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| ttyl (Talk to You Later-Internet Girls) | 
| Author: Lauren Myracle Publisher: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. Category: Book
List Price: $6.95 Buy Used: $0.01 You Save: $6.94 (100%)
New (62) from $1.15
Avg. Customer Rating: 126 reviews Sales Rank: 15519
Media: Paperback Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 234 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.6 x 0.8
ISBN: 0810987880 EAN: 9780810987883 ASIN: 0810987880
Publication Date: April 1, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Help save a tree. Buy all your used books from Green Earth Books. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review Audacious author Lauren Myracle accomplishes something of a literary miracle in her second young-adult novel, ttyl (Internet instant messaging shorthand for "talk to you later"), as she crafts an epistolary novel entirely out of IM transcripts between three high-school girls. Far from being precious, the format proves perfect for accurately capturing the sweet histrionics and intimate intricacies of teenage girls. Grownups (and even teenage boys) might feel as if they've intercepted a raw feed from Girl Secret Headquarters, as the book's three protagonists--identified by their screen names "SnowAngel," "zoegirl," and "mad maddie"--tough their way through a rough-and-tumble time in high school. Conversations range from the predictable (clothes, the delicate high-school popularity ecosystem, boys, boys in French class, boys in Old Navy commercials, etc.) to the the jarringly explicit (the girls discuss female ejaculation: "some girls really do, tho. i read it in our bodies, ourselves") and the unintentionally hilarious (Maddie's IM reduction of the Christian poem "Footprints"--"oh, no, my son. no, no, no. i was carrying u, don't u c?"). But Myracle's triumph in ttyl comes in leveraging the language-stretching idiom of e-mail, text messaging, and IM. Reaching to express themselves, the girls communicate almost as much through punctuation and syntactical quirks as with words: "SnowAngel: 'cuz--drumroll, please--ROB TYLER is in my french class!!! *breathes deeply, with hand to throbbing bosom* on friday we have to do "une dialogue" together. i get to ask for a bite of his hot dog.'" Myracle already proved her command of teenage girl-ness with Kissing Kate, but the self-imposed convention of ttyl allows a subtlety that is even more brilliant. Parents might like reading the book just to quantify how out of touch they are, but teens will love the winning, satisfyingly dramatic tale of this tumultuous trio. (Ages 13 to 17) --Paul Hughes
Product Description This funny, smart novel follows the friendship of three 16 year old girls as they experience some of the typical pitfalls of adolescence: boys, queen-bee types, a flirty teacher, beer, crazy parents, and more. Lauren Myracle has a gift for dialogue and characterization, and the girls emerge as three distinctive and likable personalities through their Internet correspondence. This light, fast-paced read is told Entirely in instant message format, the first book ever for young adults to be written so.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 121 more reviews...
Cute on the outside November 21, 2008 Parents should be strongly cautioned about allowing young girls to read this book. The characters are great at supporting each other as friends, but the author turns normal teen life into an X-rated and vulgar expose. I can't recommend this book for any girl or woman. What appears to be cute on the outside is very ugly on the inside.
just got pulled from an Austin middle school library November 19, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
they were concerned it wasn't "age appropriate."
jeez. Guess it's the modern-day "Are You There, God? It's Me, Margaret."
Don't waste your money!!!!! November 7, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I bought this from walmart and couldn't even believe the first 3 pages of the book! I have decided it is NOT appropriate for my teen and plan to return it to WM and recommend that they remove it from their shelves!!
So SAD October 31, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I cannot believe this book is written for children. This author is sick. And it saddens me to think that girls will read this and think that that is okay behavior, talk about not respecting themselves. Sad, the only word I can use to define the book. I hope girls will read the reviews and see that this may be happening in some schools but it is not the majority of what happens in high school, let alone middle school.
What a great book! October 29, 2008 TTYL is an awesome book! Great job by Lauryn Myracle. I just couldn't put this book down, every page seemed to add a new twist. I would definitely recomend this book to anyone. I'm very excited to read the other books in this series.
-Amy Jagareski
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