Home :: Books :: Teens  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens

Travel
Women's Fiction
Dead Girls Don't Write Letters

Dead Girls Don't Write Letters

List Price: $22.90
Your Price: $22.90
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Unbelievable!
Review: From the title you could tell someone has died. Jasmine the older child in a family of two has been assumed dead. The apartment she was living in burnt to a crisp and know one has heard from her. Sunny her sister is the narrator of this book and right away you the reader knows that Jasmine was the apple of her family eye. A father who is an alcoholic and a mother who is manic leaves Sunny to take care of herself. One day while returning home from school she goes into the mailbox and low and behold there is a letter from her dead sister, but is it really from her? This book had me wanting more from page to page. I did not want to put it down. The conclusion of this book left a lot to be desired. I felt the author robbed her audience of a proper conclusion good read though.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very Good Book!!
Review: Gail Giles writes the best mystery books like no one else alive! The book that I just got done reading left me wanting to read more of her books. Another really good book is Shattering Glass (2002). It was so good and it left me at the end of each chapter wondering what was going to happen next.
Sunny has an older sister Jazz that has been dead for almost a year now. Well that's what they thought. One day Sunny got a letter in the mail from her dead sister Jazz. Jazz died in her apartment building one year ago when it burned down and from the letter it says that Jazz was "away" because she got a job in a repertory company in Vermont. The only reason Sunny really did read the letter was that it was Jazz or Not-Jazz's, what Sunny calls her, handwriting on the envelope. But when Sunny and her mom and dad finally see her when she comes home, they notice that it isn't Jazz at all! This girl that says she is Jazz has different hair, a different voice, and she was actually being nice to Sunny for once. Sunny was really getting annoyed that someone was playing around with her family and trying to be someone she wasn't! So Sunny did some research and found out a bunch of information on what was happening. This book is a suspense and a really good mystery! I really think this is a book for all ages and all types of audiences. I had to reread the ending a couple of times...but in the end it left me thinking, speechless, and wanting more!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book!
Review: I really enjoyed all the mystery involved in this book. Great twists and turns and not predictable. The ending was awesome. I read it twice to make sure what really happened, happened. Terrific!!!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent
Review: It's an absolutely excellent book. In fact just trying to sum it up in my own meagre words would do it a severe injustice. Just read it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny and chilling
Review: Scary, funny, and poignant, this tightly written mystery is another winner by Giles. The Reynolds family is overjoyed to welcome their missing daughter home. Everyone but the girl's sister, Sunny, who has good reason to wish she'd stay gone. The action takes place mostly in the house, and Giles uses this confined setting to creepy advantage. Family loyalties shift and secrets are revealed right until the end. Plan to read this book in one sitting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Do dead girls rise from the dead?
Review: Sunny was always in Jazz's shadow. Everyone thought Jazz was perfect. Jazz was beautiful. Jazz was stunning. Jazz had top grades. Jazz this. Jazz that. But Jazz has an evil sister side. She frames Sunny and even though she tells the truth, she always makes it seem like Sunny was the one who was bad. Then one day, Jazz dies in a fire. Just like that. The family falls apart and mourns... except for Sunny. Except for Sunny. Sunny lives life until several months later, when she recieves a letter from... "Jazz". It's the envelope Jazz uses... the same ink... same handwriting.. The letter says that she would be coming home and she's sorry for causing such pain. When Jazz walks through the door, there she was.... but... what is that nagging thought in Sunny's mind that "Jazz" could really be dead? That this girl was really an imposter? Who is this girl?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Interesting Addition to the Teen Fiction Genre
Review: Sunny was secretly relieved when her older sister, Jazz, ran away to New York, and never returned. After all, it's hard to go through life with everyone referring to you as "Jazz's sister," and asking you questions about your older sister's achievements. But then Jazz's apartment building is burned to the ground, and she is presumed dead, yet no remains of her, or anyone else for that matter, are found. Suddenly Sunny's family, already damaged by divorce, is plagued with depression, and alcoholism, leaving Sunny to chase after her parents and pick up the pieces without any thanks at all whatsoever. Things go like this for months, until Sunny receives a letter from Jazz saying that she's coming home, which makes no sense, because Jazz is dead.

In a sea of teen fiction, and chick lit, it is wonderful to find something out of the ordinary, like a needle in a haystack, but that's exactly what Gail Giles' book DEAD GIRLS DON'T WRITE LETTERS is. Filled with crazy new twists and turns on every page, and a fresh voice that will fill readers with mixed emotions; as well as a plot that is sure to scare, yet intrigue, and surprise all, DEAD GIRLS DON'T WRITE LETTERS is a book that cannot be missed, for it is like no other out there.

Erika Sorocco
Book Review Columnist for The Community Bugle Newspaper

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dead or Alive?
Review: This book is about Sunny and her family. She has, well had, a older sister named Jasmine, but everyone called her Jazz. Their parents named them after flowers. When Jazz dies in a fire, their family falls apart. Then one day a letter arrives from Jazz. The return address says only, Jasmine. Sunny thinks it is really from her, because Jazz always thought everyone would know where she is. The letter said that Jazz was alive and coming home. Sunny doesn't believe it is Jazz, she thinks it is someone disguised as her. She finds out, that what she thought was true and the girl leaves. But her parents say they will talk about it again, and it never happened. So she calls her grandma, who no one, except her, likes. Her grandma says she thought it up. She shows her, the proof. Her grandma says she wrote it, because she can forge anyone handwritting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Review
Review: Well I just got the book today. I thought that the way it kept you guessing almost all the way to the end was good. And the end was a little weird, but I wouldn't have had it finish any other way.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Engaging psychological thriller
Review: You know that DEAD GIRLS DON'T WRITE LETTERS will be a page-turner from the initial hook. "Things had been getting a little better until I got a letter from my dead sister," says the 14-year old narrator, Sunny Reynolds.

Sunny's older sister, Jazz, has presumably died in a fire in New York City, although her remains are never found. Soon after they receive the tragic news, Sunny's family begins to unravel. Her mother becomes severely depressed and her father starts drinking heavily. The family, already torn apart by divorce, becomes even more dysfunctional.

Sunny is the only one in the family who is not upset by the loss of her sister; she had been living in Jazz's shadow her entire life. So when a letter from Jazz arrives in the mailbox, announcing that she will be returning home soon, Sunny does not share in her parents' excitement.

The girl who arrives at the house is not Jazz, but an imposter. Sunny and her father quickly realize the truth, but Sunny's mother wants desperately to believe that Jazz is alive. The tension is heightened when Sunny matches wits with the imposter. However, the plot suddenly twists and turns in unexpected directions and the story is wrapped up too quickly, leaving me to question what really happened.

DEAD GIRLS DON'T WRITE LETTERS is a psychological thriller that will cause readers to analyze the ambiguous ending and reach their own conclusion.

--- Reviewed by Renee Kirchner (renee.kirchner@usa.net)


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates