Pretty Little Dirty
by Amanda Boyden
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Lisa sees the life of her gorgeous best friend Celeste as just about perfect: she has a gigantic house, two older sisters to coach her through the hazards of high school, and loving, lively parents. As Lisa's own home has long been a place devoid of joyful noise--her mother has shut herself off in her bedroom for years--Lisa joins the Diamond household, slipping into their routine of sit-down suppers and soaking in the delicious normalcy of Diamond family life. But what begins as the story show more of two young women living a charmed adolescence, one of mastering dance moves and the protocols of male-female interaction, soon swirls into an intoxicating novel of art, music, and self-destructive impulses as Lisa and Celeste dare each other ever onward. show lessTags
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citygirl The violent side of suburban teenaged girls.
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Do you know where your daughter is? Do you know what your daughter is doing? Who her friends are?
Pretty Little Dirty is a shockingly profound portrayal of the sometimes agonizing transition childhood friendships make into adulthood. What starts as the story of two adolescent girls born for success and living a charmed life soon spirals into an intoxicating novel of art, music, and self-destructive impulses.
Lisa and Celeste become” BFF” while taking an entrance exam for a prestigious prep school. Both their families are well off and while Lisa’s upbringing is less than perfect , she is effectively welcomed into Celeste’s loving and vibrant family where she spends most of her youth. The first part of the book is funny and show more reminiscent of my own awkward experiences as a young girl. But as the girls age into teenagers they happily dabble in things that slide them into drugs + alcohol, violent punk rock raves and sex with anyone.
The friendship Lisa and Celeste share is in many ways what young women desire, something steadfast, unconditional, protective, and loyal to the end. But Boyden also shows the envy, competition, fear, and possessiveness that will sometimes darken even the best of friendships. Pretty Little Dirty is ultimately about a loving friendship and its turning points. Where did things change? Who led and who followed? It touches on issues that all too many parents, including me, wish didn’t exist, or would simply go away. It is a raw and uncut interpretation of the problems facing female youth. Boyden addresses everything from educational stress and family dysfunction to the constant pressure to “hook-up”. The language used in this book is raw and could be shocking to some and if this isn't enough Boyden includes short inter-chapters written in second person within the story. At first I couldn’t figure them out. I wondered who this narrator is. But then it hit me, these inter-chapters are not Lisa’s or Celeste’s voices, they are voices of different girls whose lives are mirroring the later lives of Lisa and Celeste. These sections are effective but shocking to read, the language and imagery is so rough and real that it makes you wonder how anyone could let themselves get to that point in their lives. show less
Pretty Little Dirty is a shockingly profound portrayal of the sometimes agonizing transition childhood friendships make into adulthood. What starts as the story of two adolescent girls born for success and living a charmed life soon spirals into an intoxicating novel of art, music, and self-destructive impulses.
Lisa and Celeste become” BFF” while taking an entrance exam for a prestigious prep school. Both their families are well off and while Lisa’s upbringing is less than perfect , she is effectively welcomed into Celeste’s loving and vibrant family where she spends most of her youth. The first part of the book is funny and show more reminiscent of my own awkward experiences as a young girl. But as the girls age into teenagers they happily dabble in things that slide them into drugs + alcohol, violent punk rock raves and sex with anyone.
The friendship Lisa and Celeste share is in many ways what young women desire, something steadfast, unconditional, protective, and loyal to the end. But Boyden also shows the envy, competition, fear, and possessiveness that will sometimes darken even the best of friendships. Pretty Little Dirty is ultimately about a loving friendship and its turning points. Where did things change? Who led and who followed? It touches on issues that all too many parents, including me, wish didn’t exist, or would simply go away. It is a raw and uncut interpretation of the problems facing female youth. Boyden addresses everything from educational stress and family dysfunction to the constant pressure to “hook-up”. The language used in this book is raw and could be shocking to some and if this isn't enough Boyden includes short inter-chapters written in second person within the story. At first I couldn’t figure them out. I wondered who this narrator is. But then it hit me, these inter-chapters are not Lisa’s or Celeste’s voices, they are voices of different girls whose lives are mirroring the later lives of Lisa and Celeste. These sections are effective but shocking to read, the language and imagery is so rough and real that it makes you wonder how anyone could let themselves get to that point in their lives. show less
Gritty coming of age novel. Shows how easily it is for teenage girls to go off the rails when they have that special best friend/partner in crime. I've definitely lived through part of this, although thankfully not all of it!
I loved Lisa and Celeste's interest in food throughout the novel, and found my mouth watering at the elaborate dinner parties they used to throw at the Diamond's house every night. I wondered about the food inclusion quite a lot, why it was there, what exactly it all meant - until I came to the part where they were living off microwaved food and the odd bit of toast. And despite all the other stuff that happened in the novel, that's the scene that made me the saddest of all. I guess it struck a chord with me.
I love show more coming of age novels, and this is definitely more hard hitting than most. It doesn't hold back. Definitely worth a read. show less
I loved Lisa and Celeste's interest in food throughout the novel, and found my mouth watering at the elaborate dinner parties they used to throw at the Diamond's house every night. I wondered about the food inclusion quite a lot, why it was there, what exactly it all meant - until I came to the part where they were living off microwaved food and the odd bit of toast. And despite all the other stuff that happened in the novel, that's the scene that made me the saddest of all. I guess it struck a chord with me.
I love show more coming of age novels, and this is definitely more hard hitting than most. It doesn't hold back. Definitely worth a read. show less
Pretty Little Dirty is an extremely tragic story about two disillusioned girls.
Lisa spends most of her time with her best friend Celeste and her family. Things at home haven’t been good for years, and she envies the wonderful life Celeste has. One summer when Lisa and Celeste are bored, they make friends with two older men and spiral down a path of self-destructive. Boyden starts this book off with a relatively normal plot. It’s just two teenage girls making bad decisions. It quickly turns into a shit storm of bad decisions. It just made me sad. I definitely think there was a lesson involved, but Boyden went about telling it in the most depressing way she could. Bot characters were likable in the beginning, but by the end I despised show more them for being so utterly stupid. Boyden’s a great writer though. She has a gritty, matter-of-fact style that lends itself to this story. She also does a great job incorporating popular bands associate with the time in which the book is set. I might have a slight bias there because I used to love punk rock, and those are the kinds of shows the girls go to. The ending will break you, and is partly what made me hate the book for a while.
I think it has an audience, that audience just isn’t me. I prefer just a little light-heartedness with my grit. show less
Lisa spends most of her time with her best friend Celeste and her family. Things at home haven’t been good for years, and she envies the wonderful life Celeste has. One summer when Lisa and Celeste are bored, they make friends with two older men and spiral down a path of self-destructive. Boyden starts this book off with a relatively normal plot. It’s just two teenage girls making bad decisions. It quickly turns into a shit storm of bad decisions. It just made me sad. I definitely think there was a lesson involved, but Boyden went about telling it in the most depressing way she could. Bot characters were likable in the beginning, but by the end I despised show more them for being so utterly stupid. Boyden’s a great writer though. She has a gritty, matter-of-fact style that lends itself to this story. She also does a great job incorporating popular bands associate with the time in which the book is set. I might have a slight bias there because I used to love punk rock, and those are the kinds of shows the girls go to. The ending will break you, and is partly what made me hate the book for a while.
I think it has an audience, that audience just isn’t me. I prefer just a little light-heartedness with my grit. show less
Wow. This book really shocked me. It doesn't take much to shock me, but this did it. Two best friends growing up together. They meet in sixth grade, while taking a placement exam to get into a prestigious prep school. Their friendship begins immediately.
The first paragraph:
I met Celeste in one of those lucky years of childhood you get before anybody significant dies-before Grandma goes, before your dad's secretary doesn't beat breast cancer, before the pharmacist gets into the car wreck. Celeste fit those years perfectly: me with my illusions of everyone living on into some hazy infinity of old age, Celeste with her surreal beauty, her otherworldly trust, her yellow eyes more gold than green, her skin, her lips, her-god!-her grace. You show more wouldn't believe how beautiful a sixth-grader could be until you saw her.
They are together every summer, and celebrate special moments together; their first kisses, first dates, first experiences with alcohol and drugs, then later their first sexual encounters. I envied their closeness....and knew that they would be there for each other no matter what. I think the best thing about this book is the end.....It blindsided me....never saw it coming.
This is a gritty, raw and surprising coming-of-age story that I will never forget. show less
The first paragraph:
I met Celeste in one of those lucky years of childhood you get before anybody significant dies-before Grandma goes, before your dad's secretary doesn't beat breast cancer, before the pharmacist gets into the car wreck. Celeste fit those years perfectly: me with my illusions of everyone living on into some hazy infinity of old age, Celeste with her surreal beauty, her otherworldly trust, her yellow eyes more gold than green, her skin, her lips, her-god!-her grace. You show more wouldn't believe how beautiful a sixth-grader could be until you saw her.
They are together every summer, and celebrate special moments together; their first kisses, first dates, first experiences with alcohol and drugs, then later their first sexual encounters. I envied their closeness....and knew that they would be there for each other no matter what. I think the best thing about this book is the end.....It blindsided me....never saw it coming.
This is a gritty, raw and surprising coming-of-age story that I will never forget. show less
There are a lot of things that I could say about Pretty Little Dirty, and even more about the author, Amanda Boyden through what I’ve read. The book itself is quite…colorful with it’s use of ‘vivid verbs’ and extreme detail. As far as Boyden goes, I’d say that she’s spent quite a large portion of her life around teenagers, lots and lots of teenagers, and not the little private school kind either.
The way I got my hands on this novel was through a friend, who told me excitedly how fun this is to read. It’s a fact that all people have read some trashy books from sometime in their life, and that they are always an easy read since you never quite know what’s going to happen next. Or, you do know where it’s going and you show more can’t wait to get there. This is one of those books, and despite how ‘easy’ this book was going to be to read, I didn’t expect the sheer volume of smut to be quite so high. I got to about page 23 before anything too risqué happened and was anticipating what was to come. It started innocently enough when two best friends are describing ‘how far they’ve gone’ and whatnot. However, a little later on it goes on to a lot more detail…and well it just seemed to snowball from there. I for one of a limit for how much I can read like this, so I can’t say that I like it, at all. At first it was okay because it was kind of funny, but it really just overwhelmed me after about 150 pages of it.
Boyden is a very gifted writer, don’t get me wrong. She actually used a lot of words that I didn’t know, like “amenably” or “triptychs”, but they were just surrounded by other, less impressive words.
The book itself is okay, it’s just overflowing with dirty references, and I’m kind of more than looking forward to returning the book. I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone I held in high regard. show less
The way I got my hands on this novel was through a friend, who told me excitedly how fun this is to read. It’s a fact that all people have read some trashy books from sometime in their life, and that they are always an easy read since you never quite know what’s going to happen next. Or, you do know where it’s going and you show more can’t wait to get there. This is one of those books, and despite how ‘easy’ this book was going to be to read, I didn’t expect the sheer volume of smut to be quite so high. I got to about page 23 before anything too risqué happened and was anticipating what was to come. It started innocently enough when two best friends are describing ‘how far they’ve gone’ and whatnot. However, a little later on it goes on to a lot more detail…and well it just seemed to snowball from there. I for one of a limit for how much I can read like this, so I can’t say that I like it, at all. At first it was okay because it was kind of funny, but it really just overwhelmed me after about 150 pages of it.
Boyden is a very gifted writer, don’t get me wrong. She actually used a lot of words that I didn’t know, like “amenably” or “triptychs”, but they were just surrounded by other, less impressive words.
The book itself is okay, it’s just overflowing with dirty references, and I’m kind of more than looking forward to returning the book. I wouldn’t recommend this to anyone I held in high regard. show less
This is my favorite book so far this year, hands down. This book was amazing. It was thorough. It was engaging. It was believable. It was written perfectly and I loved the way the book came alive right there in front of you and you were able to slip into their world and live along side them. Everything they did and went through, everything that happened seemed so natural. The ending surprised me too! I just knew I was going to hate the ending and then the book was going to be ruined for me. So often when I read fiction, especially fiction dealing with this type of plot, I end up being very disappointed, feeling like the ending was a cop out. So I appreciate the fact that she went full speed ahead and didn't cop out. She made sure the show more story was completed in a believable manner. HIGHLY recommended. show less
Very nice ending. Blunt. Dirty. Nasty. Interesting. Leaves a good after taste.
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- Original publication date
- 2006-03
- Epigraph
- O latest born and loveliest far
Of all Olympus' faded hierarchy!
Fairer than Phoebe's sapphire-regioned star
Or Vesper, amorous glow-worm og the sky;
Fairer than these, though temple though hast none,
Nor a... (show all)ltar heaped with flowers;
Nor virgin choir to make delicious moan
Upon the midnight hours;
No voice, no lute, no pipe, no incense sweet,
From chain-swung censer teeming;
No shrine, no grove, no oracle, no heat
Of pale-mouthed prophet dreaming.
John Keats - Dedication
- For all the stong women of my family,
and with great love and thanks to Joseph and my father.
You kept the faith when I did not. - First words
- I met Celeste in one of those lucky years of childhood you get before anybody significant dies - before Grandma goes, before your dad's secretary doesn't beat breast cancer, before the pharmacist gets into the car wreck.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)I will tell my daughter of her namesake soon, when we go back to Kansas City again.
And when we visit, Mr. Diamond will sing. - Publisher's editor
- Jackson, Jennifer
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