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The Year My Life Went Down the Loo

The Year My Life Went Down the Loo

List Price: $5.99
Your Price: $5.39
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Year my Life went Down the Loo
Review: (...)Hey Dru, welcome to my life, which is sometimes really uber-cool and yet at other times the most humiliating thing that could ever happen to you! I miss you so so much and I want to leave now!
Everything is so weird in England, like OHMIGOD, the school uniforms that we have to wear so gross. They are maroon, yes maroon. You know how bad I look in maroon and there is also a tie, and worst yet NO MAKE-UP! I could die! O yea another thing is that is happening to me is I think my room is hunted. Cause every time i come into my room my clothes are all over the floor. I think that it might be my mom or dad, hope its not my dad. To top it all off in two words, NO MALLS!
I can't say that everything is bad hear, there are some good things. Like the hottest guys in the world. There are three guys I have my eye on! Aidan, who is hunkalious and has a sexy mustache. Then there is Devon who is totally hottie and last Fang who is so romantic and such a gentleman.
So all in all my life is having its ups and downs with guys and girls. Well got 2 jet! c ya!

(...)!

x's and o's
-Em

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Hilarious British/American Comedy
Review: After reading Angus, Thongs and Full Frontal Snogging (by Louise Rennison) I was dying for more diaries of the British, female type. Though The Year My Life Went Down The Loo isn't very similar, I completely LOVED this book! It was hilarious, and actually had a few important lessons.
Emily is a down to earth, but hip young girl, who's forced to move to England because of her father's work. And England is a lot harder to adjust to than you might think! As Emily encounters various obstacles, you can see her bright personality, and the lovable comedy that is her life. I sincerely hope this is the beginning of a series!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: 4 star review from Timeless Tales
Review: by reviewer J.P. Sydney

Told strictly through emails between two best friends separated by the Atlantic Ocean, The Year My Life Went Down the Loo is an interesting, humorous and entertaining look into contemporary teenage life.

Emily Williams isn't too happy. Her father is a medieval scholar who has taken a job for one year in England in a small hamlet called Piddlington-on-the-Weld (or Piddling-on-the-wheel as Emily calls it). So Emily has been uprooted from her life in Seattle and is now trying to make do and learn to live in a country that to her often feels like a completely different planet. But even places horribly far away from "home" can have their advantages, especially in the form of a hunk named Aidan.

Even though Aidan is a jerk more often than not, Emily sticks to the idea that his actions mean he likes her and because he's a hunk and was the first to ask her out, she returns that affection. Devon and Fang, two of Aidan's classmates, were more to my liking and are more obvious choices for Emily's affection. At times I became frustrated with Emily's inability to see past the faults of the somewhat slimy Aidan. But what teenage girl hasn't convinced herself that a relationship existed where one really didn't?

But there is so much more to this story than just boytalk, although that is an important part of any story that revolves around 16-year-old girls. There's the ghost that haunts Emily's underwear drawer, sibling rivalry between Emily and her older sister, and Emily's infatuation and semi-stalking of Oded Fehr--something I can completely relate to as an adult.

When I started this book, I was afraid that I would never be able to get deep into the story since everything is told through emails. But Katie Maxwell does a fantastic job and I never felt like I didn't really know these characters. The book leaves room for several sequels and I do look forward to hearing from Emily again in the future.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'd feel terrible...
Review: Emily seems like every typical teenager out there, except she has to move to England, across from her friends and familiarity. The book is humorous, from the start. The underwear drawer is possessed in Emily's room. Every teenager loves to shop, but in England, there aren't too many shops to choose from.

Emily faces every day BOY problems. She develops a crush for one boy who just wants to snog around with Emily. Emily encounters different relationships with various boys, and experiances true parties, hand holding, and the first kiss with a new boy.

I feel bad for Emily at her new strict school, but it's so very funny. All the teachers make Emily sound as if she's a rebel who dreams of getting in trouble. Emily wears too much makeup, too short of shorts, and doesn't know a thing of French.

A very adorable book, a must read for any teenage girl.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I'd feel terrible...
Review: Emily seems like every typical teenager out there, except she has to move to England, across from her friends and familiarity. The book is humorous, from the start. The underwear drawer is possessed in Emily's room. Every teenager loves to shop, but in England, there aren't too many shops to choose from.

Emily faces every day BOY problems. She develops a crush for one boy who just wants to snog around with Emily. Emily encounters different relationships with various boys, and experiances true parties, hand holding, and the first kiss with a new boy.

I feel bad for Emily at her new strict school, but it's so very funny. All the teachers make Emily sound as if she's a rebel who dreams of getting in trouble. Emily wears too much makeup, too short of shorts, and doesn't know a thing of French.

A very adorable book, a must read for any teenage girl.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book rocks!----The year my life went down the loo.
Review: Emily's parents just moved to europe. Everything in her life has good wrong.10 resons why this book was freakin' awsome.
#1---shes away from her best friend
#2---She is being put back in school becuase of thier retarded grade system
#3---Her underwear drawr has a ghost.
#4---She gets a date with a uber-hottie then almost breaks his nose.
#5---She gets teased at school by "snickerer ann, and snickerer bee"
#6---Gets in trouble becuase of OTP (official teachers pet)
#7---Her home teacher for the class she usually loves looks like a horse.
#8---She messes up the halloween dance, and embaresses herself.
#9---The school uniform (must have been created by perves)
#10---All the new words that if said wrong could mean "fart" not to mention she lives in piddleing-on-the-weld.

Over all it was a great book its one that will keep you up-just to see whats going to go wrong next. It was really awsome.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hilarious!!!
Review: England. That's where Emily Williams' crazy parents have moved her too, from their cozy, if not incredibly rainy, home in Seattle, where she had to leave her best friend, Dru, behind. Of course, that's not the worst part of it. Aside from there being no malls in England (no malls? AAAAHHHH!!!), Emily is forced to live in a haunted house, where she has her very own underwear pervert (what kind of ghost steals underwear from a sixteen-year-old girl?). But that's still not the worst of it. Her new town is called Piddlington-on-the-Weld, she's starting at a new school, where she will be a sophomore, as opposed to the junior she would have been back in Seattle, she has to wear a pukish looking school uniform (maroon and teal, blech! What person in their right mind would combine those two colors?), and she's not to wear make-up at school (but how will she cover-up those unsightly blemishes?)

Of course, Emily's negativity about England and Piddlington-on-the-Weld soon decrease, when she realizes that not everything is bad. Emily not only meets three totally hot guys (Aidan, Devon, and Fang), but she also finds out that her hunk-a-licious crush, and absolute favorite actor in the entire universe, Oded Fehr, is filming a movie nearby, and Emily is completely convinced that she'll be able to not only meet him, but also to convince him to marry her. Not to mention that her newfound friend, Holly, helps her to survive certain ups and downs that Dru can't be there to experience along with her.

"The Year My Life Went Down the Loo" is written entirely in e-mails from Emily to her best friend in Seattle, Dru. Girls of all ages will find themselves laughing out loud at Emily's crazy antics and experiences, but will also find themselves relating to many of the things Emily has to go through. A great start to a great new series.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Year my Life went Down the Loo
Review: I am an adult who stumbled on this book while looking for a book for my 10 year-old neice. While it is definitely too mature for her, I absolutely loved it! I like the way the book is composed of e-mails from Emily describing her exploits with her new friends in England to her friend, Dru, back in the States. The made-up "Emily" words sound like the way two teenage best girlfriends talk to each other. Being an Anglophile myself, I loved reading about Emily learning and using the local slang. Although Emily thinks going to England for a year is the worst possible thing that could happen to her, the three boys she meets there make things interesting. One boy, Fang, is a sweet guy that Emily likes as a friend, but doesn't quite see as the one who really cares about her. I like Emily's father, who is really a pretty cool guy, although Emily thinks he's ancient and a constant source of embarrassment to her. I'd say this book would appeal to any teen girl 14 or older, or even younger if they're precocious like I was at that age.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I loved this book!
Review: I am an adult who stumbled on this book while looking for a book for my 10 year-old neice. While it is definitely too mature for her, I absolutely loved it! I like the way the book is composed of e-mails from Emily describing her exploits with her new friends in England to her friend, Dru, back in the States. The made-up "Emily" words sound like the way two teenage best girlfriends talk to each other. Being an Anglophile myself, I loved reading about Emily learning and using the local slang. Although Emily thinks going to England for a year is the worst possible thing that could happen to her, the three boys she meets there make things interesting. One boy, Fang, is a sweet guy that Emily likes as a friend, but doesn't quite see as the one who really cares about her. I like Emily's father, who is really a pretty cool guy, although Emily thinks he's ancient and a constant source of embarrassment to her. I'd say this book would appeal to any teen girl 14 or older, or even younger if they're precocious like I was at that age.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: This does not live up to expectations
Review: I had seen "The Year My Life Went Down the Loo" countless times at the bookstore, and wasn't really sure if I wanted to buy it. After reading a few reviews on here, I was convinced - it sounded hilarious. It is funny, but I wasn't thrilled with it.

Emily Williams is furious with her mom and dad (who, they call Brother), they're making her move away from her home in Seattle to a small town in England. Though the move is only for a year, Emily is still furious, and things just keep getting worse. There's a ghost in her bedroom and he likes to play with her underwear, her sister drags her along to feminist gatherings, and she's held back a year in school. But then she meets Aidan and things start to look up...she really likes him, and he seems to like her just as much. Hanging out with Aidan has also helped her make some new friends (Devon, Fang, and Peg, to name a few) and she's starting to feel like she can survive the year-long trip.

This book is really funny, but I was disappointed in some of the things they talked about (Emily's parents semi-promoting sex, teen drinking, etc) I wouldn't recommend this book to anyone under 12.

Overall grade: B


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