New Girl

New Girl
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Age Range
12+
Release Date
January 31, 2012
ISBN
0373210426
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They call me 'New Girl'...

Ever since I arrived at exclusive, prestigious Manderly Academy, that’s who I am. New girl. Unknown. But not unnoticed—because of her.

Becca Normandy—that’s the name on everyone’s lips. The girl whose picture I see everywhere. The girl I can’t compare to. I mean, her going missing is the only reason a spot opened up for me at the academy. And everyone stares at me like it’s my fault.

Except for Max Holloway—the boy whose name shouldn’t be spoken. At least, not by me. Everyone thinks of him as Becca’s boyfriend but she’s gone, and here I am, replacing her. I wish it were that easy. Sometimes, when I think of Max, I can imagine how Becca’s life was so much better than mine could ever be.

And maybe she’s still out there, waiting to take it back.

They call me 'New Girl'...

Ever since I arrived at exclusive, prestigious Manderly Academy, that’s who I am. New girl. Unknown. But not unnoticed—because of her.

Becca Normandy—that’s the name on everyone’s lips. The girl whose picture I see everywhere. The girl I can’t compare to. I mean, her going missing is the only reason a spot opened up for me at the academy. And everyone stares at me like it’s my fault.

Except for Max Holloway—the boy whose name shouldn’t be spoken. At least, not by me. Everyone thinks of him as Becca’s boyfriend but she’s gone, and here I am, replacing her. I wish it were that easy. Sometimes, when I think of Max, I can imagine how Becca’s life was so much better than mine could ever be.

And maybe she’s still out there, waiting to take it back.

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2 reviews
Interesting story of one girl's journey to figure out who she really is.
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Does anyone really enjoy being the new girl? With the anxiety of the unknown and the pressure of whether or not you'll fit in, the position of "new girl" is not usually a coveted one. However, the upside to being the new girl is, if you don't like you who you are then you can choose to be someone else.

In this story of one girl's struggle to hold onto her identity and self worth amidst the craziness around her, she finds the strength to let go while not allowing others to decide who she is. In doing so, she might just find the love she's been hoping for. This book has a little of everything, truth and lies, love and deceit, friendship and betrayal. It also has an unsolved mystery and an old boathouse that leaves the lines between dreams and reality blurred.

Callie finds herself in the role of "new girl" as she prepares to start her Senior Year at Manderly Academy in New Hampshire, a far cry from her home in warm, sunny Florida. She has no idea when she arrives at school that her "new girl" status is anything but ordinary, in fact, it will quickly go from awkward to hauntingly bizarre. You see, the girl who came before her, Becca Normandy, left some pretty big shoes to fill and even though she neither wants to nor is she trying to fill them, everyone around her acts as if she is and Callie finds the pressure almost unbearable.

Dana, her roommate is hostile towards her and takes every opportunity to remind Callie that she's not Becca and she never will be. Becca's other friends treat Callie as if she wants nothing more than to emulate the missing girl and as hard as she tries, Callie can't seem to convince them otherwise. They repeatedly warn her to stay away from Max because when Becca comes back, (and they're convinced she will) they will be together again and live happily ever after! Um, ok-ay.

All of the strange behavior makes Callie near crazy. The constant comparisons between she and Becca start to wear down her confidence and she begins to doubt her own self worth. How is she supposed to measure up to someone as perfect as Becca? To a girl who isn't even here? What really bugs her is, she just can't understand why everyone seems so obsessed with the missing girl. Everyone that is, except for Max. Max Holloway, is the one person Callie has been warned to stay away from but he's also one of the few people who treat her like she's a normal person. Blake, Cam and even Johnny are nice to her but not like Max. The more time they spend together the more she begins to question the validity of his and Becca's "golden couple" status. He seems genuinely interested in her, even coming to her defense when the verbal attacks from other students turn vicious but he also pulls away from her whenever they start to get too close. What's she supposed to think?

Everything is so confusing for Callie and she tries a few times to talk to Leah, her BFF from back home but she's always caught up in her own boy drama. To make matters worse, when Callie goes home over break, her old friends have found out about the "missing girl" drama at school and pepper her with questions she really doesn't want to answer. With her home no longer a refuge and school being a living nightmare, Callie is left feeling completely alone. Everywhere she looks (it seems) there are couples in love, whether it's Leah and her on again, off again creep of a boyfriend Michael, or Cam and Blake or even the constant chatter of Becca and Max. She starts to feel sorry for herself and wonders if there will ever be anyone to love her?

When something happens on New Years Eve that causes Callie to rethink not only her friendships (how well do you really know someone?) but also her decisions about her future, she finally realizes she is worth something - just the way she is. When she returns to school, she does so with a renewed strength in herself and a determination to make it to graduation on her own terms. She does finish out her year stronger than when she began it but not without facing a few more challenges. In the end, she'll discover that sometimes people only see what they want to see regardless of what you show them and sometimes, leaving the place you've always felt safest is the only way to find out who really are.
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New Girl
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3.7
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There has been an opening at Manderly Academy and “New Girl’s” parent get it for her as a surprise. Up until recently New Girl wanted to attend Manderly but now she doesn’t want to leave her home in Florida and go all the way up to New Hampshire. But when she first enters the door she’s viewed as Becca’s copycat. Becca Normandy went missing at the end of the previous year and that’s where the opening came from. The two girls, Becca and New Girl, have similar apprences but opposite personalities. Becca was the new girl the previous year. As soon as she arrives everyone likes her and the things she gets people to do leave a lasting mark and traditions at Manderly. Becca is confident and manipulative. She always get what she wants. New Girl is the opposite, she is self conscious and does what others want.
Everyone of Paige harbison’s charaters in New Girl are memorable. They all have flaws and at times and at points you don’t want to like them. Becca Normandy at first is only the mean girl, but that’s not all she is. The New Girl is shy and feels like she’s walking in Becca’s shadow but she stands up for herself. Max, Dana and all of the other minorish characters have many attributes. Her plotline is also intriguing and unique.
I couldn’t put this novel down. Paige Harbison’s writing is amazing and I can’t wait to read her other novel Here Lies Bridget.
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New Girl (A Room with Books review)
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3.3
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New Girl was good, but it didn’t quite live up to my expectations. For one, I thought it had a little something more going on behind the scenes than a regular contemporary, like a dash of paranormal or something. I’m not quite sure where I got that idea, but I had it and the book, in fact, did not. That’s not what really made it fall flat for me, though, just wanted to clear up anyone else’s expectations in case they had them.

For some reason I didn’t really connect with anyone in the story. I could feel for the main character, but still didn’t really connect with her. I realize Becca was literally sick, but I still hated her. She was just so horrible that it was impossible to like or connect with her. Honestly, I hated Max. He didn’t grow on me at all and I really disliked that the main character wanted to be with him so badly. He wasn’t horrid or anything, but I couldn’t get past the fact that he basically thought it was okay to mess around with Becca and not actually commit to anything. Even if she was a tad crazy.

At times I got kind of a sinister vibe, but overall New Girl didn’t deliver on the creep factor I was hoping for. Basically it was just a double mean girl story. One from the victim’s point of view and one side from the bully’s point of view.

The Nutshell: New Girl was really just an okay read. I think part of what left me so disappointed was my expectations and those are, of course, all my fault. New Girl is a good book if you like boarding schools and mean girl stories, but don’t go to it looking for paranormal or creepy mystery.
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Overly-Dramatic Characters & A Predictable Ending
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3.0
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**Because you read the book in it's entirety, before learning New Girl's name, she will be referred to as NG in this review.

New Girl was a fast-paced page-turner with overly-dramatic characters and a predictable ending. I found myself both unable to book this book down, while simultaneously rolling my eyes at the stereotypical teen behaviour that was portrayed. I waited in suspense to find out New Girl's name and the truth behind Becca's disappearance, and was left underwhelmed with the conclusion to both.

New Girl's entire premise is built around one big plot hole - namely the reason NG ends up at Manderly, a prestigious boarding school in New Hampshire. Having a fleeting desire to attend a boarding school after finishing the first Harry Potter book, a thirteen-year-old NG is heartbroken when she's declined admittance. Luckily for her, her loving parents continued to submit applications for the next four years, until her senior year when she's accepted. Not wanting to disappoint her parents after their hard work (and obvious expectancy that she would be thrilled with their news), NG agrees to leave sunny Florida and start her senior year of high school at a new school, away from her friends and family, for a boarding school in cold and rainy New Hampshire.

Ummm....what? First, I find it hard to believe any parent would think that the momentary desires of a thirteen-year-old would continue across several years of teenage-dom, especially when NG makes it clear that after her original disappointment at not getting in, she grew to love her normal life and forgot about any aspirations of attending a boarding school. Second, what kind of parent would willingly uproot their happily-adjusted teenage daughter during her senior year of high school, without good reason? Why risk seeing her grades plummet, or her emotional stability fluctuate due to such an extreme change in not only location, but learning environment? And third, what teenager would willingly and self-sacrificingly accept the situation without some kind of argument (most likely one involving the slamming of doors and accusations of parents that were trying to ruin her life)?

It just didn't make sense that NG's fear of disappointing her parents would overshadow her desire to finish high school with her friends before embarking on her journey to college. I feel like Harbison could have accomplished the same results with different means - maybe NG still wanted to go to boarding school, or maybe her family was being uprooted due to a parent's job and she had no choice but to switch schools. I do understand that the book is, in part, about finding your inner strength and believing in yourself when presented with huge obstacles - like being far from anything remotely familiar - and that leaving for boarding school forced NG to come to terms with believing in herself, but I think Harbison could have handled it better.

I could have overlooked this plot hole if I enjoyed everything else. Unfortunately, I also found the characters to be lacking. NG started off promising. She had the same insecurities anyone faces when starting over somewhere new, and met those insecurities head on. As the story progresses however, she made several ridiculous choices which only added to the rumours and the whispers behind her back. Like when Dana offered her her spare Halloween costume. Why would NG trust anything that Dana had to say when she had been nothing but hostile towards her from the moment she started at Manderly? And having been "warned" by Julia and Madison that the only two boys off-limits were Johnny and Max, NG obviously develops relationships with both of them. While her relationship with Johnny remained platonic, it didn't help the rumour mill that he seemed to be one of the only people she opened up to. Her relationship with Max caused her more trouble then it seemed to be worth, as every time she admitted to someone out loud that they were seeing each other (which always seemed to be at a party, in front of a group of people), he wouldn't confirm it - leaving her blushing and embarrassed in front of a crowd of onlookers who secretly (or not-so-secretly) hoped to see her fail. There was no development to their relationship, I didn't feel any chemistry between them and NG's constant self-pep-talks about how she was better then the treatment he gave her did little to foster my pity for her situation. But mostly, I just didn't understand why she chose to make things harder on herself by pursuing the ex-boyfriend of the notoriously missing "Becca".

And Becca. Ugh, she drove me insane. I almost couldn't finish the book because of her attitude. Unhappy unless she was the centre of all attention, Becca said (or did) whatever was necessary to get what she wanted. She didn't truly care for any of her friends, and saw them all as mere pawns with which she could control to get her desired outcome. She lived in constant fear of being found out as a fake, or as a loser, and had no qualms extorting the emotions of those around her in order to advance her social status.

"She felt Dana's eyes on her. She was jealous that Johnny was all about talking to Becca. And Becca couldn't help but rub it in."

But my problem wasn't so much with Becca's personality flaws as it was with how they were presented.

"Half an hour later, Becca had been flirted with by another group of guys and had her self-esteem restored."

I had Becca completely figured out within her first chapter as narrator, as Harbison took great pains to hammer home the point that Becca was a "mean girl". This left Becca devoid of complexity as I wasn't presented with the chance to watch her true self unfold - it was laid out in front of me, through the thoughts in her head. The worst part about this was how every other character seemed to recognize how horrid Becca was, yet they still put her on this pedestal and idolized her as this perfect person; the other half to the "golden couple". Her disappearance is constantly brought up, and the general consensus seems to be that Becca is merely waiting for the right moment to make her triumphant return.

"Come on," said Max. "Can you not see how this would make perfect sense to Becca? She loves having people think about her. I can completely picture her just shrugging and saying it's funny to watch everyone wonder."

By the end, it's obvious that Becca was mentally disturbed - which is a shame because she should have been a complex and compelling character! - but her final scene, in which she returns to make good on her sins, was so forced that she deflates and falls completely flat.

Another character with great promise who flickered and burnt out was Dana. Her obsession with Becca and Becca's relationship with Max was borderline psychotic - I kept waiting for NG to wake up to Dana hovering over her in her sleep with a knife of something. Having NG wake up to Dana singing "You Are My Sunshine" was so creepy, I got chills. But her emotional outlashes seemed random and forced, occurring during inappropriate moments, and her constant accusations that NG was trying to "be Becca" became annoying and always seemed to be without reason. I kept waiting for NG to ask her what it is she had done that made it seem like she was trying to be Becca, but it never happened. Dana's constant threats that Becca would return, or that Max knew more then he was letting on made a level of suspense that crested and toppled when I realized that she wasn't actually going anywhere with them.

The plot itself is well-written, and I found myself eager to find out what had happened to Becca. I looked forward to Becca's chapters, so I could uncover more behind her mysterious disappearance. Unfortunately the ending is glazed over, interrupted with a dream-like sequence that I'm still confused about. I was really hoping my predictions would be completely off-base (there was a part of me hoping NG was Becca - I don't know how it would work, but I was looking forward to finding out!) but I was spot-on which left me with an underwhelming feeling of disappointment. Now knowing NG's name, I half-wish it had been left a secret. I'm sure the revealing of her name after the closure with the ending was supposed to be symbolic of NG gaining her independence from Becca's shadow (and blah, blah, blah), and though the significance wasn't lost on me, I just didn't care.
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Better Than Harbison's Debut!
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4.0
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So freaking cool! And not just because it was set in New Hampshire...because it's cold there. Punned! Anyway, with this book, I pronounce myself a Paige Harbison fan. Last year, I read her debut Here Lies Bridget and I liked it, but it wasn't too much out of the ordinary. This one, though, just blew me away.

Why? Well, I've always had a weakness for books based on other books. New Girl is based on Daphne DuMaurier's Rebecca, which I have not yet read. Unfortunately, I had to look up a summary on Wikipedia, because I did not want to miss any references. Hopefully, I will forget about some of the plot twists before I try to read the book.

Anywho, based on my extensive knowledge of Rebecca (aka Wikipedia article), Harbison did a really amazing job modernizing this. The transitions she made in some of the characters, like turning Mrs. Danvers into Dana, Becca's roommate who refuses to let her go, is quite clever, as is the changing of the scene with the dress.

The story is told alternatingly between the New Girl's perspective in first person and Becca's perspective in third person. You might think that sounds clunky, but it really wasn't. This makes the fact that you never learn the New Girl's actual name but are so familiar with Becca's completely natural; I didn't even notice until partway through. Of course, I wanted to punch Becca in the face the whole time, but I really liked New Girl.

For those who like clever teen lit, you'll probably quite enjoy this. It's full of drama and told in an interesting way. I also suspect that people who love Rebecca and don't ordinarily read teen lit will, at the very least, get a kick out of New Girl.
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Full of lust and mystery. A page turner, I must admit.
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4.0
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When I picked up this book, I truly had no idea how intense it would be. Filled with lust, envy, mystery, and jealousy, this book sucked me into its web of drama at Manderley Academy.

First of all, let me clarify that this book takes place mostly at a boarding school in New Hampshire. Before even reading the full synopsis, I knew that this would be a great book. Boarding schools always provide a certain inexplicable quality to books that I just can't get enough of.

The perspective switched between Becca and New Girl, Becca's being a year before New Girl's present year at Manderley. I loved how both girls were telling what happened to them at the same time of year. For instance, if New Girl was telling about a dance, so was Becca, only a year before. Before she went missing.

The mystery behind Becca's disappearance I found very intriguing. She had a terrible manipulative and impersonal attitude, but behind her shell was a person more complex than any one of her worshippers at Manderley ever could have imagined. She just got fed too much of popularity and it gained control over her actions. I was constantly wondering if she went missing on purpose to attract more popularity or if someone took her or worse.

New Girl was a frustrating read, but in the best way. The New Girl was always presumed by her peers to be trying to take Becca's place and be exactly like her. That wasn't her intention at all, of course, but people never showed any sign of knowing it. Especially Dana. She was bipolar or something was not right in her head. Not only did she blame New Girl incessantly for Becca's disappearance, she was always chanting songs in her sleep and furiously insisting that Becca was still out there.

From the beginning, I knew that Dana knew more than she was letting on. More than anything, this book was unpredictable. So much so, that I didn't dare predict what was to happen. There were new surprises around every corner and suspense galore!
Good Points
- constant mystery
- great writing style!
SH
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I probably would have enjoyed this one a lot more if I hadn’t disliked the characters so much.
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2.7
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The New Girl used to want to go to boarding school at Manderley, back when she was younger. But there wasn’t an opening back then. Suddenly, there is one and her parents are excited to let her go. Only, she’s not crazy about the idea now, that was her dream back then. But her parents are so excited for her, she agrees to go along with it. Once she shows up, she finds herself living in the shadow of the girl who disappeared last year.

Overall, I thought the plot was pretty good. I understand it is a retelling of Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, but since I had never read that one, I didn’t know what to expect.

At first, I liked the New Girl’s character. She had a nice group of friends and she got along with her parents, even agreeing to go to the boarding school just to please them. Then, she arrived at the school and turned into a total weakling. I felt sorry for her as she arrived at this new school, kind of looking forward to it, only to be immediately shunned for no reason. She was in the dark about who Becca was and why she was so popular. Her new roommate was obsessed with Becca (I wondered if maybe she was in love with her) and all the kids in the school wanted to talk about was Becca. But New Girl just put up with it all, not asking questions or standing up for herself. After she agreed to go to the school just for her parents, I guess it would be considered characteristic of her to just lay down and let everyone walk all over her like that.

As for Becca, I never understood why she was such a beloved person. She lied and cheated and wormed her way around the school bending everyone to her will. She was a terrible girlfriend to not 1, but 2 boys and they both let her get away with it. Although, thinking about it now, I imagine the mystery of her disappearance made her infamous and that probably had a lot to do with her popularity once the New Girl arrived.

All of the other people in the school were thoughtless at best and some were downright cruel. The teacher’s were clueless and had no idea how much Becca’s disappearance was affecting everyone, especially New Girl.

Harbison did a fantastic job of describing the school and grounds; they were easy to picture in my mind, with foreboding buildings and the dark musty boathouse. There was some sex talk/doing and while it wasn’t super graphic, it might give younger teens pause. Lots of recreational drinking and drug use, including date rape drug use. There was a bit of a surprise ending; I thought I had it all figured out but I was wrong, which was good. If it had ended any other way, it wouldn’t have seemed as realistic.
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Review from Mandi Kaye's Book Blog
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3.0
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I never read Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, so I can’t comment on any similarities – as such, the story was completely new to me.

I liked the main character – it startled me at the end when someone said her name. I hadn’t realized that for the entire book she’d only been called “New Girl.” I liked that she figured out pretty quickly that she was worth far more than what her classmates made her out to be. I liked that she stood up for herself.

I pretty much hated the rest of the characters, even Max. Yes, even Max.

They all treated her so horribly – as if she were trying to steal Becca’s identity – when all she was trying to do was live her own life. They were mean to her. They were petty.

I think that’s why the book left me so unsettled – I couldn’t find a redeeming quality in most of the characters I met. Max managed to redeem himself – somewhat – but no one else did.

While I didn’t care for the characters so much, I can’t deny that the writing was high quality. If Harbison hadn’t written such descriptive characters, I wouldn’t have ended up feeling the way I did – and I wouldn’t have been so eager to find out what happened to Becca and how things would end up for everyone.
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