Monday, August 24, 2009

Lessons From A Dead Girl by Jo Knwles

Laine McCarthy wished for something, something bad. She wished for Leah Greene to die. Now Leah is dead and Laine believes that it was her fault. She feels guilty about her death, but she hated Leah. She can't help but still hate Leah for all of those things Leah made her do in the closet. Leah had told her that they were praticing. She wanted them to be prepared for when they were older and had boyfriends. laine knows that she lied. She knows that other bestfriends don't do those things. Laine just doesn't understand why Leah chose her out of all the girls she could've chosen. Does she have some kind of importance or was she just easy to control? Leah is dead now and Laine knows that she can't erase the memory of what happened all those years ago. Now she needs to find meaning in the lessons that she was forced to learn. Laine knows she has to find it in her heart to forgive Leah, because maybe something drove Leah to do it. Maybe something worse had happened to Leah for her to hurt Laine so emotinally.

This book was very interesting. It was very different than most young adult novels turn out to be. It had surprising twists to it. Lessons from a Dead Girl explains about abuse and guilt. Jo Knowles did and excellent job on the plot of this book. I enjoyed every last page that I read. Lessons from a Dead Girl tells the story of forgiveness and it tells the story of two young, very confused girls. I recommend this book to all young adult readers who enjoy all genres.

Reviewer Age:13

Reviewer City, State and Country: Fairborn, Ohio USA