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Books : Teens : Authors, A-Z : ( D ) : Danziger, Paula
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Marcy Lewis is bored by school, she knows she’s never going to be thin, and her family life’s a nightmare. Then Marcy meets Ms. Finney, an English teacher who will try anything in the classroom. Finally, Marcy’s life in and out of school begins to have a purpose. But when Ms. Finney is suspended, Marcy knows she’s got to take a stand, no matter the price she must pay.
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Cassie Stephens is dealing with a lot. She’s got asthma. World War III is waged daily in her home, beginning at the breakfast table and ending with slammed doors at night. She’s running for freshperson class president. The pressure is mounting, and there’s only one thing that can make Cassie feel better. Pistachio nuts. No matter how weird it sounds, those little red nuts are just the prescription for Cassie’s troubles.
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No one wants to ride the Divorce express. especially phoebe. it means leaving her New york City apartment and friends, moving to the country with her dad, and taking the bus every weekend to visit her mom in the city. it means she has to go to ninth grade in a new school, and see her father go on dates. it’s a hectic life with no time to feel she really belongs with the kids in either place. then, just when phoebe gets a handle on juggling the pieces of her life, her mother makes a decision that will change everything again. Can phoebe be herself and still be part of both her parents’ worlds?
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Marcy Lewis is thrilled when Ms. Finney asks her to be a junior counselor at a creative arts camp. Finally, she’s on her own for the first time, away from family and school. It’s her big chance to reinvent herself in a place where no one knows how insecure she used to be. This could be the perfect summer, but will nosy, noisy campers ruin it all?
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It’s the year 2057 and fourteen-year-old Aurora couldn’t be happier with her life on Earth—she’s part of the "in" crowd, her best friend is a celebrity, and Matthew has asked her to Homecoming. But Aurora’s parents have new jobs on the moon, and she and her little sister must leave their friends and schools to go with them. Aurora is sure she will hate life on the moon, because there are only 750 people in the whole colony. What if none of them is a cute boy her age?
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At fourteen, Rosie, her mother, her best friend, and her best friend's father form a new family unit and find it takes a lot of work to make a family in a world of changing relationships.
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It's absolutely disgusting being fourteen. You've got no rights whatsoever. Your parents get to make all the decisions: Who gets the single bedroom. How much allowance is enough. What time you must come in. Who is a proper friend. What your report card is supposed to look like. And what your parents don't tell you to do, the school does. None of this seems fair to Lauren Allen, but then she finds a way to fight back. She can even sue her parents for malpractice...can't she? "Entangled in a web of family friction, adolescent uncertainty, and romantic longing, Lauren slowly learns to make decisions that are right for her....Humor abounds, nicely balancing the reality." -- Children's Book Review Service "Ruefully and relentlessly funny." -- The New Yorker Paula Danziger lives in New York City and Bearsville, New York. "This novel is as much fun as Danziger's The Cat Ate My Gymsuit." -- School Library Journal
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When Frank spends the summer with Kendra and her family in their New York City apartment, a friendship develops as the two teenagers set off on a scavenger hunt exploring the city's museums, restaurants, and other landmarks.
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In the sequel to Remember Me to Harold Square, Kendra begins to replace the "What if's" in her life with a new sense of confidence. 2 cassettes.
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Matthew Martin finds himself on the threshold of becoming a teenager in suburban America and experiences conflicting emotions regarding his future.
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3 hours, 44 minutes
Performed by Dana Lubotsky
The spunky third-grader is back in this collection of stories on two cassettes. Includes Amber Brown Wants Extra Credit, Forever Amber Brown and Amber Brown Sees Red. -
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