Told in alternating chapters, teeming with music references, humor, angst, and endearing side characters, this he said/she said romance is a sexy, funny roller coaster of a story about one date over one very long night, with two teenagers who are just trying to figure out who they want to be.
Cyd Charisse takes on Manhattan in this follow-up to "Gingerbread" and "Shrimp." Now that she's graduated from high school, Cyd crashes with her brother Danny in New York City, ready to start her fabulous independent life--that is, until she breaks her leg.
"Recovering hellion" Cyd Charisse (after the famed entertainer) reaches the breaking point with her mother and stepfather and her boyfriend, Shrimp, and has only her childhood doll, Gingerbread, to confide in. The 16-year-old is dispatched from her San Francisco home to New York City for the summer, to stay with her father, whom she has met only ...
Miles has spent her life in the shadow of her cousin Laura--until Laura commits suicide, leaving her dad and Miles lost in the wake of the event. After spiraling downward, Miles overdoses on drugs. She almost dies, but with the help of her family and friends, Miles gains the strength to face her situation and accept help.
The long-awaited sequel to "Gingerbread" finds Cyd Charisse, now home from her summer in New York, planning to reclaim her true love: Shrimp, the hottest pint-size artist-surfer in San Francisco. Cyd's now grown up, and isn't going to let Shrimp get away this time.
Naomi is in love with her best friend, Ely, but Ely prefers boys. So they create a "No Kiss List" of people neither of them is allowed to kiss. It works fine--until Bruce enters the picture. Can these best friends come back together again?
Naomi loves and is "in love with Ely, but Ely prefers boys. So they create their "No Kiss List" of people neither of them is allowed to kiss. And this works fine--until Bruce, Naomi's boyfriend. Ely kisses Bruce. The result: a rift of universal proportions.
When 15-year-old Wonder Black is given the chance to become a teen idol, it seems like a dream come true--even if it's not her dream, but her older sister Lucky's, who was on her way to becoming a pop star when she died. Wonder jumps at the offer, but learns that stardom isn't all glamour.
Told in alternating chapters, this sequel to Cohns acclaimed novel "The Steps" finds stepsisters Annabel and Lucy together again for a summer in Los Angeles.
Twelve-year-old Annabel travels to Australia where her father is living with his new wife and Annabel's new step-siblings. Annabel is determined to get her father to move back to her own hometown of New York City, but when she sees how happy he is in Australia, she begins to question whether her plan will actually cause her to lose her dad to his ...
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