Dreams of Significant Girls
The “power of sisterhood and female friendships shine” (Publishers Weekly) in this boarding school novel that spans continents and delves deep with maturity and grace.Shirin is an Iranian princess; Ingrid, a German-Canadian eccentric; and Vivien, a Cuban-Jewish New Yorker culinary phenom. The...
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The “power of sisterhood and female friendships shine” (Publishers Weekly) in this boarding school novel that spans continents and delves deep with maturity and grace.Shirin is an Iranian princess; Ingrid, a German-Canadian eccentric; and Vivien, a Cuban-Jewish New Yorker culinary phenom. The three are roommates at a Swiss boarding school, where they spend their summers learning more than French and European culture. As the girls’ paths cross and merge—summers together, school years separate—they navigate social and cultural differences and learn the confusing and conflicting legacies of their families’ pasts. In the spirit of sisterhood and friendship, Shirin, Ingrid, and Vivien grow together even when they are apart, forming unbreakable bonds along the way.
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Format: paperback
ISBN:
9781416979302 (1416979301)
ASIN: 1416979301
Publish date: May 22nd 2012
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
Pages no: 256
Edition language: English
Category:
Young Adult,
Adventure,
Novels,
Cultural,
Realistic Fiction,
Historical Fiction,
Drama,
Contemporary,
School Stories,
Boarding School,
Young Adult Contemporary
I was just starting to get on board with this book when I had to quit because of the attempted murder of Midori. I'm sure this sounds like I'm exaggerating, but I'm not. The character grabs Midori's foot, drags her down to the deep part of the pool and even that won't get her expelled from this camp...
Dreams of Significant Girls manages to touch on all the "issues" of issue books - depression, divorce, sexual assault, slut-shaming, statutory rape, absent parents, suicide, abortion, homosexuality, revolution, war, genocide, you name it! - without actually saying much about any of those experiences...
I thought this book was a very fun summer read and it was quick. It had amazing character development and some great moments. The book follows three girls' journey through the teenage years as they work to find themselves. Each of the girls are completely different from one another but soon they bec...
Nearly unreadable. I didn't like any of the narrators, the period details didn't ring especially true, and it felt more like a grown person looking back fondly on an idealized, if hypersexualized, adolescent period. The writing is pedestrian at best. It's basically about three rich girls who go to b...