3.99 AVERAGE


Probably the best book out of the series, even if Georgia still is a bratty, stuck up teen.

I actually snorted outloud while reading this...in public.

This is a great story. I love Georgia and her ridiculous antics. I can't wait to see what she and the ace gang get up to next

I liked this one a little better than 7. A little. The books are starting to run together and I can't tell if it's because not much is happening or if it's because I'm reading them so quickly. I think the thing that bothers me the most is that, even though it's been a year, Georgia really isn't any different. It would be nice to see some character growth, but she has all the same flaws as she has since the first book. The first couple of books it's quirky and fun, but a stagnant character just doesn't hold my attention.

YESSSSSSSSS!!!!! GEE AND DAVE!!! #shippinghard

I will finish this series out of pure spite.


If Georgia doesn't end up with Dave The Laugh I will KICK the FUCK off.

Well, this series is dying on it's arse on a re-read, although I never made it up to these later books the first time round. At this point, nothing much is happening plot-wise, the humour is stagnating and I can no longer ignore the casual homophobia, xenophobia and fat-shaming coming from this book. I could understand this a bit more in the earlier books, but this one was published in 2007. Surely we knew better 11 years ago? I wouldn't mind any of this if it was called out by a character we like but it's largely ignored.

Love is a Many Trousered Thing by Louise Rennison is the eighth in the Confessions of Georgia Nicholson series. All of Georgia's machinations have come together too well. She now finds herself with two potential boyfriends and she doesn't know what to do.

She has to decide between Rob the Sex God who has returned from New Zealand and Masimo the Italian Lurve God. She wants advice from her friends but Dave the Laugh is too busy with his own girl friend and Jas is more of a spazz than usual.

Despite Georgia's overly silly teenage slang, she has matured over the course of the books. Proof of this comes in the form of two tweens who get in trouble during a concert. Georgia (to her own surprise) tells them they are too scantily dressed and that children their age don't belong in the club (even though she had done the same thing at their age). It's refreshing to see silly Georgia actually age some and be surprised by it.

As with the previous books, Love is a Many Trousered Thing takes off where the last one ended. So far every single book has managed to entertain and amuse me. Although I don't normally do this: I highly recommend you start at the beginning with Angus Thongs and Full Frontal Snogging.
funny lighthearted fast-paced
Plot or Character Driven: Plot
Strong character development: No
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: No
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated