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Amy Talkington
Amy Talkington is an award-winning screenwriter and director living in Los Angeles. Before all that she wrote about music for magazines like Spin, Ray Gun, Interview, and Seventeen (mostly just as a way to get to hang out with rock stars). As a teenager in Dallas, Texas, Amy painted lots of... show more

Amy Talkington is an award-winning screenwriter and director living in Los Angeles. Before all that she wrote about music for magazines like Spin, Ray Gun, Interview, and Seventeen (mostly just as a way to get to hang out with rock stars). As a teenager in Dallas, Texas, Amy painted lots of angsty self-portraits, listened to The Velvet Underground and was difficult enough that her parents finally let her go to boarding school on the East Coast. Liv, Forever is her first novel. Visit her website www.amytalkington.com, @amytalkington on Twitter, and on Tumblr.
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Community Reviews
Reading Through The World
Reading Through The World rated it 10 years ago
Insta-love and paranormal all rolled into a ball at boarding school. I nearly broke something with the strength of my eye rolling, but it was ok overall. The main character is annoying and unrealistic--a Mary Sue of an artist who got into a prestigious boarding school based on her extreme talent i...
xxsquigglesxx
xxsquigglesxx rated it 11 years ago
3.5/5OVERALL IMPRESSION: I didn't know anything at all about this book when I started it, so I really had no expectations whatsoever. I liked it a lot though. It's a fun story and mystery (even though the subject matter is pretty grim) and I enjoyed trying to figure out what was going on right along...
SA Bodeen Reads
SA Bodeen Reads rated it 11 years ago
Ghosts at a boarding school, evil family legacies, what' s not to like?
Khanh the Killjoy
Khanh the Killjoy rated it 11 years ago
"Liv...it’s a name, a verb, a command. A notion of mortality. That’s a name ripe for some epic poetry. If I could write, I’d write you one, a poem.” In YA literature, I often find myself wishing I could kill the main character. This book did me a favor: it DID kill off the main character. Sadly, it...
pedestrienne
pedestrienne rated it 11 years ago
although the subject should be right in my reading sweet spot: artist goes to boarding school, becomes ghost, the reading experience was lackluster. I thought Liv's constant artist reference namedropping was a little forced, and I don't agree that a long & dark-haired scruffy guy would remind anyone...
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