Second Helpings
A Jessica Darling Novel
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- 10,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Navigating the Ups and Downs of Senior Year in this Witty Teen Romance
Second Helpings continues Megan McCafferty's New York Times bestselling series - now with a new foreword by New York Times bestselling author Rebecca Serle.
Jessica Darling is in her senior year of high school, and things can't seem to get worse: her best friend, Hope, still lives in another state, and the mysterious and oh-so-compelling Marcus Flutie continues to be a distraction she doesn't need. To top it off, her parents won't stop pestering her about choosing a college, and her older sister's pregnancy is causing quite a bit of drama in the Darling household.
This critically acclaimed second book in the Jessica Darling series is a fun, irreverent look at the challenges of being a teenager. Filled with witty humor, relatable coming-of-age themes, and the ups and downs of young love, Second Helpings is a must-read for fans of contemporary teen romance and comedy. Now featuring a foreword from Rebecca Serle and a new author's note from Megan McCafferty, this edition is sure to resonate with readers embarking on their own journeys of self-discovery and first love.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
"Every day, I wait for that doomsday shoe to drop on my head and crush my spirit," laments New Jersey high schooler Jessica Darling. This hilarious, candid sequel to Sloppy Firsts opens the summer before Jessica's senior year of high school, when the precocious misfit is at a New Jersey academic enrichment camp whose competitive enrollment is belied by its acronym SPECIAL. There, she meets Prof. Samuel MacDougall, a handsome writing teacher with "three novels, two works of nonfiction and one hot piece of ass to his name," who challenges Jessica to imagine the world outside of her native suburbia. She also runs into her former "crush-to-end-all-crushes" Paul Parlipiano (he's gay, of course), who introduces her to Columbia University which she decides she must attend. Come September, Jessica works on her college applications, dearly misses her best friend, Hope, who has moved to Tennessee, and spends much of her time trying not to think about bad boy Marcus Flutie, who broke her heart last winter when he confessed that he only asked her out as an experiment. As her senior year progresses, Jessica starts dating Len Levy, her rival for class valedictorian, and becomes the subject of the school's new anonymous gossip rag. The material is typical teen fare, but Jessica is a captivating, intelligent, acidly funny but always believably adolescent narrator who is unsparing in her sketches of Pineville High "society" yet touchingly alive to her own vulnerabilities. Though the happy ending seems targeted to a YA crowd, adults will also enjoy Jessica's winning observations.