Language: English
Diseases Fairy tales Family Family & Relationships Fiction Folklore & Mythology Friendship General Health & Daily Living Illnesses & Injuries Juvenile Fiction New York (N.Y.) Social Issues Teenage girls Young adult fiction
Publisher: Random House Children's Books
Published: May 11, 2010
Description:
From School Library Journal
Grade 9–11—Connelly Sternin, 16, moves through her New York City high school on cruise control. She is an average student who doesn't get into trouble, doesn't sit with the cool kids, and has a quiet home life. She fantasizes that she is living in a fairy tale and sees herself as Rapunzel, confined in an Upper East Side tower amid college applications and SAT scores. She sees wealthy Jeremy Cole as the prince of their school: loved and respected by all. What she doesn't see coming is a friendship with him based on tragedy—his younger sister has leukemia—and secrets—Connelly is preoccupied with learning how her father died. Jeremy knows more about her life than she does, and together they find the fortitude to face the present and the past. Although the narrative concerns death and lies, this first novel is not dark, but instead full of small moments and quiet realism. Connelly and Jeremy's friendship, which may turn into romance, is realistically portrayed as deepening over time. The story's pace is steady. Although the buildup to the climax—Connelly confronts her mother about her father—is better paced, and more creative and satisfying than the conflict itself, overall this is a terrific alternative to the clique-y high school novels that are all sex, drugs, and rock 'n' roll.—_Geri Diorio, The Ridgefield Library, CT_
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Review
"Endearing, realistic and heart-wrenching, Sheinmel offers a thoughtful look at teens." —_The New York Post_
"Sheinmel makes an impressive debut with an absorbing tale of unlikely friendship, loss, and family secrets." - Publishers Weekly
"Satisfying and believable"- Kirkus Reviews
Full of small moments and quiet realism. - School Library Journal