Lisi Harrison

Web
Sites
http://www.lisiharrison.com/home.html
http://www.jointheclique.com/
http://www.alphasacademy.com/
http://www.lisi-harrison-official.webs.com/
Bibliography
The
clique
Best
friends for never
Revenge
of the wannabes
Invasion
of the boy snatchers
The
pretty committee strikes back
Dial
L for loser
It’s
not easy being mean
Sealed
with a diss
Bratfest
at tiffanys
P.S.
I loathes you
Boys
“R” Us
Charmed
and dangerous (the rise of the pretty committee)
The cliquetionary
The
clique summer collection
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The clique : a novel
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Best friends for never : a Clique novel
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Revenge of the wannabes : a Clique novel
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Invasion of the boy snatchers : a Clique novel
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The Pretty Committee strikes back : a Clique novel
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Dial L for Loser : a Clique novel
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It's not easy being mean : a Clique novel
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The Clique #8: Sealed with a Diss: A Clique Novel
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Bratfest at Tiffany's
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P.s., I loathe you : a Clique novel
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Review of the clique
The battlefield strategies of teenage girls has been a hot topic
in fiction and nonfiction over the past few years, with books like Queen Bees and Wannabes and Odd Girl Out, not to mention movies like “Mean Girls.” But
that doesn’t make the topic any less interesting and in her novel The Clique, author Lisi Harrison breathes new, funny life
into the topic.
In this young adult novel, middle-schooler Claire Lyons moves from
Florida to Westchester County, N.Y., to stay with the family of her father’s
old school friend. The family, of course, has everything, including an
ultra-popular daughter Claire’s age, Massie. But Massie takes a dim view of Claire,
her Gap clothes, and the fact that Claire’s family is staying in her family’s
guesthouse. She and her school-ruling buddies conspire to make Claire’s life
miserable and, for a while, they succeed – until Claire fights back.
Harrison has taken this well-worn topic and peppered it with gags
that are both mean and hilarious (one of Massie’s friends “drops” a red
paintbrush in Claire’s lap in art class so that everyone thinks Claire has her
period), but never makes the girls less than human.
Sure, she captures the
casual cruelty of the teen years, but Harrison doesn’t make the girls monsters.
She knows that the teen years are kill-or-be-killed, and doing something like
pelting the new girl with smoked salmon or ditching a so-called friend to hang
with someone more popular are just part of the game. The book is fun,
fast-moving and, in the end, actually kind of sweet.