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    If You Only Knew (Friendship Ring Series #1)

    If You Only Knew (Friendship Ring Series #1)

    4.9 30

    by Rachel Vail


    eBook

    $7.99
    $7.99

    Customer Reviews

    Rachel Vail is the critically acclaimed author of numerous books for kids and teens, including Lucky, Gorgeous, and Brilliant (the Avery sisters trilogy), Wonder, Daring to be Abigail, and the upcoming Unfriended. She lives in New York City with her husband and two sons.

    www.rachelvail.com
    Twitter: @rachelvailbooks.com
    Facebook: Rachel Vail

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    4 rings, 1 promise: Best Friends Forever

    Growing up is never easy. But when things get tough, you can always count on your best friends. CJ, Olivia, Morgan and Zoe know one thing’s for sure: they’ll always have each other!

    Zoe isn’t like her three best friends. She enjoys playing sports outside, doesn’t really care about clothes, and is a little self conscious of her body. So when her best friend Tommy admits he likes her, Zoe is caught off guard and tells him to ask CJ out instead. But then she starts having doubts about her decision. Can she share her true feelings without risking her friendships?

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    Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
    Vail (Ever After) returns to familiar territory, chronicling the trials and triumphs of adolescence in this first in a trio of novels that examines the pleasures and pitfalls of junior-high friendships. Each book is narrated by a different girl, thereby offering readers insights into each character's personality and motivations. Here, seventh-grader Zoe Grandon learns that friendships involve contradictions: sharing confidences can result in betrayals, personal triumphs can elicit jealousy and being different can engender suspicion. Clearly different from her friends, Zoe cares little about what she wears, plays sports with the boys and feels large and clumsy compared to graceful CJ, a ballerina, and tough Morgan, a sophisticate when it comes to boys. Vail's perceptive portrayals of Zoe's stumbling attempts to win CJ as her best friend and to capture the affections of one of her pals, Tommy ("I refuse to go boy-crazy like my sisters, just because Tommy has deep dimples"), are simultaneously poignant and humorous--and sometimes painful. In between Zoe's growing awareness that she can survive life's pitfalls, Vail weaves in details about Zoe's home situation, showing that appearances rarely comprise the whole picture (e.g., the happy exterior of the Grandon clan hides Zoe's worries about the angry relationship between her rebellious sister and their father). Bravo to Vail for painting a true, intimate portrait (enhanced by the small, keep-it-with-you trim size) of what life is like for a seventh grader: a heartbreaking and glorious rollercoaster ride. Ages 9-13. (July)

    FYI: The other two novels are narrated by Zoe's friends: CJ's Please, Please, Please, also releases in July, and the other, from Morgan's point of view, Not That I Care, is scheduled for a November release.

    Children's Literature - Wendy Keen
    Scholastic's "The Friendship Ring" series introduces readers to a group of seventh grade girls. Each installment is told from a different girl's perspective. If You Only Knew is Zoe's story. It follows Zoe's relationship with the other girls, as well as her turbulent family life. Pre-teens will identify with Zoe's mixed emotions towards her sisters, her friends and herself. Vail quite admirably captures the awkward and sometimes painful lessons girls learn on their way to adolescence.
    School Library Journal
    Gr 5-7-At the start of seventh grade, Zoe has lots of worries. Will boys like her even though she's not stereotypically feminine? Will girls think she's worth having as a best friend? Zoe has a crush on her pal Tommy, but so does her ballerina friend CJ. What to do? After Tommy reveals his interest in Zoe, she impulsively tells him to ask CJ out with the hope of winning her undying friendship. By the end of the story, Tommy does approach CJ while Zoe is having second thoughts about her decision to give him up. Readers are left hanging, but a sneak preview of the sequel is given. Nothing profound happens here, but that's just the point-these small dramas are earth-shattering to seventh graders. As in her other books, the author excels in depicting adolescent preoccupations and confusions. The dialogue is funny and the rapidly changing friendships and fickle alliances are authentically portrayed. The book's small size will attract preteens. A light confection that will be gobbled up.-Jacqueline Rose, Lake Oswego Public Library, OR

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