It's 1989 and Rae Earl is a fat, boy-mad 17-year-old girl, living with her mum and their deaf white cat in a council house with a mint-green bathroom suite and a kitchen Rae can't keep away from. "About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.īook Description Paperback. Hilarious and gut-wrenchingly familiar * In Style * 'Funnier, sadder and ruder than Adrian Mole, this will delight teenagers past and present' * Financial Times * Hurray then for Rae Earl, who dug out her 1989 diary and published it in the raw. * Caitlin Moran for The Times * 'Full of teenage logic, bad poetry and 80s nostalgia, Rae's frank and hilarious trip down memory lane stands out from the current surge of memoirs' * The London Paper * 'Very funny - and sad' * Heat * 'Full of 80s nostalgia, this journal will make you laugh out loud' * Closer (four stars) * Very funny * Elle * You wouldn't catch many people revealing their true teen thoughts. Reminds you how rarely you see teenage girls on television doing anything other than looking sexy in short skirts, endlessly texting their friends about parties, or wailing "IT'S SO UNFAIR" when their parents won't buy them a car. I have already pretty much lived this show, for real.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |