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Large Mammals, Stick Insects and Other…
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Large Mammals, Stick Insects and Other Social Misfits (edition 2012)

by Felicity McCall

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A hilarious and honest depiction of life as a 15-year-old, when virtual friends sometimes seem more important than real ones   Meet Aim#65533;e Logan: social networking addict, compulsive list-maker, metabolically challenged cat-lover, and aspiring world leader. When Aim#65533;e is twinned with Caoimhe Cassidy in a Derry-Dublin school exchange scheme, she and the rest of her class begin the frenzied countdown to their counterparts' visit. Whilst Aim#65533;e and her best friends, intense mother figure Beks and dizzy, loved-up socialite Bree, are excited to meet Caoimhe Cassidy, the real anticipation is around Caoimhe's gorgeous older brother, Darren. Told with social realism, insight, and humor, this book introduces a sparkling cast of characters and gives the reader a the best of teenage diary fiction with a distinctly Irish flavor.… (more)
Member:AbigailAdams26
Title:Large Mammals, Stick Insects and Other Social Misfits
Authors:Felicity McCall
Info:Dublin: Little Island Books, (2012), Paperback, 232 pages.
Collections:Read, Read but unowned, a-a-NYPL
Rating:***
Tags:children's fiction, disability, Irish children, Little Island, young adult

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Large Mammals, Stick Insects and Other Social Misfits by Felicity McCall

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Fifteen-year-old Aimée McCourt Logan, a Derry girl who attends 'inclusive' Castle Grove College, must find a way to balance the demands of friends old and new when she is 'twinned' with Caoimhe, a pupil at Knockgorey School in Foxrock, south Dublin. As she gets to know Caoimhe through their online interaction, and through phone-calls, Aimée also finds herself developing a crush on her new friend's older brother, Darren. Meanwhile, at home in Derry, her best friends Beks and Bree both seem to be drifting away, as they become involved with boys of their own. Is Aimée abandoning her 'real' friends for her virtual ones, or are the Derry trio growing apart? Things come to a head when Caoimhe and Darren visit for the Hallowe'en weekend, and Beks and Bree both find themselves involved in their boyfriends' troubles...

Although not the sort of fare I normally read - the Young Adult fiction I enjoy tends to be more fantastic or dystopian, rather than revolving around adolescent romance and angst - I did find Large Mammals, Stick Insects & Other Social Misfits an engaging book. I picked it up largely because it was published by Little Island, a small Dublin-based children's publisher owned and run by Irish children's author Siobhán Parkinson - I like to support independent publishers, as I find their catalogues more carefully and thoughtfully curated - and because it was set in Derry. Other than Joan Lingard's series of novels about Kevin and Sadie, which occur during the Troubles, and Sheena Wilkinson's excellent Taking Flight and Grounded (also Little Island publications!), set in contemporary Belfast, I've not run across too many Young Adult books set in Northern Ireland. However that may be, I found Felicity McCall's text lighthearted and engaging. I appreciated that Caoimhe's disability was included in such a matter-of-fact way - Aimée isn't even aware that her new friend suffers from debilitating arthritis, and must often use a wheelchair, until shortly before her visit - and that it isn't the focus of the book. It's something the characters must address, but it isn't Caoimhe's defining quality or 'issue,' and it doesn't detract from the humor of the tale. I wouldn't say I was particularly moved, or deeply involved with the characters emotionally, but this was an entertaining read, one I would recommend to readers looking for young adult fare that addresses virtual vs. 'real'-life friends, or that is set in Derry. ( )
  AbigailAdams26 | Jun 30, 2015 |
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A hilarious and honest depiction of life as a 15-year-old, when virtual friends sometimes seem more important than real ones   Meet Aim#65533;e Logan: social networking addict, compulsive list-maker, metabolically challenged cat-lover, and aspiring world leader. When Aim#65533;e is twinned with Caoimhe Cassidy in a Derry-Dublin school exchange scheme, she and the rest of her class begin the frenzied countdown to their counterparts' visit. Whilst Aim#65533;e and her best friends, intense mother figure Beks and dizzy, loved-up socialite Bree, are excited to meet Caoimhe Cassidy, the real anticipation is around Caoimhe's gorgeous older brother, Darren. Told with social realism, insight, and humor, this book introduces a sparkling cast of characters and gives the reader a the best of teenage diary fiction with a distinctly Irish flavor.

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A hilarious and honest depiction of life as a 15-year-old, when virtual friends sometimes seem more important than real ones. Meet Aimee Logan: social networking addict, compulsive list-maker, metabolically challenged cat-lover, and aspiring world leader. When Aimee is twinned with Caoimhe Cassidy in a Derry-Dublin school exchange scheme, she and the rest of her class begin the frenzied countdown to their counterparts visit. Whilst Aimee and her best friends, intense mother figure Beks and dizzy, loved-up socialite Bree, are excited to meet Caoimhe Cassidy, the real anticipation is around Caoimhe s gorgeous older brother, Darren. Told with social realism, insight, and humor, this book introduces a sparkling cast of characters and gives the reader a the best of teenage diary fiction with a distinctly Irish flavor."
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