From Publishers Weekly

At a New York City jet-set private school populated by hard-drinking, bulimic, love-starved poor little rich
kids, a clique of horrible people behave badly to one another. An omniscient narrator sees inside the shallow hearts of popular
Blair Waldorf, her stoned hottie of a boyfriend, Nate, and her former best friend Serena van der Woodsen, just expelled from
boarding school and "gifted with the kind of coolness that you can't acquire by buying the right handbag or the right pair
of jeans. She was the girl every boy wants and every girl wants to be." Everyone wears a lot of designer clothes and drinks
a lot of expensive booze. Serena flirts with Nate and can't understand why Blair is upset with her; Blair throws a big party
and doesn't invite Serena; Serena meets a cute but unpopular guy; and a few less socially blessed characters wonder about
the lives of those who "have everything anyone could possibly wish for and who take it all completely for granted." Intercut
with these exploits are excerpts from www.gossipgirl.net (the actual site launches in February), where "gossip girl" dishes
the dirt on the various characters without ever revealing her own identity amongst them. Though anyone hoping for character
depth or emotional truth should look elsewhere, readers who have always wished Danielle Steel and Judith Krantz would write
about teenagers are in for a superficial, nasty, guilty pleasure. The book has the effect of gossip itself once you enter
it's hard to extract yourself; teens will devour this whole. The open-ended conclusion promises a follow-up. Ages 15-up.
College interviews, romantic troubles and a fancy wedding photographed
for Vogue dominate this second installment of von Ziegesar's frothy but fun series about rich Manhattan prep school kids and
the gossip Web site tracking their lives. Blair Waldorf's mother is marrying her "seriously tacky" boyfriend on Blair's birthday
and has chosen the bulimic overachiever's former best friend Serena as a bridesmaid (Blair will be maid of honor). Meanwhile,
"hunky" Nate avoids Blair (he's secretly seeing chesty Jenny Humphrey), and the compounded stress makes her act like a "freakshow"
during her Yale interview. Blonde bombshell Serena is disturbed by poet Dan's intense affections, struggles through her own
interview at Brown and scores first prize in a school film contest. The plot culminates at the wedding, where the girls' boy
troubles come to a head. As with her Gossip Girl, von Ziegesar creates a complete world: the characters get drunk, shop and
indulge in spa treatments plus, the film contest prize is two tickets to Cannes. While this is still strictly a guilty pleasure,
the story lines are better developed in this volume and the characters show more growth. But it's their outrageous lifestyles
and antics and the snide omniscient narrator that will keep readers turning the pages. Ages 15-up. Copyright 2002 Cahners
Business Information, Inc.
S and B and J and N are back, along with A, D, V, and assorted other
rich, catty Manhattan teenagers in this third installment of the Gossip Girl series. An omniscient and anonymous narrator
keeps track of the scene in www.gossipgirl.net (now an actual site), where the rumors fly, backs are stabbed, and celebrity
sightings are dutifully reported. Serena (S) and Blair (B) are best friends again, shoring each other up as Blair faces life
without her ex, Nate, who has hooked up with a sweet, busty 14-year-old, and Serena fends off advances from drop-dead-gorgeous
rock star, Flow. Life’s rough. Meanwhile, Vanessa and Dan play the will-he/won’t-he game, and Aaron tries to thwart
his own crush on new stepsister Blair.
They’re the teens you love to hate, and yet it’s not all trash. Beneath the designer name-obsessed
veneer and the nasty soap opera quality of Gossip Girl novels, there’s plenty that’s true and real for any teenager.
Angst, creative passion, love, college applications, drinking, smoking, sex…sure, these kids are obnoxious and spoiled,
but their core issues are not a million miles away from every other teen’s. And you know you love it. (Ages 14 and older)
--Emilie Coulter
From School Library Journa
l
Grade 9 Up--All the regular cast is present in this fourth installment
in the series. Situations and alliances have shifted, but these are still beautiful, rich kids whose lives are the stuff of
fantasy, and whose achievements seem effortless. Almost by accident, Dan gets a poem published in the New Yorker. Vanessa's
film New York is used as a backdrop for an important fashion show. Serena lands a modeling job just by entering a clothing
store. However, there is also a darker side to the characters' lives. Neglected and unloved by their self-centered parents,
these teens are dying to be noticed. Nate gets busted for drug use. Within hours of meeting a new girl in group counseling,
he ends up saving her life when she overdoses. Things don't go well for Blair, either. She's still trying to get into Yale
after botching her interview in a previous book. In this installment, she's about to fall for the older man helping her repair
the damage of her first interview--until she discovers that he's not separated from his wife and that his daughter is a freshman
at her school. Soap operalike, the trials and joys of these kids continue. Teens interested in reading about the lives of
Manhattan prep-schoolers are sure to devour this book.--Catherine Ensley, Latah County Free Library District, Moscow, ID Copyright
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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