You MUST MUST MUST Read Courtney Summers’ “Some Girls Are”

Note: I first ran this review in September and am re-running it because this book releases today.

You think vampires that want to kill you in high school are scary? Or maybe werewolves who could rip your throat out?

They’re cotton candy compared to the high school in Courtney SummersSome Girls Are,” the January 2010 follow-up to her well-received debut “Cracked up to Be.”

No, there’s nothing like the high school hell she makes her characters endure in “Some Girls Are.”

Even standard high school misery, like clueless teachers, cliques and gym are kittens next to Hallowell High, where the Fearsome Fivesome roam the halls. This girl bully gang loves to hate — they devise cruel tricks and horribly mean pranks in a game of chess with other students as the pawns. Their targets have no recourse, nowhere to go. They become nothing when the quintet is through with them.

Regina Afton is part of this crew. Until she’s kicked out for something she didn’t do. Now, she can’t duck fast enough because they’re pulling out all the stops as the four remaining members seek to destroy her. She hides out in the storage room, in the washrooms, with the so-called “losers,” but even they don’t really want a mean girl hanging with them. Because, can a Grade-A Henchwoman really change her stripes?

That is exactly what Regina desperately wants to do in this story — put her past as a very bad girl behind her — only she has to battle the now Fearsome Foursome, their toady boyfriends who do their dirty work, and worst of all, her own self doubts about whether she can be brave enough. The one bright spot is a loner boy who comes to see the good that is still inside her.

“Some Girls Are” is about what it means to be good, what it means to be bad, what it means to change. It’s about how to stand up and how to forgive and, especially, what not to do. It’s about — like the “Kiterunner” — “how to be good again.”

If you’ve talked to me about books for more than two minutes, you’ve certainly heard me mention Courtney Summers and “Cracked up to Be.” It is one of my favorite books of all time and also inspired me to switch genres from women’s fiction to young adult. Naturally, I was nervous reading “Some Girls Are,” hoping it would stand up to its predecessor. I can’t believe I’m saying this but “Some Girls Are” is even better. I was gripped with fear, anticipation, and intense, white-knuckling nerves during the second half of this book, wondering how on earth Courtney would possibly pull of a satisfying ending after she’d tortured her characters.

I won’t spoil the ending, though. You will need to read to find out! The countdown begins to the book’s January release date!

BookChick Recommends Courtney Summers “Cracked Up to Be”

I’m not sure how this happened, but somehow in the nine-month history of this blog I have neglected to review/recommend one of my absolute favorite books of all time. Shame on me.

But I am prepared to rectify that mistake today. So here goes.

Courtney Summers‘ debut novel “Cracked up to Be” is the reason I became a YA author. Her novel released in December 2008, but I wheedled an advance copy out of her way back in August 2008 and I devoured it. We are talking a-can’t-put-down-mystery.

“Cracked up to Be” is the story of Parker Fadley, the most popular girl in school who also happens to harbor a horrible secret. Something very bad happened and it just might be her fault. So she does what any good cheerleader would do — quits the squad, ditches school and starts failing. It’s her punishment, the one she imposes on herself. She can’t talk about what happened, she certainly can’t fix it. Self-loathing is her solution, sarcasm her shield. That’s how she deals. But pushing people away isn’t all it’s cracked up to be and there’s still maybe just a tiny sliver of hope left in Parker — hope that she can be redeemed.

What is so special about this book is the voice of Parker, the writing style and a very clever device Courtney employs. The reader doesn’t know until the end what Parker did and why she hates herself. That backstory unfolds in pieces throughout the novel and it’s what will keep you turning pages.

I’m also thrilled to report that I snagged ANOTHER sneak peek at a Courtney Summers novel. I just finished reading her second book “Some Girls Are,” slated for a January release. I’ll publish a full and proper review later this fall, but I will leave you with two teasers:

There is no sophomore slump for Courtney, but rather a sophomore streak

Once again, Courtney forbids her main character from owning a cell phone.

Summer Reading: The Real Must Reads for Teens

You know those summer reading lists they give you at the end of the school year? Kafka and Orwell and so on? Well, throw it out. Because here’s the real summer must-read list for teens!

Now go to the library, the book store, your best friend and read!!!

The list was compiled this list with the help of four writing friends: Trish Doller, Suzanne Young, Courtney Summers and Mandy Morgan. And no, Courtney didn’t pick her own book for the list. I picked it! The list includes books published in 2008 and 2009.