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Little Black Lies
Little Black Lies
Author: Tish Cohen
Sara Black is tiptoeing across a fraying tightrope. — As the new eleventh grader at Anton High -- the most elite public school in the country -- she sticks out like an old VW bus in a parking lot full of shiny BMWs. But being the new kid also brings a certain advantageous anonymity. — In Anton High's world of privilege, intelligence, and wealth, S...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781606840337
ISBN-10: 1606840339
Publication Date: 10/13/2009
Pages: 288
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 3.2/5 Stars.
 6

3.2 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: EgmontUSA
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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skywriter319 avatar reviewed Little Black Lies on + 784 more book reviews
LITTLE BLACK LIES is a high school drama-filled novel, similar to Gossip Girl except without the same high level of sexual escapades, and set in the most unusual of locations: a nerdy public school. Don't let the academia fool you, though: the girls are still as bitchy, the drama still as intense.

The characters in LITTLE BLACK LIES, while not immediately endearing, still grow on you after about halfway through the book. We can feel for Sara as she navigates life without her mother, in a new school full of classmates who would do nearly anything to beat their friends. The stresses of her new life make Sara's lies and actions justifiable, though not necessarily admirable. I particularly admired Cohen's treatment of OCD in this novel, as a disorder that breaks hearts, strains relationships, and pushes teens to lie for the sake of preserving their social status.

I mentioned earlier that I thought it was a watered-down version of Gossip Girl. There are definitely still bitchy girls who manipulate, blackmail, and hurt one another. While the antics of the Anton High âinâ crowd of are amateurs compared to other mean girls in media, they're still believable enough, and you will still feel for Carling, the head mean girl with the bad family life, despite her manipulations. Cohen generally succeeds at balancing readers' hatred of and caring for these characters.

LITTLE BLACK LIES will appeal to a wide range of teenagers who can identify with Sara's difficulty in balancing her family life and school life. It's a good story, and even if it took a while to get to its feet, my nervousness for what will happen to Sara in her huge, tentative house of lies kept me reading into the night.


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