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Cupcake by Rachel Cohn
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Cupcake (edition 2008)

by Rachel Cohn

Series: Gingerbread (3)

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388765,371 (3.69)9
Former "bad girl" Cyd Charisse moves to New York City to live with her half-brother Danny while exploring career options and various relationships, including the one with Shrimp, who is surfing in New Zealand.
Member:eversoplucky
Title:Cupcake
Authors:Rachel Cohn
Info:Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers (2008), Edition: Reprint, Paperback, 336 pages
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Cupcake by Rachel Cohn

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» See also 9 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 7 (next | show all)
I must honestly say that Cyd Charisse/CC's hot-boy obsession began to wear pretty thin in this third volume of the trilogy. It wasn't a bad book, but the first half grew tedious as CC tried to manage living in NYC with her brother, while avoiding any semblance of responsibility and drooling over men constantly. Then the second half grew tedious after Shrimp (her true love) showed up unexpectedly on her doorstep, and they started covering old ground from their on-again/off-again love affair.
I liked that CC did manage to finally mature a little bit by the end of the book. I liked the way the CC/Shrimp love story concluded (no spoilers here), and I liked the wind-up chapter at the end.
If you read and liked "Gingerbread" and "Shrimp," then you'll probably want to read the final volume. But if you haven't read the first two, or if the first two didn't thrill you all that much - definitely skip "Cupcake." ( )
  fingerpost | Jun 28, 2022 |
Defiantly not a book on cooking! Let's join our heroine CC as she embarks on the road to adult hood. Fresh from high school CC decides to chase her dreams and move to Manhattan to live with her brother. Only problem is that it is harder to let go of her first love then she imagined. CC learns that life isn't what you dream it to be but what you make it to be. Along the way she discovers her true family in life and what it means to truly be yourself.

I will admit at first I wasn't very enthusiastic about reading this book. The first couple chapters were very hard to follow because the main character, CC was very adolescent in her views and vocabulary, almost like the writer was trying too hard to make her seem like a 18 year old. As the pages turn and you learned more of the characters it became clearer that the writing was not forced but intentional in order for you to see CC's growth as a person and how she was maturing in thought and personality; which made the book more rich and enjoyable.

I enjoyed the odd characters like Max and Mold; whom I would imagine to be actual people living in a town like New York. I couldn't help become attached to the characters and feel the love, happiness and sadness as life took it's hold on all of them. The book ended well and I got a good happy feeling out of my experiences with it. So I highly recommend this book to anyone who likes "journey of life" stories. ( )
  Appliquetion | Jun 2, 2011 |
Reviewed by Jocelyn Pearce for TeensReadToo.com

I had high expectations for this book, the third Rachel Cohn has written about Cyd Charisse (the first two are GINGERBREAD and SHRIMP). The previous adventures of Cyd Charisse were absolutely brilliant. This book didn't quite live up to those expectations, but perhaps they were unreasonably high. But this was still a fabulous book!

In CUPCAKE, Cyd Charisse (or CC, as she now prefers to be called) has graduated from high school and moved to Manhattan. She's staying with Danny, her half-brother, and she's thrilled to finally be independent. She's not going to think about Shrimp; the two of them agreed to a clean break after she turned down his offer of marriage and a life with Iris and Billy, his pothead parents, in New Zealand. That's what she wanted...right? She's going to fill up her time and her mind with other things...like handsome delivery guys and maybe even a fling with Luis. She's starting her new life, and Shrimp's starting his--separately.

Unfortunately, all of CC's big plans come screeching to a halt when she falls down the stairs, breaks her leg, and is immobile in Danny's fifth-floor walk-up apartment for weeks. All she can do is order food, watch movies, spy on the neighbors...and think. Thinking is exactly what she didn't want to have time to do, but now there's nothing better.

Even though she can't forget about Shrimp, there are a few distractions in New York City. CC's playing matchmaker, hanging out with Autumn, ditching culinary school, visiting her grouchy old neighbor, getting a job, and even bonding with lisBETH, her older half-sister.

No book with CC would be complete without Shrimp. I was worried he wouldn't show up at all, and CC might have been secretly hoping he would, too. And so he does. Just when Cyd Charisse is getting used to her life in New York, Shrimp shows up, and she's forced to make a really hard choice yet again: follow true love or follow her own dreams in the huge city she's calling home these days?

This is a fantastically well-written, funny, and touching novel, as is to be expected from Rachel Cohn. It's quite possible that my slight disappointment resulted only from the fact that I was missing some of my favorite characters throughout much of the book, like Helen and Shrimp. Still, though, Cyd Charisse's voice in this book is as honest, fresh, and brilliant as in the previous two, capturing my attention just as easily. CC is a fantastic character; probably one of my favorite book characters ever. CUPCAKE, along with GINGERBREAD and SHRIMP, is a must-read! ( )
  GeniusJen | Oct 10, 2009 |
Former "bad girl" Cyd Charisse moves to New York City to live with her half-brother Danny while exploring career options (barista and cupcake baker) and various relationships, including the one with Shrimp, who is surfing in New Zealand. (BCCLS) ( )
  mhg123 | Mar 27, 2009 |
The more I read Cohn, the more I like her. Her writing style is absolutely spot-on with the way teens speak and think and feel these days (at least it seems that way to me; I don't think I'm too far displaced from my teenage years to make this call). I read the first book about Cyd Charisse, aka CC, back when I first started working at the bookstore and I enjoyed it well enough. I didn't read the next book but when this one showed up on our shelves, I couldn't resist it. I don't feel like I missed out on a ton of important stuff by not reading the middle book, which is really good. This one tells the story of CC's move to Manhattan and her new life there and the inevitable interruption by her true love, Shrimp. CC is just a wonderful character; in some ways she's the really cool and individual teenage girl I wish I had been in high school. I think Cohn is an important author for teen girls because she deals with real life heavy issues but not in a preachy or scary way; sometimes she's a bit like the movie "Juno" on paper. I just really enjoy the way she phrases the inner workings of a teenage girl. ( )
  booksandbosox | Mar 8, 2009 |
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Former "bad girl" Cyd Charisse moves to New York City to live with her half-brother Danny while exploring career options and various relationships, including the one with Shrimp, who is surfing in New Zealand.

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