Cat Girl's Day Off
Review
By Children's Literature
The kids had fun and believable personalities and Natalie’s voice had just the right amount of sarcasm and self-loathing to make it pure teen without becoming overly angst-y. The celeb element (her friends over the top fan mania and the actors themselves) balanced nicely with Natalie’s more down-to-earth way of looking at things. As a bonus there’s an author’s note about the movie and John Hughes. This is a soft X-Men-ish sort of tale that tweens are sure to enjoy.
Read the full review here .
Reviews & Comments
School Library JournalSarah Beth Durst, author of <i>Drink Slay Love</i> and <i>Ice</i>
Ingrid King, Blogger at The Conscious Cat
Happy Nappy Bookseller
Booklist
Shannon Muir at Amoxcalli
Charlotte's Library
The Hate-Mongering Tart
A Nook Full of Books
YA's the Word
Finding Wonderland
Second Bookshelf On The Right
Book Cricket
UMS Tigers Read
Francesca Amendolia, YA Books Central
Kim Baccellia, YA Books Central
CJ Redwine, YA Books Central
Novel Novice
The Book Muncher
Catch the Lune
Into the Hall of Books
VOYA
The Brain Lair
Bookish
Mette Ivie Harrison, Author of <em>Tris & Izzie</em>
Hitting on Girls in Bookstores
BriMeetsBooks
Teens Read
Audrey Magazine
Life is Better with Books
ScifiWriterMom
The YA YA YAs
Kirkus Reviews
Amy, Happiness Is…
Bonnie, Words at Home
Alex Flinn, author of <i>Beastly</i> and <i>Bewitching</i>
Saundra Mitchell, author of <i>The Vespertine</i>
As the Page Turns
School Librarian's Workshop
Publishers Weekly
Brent Hartinger, author of GEOGRAPHY CLUB
Project RACE
Kaitlyn H., Sneak Peek Reviewers Club at SLJ