Thirteen (The Winnie Years, #4) by Lauren Myracle


Thirteen (The Winnie Years, #4)
Title : Thirteen (The Winnie Years, #4)
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0525478965
ISBN-10 : 9780525478966
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 244
Publication : First published February 1, 2008
Awards : Children's Choice Book Award Fifth Grade to Sixth Grade Book of the Year (2009)

Winnie Perry is a teenager at last! And it s a really big deal. A ginormous deal, which, wouldn t you know it, brings ginormous problems along with it. Winnie s bff #1 is growing up too slowly, while her bff #2 is growing up too fast, leaving Winnie stuck in the middle. Winnie s boyfriend, Lars, is fabulous except when he s not. And as for Winnie s family, well, BIG changes are in the air. Bestselling author Lauren Myracle concludes her enormously popular trilogy about a winning young heroine whose humor, daring, and compassion for others is infectious and unforgettable.


"


Thirteen (The Winnie Years, #4) Reviews


  • Carol

    Oh boy! I finished the Cringe Book!
    Guess what I'm reading now?
    *drumroll please*
    The next book in the series. THANKS, MADDIE.
    The Adventures Of Winnie will continue. Oh, joy. This is the last book in the series though, so that's good.

    I sadly can't find all the updates I made throughout the book. If I end up finding them, I will compile them here. Yay.

    Here's what happened at the end of the book!
    1. Winnie broke up with Lars because he wasn't treating her right. Oh no.
    2. Winnie and her sister, Sandra, decided to skip school because they're too embarrassed to show their faces on Valentine's Day without a boyfriend. Their mother finds out and they are grounded. They also have dishwasher duty (the horror) for the rest of their lives.
    3. Winnie got back together with Lars and they're happy now. Yay.
    4. Winnie has a new baby sister! She is happy because now she can be a great older sister.
    5. That's where we leave off. To be continued in THIRTEEN PLUS ONE! Oh wow I simply cannot wait.

    Overall, the writing wasn't bad or anything, I just didn't like the narrator. Or the plot. I award 2 stars because the writer isn't *bad*, I just didn't like the story.

    UPDATE! I found the updates feed. Here it is in all its glory.

    If you're not in my English class, this book is on the shelf in the classroom and I'm reading it because of how cringey it is.
    Here's what has happened so far.

    1. It's Winnie's 13th birthday! Her 2 friends and her celebrate by going to the mall to get MAKEOVERS!!!1!
    2. Winnie worries whether her boyfriend is ever going to kiss her.
    3. They kiss.
    Stay tuned for more adventures with Winnie.

    March 22, 2017
    Back by popular demand, (haha just kidding it's because I have no life), it's Adventures With Winnie!! (part 1)
    Here's what has happened so far.
    1. Winnie's little brother does not want to cut his hair because they are his friends. He ends up cutting his hair. He now carries his hair around in a bag.
    2. Winnie wants to cut her hair for Locks Of Love. She ends up not doing it, because she doesn't want to look weird.

    March 22, 2017
    Here we go. Part 2. Oh boy.
    3. Did I mention that Winnie has 2 friends? Not like 2 best friends, but only 2 people that she interacts with ever. Also her ex-friend Amanda. Doesn't that sound like a threatening name? No. No it does not.
    4. Winnies boyfriend Lars is in high school. THE HORROR. Now winnie will not be able to flirt with him constantly. What a shame.

    Stay tuned for more adventures with Winnie!!!

    March 24, 2017
    Welcome back to The Adventures Of Winnie Perry. Here's what's going on.

    1. OMG! Winnie's mother is pregnant! This is a Very Big Deal because now Winnie will have 3 siblings. Oh joy.
    2. Winnie's 2 friends, Dinah and Cinnamon are having problems. Cinnamon has called Dinah fat! Dinah is very sad because this is a mean thing to say. Dinah confides in Winnie, saying that Cinnamon is very mean.
    Stay tuned for part 2

    March 24, 2017
    Part 2. Gee, I wish you could write longer on these things.
    3. Dinah has called Cinnamon to tell her how rude she is being to Dinah. Meanwhile, Winnie has come to a decision. She will dress as Ugly Girl for Halloween to commemorate all the ugly people out there in the world. How kind.
    4. Cinnamon and Dinah yell at Winnie because she looks ugly. They drag her into the bathroom to go change into presentable clothes.

    March 24, 2017
    I'm almost finished! Wow, I'll miss having Winnie in my life. But never fear, there's another book in the series! I'll probably read it. It's just so fascinating. Here's what's happened. (part 1)
    1. Winnie goes to a bat mitzvah! It was a pretty cool bat mitzvah. They played games and had fun.
    2. Winnie is worried because her boyfriend keeps ditching her. She doesn't want to be known as the person who got dumped.

    March 24, 2017
    3. Oh no! Cinnamon's boyfriend Bryce broke up with her! The horror! Now Cinnamon is forever alone. Poor Cinnamon.

    4. Winnie decides to talk to Amanda (her ex-friend) and she sees how much she changed! She dyed her hair black and wears black lipstick and is pretty goth looking. (unlike some people we know who think that goth is wearing a black shirt coughJasminecough)

    That's about it.

  • Chloe Resendez

    I've got so say, this book was amazing!!!! That title says a lot a about the story. Lauren Myracle made this story give me a lot of emotions. Sometimes I would feel so happy for Winnie, and then other times I would feel kind of sad. I would recommend this book to young adult women who like to read books with a lot of drama in them. I think the strength in this book was the drama in it and the the emotion the author wanted you to feel. I would totally read the next book !!!!

  • Roxanne Hsu Feldman

    My rating hovers around 3 and 4 ... closer to 4 but not quite there... anyway, no wonder my 4th and 5th grade girls are eating this series up. Myracle has a real understanding of what a girl might worry about and how she might go about dealing with the problems, sometimes with success but more likely is left with even more questions and uncertainty. I admire this about the book - nothing really has a firm answer. However, my "issues" with the book comes when Myracle resolves some of the most complex issues with simplistic solutions: Lars coming around to Winnie just because Winnie confronts him once? Joseph, the boy with Leukemia, is conveniently responding to the treatment toward the end of this year when Winnie is at her lowest? Not that I wish for the boy to die or suffer more, and not that Lars wouldn't have come around... but these simplistic turns of events make the book not rise above the whole host of pre-teen chic lit. Too bad. And the editorial mistake of not catching that in the November/Bat Mitzvah chapter there are a bunch of switches of the name of the Bat Mitzvah girl: It's Becca, but at several places, Louise was identified as the one when sent out invitations and such. A tsk-tsk moment that made me decide to make a wiki on Editorial Mishaps.

  • Saira

    Why does Winnie only interact with Dinah and Cinnamon? Likeeee she doesn't even talk to anyone else.
    And Winnie dresses as Ugly Girl for Halloween to commemorate all the ugly people out there in the world. How kind.
    It's so cringe that it's funny 'te hee' 😃🥲

  • Heather

    Title(s): Eleven, Twelve and Thirteen
    Rating: A+

    Review: I decided to review all of these books together because, well, I read them all together. I read the first one on a whim, a decision to develop myself "professionally" (because I dream that, when I'm finished with my MLS program, that I'll be a kick-butt YA and children's services librarian in a public library who will help reluctant readers find the book that will help them turn the corner and develop a lifelong love of reading). I read plenty of YA and had recently started to dip my toes into MG (at the urging of my nephew), but needed a broader scope. I didn't intend to like these books because I'm not in their target audience.

    But you know the crazy thing?

    Even though I was reading them with, "I wonder what fifth- or sixth-grade girl I can recommend these to," in my mind, I loved them. Not for someone else, but for myself. They were really funny. I laughed out loud. And the lessons learned were poignant and spot-on for what girls that age struggle with (some of which are things that girls of all ages--even those of us who are well beyond the middle grades--struggle with). The voice of Winnie is so honest; she tries to be good, but she isn't always successful. She's just real.

    And that tends to be the way that Myracle writes all of her characters in all of her books. She's just really good at creating interesting characters. You might not absolutely love every single character in all of her books (I didn't love all the characters in this series), but you can always find someone you connect with. And that's what reading is all about--watching somebody else make life's mistakes in one way or another and learning from them.

    I have recommended this book to a very nice young sixth grader who I interact with in a volunteering role that I have and, after I explained the conflict of the first book, she was hooked. She can't wait for me to check with her mom to make sure it's okay for her to read these. And that's what's so great about Myracle: she writes books that you want to read.

    So, in summary, Myracle's positive qualities are:
    1. She writes characters that you can connect with.
    2. She writes books that you want to read.
    3. She's funny (which I might not have explicitly said, but is still true).

    Let me leave you with this snippet from a scene where Winnie (age 13) has gone to ask her older sister, Sandra (17), and her sister's boyfriend, Bo (also 17), for advice on kissing (page 55):

    "I was hoping we could discuss kissing," [I said:].
    "Oh, good God," Sandra said. "Winnie."
    I blushed, but the thing about Sandra and Bo (unless Sandra was in one of her moods) was that I could blush around them and still keep going.
    "I just don't understand what you do with your tongues," I said.
    "How many tongues do you have?" Bo asked.
    "Ha ha," I said. "One that belongs to me, one that belongs to someone else."
    And, since we're on the topic of funny (and a little bit sweet) things that happen in the book, let me share this, which isn't truly a spoiler (page 63):
    Lars looked at me. His face was right there, inches from mine, and I knew this was it: the moment of the first kiss.
    He leaned in. I giggled and drew back. My breathing grew shallow, and my heart drummed against my ribs, more out of nervousness than anticipation. Extreme, horrible, freak-out nervousness, the kind I occasionally experienced before having to give an oral presentation or introduce myself to a crowd of strangers.
    Lars tried again. I turned my head from his. I didn't mean to--I so didn't mean to--but it was too much, being in the actual moment and thinking, Oh, god, lips. His. Mine. Touching!
    An anxious laugh made a very strange sound coming out of me. I could feel my smile go rubbery.
    He learned in. I pulled back. He leaned in further. I did a bob and a duck maneuver. It was bad. Bad, bad, bad. And the worst part of it all was the doubt creeping into his eyes. He thought I didn't want him to kiss me, but I did!
    "Winnie?" he said.
    "Yes?" I squeaked. My cheeks burned.
    You'll have to read the books to see how "the kiss" turns out.

    So, to make this long post a little bit longer, I only intended to read the first book, but whizzed right through it and promptly went back out and picked up the next two and buzzed right through them. I was actually quite disappointed to find out this was only a trilogy. I want more Winnie Perry.

    Recommendation: I recommend that you read absolutely everything by Lauren Myracle. Young Adult, Middle Grade, doesn't matter, just read it. (And add E. Lockhart while you're at it for good measure.)

  • Laura

    Hmm… this book really confuses me. I adored some parts, but it was the parts that were not written that made it eh.

    Winnie Perry is finally a teenager! She just turned 13, and she feels pretty good about herself. She has too best friends, Cinnamon and Dinah. Cinnamon is growing up too fast, and Cinnamon seems to stay behind. And then there’s Lars, Winnie’s boyfriend. Everything seems fine on the outside, but Winnie secretly isn’t “okay” like her parents say.

    School isn’t mentioned once in this book, even though Winnie is in eighth grade and therefore should have growing amounts of work. Also, Lars’ schoolwork isn’t mentioned, and he is in ninth grade. Winnie did not talk about teachers, which seemed unusual. My friends and I talk about teachers and classes all the time, even if it is just who is in the different classes. I also thought that time passed very strangly. I was unaware of the transition between months, weeks, and days. Suddenly, a month had gone by with little mention to the reader. Thirteen reads more like an on-and-off diary than a first-person novel to me.

    I enjoyed the romance with Lars, because unlike most middle grade realistic fiction/chick lit, the romance is in no way over the top. I remember seventh and eighth grade well- people “go out” for a few weeks, and then break up. It wasn’t too intense, either. I really related to Winnie, as opposed to other 13-year-olds that are boy obsessive. I would really enjoy reading Eleven and Twelve.

    Overall, I would liked to have seen Thirteen on my seventh grade bookshelf. I read so many books that year, and Thirteen reminds me of so many books I enjoyed this year. I bet that my school library even has the first two… let me check. Surprisingly, we don’t have either of the first two books.

    My impression of the book could be contained in one word, “sweet.” I sort of knew how it would end from the beginning. Winnie is such a subdued character for a change. Lately I’ve been reading about really spunky characters, and I enjoy a protagonist more similar to me.

    Comes out February 28th, 2008. Previous books in the series are Eleven and Twelve.

  • Sheila

    While I thought
    Eleven and
    Twelve were quite appropriate for their titled ages, I was not as enamored with this book in the beginning.

    Near the beginning of the book, the 7th and 8th graders in the story go to an unchaperoned party and drink beer and wine coolers, and kiss boys in the hot tub. Really? Is this the type of behavior for 13 year old children that we need to be encouraging and promoting in a YA book? Especially since a recent study has shown that schoolchildren who date earliest do worst at school and are more likely to smoke, drink and take drugs?


    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/artic...

    There were other parts of the book that I appreciated for their age appropriateness. There were issues of life and death. Issues of children with cancer, which introduced the idea of charity and giving and "Locks of Love".

    Of course there were also the issues of friendships, and cattiness. Cliques and crowds. The popular kids and the less popular ones.

    In the end, I am satisfied with the main character Winnie. I think she is growing up nicely, and she is a girl I would not mind my daughter being friends with.

  • Betsy

    It’s always weird to drop right smack dab into the middle of a series. You never know whether you’re missing out on some subtle details from the previous books, or even whether or not the book in your hand would be better if you knew its characters already. It’s more of a problem with series books, I suppose. Realistic fiction doesn’t contain crazy names and weird interior logics. Tween books starring girl characters supposedly are all the same too. The idea is that if you’ve read the
    Anastasia Krupnik books by Lois Lowry then you’ve read the Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
    Alice series then you’ve read the Lauren Myracle books, and so on and so on. Which, let’s face it, isn’t true at all. Tween girl heroines each have their own set of quirks and characteristics and Lauren Myracle is no exception. Now I’ve heard a couple people who are fans of Myracle pooh-poohing her latest book Thirteen. They say it isn’t as strong as the other books or the plot wraps up too neatly. Stuff along those lines. Well I myself haven’t read any other books by Ms. Myracle except for thistitle and what I read I really liked. I’m sure that every series like this one has its supporters, but when it comes to an incredible voice and a likable heroine, color me a new Myracle fan. I can’t wait to start recommending this book left and right to my patrons.

    She survived the age of eleven. She breezed (sorta) through the age of twelve. Now Winnie Perry is a great big beautiful thirteen and boy is she feeling it. She has a boyfriend (sorta sorta) by the name of Lars who seems okay and all but is much better at kissing than communicating. She has her two best friends Cinnamon and Dinah by her side, helping her through her roles. And then there are her siblings, moody for their own reasons, and a mom who has a couple secrets of her own. The trek into teenagerhood is fraught with many perils, but through it all Winnie comes this much closer to knowing who she is and what she can accomplish.

    Ms. Myracle is one of the few authors I know of to acknowledge and thank her cover artist (in this case the fabulously named “Beegee Tolpa”). For this reason alone I believe that she must have more in common with her charming heroine than one might initially think. It doesn't hurt matters any that Myracle gets the sheer level of tween/teen selfishness down pat. The constant fears that you aren’t looking the way that you should be looking, for example. She has an ear for relaying when people trying to hard, like Winnie laughing uproariously at her friends’ jokes when Lars is near, so as to look wild and free and attractive. I loved too how Myracle accurately got down the fogginess teens feel about what constitutes “old” (example: “I thought it was important to make this promise to myself now, before I turned thirty and got saggy and fat.”). She gets the age.

    I suppose I could see how Winnie’s bon mots might tap dance on a person’s nerves, but somehow they never got to me. I liked her insights most times. Like when a popular girl acts like she’s a loser, which was weird but, “better than being snotty”. I loved her cheery sarcasm regarding boring children’s primers. “Oh, the joy of short A’s. Might there be a bat in the cat’s future? A bat wearing a hat? Who knew! That’s what made it so exciting!” Any author that can make a thirteen-year-old character sound like someone who would call herself a stud (“that’s the kind of stud I am”) wins my heart. She also has this unexpectedly dirty mouth that just pops out of nowhere. I can think of at least one section where the words “turd”, “penis”, and “vagina” all pop out at you, and somehow it’s funny rather than overly scatological.

    Some things didn’t sit with me perfectly, though. Maybe I just had a really self-involved life, but when I was thirteen nobody had parties where they invited the whole class. I went to public school, though, and Winnie is going to a private one where issues of class and race (set against an Atlanta setting, no less) never even come up. Still, I can’t imagine the kind of privilege a person would have to be raised in to hear about 14-year-olds throwing house parties with hot tubs and liquor cabinets. It happens probably, but at least in my own case it made Winnie’s story seem so much older than its scant thirteen years. Then again, if Myracle continues at the rate she’s been going, Winnie’s gonna be nineteen soon and possibly outgrowing her young fans. On the other other hand, I have this weird desire for that to happen. Remember in the old days when books like
    Betsy-Tacy and
    Anne of Green Gables would just keep going and going until their characters grew up, got married, and had kids? How cool would it be if Lauren Myracle continued that trend? I mean, what if? I know that publishers would shy away from that kind of retro writing, but I think that there’s a real allure in following a character through life. Winnie certainly has plenty of material to work from, and instead of the standard marriage ending you could finish the series off with something appropriately grown-up, mature, and feminist. Awesome.

    Spoiler alert, if you care for that sort of thing. I’m sure that there will be teen girls cheering Winnie on for getting back together with Lars at the end of the book when he apologizes for being a doofus, but I know that the adults reading the story will wish heartily that Winnie moved on. Wouldn’t she be so much better off with that nice boy she met on the camping trip? Lars is the kind of guy willing to laugh at his sweetheart if it’ll impress the sexy girl with the nose ring hanging about. If I were Winnie I’d dump the fool and move on. But then, maybe that’s where Myracle is going and we’ll get some kind of magnificent dumping scene in the next book. Hey, a gal can hope can’t she?

    If you’re too old to get a book’s references (My Super Sweet Sixteen anyone?) are you too old to review it? Not if the characters smack of reality, the story’s fun, and the drama lies at a low ebb (which, for me, is a definite plus). I don’t know how many more Winnie books Ms. Myracle has in her system, but here’s hoping she keeps cranking them out. Ms. Myracle has a brand new fan.

    Ages 9-15.

  • Avery

    This book is a very entertaining book for 9-14 year olds. If you like your books to be filled with drama, then this one is right for you. This is a realistic fiction book about a girl named Winnie Perry. She has finally turned thirteen, a moment she has been waiting for her whole life! It goes through a year in Winnie's life. I feel like parts of this book are very relatable for some girls. She has two best friends, Cinnamon and Dinah. Sometimes Cinnamon acts a little bit old for her age, and Dinah can be immature. She also has some problems with her boyfriend, Lars. I liked Winnie because she wasn't a cookie cutter. She was her own style and didn't care what others thought of her. She faces problems when it comes to friends, family, and her relationship. I think some of the idea behind this story was what it is like to be a teenage girl. This book is worth reading because it really keeps you entertained. You don't get bored of it easily. The author can really paint a picture of the setting in your head. It is easy for you to see what is going on. It is set in the twenty first century. This book was definitely meant for entertainment. I think that the author really wanted you to want to keep reading, and she definitely made me want to read more. Overall, I feel like this was a very enjoyable book.

  • Tasha

    Winnie has finally reached her thirteenth birthday. She doesn't think life could get any better. She has two wonderful best friends forever (BFFs), Dinah and Cinnamon, and a super hot boyfriend, Lars, who held her hand just last week! Everyday is a new adventure for this fun teenager. Her six-year old brother Ty always has intriguing questions, and it seems that some times he will only listen to Winnie. Then there's her sister Sandra who's in her senior year of high-school and is moody most of the time, but at other times can offer some great sisterly advice. Winnie soon begins to realize that being thirteen has its ups and downs. She's on the rocks with Lars, and doesn't quite know how to handle it, as it is her first real relationship. And then there's Joseph, the little boy in her brother's class who has leukemia. Even though she doesn't know him Winnie feels sorry for him. This makes her look at life in a whole new way. Over the course of her thirteenth year, Winnie faces lots of new things, each one exciting in its own way. Even though life sometimes gets a little hectic, Winnie knows she loves being thirteen!

    This book was really cute. There are two other books that come before it, Eleven and Twelve, but I don't think it's necessary to read them before reading Thirteen. I loved how Lauren Myracle made Winnie such a real character. It seems that characters in other books like Thirteen have really unrealistic goals or outlooks on life. Winnie seemed to be really down to earth and very likable. I could relate to a lot of the issues that she faced, and it was easy to laugh along with her. This is a great book for any girl, young or old, and makes you see growing up in a fun way. I look forward to seeing if Winnie's story continues.

  • Lilly

    The book “Thirteen” is about a girl named Winnie who is turning 13. It tells about her life, and how she is trying to juggle a relationship, family life, and trying to make it through middle school. It shows how she makes it through “life.”
    Winnie: A thirteen year old with an outgoing personality and a boyfriend named Lars. She has two awesome friends named Cinnamon and Dinah.
    Lars: Winnie’s boyfriend, a ninth grader at the boy school. He has a friend named Bryce who dates Cinnamon for a while, and he is known as the “cool kid” in the book.
    Mom: A fun upbeat kind of person, can be strict, and gets angry in the summer from the heat. She is pregnant and is a substitute reader at her son’s school.
    Cinnamon: Winnie’s best friend since the beginning of 5th grade, a fun upbeat person, likes to have fun. She is caring and kind to all people.
    Dinah: Winnie's second best friend, and she is a goody-two-shoes, and worries about everything, but likes to have fun with her friends.
    The setting mostly takes place at school or at Winnie’s house.
    The conflict is that Winnie is trying to figure out life and what’s important.
    Winnie finds out that life isn’t perfect and that there are good and bad moments, and that everything happens for a reason.
    I thought this book was amazing, and it goes great with the rest of the series. It’s super descriptive and it makes you feel like you are Winnie in real life. It definitely pulls you in.
    I would recommend this book to all girls 10 years to 13 years old. Anyone would enjoy it, and you should definitely check out more of Lauren Myracle’s books!

  • Michaela

    I really enjoyed this book! It is exactly what i'm going through! Winnie is so funny. I wish she was real so i can meet her! I wish this was a movie. I would defiantly recommend this book for other girls.

  • Sprout

    This author sets really high standards for her writting and I was dissapionted! This book mentioned God QUITE a lot of times! The story was relativly inappropriate!

  • Michelle

    I loved this book! Winnie finally gets her first boyfriend! What a milestone! Hehe...

  • Stella

    Spoilers spoilers spoilers! I love this book so much, every time I find I don’t have anything to read I sit down with this hilariously adorable book and get lost in the world of Winnie. Yes, some may call her life mundane, boring, and tragically childish- rightfully so. But what some don’t understand is this is the life of a teenager! The glorious world of being thirteen is dating, fitting in and being goofy; which Winnie does perfectly. Yes, there are some parts that may be a bit far fetched for Winnie’s life. For example, one day Ty brings home Pingy the penguin and hides him in the bathtub. Oh God. So Winnie and Sandra sneak Pingy into a backpack and whisk him back to the aquarium. Only, oh no! They’re caught by a security guard and make up a long story about how… let me recall, Sandra is a mute named Fanny who loves animals and Winnie is named Marla? The security guard doesn’t buy their story but returns Pingy for them and lets the girls off the hook. Yippee! There are also some very relatable parts of Thirteen, such as Winnie and Lars’ breakup. To sum it up Lars was flirting with other girls and ignoring Winnie. Maybe this doesn’t seem realistic to an adult but oh boy it really is. Of course Lars doesn’t WANT to be broken up with Winnie and they get back together, hip hip hooray! The whole story covers the span of a year, from Winnie turning thirteen to Winnie starting eighth grade (Big girl moment!) and is heartfelt and touching. Love you Winnie from the deepest spot in my heart. Love you Cinnamon, Dinah, Lars, Ty, Sandra, Bo and maybe even… Amanda? On second thought, I love everything in this book and series.

  • Mirele Kessous

    I'm not a fan of tween fluff books, but this was not as fluffy as I'd feared. It was strikingly authentic. Winnie's voice sounds very much like a 13-year-old girl learning how to deal with life's everyday challenges. Myracle captures Winnie's inner thoughts and monologues with great perception and humor.

    13 year olds are on spectrum of maturity. Some of the things that Winnie did seemed really mature for some 13 yr olds I know (wine cooler parties, kissing boys), but there's nothing here that would traumatize a late bloomer.

    My only criticism, as an old fuddy-duddy, is that [SPOILER ALERT] everything turns out perfectly rosy in the end. Lars has this sudden epiphany in which he realizes the error of his ways and apologizes and they are back together!!!! Joseph's cancer is cured!!!! Winnie gets the baby sister she always dreamed of!!!! Barf. But if you're a tween girl reading this, I suppose any other ending would be too dark to handle.

    So-- It's reminiscent of Judy Blume, but maybe not as real. Girls ages 10-13.

  • india :)

    3.5 (good)

    This book was great fun, though sadly, it wasn’t quite as good as “Twelve”. Winnie’s relationship with Lars was quite toxic, and she was technically only with him because of his looks. From the time until we first met Cinnamon in “Twelve”, until now, my opinion of her hasn’t changed at all. She might be a fun friend, but she certainly is NOT a true friend, and she lives for drama. It’s interesting to see the characters mature and change throughout the book/s. Amanda changed a lot, while Dinah barely changed. A thing I really appreciated was that the characters actually act their age, and that it is quite relatable for kids aged 12/13. Overall, an enjoyable experience.

  • Amanda Harvey

    I would say this book was one of the best I have seen recently. I mean, I have been collecting this series for a while and I have really enjoyed. In past years I have savored getting to know Winnie through the challenges of growibg up, even as I went through them myself. Winnie is funny, adorable, and awkward, perfectly matching what I feel at this time in my life. All in all, Meghan Markle has really helped me with these books and hope she writes more in the future.