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    My Worst Best Friend

    My Worst Best Friend

    3.8 4

    by Dyan Sheldon


    eBook

    $11.49
    $11.49
     $15.99 | Save 28%

    Customer Reviews

      ISBN-13: 9780763651978
    • Publisher: Candlewick Press
    • Publication date: 08/24/2010
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • Sales rank: 361,522
    • Lexile: HL600L (what's this?)
    • File size: 722 KB
    • Age Range: 12 Years

    Dyan Sheldon is the author of many novels for young adult readers, including the #1 New York Times bestseller CONFESSIONS OF A TEENAGE DRAMA QUEEN, which was made into a major motion picture. American by birth, she lives in North London.

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    The best-selling author of CONFESSIONS OF A DRAMA QUEEN takes a smart, funny look at friendship, staying true to your identity, and moving on. (Ages 12 and up)

    Gracie and Savannah are best friends —and utterly unalike. Savannah is beautiful, outrageous, and irresistible to the opposite sex. Gracie is shy, smart, and would rather be studying lizards than meeting boys. Still, they’ve made a surprisingly great team, and (until now) it seemed as if nothing could come between them. But lately, Savannah’s talent for lying and manipulating is becoming harder to ignore. She’s fallen head over heels for an elusive college boy, and Gracie can’t help wondering: is her friend as confident as she seems? When Savannah gets between Gracie and her crush, the line separating best friend from worst friend is crossed.

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    Publishers Weekly
    Something happened to end Gracie's best friendship with the beautiful, beloved yet ditzy Savanna but Gracie won't say what. Instead Sheldon (Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen) unfolds their friendship's demise slowly, developing the complex dynamics of their relationship as well as the girls' individual personalities. As Gracie and Savanna's connection grows ever more tenuous--Savanna is constantly standing up Gracie (and others) and forcing her to lie on her behalf--the never-been-kissed Gracie has an unexpected suitor: the odd but adorable Cooper, who ropes her into volunteering with him. Gracie's down-to-earth narration and passion for protecting the environment makes Savanna's shallow and clueless nature all the more grating, though Savanna is never reduced to a mean-girl caricature. Instead, her actions come across more as misguided than intentionally cruel, and readers should relate to Gracie's painful experience of growing beyond a once-treasured friendship. Nevertheless, it's a relief when Gracie realizes that she has changed but that Savanna will not, and finally lets her go. Ages 12–up. (Aug.)
    Children's Literature - Janis Flint-Ferguson
    Gracie Mooney is one of those sweet, quiet, school smart girls who blend into the high school atmosphere, but her best friend Savannah Zindle is the drop-dead gorgeous girl who stands out and attracts attention with every move she makes. How they became friends is a mystery to Gracie, but that they are friends is important to her, so important that she rearranges her schedule to spend time with Savannah. The first difficulty is when her teacher catches onto the fact that Gracie used the computer to translate her work so she could go shopping with Savannah. But that is nothing compared to helping Savannah spend time with a college boy by covering for her with the Zindles and with Savannah's high school boyfriend, Archie. Being caught up in Savannah's drama is no longer comfortable for Gracie and as she develops her own relationship with one of Archie's friends and desires distance from her best friend's antics. Archie's friend, Cooper, volunteers at a local community center and as Gracie joins him, she discovers that she really has her own thoughts, values and interests. The themes developed in the novel are important ones for young high school girls to consider: what is friendship? How do friends support one another equitably? As Gracie realizes her own strengths and talents, she is better able to see that Savannah's friendship is more about making Savannah look good than any real interest in her as a person. Reviewer: Janis Flint-Ferguson
    School Library Journal
    Gr 7 Up—Gracie believes that there are only two kinds of girls: "Those Girls," who make heads spin and horns beep, and everyone else. She is proof that opposites attract. Gracie is a smart, environmentally conscious, lizard-loving girl, while her best friend, Savannah, is a boy crazy, fashion loving, drama queen. The highs and lows of high school run their course, but the track becomes bumpy when Savannah begins to secretly date a college guy behind the back of her current beau, Archie. Savannah's GPA can't compare to Gracie's, but she's skilled in the art of communication with an almost innate ability to plead and cajole Gracie. Yet, Gracie remains loyal to a fault. However, Savannah's feathers get ruffled from the loss of attention when Archie's best friend, Cooper, changes from annoying presence at the lunch table into a quirky, fun-loving guy that Gracie spends an increasing amount of time with at Neighbour's Project, a community outreach center for kids. The girls' friendship starts to fray when Savannah's white lies domino to include Gracie's need to lie. Dyan Sheldon spins an insightful tale (Candlewick, 2010) about high school friendships and the delicate threads that hold them together. Narrator Jeannie Stith is wonderful, offering slight voice variations forthe many characters. She shines with Savannah, a pay-attention-to-me Valley girl. A great story about the good, the bad, the beautiful, and the ugly sides of friendship.—Cheryl Preisendorfer, Twinsburg City Schools, OH

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