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The series' publisher, Scholastic Books, published a lesson plan for teachers to use the quartet in the classroom. The lesson plan suggests exploring the series' "refreshingly multiracial world," its representation of the student experience, and literary techniques of sensory writing, simile , and plot suspense.
A high school girl who became afraid of heights after falling off a playground structure and breaking her leg. Thanks to Hinata's influence, she begins to take an interest in mountain climbing. Hinata Kuraue (倉上 ひなた, Kuraue Hinata) Voiced by: Kana Asumi [3] A hyperactive girl who loves mountains.
Janet McDonald (August 10, 1953 – April 11, 2007) [1] was an American writer of young adult novels as well as the author of Project Girl, a memoir about her early life in Brooklyn's Farragut Houses and struggle to achieve an Ivy League education.
A hyperactive girl who often claims to be a princess from a strawberry planet as part of her character. She works part-time jobs which she sometimes gets fired from due to absences. She has a cheerful character that can make Futaba and Rin carried by the atmosphere. She is a member of the unit Earphones Rin Kohana (小花 鈴, Kohana Rin)
The main protagonist, a 14-year-old girl who fights with a variable size hammer, named Aratama (荒魂). Koto is a carefree and hyperactive girl who is searching for a black rabbit in order to return home with her familiars, while also searching for clues that will reunite her with her family.
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Her first novel, Cracked Up to Be, was published in December 2008 [4] and was the 2009 Cybils Award winner for YA Fiction. [5] Her sophomore novel, Some Girls Are, was published in January 2010, [6] and received starred reviews from Kirkus Reviews, [7] Publishers Weekly, [8] and School Library Journal, [9] and was a 2010 Goodreads Choice Awards nominee in the YA Fiction category. [10]
The book gives suggestions on how parents can better understand and help their daughters navigate the social atmosphere of what Wiseman refers to as "Girl World." Since its release in 2002, it has become a New York Times Best Seller [5] and was the basis for the 2004 film Mean Girls. [2]