Leavitt, Lindsey
Going Vintage, 310 pgs.
Bloomsbury, 2013. $16.99 Content: Language: PG (2 swears; 3 God); Mature
Content: PG-13; Violence: G.
Mallory finds out that her boyfriend, Jeremy, of one year has been
sharing his thoughts and feelings with a girl online, while Mallory has been
sharing all of her feelings with Jeremy.
Feeling betrayed, Mallory swears off all technology and is inspired, by a
list she found from her grandmother’s high school boxes, to live as though it
is the 60’s. She dresses the time
period and refuses to use her phone or the internet. As she realizes that her relationship with Jeremy wasn’t
always perfect she also realizes that her grandmother’s life during the 60’s
had just as many complications.
With the help from her best friend, little sister and a new friend
Oliver, Mallory begins to find out who she and is able to live in the now.
This book is about a girl finding who
she is on her own and accepting her time in life. It’s about family, friends and boyfriends and how Mallory
learns to communicate better with each.
Overall, the story was interesting and regardless of the teenage drama,
I cared for the characters. I had
just finished reading Lindsey Leavitt’s other novel, Sean Griswold’s Head a
week before and felt they were similar with a strong female character learning
to be comfortable with her situation in life.
MS-ADVISABLE.
Reviewer, C. Peterson.
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