Scan barcode
nicolamb's review against another edition
3.0
An okay book, lightly entertaining. My edition hadn't been proof-read very well, a lot of typo's like jumping from page 202 to 223 then back to 204! Very annoying!
mon_ique's review against another edition
3.0
Hate it when I can't get my hands on a copy...
Cute, and laugh out loud funny sometimes!
Some things were a little too inappropriate, though which affected my enjoyment of everything else.
Cute, and laugh out loud funny sometimes!
Some things were a little too inappropriate, though which affected my enjoyment of everything else.
nicolamb's review
3.0
An okay book, lightly entertaining. My edition hadn't been proof-read very well, a lot of typo's like jumping from page 202 to 223 then back to 204! Very annoying!
pixieauthoress's review
5.0
I read this book eight years ago, when I was nine, but I remember it so vividly. I'd love to get hold of a copy and see if I still enjoy it. The things which I remember most about this book are: the girl and the boy think that they're related because their mum's have the same name; their parents had a pancake party; the girl recieves postcards and there is some mystery connected to this; the boy is called Guy and the girl thinks that it's a stupid name so calls him something else in her emails; she lies to him about her age but he finds out because he visits her school website and she has a photo there which reveals her age. I can't actually remember what the outcome of the story was but I remember loving it. This and Catherine Jink's 'To Die For' were the first books I ever read which were written in email form. Oh, and Ann M. Martin's 'Snail Mail No More.'
More...