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Ask Amy Green

Summer Secrets

#2 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Amy is trapped in family vacation hell- until she and Clover, her teenage aunt, get a chance to interview a hot U.S. movie star with a secret.
(Age 11 and up)

Could this summer be any worse? Thirteen-year-old Amy's dreamy boyfriend, Seth, is off to Rome, while she gets to spend two weeks on a tiny Irish island with a nagging mom and a neurotic aunt locked in a feud, not to mention a crazy stepdad and a surly cousin. Good thing Clover, teen advice columnist supreme, is there to keep Amy from going completely nuts! It doesn't help Amy's changeable mood that Seth keeps mentioning some girl in his e-mails, or that Amy feels an electric attraction to the mysterious young gardener next door. So when The Goss magazine unexpectedly sends Clover to glitzy Miami to write a revealing piece on a hot young actor (with Amy as her sidekick, of course) it couldn't come at a better time. U.S. of A-mazing- here they come!

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    • School Library Journal

      April 1, 2011

      Gr 6 Up-In this sequel to Ask Amy Green: Boy Trouble (Candlewick, 2010), 13-year-old Amy and her 17-year-old Aunt Clover, author of an advice column for an Irish teen magazine, the Goss, are setting out on summer vacation. Amy is convinced that two weeks with her entire family, including her father, stepfather, his sister, her mother, Clover, and all the sibs, will be an absolute disaster. After frantic packing, the gang heads off to an island in West Cork. Soon Clover and Amy are glibly chatting about cute boys, washboard abs, and teen idols. Clover's column offers an avenue to impart information about kissing, PMS, and first periods. The plot clips along with family rivalries, personality clashes, and a near drowning to provide drama. But the greatest adventure occurs when Clover lands an interview with teen idol Matt Monroe in Miami Beach, and the magazine sends the girls to Florida where they solve a mystery about his origins. A chatty read, with a nearly unbelievable plot, for readers attracted to gossipy chick lit.-Kathryn Kosiorek, formerly at Cuyahoga County Public Library, Brooklyn, OH

      Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2011

      The characters deepen slightly in Amy Green's new go-round (Boy Trouble, 2010), but Webb keeps the focus on fun in this lively chick-lit sequel. Amy Green, a 13-year-old Irish everygirl, goes to Cork to vacation with her blended and extended family. Amy's messy, harried, TV- and junk-food-allowing mother Sylvie immediately locks horns with her boyfriend's more organically oriented and perfectly groomed sister Prue; Gramps runs into an old flame who's still holding a near-homicidal grudge (dead rat anyone?); and Prue's pudgy and furious son Denis has a serious eating issue. Worse, Amy's boyfriend, Seth, sends letters and emails that show an increasing preoccupation with a bikini-clad female. But there are bright spots to be had, including a seriously sexy gardener, and of course, Amy's 17-year-old aunt, Clover, who is spending her gap year working for a teen lifestyle magazine. Various plot elements come together when Amy accompanies her aunt to Miami so Clover can interview a rising star and teenage idol named Matt Munroe. By this point in the story, there are so many unlikely coincidences and credibility-shredding character connections that any sense of reality is completely and utterly lost. Despite some touching moments and serious life lessons, it's mostly a frothy confection, though, and girls should be willing to suspend their disbelief and simply enjoy themselves. Good fun. (Fiction. 11 & up)

      (COPYRIGHT (2011) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2011
      Thirteen-year-old Irish girl Amy isn't excited to go on a Cork island vacation with her wacky family; luckily her cool seventeen-year-old aunt Clover will be there. When the magazine Clover writes for sends her to Miami, Amy is thrilled to tag along. Together they discover a young movie star's secret. This second Amy Green book, like the first, is diverting but forgettable.

      (Copyright 2011 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 9, 2010
      This earnest but unmemorable Irish import follows the eponymous 13-year-old, who is dealing with divorced parents, new siblings on both sides of her family, a falling-out with her best friend, and her first crush. Amy's salvation is her aunt Clover, her mother's 17-year-old sister. Flighty Clover has landed a coveted job at The Goss magazine, where she answers letters from unhappy teens and ropes Amy into helping her with revenge strategies against those who have wronged those who write in: "We're not going to let boys behave like eejits anymore." The girls crash parties and impersonate casting agents, embarrassing wrongdoers in the name of justice. First in a planned series, adult author Webb's first book for young readers keeps the narrative contemporary with references to social media, hip clothing, and text messages; some references and slang, like the term "agony aunt" for the type of column Clover writes, may be lost on U.S. readers (a glossary, written in Amy's voice, helps). When a pearl necklace is stolen and Amy is framed, she looks to Clover for help, bringing the story to a predictable close. Ages 11–up.

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:3.9
  • Lexile® Measure:620
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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