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Title:Kissing Kate
Author:Lauren Myracle
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 198 pages
Published:April 19th 2007 by Speak (first published April 14th 2003)
Categories:Young Adult. LGBT. Romance. Fiction. GLBT. Queer. Contemporary
Books Download Kissing Kate  Free Online
Kissing Kate Paperback | Pages: 198 pages
Rating: 3.69 | 9822 Users | 357 Reviews

Interpretation Conducive To Books Kissing Kate

Kate was Lissa's best friend. They've shared everything for four years. Then one night at a drunken party, Kate leaned in to kiss Lissa, and Lissa kissed her back. And now Kate is pretending Lissa doesn't exist. Confused and alone, Lissa's left questioning everything she thought she knew about herself, and about life. But with the help of a free-spirit new friend, Lissa's beginning to find the strength to realize that sometimes falling in love with the wrong person is the only way to find your footing.



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Original Title: Kissing Kate
ISBN: 0142408697 (ISBN13: 9780142408698)
Edition Language: English URL http://laurenmyracle.com
Setting: Atlanta, Georgia(United States)


Rating Epithetical Books Kissing Kate
Ratings: 3.69 From 9822 Users | 357 Reviews

Criticize Epithetical Books Kissing Kate
This book frustrated the shit out of me. I was all about it at first. Lissa and her supposedly best friend since elementary school Kate go to a party where Kate gets a bit tipsy and kisses Lissa. Things went a little PG-13 and now for some reason Kate is ignoring Lissa. It's hard to review because the book then goes off on some weird deep end randomly delves into the topic of "Lucid Dreaming", won't go there. It's also hard to review because there is barely any character definition of Kate (

This review is also posted on my blog. (view spoiler)[Well! That was adorable and much easier to read than probably anything else Ive gotten through this year. It was a good portrayal of someone just discovering their sexual identity, I thought.I did feel like the first half was just stuffed with boring filler and unimportant doings, but that may have just been me. I also felt like Lissa was TERRIBLY ANNOYING during that first half, and I found it very hard to like her or care about what

This book had many great moments, but upon reflection, I am not sure if I really liked it. I was certainly hooked on it, and read most of it in one sitting, but I felt like I was just expecting it to get better, and I'm not sure it ever did. I felt that Lissa's emotions were incredibly genuine and well depicted, and her struggle with Kate seemed very real. Yet, at the same time, I was annoyed with the various subplots that I felt skewed the focus of the story. There were quite a few cliche

Review on my blog!

I wasn't going to rate this but I got 10 pages in and couldn't stand the writing style or the whiny main character, so I'm giving this 1 star anyway

I enjoyed this book and appreciate the hard task of tackling such a tough subject as teenage homosexuality. I appreciate what the author did with it and would definitely read more of her books.While I thought this book did a good job at pulling out the different emotional aspects that Lissa is going through, I felt like it never went quite far enough or did enough. The resolution felt smudged and somewhat awkward. We'd like to think that Lissa is going to be OK, but you're left with the feeling

(Spoilers - varying from major to minor- ahead. Warning. Proceed carefully.)When a book handles a dangerous,powerful, hard subject such as coming to terms with your sexuality - and accepting it - I feel as if it should be fantastic, should make me bawl or something along the same lines. The premise was fascinating. It sounded real in a way that I can't imagine myself in, but can see other people having as a reality. The cover was pretty. And when I first met the main character, I sort of like

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