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Better off Famous? »

Book cover image of Better off Famous? by Jane Mendle

Authors: Jane Mendle
ISBN-13: 9780312369033, ISBN-10: 0312369034
Format: Paperback
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Date Published: October 2007
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Jane Mendle

Book Synopsis

Fame is awesome, right? Partying every night at the hottest clubs. Hanging with the coolest stars. Having your picture in every magazine. Yeah, that's what Annie Hoffman thought too. Until she became a celebrity.

All Annie ever wanted for her sixteenth birthday was a driver’s license and a spot at Julliard’s prestigious high school violin program. Well, she got neither. But as luck would have it, a casting director for fall’s hottest new television show happens to be at the Julliard auditions, and Annie wows him. He thinks her look is exactly what his show, a teen soap set at a posh New York school, has been missing. And just like that, Annie gets cast as the naive “new girl,” and her life is turned upside down.

Sure, the perks are great, the wardrobe is awesome, and her tutor is a super hot genius… but being stalked day and night by paparazzi out to catch her in her worst light—-not so fun! Can Annie learn to balance her life— and her partying— before the press, and the public, write her off for good?

Publishers Weekly

A likable, flawed heroine helps set apart this fairly formulaic book about the trappings of fame. When narrator Annie Hoffman's great-aunt invites her for a visit to New York City, the talented violinist from Alabama secretly auditions for Juilliard. Instead of an acceptance from the prestigious music school, though, Annie gets another offer: she literally runs into a television producer, who invites her to audition for a new teen show (the role just happens to be for a Southern good girl who plays the violin). As Annie is catapulted to stardom, she hangs out with celebrities, receives an amazing gown for free and, less pleasingly, is stalked by the media. Readers will relate to Annie, who is prone to saying and doing embarrassing things (at a shoot for Seventeenmagazine, her mace goes off in her purse, sending the photographer fleeing). Eventually her worsening behavior, including drunkenly swearing at paparazzi, makes her the target of a politician "committed to improving teenage morality in America." Mendle (Kissing in Technicolor) convincingly builds Annie's transformation from nice small-town girl to big-city wild child (after she blows off young fans in one of her first diva acts, she feels bad, saying to herself, "Maybe I could complete my transformation into Cruella DeVil by ingesting live newborn puppies"). There's never any doubt about the path Mendle or her narrator will take, but the amusing narration and wishful premise will keep readers following along. Ages 13-up. (Nov.)

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