Författarbild

Kate William

Författare till Rivaler i kärlek

135 verk 10,168 medlemmar 138 recensioner

Om författaren

Särskiljningsinformation:

(eng) Pen name used by ghostwriters of the Sweet Valley High series.

Serier

Verk av Kate William

Rivaler i kärlek (1984) — Författare — 525 exemplar
Den förfärliga hemligheten (1983) — Författare — 358 exemplar
Leka med elden (1983) — Författare — 273 exemplar
Hämnden är ljuv (1984) — Författare — 250 exemplar
Älskade syster (1984) — Författare — 231 exemplar
Ensam i natten (1984) — Författare — 220 exemplar
För kärleks skull (1984) — Författare — 217 exemplar
Sweet Valley saga. [D. 1] (1991) — Författare — 216 exemplar
Elisabeth är kidnappad! (1984) — Författare — 190 exemplar
Heart Breaker (1984) — Författare — 176 exemplar
Med dåligt rykte (1984) — Författare — 176 exemplar
SVH #020: Kärlekens offer (1985) — Författare — 172 exemplar
Racing Hearts (1984) — Författare — 169 exemplar
När kärleken dör (1984) — Författare — 167 exemplar
Lurande lögner (1984) — Författare — 164 exemplar
Sweet Valley Saga: Familjen Wakefield (1992) — Författare — 157 exemplar
SVH #032: Den nya Jessica (1986) — Författare — 151 exemplar
SVH #015: En ny syster (1985) — Författare — 148 exemplar
SVH #017: Svindlande kärlek (1985) — Författare — 146 exemplar
SVH #018: Jag lämnar dig aldrig (1985) — Författare — 146 exemplar
SVH #021: Farväl för alltid (1986) — Författare — 142 exemplar
Rags to Riches (1985) — Författare — 141 exemplar
Elisabeths stora misstag (1984) — Författare — 140 exemplar
SVH #019: Svekfulla planer (1985) — Författare — 138 exemplar
SVH #026: Tagen som gisslan (1986) — Författare — 137 exemplar
Den falska tvillingen (1993) 134 exemplar
Bitter Rivals (1986) — Författare — 124 exemplar
SVH #031: Oväntad rival (1986) — Författare — 123 exemplar
SVH #028: Hemlig längtan (1986) — Författare — 122 exemplar
Memories (1986) — Författare — 121 exemplar
On the Edge (1987) — Författare — 120 exemplar
Nowhere to Run (1986) — Författare — 118 exemplar
SVH #022: Kärlekens krav (1985) — Författare — 115 exemplar
Slam Book Fever (1988) — Författare — 113 exemplar
Jealous Lies (1986) — Författare — 113 exemplar
Troublemaker (1988) — Författare — 113 exemplar
Farligt dubbelspel : Under falskt namn (1987) — Författare — 113 exemplar
Outcast (1987) — Författare — 107 exemplar
SVH #037: Falska rykten (1987) — Författare — 105 exemplar
SVH #027: Sviket förtroende (1986) — Författare — 103 exemplar
SVH #035: Blind vrede (1987) — Författare — 103 exemplar
SVH #038: Skilda vägar? (1987) — Författare — 102 exemplar
SVH #039: Hemlig beundrare (1987) — Författare — 101 exemplar
SVH #034: Kärlek med förhinder (1987) — Författare — 99 exemplar
SVH #033: Ny i familjen (1987) — Författare — 98 exemplar
Family Secrets (1988) — Författare — 95 exemplar
SVH #036: Våga välja (1987) — Författare — 93 exemplar
Second Chance (1989) — Författare — 93 exemplar
Brokenhearted (1989) — Författare — 89 exemplar
Playing for Keeps (1988) — Författare — 88 exemplar
Pretenses (1988) — Författare — 88 exemplar
SVH #040: Sandras lögn (1988) — Författare — 86 exemplar
A Killer on Board (Sweet Valley High Super Thrillers) (1995) — Författare — 86 exemplar
The Fowlers of Sweet Valley (1996) 86 exemplar
Lost at Sea (1989) — Författare — 85 exemplar
White Lies (1989) — Författare — 83 exemplar
Hard Choices (1988) — Författare — 81 exemplar
Out of Reach (1988) — Författare — 78 exemplar
Perfect Shot (1989) — Författare — 76 exemplar
Almost Married (1994) — Författare — 74 exemplar
Decisions (1988) — Författare — 71 exemplar
A Stranger in the House (1995) — Författare — 71 exemplar
Against the Odds (1989) — Författare — 69 exemplar
Ms. Quarterback (1990) — Författare — 69 exemplar
Two Boy Weekend (1989) — Författare — 68 exemplar
The Wedding (1993) 67 exemplar
Date with a Werewolf (1994) — Författare — 66 exemplar
Beware the Wolfman (1994) — Författare — 65 exemplar
The Long-Lost Brother (1991) — Författare — 64 exemplar
Love and Death in London (1994) — Författare — 64 exemplar
Kidnapped by the Cult! (1992) 60 exemplar
A Deadly Christmas (1994) — Författare — 60 exemplar
Teacher Crush (1989) — Författare — 56 exemplar
Happily Ever After (1997) — Författare — 54 exemplar
Fashion Victim (1997) 53 exemplar
A Kiss Before Dying (1996) — Författare — 52 exemplar
Nightmare in Death Valley (1995) — Författare — 51 exemplar
R for Revenge (1997) — Författare — 51 exemplar
Once Upon a Time (1997) — Författare — 49 exemplar
Left at the Alter (1994) 48 exemplar
To Catch a Thief (1997) — Författare — 45 exemplar
Fight Fire with Fire (1998) — Författare — 43 exemplar
A Picture Perfect Prom? (1998) — Författare — 42 exemplar
Sweet 18 (2003) — Författare — 42 exemplar
Too Hot to Handle (1997) — Författare — 41 exemplar
Lila's New Flame (1997) — Författare — 39 exemplar
The Big Night (1998) — Författare — 37 exemplar
Mystery Date (1998) 36 exemplar
Sweet Valley High, Books 1-12 (2015) — Författare — 19 exemplar
Sweet Valley High (1990) 3 exemplar
Sweet Valley High Collection: Romance (1998) — Författare — 3 exemplar
Vaikea valinta (1999) 3 exemplar
Uusi alku (2000) 2 exemplar
Ulkopuolinen (2000) 2 exemplar
Jessican muodonmuutos (2000) 2 exemplar
Liikaa rakkautta (1999) 2 exemplar
Salainen ihailija (2001) 1 exemplar
Takaisin kouluun (2000) 1 exemplar
Sokeaa rakkautta (2001) 1 exemplar
Tukala tilanne (2001) 1 exemplar
Tosi rakkautta (2002) 1 exemplar
Juoruja (2000) 1 exemplar
Päätöksiä (2001) 1 exemplar
Loistava tilaisuus (2000) 1 exemplar
Juonittelua (2001) 1 exemplar
Kilpasiskot (2000) 1 exemplar
Rakkauden tanssi (2002) 1 exemplar
The Other Side of Vaccines (2019) 1 exemplar
Dødsforelska (1998) 1 exemplar
Kvalt av kjærlighet (1997) 1 exemplar
En morder i huset (1996) 1 exemplar
Summer Danger Collection (Sweet Valley High) (1999) — Författare — 1 exemplar
Panttivangit (1999) 1 exemplar
Sweet Valley High 1 exemplar
Särkyneet sydämet (1999) 1 exemplar
Hintana yksinäisyys (2001) 1 exemplar
Hintana yksinsyys 1 exemplar

Taggad

Allmänna fakta

Kön
n/a
Särskiljningsnotis
Pen name used by ghostwriters of the Sweet Valley High series.

Medlemmar

Recensioner

Double Love
Sweet Valley High, Book 1

I Picked Up This Book Because: A character in another book talked about the series and I thought a trip down memory lane would be fun.

Media Type: eBook
Source: Hoopla via HCPL
Dates Read: 3/23/24 - 3/24/24
Stars: DNF - No Rating
Narrator(s):

The Characters:

Elizabeth Wakefield:
Jessica Wakefield:
Mr & Mrs Wakefield, Enid, Todd Wilkins

The Story:

I didn’t even get to the meat of the story because I'm being run off by Jessica's insufferable selfishness. I couldn’t remember why I stopped reading this series as a kid but I have a feeling she is why. Sorry Liz.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
bookjunkie57 | 18 andra recensioner | Mar 26, 2024 |
All miniseries long, I've been waiting for the Christmas season to hit, and boom! Here it is. Chapter one, the twins are dressing for their last day of classes before the winter break. They are both musing over the disaster that was the Jungle Prom, Sam's death, and their estrangement ever since. Both twins have premonitions that something bad is going to happen, but they are so mired in their anger and sadness that they can't really tell if its a true feeling or not.

There is another great early canon touch with the Secret Santa candy canes given out during the last day of school, though Margo has slipped some nasty anonymous messages to both Jessica and Elizabeth. Margo has started regularly impersonating both twins - at school, at home, with friends, etc. Margo thinks she's doing a fabulous job of pulling the wool over everyone's eyes, but in reality, everyone she's with knows that she's not Liz, at least if their interaction is more than a few words. She has an easier time impersonating Jessica, and even contemplates switching her murderous ire to the feisty twin for awhile, but ultimately can't shake her ultimate desire to take over Liz's life. She has a countdown clock running, too: she's going to murder Elizabeth at the stroke of midnight on New Year's Eve.

The Wakefields have a strained Christmas celebration (with Margo watching from the shadows), and then the parents are off on their wild goose chase in San Francisco that Margo had arranged in the previous book. Margo has figured out how to sneak into the Wakefield home from a basement window, so she starts coming and going with great regularity. She sneaks into Liz's room, reads her diary, lays in her bed, and even hides in her closet when Liz arrives home unexpectedly. It's really creepy. Liz sees her room in disarray and blames Jessica. She's still mad about Jess hiding the note from Todd, but she can't understand "Jessica's" strange behavior in rifling through her things.

Meanwhile, Margo is making dates with Todd, who is having weird flashbacks to his earlier fling with Jessica, and is also wondering what "Jessica" is trying to pull by impersonating Liz. He doesn't trust his instincts (until its too late). Only Enid looks at Margo-playing-Liz and tells her outright that she doesn't believe its Liz she's talking to; she, too, suspects Jessica, though she doesn't understand the motive.

Margo is also impersonating Jessica, especially around Lila. Lila and her family are off to Paris for Christmas, but are returning just in time to throw a huge, formal ball for New Year's. Margo worms her way into Fowler Crest by pretending to be Jessica, and makes plans to kill Liz at the ball and bury her in the woods behind the pool house.

Jessica is wracked with guilt about spiking Liz's punch at the Jungle Prom, but can't quite bring herself to come clean. James has suddenly dumped her, and she has no idea why. He calls one night and asks her to meet him so he can explain, but unfortunately Margo intercepts the call - and the meeting - and pushes James off a pier.

Josh Smith is still dogging Margo's trail, and when she realizes it, she leads him directly to James, and leaves it looking as if he was the one who killed James instead of her, so he's neatly removed from her plans by being arrested for the murder. After all, who arrives just after but the Wakefield twins and Todd, and who do they see but Josh, standing on the pier looking over?

James's sudden death plunges Jessica into pretty deep despair. Margo, being a sociopath, does not have real emotions and goes on impersonating both twins, though each set of friends finds it incredibly odd that "Jess" and "Liz" are so chirpy and talkative. Nobody really puts two and two together though, which is pretty frustrating. Especially since Margo's interactions with everyone are not convincing - if these people had exchanged notes more regularly, they would've figured out what was going on way before the end of the book.

But alas. The Wakefield parents make it to San Francisco and find nothing is as they thought. The letter Mr Wakefield received is confirmed as a forgery by the company, and they decide to return to Sweet Valley early. Mrs Wakefield is beside herself with worry about her children; every time she calls home she speaks with "Liz" (aka Margo), who assures her that everything is fine, but her mother's intuition keeps telling her something is wrong.

Playing against everyone is the fact that it's apparently the storm of the century in southern California, raining seven straight days from Christmas through New Year's, with plenty of electrical storms and fog. It slows the Wakefield parents' return to Sweet Valley, and obscures the actions going on at the New Year's ball.

Margo finagles the dresses that she and Liz are wearing to the party; when Todd arrives to pick Liz up, he has to look and her long and hard to make sure that she really is Elizabeth. He's determined to stick to her like glue for the entire evening, but of course Liz has to go to the bathroom at some point, and that's when they are separated. Todd thinks he finds her in a dark room at Fowler Crest, but instead he realizes that he's with Margo and she knocks him out with a brass statuette (the tiny picture on the bottom left of the stepback).

Jessica goes to the party alone, for once wearing a completely different outfit from her sister. Steven and Billie are at the Wakefield homestead, watching movies/making out to celebrate the new year. Everyone hears the news when Josh breaks out of the county jail in one last attempt to stop Margo, and everyone is fearful that because he knows Todd and the twins, that he'll be gunning for them.

Jessica goes looking for Liz at Fowler Crest and sees her going into the pool house; she follows her and finds Margo standing over Liz, about to kill her. Todd has regained consciousness and is stumbling around; Steven and Billie have raced to Fowler Crest to check on the twins after finding the phones down; Enid spots Josh Smith near the pool house and sends as rescue party to stop Josh in his tracks.

Meanwhile, Jessica, Liz, and Margo are struggling for the butcher knife. Jess and Liz have both had the prophetic dream about the "twin" with dark hair and the butcher knife at Secca Lake, so they immediately understand what's going on. Jess gets the knife in hand at one point and points it at both girls in pink, unable to figure out which one is which. This is the moment that sticks with me, even thirty years later. Jessica realizes which one is Liz a split second too late; Margo grabs the knife and threatens them both. Mercifully, Jess throws herself over Liz, and Josh slams into the pool house at just the right moment, to knock Margo off the twins, through the plate glass window, and onto the patio below. Margo is killed when a slice of glass cuts into her carotid artery and she bleeds to death.

Josh is telling his story to the police, who believe him now that there's a third "twin" dead nearby. Neither Elizabeth nor Jessica can understand it, but they are so thankful to be alive that they immediately forgive each other, and rush into their mother's arms.

This is certainly a thriller, and it works on every level. It's also a standalone; you don't have to read A Night to Remember or #95-99 in order to understand what's going on here - all of the relevant info is recapped. Margo has finally put all of her plans into motion, and while she is clever, she's not nearly as clever as she thinks. No one that she interacts with for any length of time believes that she's Elizabeth, not even Mrs Wakefield or Todd. If anything, she'd have had an easier time slotting herself into Jessica's life, but she thinks Jess is weak and pathetic.

Reading this as an adult, I kinda felt sorry for Margo. She's absolutely insane, but she's also deluding herself for thinking that she'd get away with it. Her answer to not getting her way is to kill, and what makes her think that even if she did successfully off Elizabeth and take over her identity, and anyone would believe that Liz would kill as easily and as often as Margo did? Sure, she was on trial for involuntary manslaughter for Sam's death, but she was acquitted. Only someone who was totally bananapants beyond-the-bend would think that was a good cover for committing murder.

Anyway. Margo is a sad, mad, awful, evil person, but knowing that she'd never get away with it - when she hesitates to kill Elizabeth at the end - takes away some of the suspenseful feeling. Also: no one is as dumb as pretty much everyone acts here, and no way is Josh the only person on Margo's trail throughout all of this.

Other disappointing factors: that Josh never explains how he put together Margo's murderous past; and that Jessica never tells Elizabeth about spiking the punch at the Jungle Prom (supposedly Liz 'intuits' it from a series of dreams, where her subconscious magically allows her to see Jessica doing it, and why she did it).

But, this is rightly considered the best book of the entire SVH series, and it definitely holds up as such. There was no going back to the slim, white-spined, early canon series after this, and indeed, SVH quickly goes off the rails in increasingly dramatic and idiotic ways, but damn. What a helluva way to celebrate reaching a milestone series number!

Unfortunately, one of the terribad books that follows this is an actual sequel to the Evil Twin, which is so OTT that I remember being angry that they even attempted to pull it off. Hopefully I will find it less anger-inducing this time around, as we close out our re-read (and this year)!
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
eurohackie | 3 andra recensioner | Dec 27, 2023 |
This has always been my favorite book of this miniseries, and I suppose it still is. It holds up beautifully and serves as a good bridge between the previous angst-driven books and the upcoming showdown in #100.

The centerpiece is, of course, the Fowler (re-)wedding, as depicted on the cover. I've always kinda loved that we never see Grace's face. She's forever an enigma of the series, having disappeared from Lila's life at an early age, and her being gone is part of the root of Lila's issues (the other being that her father gives her everything money can buy, but withholds the one thing it can't: his attention). Even now, at the crowning of her triumphant return, we don't really see her. Well played, cover artist!

The novel opens with Lila throwing a big luncheon to introduce her mother to all of her SVH friends. She's super proud and happy, and is deep in matchmaking mode, in spite of what her mother told her in the last book. She's determined to get her parents back together, and what Lila wants, Lila gets. There's only one thing standing in her way: Pierre the Pill, her mother's French ~lover~ who insists on inserting his irritating, melodramatic self into everything. He even crashes Lila's luncheon. Grace pleads with Lila to give him a chance, but of course Lila's having none of that. Her resolve is strengthened when she learns that the reason Amy leaves so abruptly is because Pierre cornered her and tried to assault her. Pierre's not merely a pest, but he's a sex pest, too.

Lila sweeps him off his feet and "treats" him to a day around Sweet Valley: a greasy breakfast, a whirlwind shopping trip, tennis at the club, and lunch in the desert, where he mostly drinks and smokes. He's a complete mess by the time they make it back to Fowler Crest, which is of course what Lila wanted. They are supposed to meet her parents at an elegant LA restaurant, and Lila wants to insure that her mother sees George in his best light, and Pierre at his worst.

She needn't have bothered. Her parents are glowing at each other all through dinner, and George pops the question mere moments before Pierre makes his loud, drunken entrance. Lila follows him as he's escorted out of the restaurant and threatens to tell Grace about his assaulting Amy if he doesn't leave, posthaste. Personally, I think she should've said something to Grace anyway, because gross. Any grown man who puts his hands on a teenage girl is disgusting and deserves to have that little fact amplified across town (the world). But, Lila's so thrilled that Grace has agreed to marry George that she lets it drop.

Unfortunately, whatever groveling George has done to make up for the fact that he once had Grace declared an unfit mother is done off-page. Grace has decided to forgive him and remain with him. We see this all from Lila's perspective, so of course there is a rosy glow emanating from this whole scene. It doesn't cut much ice with me as an adult, but I'm willing to be swept away by my nostalgia. Besides, we need the wedding setup as the social event of the season to push all of the other plots forward.

At Lila's luncheon, Jessica finally has a realization that her whole plan to steal Todd away from her sister as punishment for Elizabeth is just not working. She doesn't like Todd, Todd is miserable and pulling away anyway, and none of this has assuaged Jessica's guilt for spiking the punch at prom and being the catalyst for Sam's death in the first place. When Todd finally dumps her, jessica visits Sam's grave again and has a good long cry and comeapart, and realizes that the only way to begin healing from her boyfriend's death is to celebrate his life. So she throws herself into planning a memorial dirt bike rally. Jessica never had a ton of interest in dirt biking before, but she's so enthusiastic and sincere that everyone immediately hops on board to help make it a big success.

Jessica gives a very emotional speech at the opening of the rally, and raises quite a bit of money for SADD. She also meets a new man: the mysterious late entry Black Lightning appears at the last minute and wins the entire race in thrilling fashion. He unveils himself on the winner's stand, and Jessica is instantly smitten. Black Lightning's real name is James, and he falls just as hard for Jessica - or so it seems.

James has an ulterior motive, however: he's been paid to enter and win the race by Margo, who finds him one night at Kelly's, bemoaning his broken bike. Margo has visions of motorcycles dancing in her head, but James puts her clear. When Margo learns of the rally from the newspaper, she pays James to fix his bike and win the race, and then to start pumping Jessica for a TON of information about herself and her family. Margo rightly guesses that Jessica will be so dazzled by an older man paying such close attention to her that she'll barely even notice what James is doing.

Jessica is appropriately dazzled, and apparently gives James every detail of her life, including a floorplan of her house (!), which James dutifully passses along to Margo, along with piles and piles of pictures. Margo has already staked out the Wakefield house on Calico Drive, watching each member of her "new family" quite closely, and even assists Alice Wakefield with the groceries one random afternoon.

Margo also learns about the Fowler wedding and schemes her way in as part of the catering team. The owner of the catering business doesn't take her on right away, so Margo kills one of the other applicants for the job by running her over with a rental car. Margo gets into the wedding and spends as much time as she can around Elizabeth, enough to rouse the suspicions of Liz's date, Winston.

Margo's also starting to get a little careless and reckless - she comes thisclose to killing her boss in the Fowler kitchen because she can't get outside to spy on Elizabeth fast enough. Really, Margo? You're going to leave a bloody crime scene at Fowler Crest and think you aren't going to draw attention to yourself?? Mercifully, she's allowed out before she has to drawn blood over it, and she goes out and watches Elizabeth and her friends, listening to the idle gossip from the other SVHers to learn about Todd.

Todd has finally put on his big boy pants and attempts to approach Liz a couple of times. First he offers her a ride home from school one day (which Liz rejects), then he approaches her at the wedding and requests a slow dance, which Liz accepts. They don't actually speak to each other, and indeed end the dance crying, but it's one of those sigh-worthy romantic moments that I'm just completely hopeless about. (It put me in mind of Shawn and Belle's dance at their senior year Last Blast, after they'd been estranged for most of the school year.)

The last little storyline going on is that Josh Smith is still hot on Margo's heels, determined to hunt her down and make her pay for killing his brother Georgie. Georgie's death has sent Josh's mother into an alcoholic spiral, and the police aren't taking everything seriously enough for Josh's taste, so he's basically a lone teenage vigilante at this point. He pounds the pavement in LA for most of this book, but finally realizes the significance of Margo reading the Sweet Valley News on the train to San Diego, and gets back on track of hunting her down.

Per the timeline of this book, two months have passed since Grace's return to Sweet Valley. Everything's moving awfully quickly, and I don't even think this puts us into the summer season yet (everyone's still in school), but somehow in two books' time we'll be at Christmas. My, how time flies.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
eurohackie | Dec 15, 2023 |
It's time for cheerleading try-outs at Sweet Valley High. Funny, it seems like only yesterday that they were last holding trials. Book four, to be precise. Apparently they go through a lot. If you remember Lila being a cheerleader in book four, scratch that from your memory because since then, she and Cara have been thrown off the team for nefarious behaviour. By Lila? Who'd have thought.

Lila's not interested in getting back on the team, but Cara is, and Jess is determined that she'll be picked. The second girl on Jess's list is Sandra Bacon, who has the tastiest surname in all of Sweet Valley. Not on the list in the slightest? Annie Whitman.

Everyone's heard of Annie Whitman. Easy Annie, as they call her. She has a new boyfriend every week, and the talk is that she does a lot more than give them all a quick peck on the cheek to say goodnight. Annie's only a sophomore, but she's well known to the juniors for her escapades, and Jess is absolutely, definitely, 137% not going to let the cheerleaders' reputation be sullied by letting her type onto the team.

The trouble is, Annie's good. Really good. But that's not going to stop Jessica from getting her way.

In the end, Cara and Sandra get on the team (surprise surprise), Annie finds out just what everyone's been saying about her all the time, and we learn just how bad an influence the Sweet Valley books are on malleable young minds when she manages to score that coveted position on the team after all, simply by attempting to kill herself.

(At this point, it's good to remember that the original audience for these books was a bunch of impressionable 10-to-12-year-olds.)

The way that the Sweet Valley novels present female sexuality is a really fascinating thing. Annie is presented as thoroughly scandalous for her dating behaviour, but Jessica is always represented as a perfectly normal and healthy teen. In the book, we hear about Annie with five boys. By this point of the series, Jess has been interested in nine, and we know that she was a big fan of Danny Stauffer's reclining car seats. There's always the hint that Jess is into more than just the chaste kind of kissing that Liz and Todd get up to—and she's into it with a good number of boys.

I feel we're supposed to think that Annie really is having sex with the boys she dates and that's the big difference. And, when you examine the glimpses we have of Annie's home life—Annie's drunken, irresponsible mother and her lecherous boyfriend—there's no wonder that Annie might be seeking positive attention in the only way she's been shown it. She still has to be redeemed, though, because this is Sweet Valley, and sweet girls don't have sex, and certainly don't enjoy it.

You really have to wonder what Ricky Capaldo thinks about the new, chaste Annie. As a 16-year-old boy full of hormones, it must be a little sucky hooking up with the girl with the reputation, just as she turns over a new leaf.

Anyway, this is classic Sweet Valley fare. Not one of my favourites, though, due to the representation of female sexuality and the awful, awful message it gives to teenage and preteen girls.

Moral of the Story? Attempt suicide to get your way.

[re-read: previously read around four times]
… (mer)
1 rösta
Flaggad
Tara_Calaby | 1 annan recension | Apr 17, 2023 |

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Verk
135
Medlemmar
10,168
Popularitet
#2,335
Betyg
3.1
Recensioner
138
ISBN
500
Språk
7

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