pursue his dream, which is to sell Perfect You vitamins at a booth in the mall. His impetuous and irresponsible behavior lands the family in money trouble, so life at home is tense and stressful. To make matters worse, poor Kate is forced to work for her father, spending most of her free hours trapped at the mall, trying to avoid humiliation. At school and at work, she verbally spars with Will, a boy she supposedly can’t stand, yet admits to being “reluctantly lust-ridden” for. With her family falling apart and her best friend turning her back on her, the last thing Kate feels she can handle is being made a mockery of by Will, a notorious womanizer. When Kate’s critical grandmother moves in, Kate is horrified to see that she often acts quite a bit like her grandma. She’s so busy building up walls around her feelings and so set on things turning out terribly that she can’t see what is good in her life. Both Kate and Will are excellent characters, and Scott’s dialogue is superb. Kate is witty, sarcastic, and stubborn--all wonderful traits that Kate learns can work against her at times. Scott manages to capture the common high school troubles of family issues, dating and friendships without making it all seem too overwhelming. Kate may start out feeling alone, but she ends up with some surprising allies in her corner. Category: Paperback Fiction. KLIATT Codes: S*--Exceptional book, recommended for senior high school students. 2008, Simon & Schuster, 279p., $9.99. Ages 15 to 18.

Deborah Stevenson (The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books, March 2008 (Vol. 61, No. 7))
Life has changed for Kate: her father recently quit a steady job to sell vitamins from a booth in the mall, and her best friend, Anna, returned from camp with a new svelte shape, glossy appearance, and preference for the popular girls over her old friend. Not changed is Kate’s classmate and fellow mall-worker Will, a noted player with whom Kate has an adversarial relationship that’s only partly playful. As her family and best-friend situation become increasingly strained, Kate inexplicably finds herself engaging in random makeout sessions with Will, but she refuses to believe that they could be embarking on an actual relationship. Bloom overplays Kate’s misjudgments, requiring soap-opera-level contrivance for her to remain convinced that Will’s not just using her even as she’s an obvious sap for Anna’s periodic apologies and claims of friendship, with the result that Kate is simultaneously gullible and excessively suspicious. It’s therefore Kate’s complicated family saga that’s the most successful of the three plots, and the book depicts the increasing tensions with poignancy and keen perception; it’s clear that Kate’s mother loved her husband for his contrast to her parents, but that contrast is now spiraling the family into a financial black hole as Kate’s father expects both financial and labor support from kids and wife for following his chimerical dreams. Since most stories of parental reassessment are divorce-centered, this is an original approach to the subject; those willing to wade through the formulaic romance and friend story to get to a thoughtful family drama may find this a tense but satisfying read Review Code: Ad -- Additional book of acceptable quality for collections needing more material in the area. (c) Copyright 2006, The Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. 2008, Simon, 304p.; Reviewed from galleys, $9.99. Grades 7-10.

Subjects:

Best friends Fiction.
Friendship Fiction.
Family problems Fiction.
Dating (Social customs) Fiction.
High schools Fiction.
Schools Fiction.
LanguageCall NumberLCCNDewey DecimalISBN/ISSN
English (eng) PZ7.S4195 Per 2008
2007929324 [Fic]
9781416953555
1416953558
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