Dead Girls Don’t write Letters: By Gail Giles
Reviewed by:Madiha B.
In Texas during noon, Sunny Reynolds, who is the protagonist, receives a
letter from her dead sister. Sunny does not know how to react to the
letter she has received. The letter says that her sister Jazz is coming
home which surprised Sunny because she was convinced that her sister
died in the fire in New York. A girl arrives claiming to be Jazz, she
looks like Jazz, acts like Jazz, and seems to be Jazz in every way, but
is she really Jazz? Does Sunny tell her mother who is very happy to see
Jazz? or does she let it go? Read on to fight out what happens next.!!!
I liked this book because it was a mystery book and mysterious books
are always interesting. On page 65 when Sunny's sister Jazz arrives home
she finds out that it isn’t Jazz and she has to find out who this girl
is? And what is she up to? This is a mystery that Sunny has to find out.
What I really liked about this story is that it was a suspense and it
kept me wanting to know what was going to happen in the end. I would
recommend this book to ages 12 and up. The theme of this book is that
life always gives you alternatives. It shows that you have options on
what's going to happen in your life and everyone's endings aren't the
same. The theme helped me understand that whatever the options to life
are never the same as everyone elses life.
I would give Honorable mention to the books that I have read, but didn’t write a review about are: Hunger
games series, Six months to live by: Lurlene Mcdaniel, Willa By heart
by; Coleen Murtagh, The secret life of bees by: Sue Monk Kidd. Diary Of A
Would Be Princess By Jessica Green.
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