From the author of *The Face on the Milk Carton* comes a novel about romance and love. Sometimes there is heartbreak, but there can also be happily ever after. Teen girls will follow the complexities of dating, and the difference between falling in love, being in love, and really loving someone, por
The Girl Who Invented Romance
โ Scribed by Cooney, Caroline B
- Book ID
- 107560288
- Publisher
- Random House Children's Books
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 681 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780307818850
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From the author of The Face on the Milk Carton comes a novel about romance and love. Sometimes there is heartbreak, but there can also be happily ever after. Teen girls will follow the complexities of dating, and the difference between falling in love, being in love, and really loving someone, portrayed in this inventive novel.
When 16-year-old Kelly Williams's best friend, Faith, declares that she will stop playing games and find a real romance, Kelly watches from the sidelines and takes note. She sees Faith, as well as other friends, her brother, and even her parents attempt to play the game of love in their own unique ways. Kelly decides to create an actual game--one that captures the way people behave--and in the process it teaches them a thing or two about what can be considered winning when it comes to matters of the heart.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
### From Publishers Weekly Charles Dickens was almost 32 in late 1843, and his career trajectory was downward. Since the megasuccess of _The Old Curiosity Shop_ , dwindling sales of his work and problems with his publisher left little doubt in his mind: he would support his growing household as a t
### From Publishers Weekly Charles Dickens was almost 32 in late 1843, and his career trajectory was downward. Since the megasuccess of *The Old Curiosity Shop*, dwindling sales of his work and problems with his publisher left little doubt in his mind: he would support his growing household as a tr
### From Publishers Weekly Charles Dickens was almost 32 in late 1843, and his career trajectory was downward. Since the megasuccess of *The Old Curiosity Shop*, dwindling sales of his work and problems with his publisher left little doubt in his mind: he would support his growing household as a tr