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Leslie Margolis

Author of Boys Are Dogs

19+ Works 1,514 Members 27 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Margolis Leslie

Series

Works by Leslie Margolis

Associated Works

21 Proms (2007) — Contributor — 324 copies, 10 reviews
Who Done It? (2013) — Contributor — 155 copies, 6 reviews
First Kiss (Then Tell): A Collection of True Lip-Locked Moments (2007) — Contributor — 92 copies, 3 reviews
Zapped [2014 TV movie] (2014) — Original novel — 2 copies

Tagged

4.2 (8) 2008 (7) ARC (6) boys (12) Brooklyn (5) bullies (9) bullying (10) chapter book (7) children's (7) dog training (10) dogs (28) family (6) fiction (43) friendship (34) girls (13) humor (8) J Fiction (6) Junior Fiction (6) MG (7) middle grade (6) middle school (33) moving (12) mystery (20) realistic (14) realistic fiction (24) relationships (8) school (16) to-read (21) YA (19) young adult (8)

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

28 reviews
Pixie is the exact opposite of her parents. They are, literally, party people, running the town's most successful party business, specifically for children. Pixie is perfectly content staying in the background, letting her mom be Crazy Chicken, Luella the Mermaid, and any other starring roles, and keeping up with her light, surface friendship with Lola and Sophie. In short, Pixie is invisible and she likes it that way.

But now things are different. Pixie’s mom is far away, dealing with show more family issues. Pixie and her dad are overwhelmed trying to run the party business on their own. Sophie, even though she’s a new girl, is taking on the most popular girl in school to run for president. And Pixie has to be Luella the mermaid in two weeks!

A lot can happen in two weeks. Friendships can change, and maybe, just maybe, people can too.

I was ready to hate this, since I suspected it would be one of those “breaking out of your shell” shy people stories, where the girl realizes she really likes to be in the spotlight after all. It didn’t turn out that way at all though, and I should have trusted Margolis! Sophie, Lola, and Pixie all learn to be better friends by being more honest with each other about their feelings. Pixie realizes that just because Sophie looks confident doesn’t mean she always is, and that she, Pixie, has more confidence than she knew. Maybe she won’t like being in the spotlight, but she’s willing to try it and see. A lot of Pixie’s growing maturity comes from her learning to set aside some of her habitual anxiety about being embarrassed, worrying about looking silly, and being stuck in a box by what other people might think - even if she doesn’t like the other people. Margolis writes excellent stories of middle school girls growing into themselves and this is a great stand-alone story that will encourage them to try new things, create true friendships, and open out into thinking more about the world outside themselves than their own concerns.

Verdict: Hand this one to fans of Lauren Myracle, Wendy Maas, and Leslie Margolis’ own readers. Recommended.

ISBN: 9780374303884; Published October 3, 2017 by Farrar, Straus, Giroux; ARC provided by publisher at ALA 2017
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Very cute! First book in a series. 6th grader Annabelle moves to a new house when her mother decides they will move in with her boyfriend. Moving from an all girls small private school to a public school with boys proves to be a challenge. Annabelle decides to try some of the same training methods that she is using on her new puppy to deal with the boys!
I found Katie and Melody's interest in boys a tad too sophisticated for 12-year-olds. Other than that this switch-up story will appeal to tween girls who believe the grass is greener on the other side and wish for a life other than their own.
Reviewed by Jocelyn Pearce for TeensReadToo.com

Cameron and Allie are sisters. They used to look like it, too. Since Cameron turned fifteen, though, things have changed. Cameron and Allie inherited big noses from their father, but other than that, they both have the good looks of their mother, formerly a rather famous model. When Cameron turned fifteen, her life changed completely. For the better, she says.

How? She got a nose job. She turned from homely to gorgeous, moved to a new school, and show more now she's so much more popular and happy than before! Plastic surgery, Cameron feels, is a brilliant idea. It can fix everything, right?

Now she is turning fifteen, and Allie's mother feels that she needs the same birthday present Cameron got: a nose job. It made Cameron a much happier person, and who wouldn't want that for their other daughter? Problem is, nobody asked Allie. Allie is already confident and happy, the way Cameron keeps saying plastic surgery made her. There's one thing she's not that Cameron is, though: gorgeous. But really, does Allie need to be gorgeous? Or is that just what her family has led her to believe?

Leslie Margolis's novel FIX is, aside from being an interesting story about a family, particularly two sisters, a great look at a rather controversial issue: plastic surgery, particularly for teenagers. It shows all sides of the issue, from the perspective of two teenage girls (who, admittedly, could be slightly more realistic characters at times). It is a riveting story, and Allie's and Cameron's very different motivations for making the decisions that they do are quite believable. FIX is certainly worth reading, particularly for anyone who is considering plastic surgery for cosmetic reasons.
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Statistics

Works
19
Also by
4
Members
1,514
Popularity
#16,986
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
27
ISBNs
93
Languages
5

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