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How to Take the Ex Out of Ex-Boyfriend
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Sixteen-year-old Giovanna Petrizzo finds it hard enough to fit in at school. It doesnt help when her twin brother, Dante, takes on the mayors son by running for class president. The least she could expect, though, is for her boyfriend, Jesse, to support their cause. But Jesses apparent defection triggers Giovannas rash emotional side. Boyfriends are supposed to be loyal, caring, and handsome. Giovannaas boyfriend, Jesse, has perfected the last two. But when her twin brother, Dante, runs for student body president, Jesse doesnat support Dante, choosing to campaign for his opponent instead. Shouldnat the fact that Jesse is Giovannaas boyfriend count for something? So Giovanna dumps Jesse and becomes Danteas campaign manager. But as the political debates heat up, Giovanna begins to regret breaking up with Jesse, and realizes that maybe her decision wasnat the political strategy she should have useda].
Fame, Glory, and Other Things on My To-Do List
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Jessica tells Jordan the way to get his divorced, movie-star father to visit is to be in the school play--and if she's "discovered" in the process, all the better. Things turn disastrous when the principal tries to change "West Side Story" into a politically correct production. A PC school principal turns West Side Story into a comedy of errors.
Sixteen year-old Jessica dreams of Hollywood fame, and when Jordan moves into her small town, she dreams of him too. He's a movie star's son, and hey, he's gorgeous to boot. Jordan has always wanted to get out from the shadow cast by his superstar father, but now that he and his mother have moved so far away from LA, how can he get his divorced parents back together? Jessica convinces Jordan the way to get his father to come for a long visit is to be a part of the school play. And if she's "discovered" in the process, all the better. Things go wrong when she lets Jordan's secret identity slip, and grow even more disastrous when the principal tries to change West Side Story into a gangfree, violence-free, politically correct production.
In the same romantic and sharply witty spirit of Life, Love, and the Pursuit of Free Throws, Janette Rallison delivers another comic gem that teen readers are sure to love.