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The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks

Lockhart, E. Book - 2008 R Printz Honor 2009, Teen Fiction 1 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 4.3 out of 5

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Locations
Call Number: R Printz Honor 2009, Teen Fiction
On Shelf At: Downtown Library

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown Kids Reference
0-week checkout
R Printz Honor 2009 0-week checkout Library Use Only
Downtown Teen, 1st Floor
4-week checkout
Teen Fiction 4-week checkout On Shelf

REVIEWS & SUMMARIES

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COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Insightful and Funny submitted by Brad B. on December 9, 2008, 10:10am Frankie (a girl) goes to a wealthy, private high school and manages to sneak her way into an all boys secret society, one her boyfriend is a member of but refuses to tell her anything about. Expecting a light, funny, school romance this completely blew me away. Don’t get me wrong, there is nothing wrong with a light, funny, school romance, and yes, this books does have romance, and yes, this books is, most assuredly, very funny, but it’s more than that. Frankie secretly manipulates the boys into pulling school pranks without figuring out its her. Does she go a little too far, or does she not? This book is very smart. The interactions are very realistic and it says a lot about the power-plays between men and women. A book that’s insightful and funny; for me that makes a good read.

Tries a bit too hard, but good submitted by marielle on June 25, 2011, 8:27pm My smart, Jewish, feminist female friend recommended this book to me, and lo and behold, the main character is a smart, Jewish, feminist teen female with a bone to pick with the patriarchy.

I enjoyed the book for what it was, but it is a bit preachy. There are bits in the book where Frankie gets in long drawn-out arguments with other students about that nature of gender and whether or not it has a biological basis, blah blah blah, something about peacocks. This I did not enjoy; show, not tell, you know the drill.

Other than that I found the book highly enjoyable and I would not hesitate to foist it on female teens.

Entertaining and refreshing submitted by Lillie Schneyer on July 7, 2011, 5:57pm Frankie is the epitome of a spunky heroine: smart, funny, and with a lot to say. She refuses to be dominated over, and she wants to be known for herself, not just for her boyfriend. It was refreshing to read this book, because Frankie is not at all like many heroines in YA books. She worries about whether or not her boyfriend is looking down on her, and how she can be a stronger feminist, not just her grades or social status (though she spends a lot of time on that too). My only criticism is occasionally Frankie doesn't sound like a teenager. She'll launch into long speeches that sound more like a long-experienced and very articulate adult feminist. While teenagers can be just that articulate, some specific speeches just don't ring true.

Good Book submitted by ljq on July 11, 2011, 10:35am This book is hilarious and isn't your normal chick flick.

book submitted by dekeyzerj on July 15, 2011, 10:12am never heard of it

Enjoyable submitted by emjane on August 9, 2013, 9:50am In her sophomore year of boarding school, Frankie no longer lives under the radar-- publicly dating one of the most popular seniors, and secretly infiltrating the boys-only secret society that he runs.

Frankie is a heroine that transcends most chick-lit tropes, finding a lovely balance between a feminist solid in her beliefs and a teenage girl interested in boys and being liked. The hijinks of Frankie and the Loyal Order of the Basset Hounds will amuse readers and keep them turning pages, and the book as a whole will leave them thinking about rebellion and its purpose. Though teen boys may be reluctant to pick up a book with a female protagonist, the story is not girly, and if they give it a shot, they will not be disappointed.

great teen book!! submitted by manz on July 25, 2014, 8:58am This is a great read. I went through a phase of reading YA books set in prep schools, and this is one of my faves. Good writing and characters. And fun pranks!

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SERIES
Printz Honor book - 2009.



PUBLISHED
New York : Hyperion, c2008.
Year Published: 2008
Description: 345 p. ; 21 cm.
Language: English
Format: Book

READING LEVEL
Lexile: 890

ISBN/STANDARD NUMBER
0786838191
9780786838189
0786838183

SUBJECTS
Boarding schools -- Fiction.
Practical jokes -- Fiction.
Clubs -- Fiction.