



Ask Amy Green: Boy Trouble
-
-
5.0 • 1 Rating
-
-
- $12.99
-
- $12.99
Publisher Description
When Amy’s seventeen-year-old Aunt Clover lands a dream job giving advice for teen mag The Goss Amy quickly realizes that this is no ordinary column. Clover – being Clover – doesn’t just want to answer her readers’ letters, she wants to solve their problems … personally. From stamping out malicious rumours to handling first kisses and creating the perfect Bebo page, the pair bring happiness to many unhappy girls. But when Amy falls for the cute boy in her art class, she finds she’s in need of a little help of her own…
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
Irish author Sarah Webb introduces her titular heroine Amy Green in this bubbly series-starter. Enlisted by her aunt to help with a teenage advice column, Amy has no problem doling out guidance to local girls about their boy problems. But when a crush of her own leads to heartache, Amy ends up questioning whether she really has the answers. Amy's engaging voice and funny observations about dating and popularity will charm older teens (and teens at heart) looking for a hip new series.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
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.