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Booklist, April 15, 2002 (Vol. 98, No. 16) Gr. 9-12. Sixteen-year-old Cyd Charisse's parents
call her "Little Hellion."When she's kicked out of an exclusive
boarding school, she returns to her privileged home in San Francisco, where
she fights constantly with her mother and stepfather, who don't know about
her recent abortion. She finds her place with new friends: a boyfriend
Shrimp, a sexy surfer, and Honey Pie, an elderly woman who understands her
secrets. After a broken curfew escalates into bitterness, Cyd is sent to her
biological father in New York City. "Frank real-dad"isn't what Cyd
had imagined: nor are his two grown kids. Cyd's New York experience helps her
confront her most painful questions. Written in Cyd's hilarious, contemporary
voice, Cohn's first novel is a fast, uncomfortable read. Bratty, spoiled, and
prone to tantrums, Cyd is often unlikable and is all the more realistic for
it. Some characters, particularly Cyd's parents, and details about the world
of wealth occasionally collapse into stereotype, and Cyd spikes her honest,
revealing speech with such aggressively hip words as crazysexy, which may
date quickly. But teens will recognize themselves in Cyd's complex,
believable mix of the arch and the vulnerable, the self-aware and the
self-destructive, and also in her struggle between freedom and the protective
safety of family. |
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School Library Journal, February 1, 2002 Gr 9 Up-According to stepdad, Sid, Cyd Charisse is a
"recovering hellion." Kicked out of boarding school, the teen
returns home to San Francisco. True to her wild nature and obsession with
boys, she does anything to get a rise from her parents. She is grounded in
her "puke-princess bedroom" after being caught out overnight again
with surfer-boyfriend, Shrimp. Finally, Sid and Nancy send her to bio-dad in
NYC. Meeting her real father and family has long been Cyd's dream. Since he
was married with children when her mom had an affair with him, he is
virtually a stranger to her. When Cyd got in trouble at boarding school and
needed money for an abortion though, she called him. He didn't remember
Gingerbread, the rag doll he gave her when she was five, but he helped her
out. Cyd Charisse sees herself when she meets him 11 years later. She finds
excitement working in her gay half-brother's café as a barista and exploring
New York. Confrontations with her older half-sister and brief talks with her
father bring Cyd more knowledge about her families on both coasts. Her
strong, independent, and kinky personality; realistic take on life; and quick
mind make her a memorable character. Cohn works wonders with snappy dialogue,
up-to-the-minute language, and funny repartee. Her contemporary voice is
tempered with humor and deals with problems across two generations. Funny and
irreverent reading with teen appeal that's right on target.-Gail Richmond,
San Diego Unified Schools, CA Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information. |

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Author |
Cohn, Rachel |
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Title |
Gingerbread/ Rachel Cohn |
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Publisher |
Simon Pulse, 2003, c2002. |
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Description |
172 p. ; 18 cm. |
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Notes |
"Ages 14 up"--Cover p. 4. After being
expelled from a fancy boarding school, Cyd Charisse's problems with her
mother escalate after Cyd falls in love with a sensitive surfer and is
subsequently sent from San Francisco to New York City to spend time with her
biological father. |
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Subjects |
Mothers and daughters Fiction. Stepfamilies
Fiction.
Interpersonal relations Fiction. Abortion
Fiction. Teenage
girls Fiction. |