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Airhead
 
 

Airhead [Paperback]

Meg Cabot
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
List Price: CDN$ 12.50
Price: CDN$ 11.25 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

Review

Praise for Meg Cabot: "Cabot shows the dark side behind the bling-blingy superficial worlds." -- Teenreads.com "[The] strong, amusing voice, the plot twists, and the possibility of romance will draw mystery and chick-lit readers alike." -- Booklist "Bag the tiara and get out the gun... Cabot delivers." -- Publishers Weekly "Meg Cabot... reigning grand dame of teenage chick-lit." -- The New York Times Book Review "Meg Cabot is chick-lit royalty." -- Newsweek Praise for the Airhead Trilogy: New York Times Bestseller Publishers Weekly Bestseller "Cabot delivers yet another... far-fetched but rousing roller-coaster ride of a novel... This book is sure to fly off the shelves." -- School Library Journal, starred review "Cabot dishes up all the story ingredients her fans have come to know and love -- romance, humor, believable teen dialogue and even a fantastical twist... Cabot's portrayal of Emerson is brilliant... Pure fun." -- Publishers Weekly "Bag the tiara and get out the gun...Cabot delivers." -- Publishers Weekly "[The] strong, amusing voice, the plot twists, and the possibility of romance will draw mystery and chick-lit readers alike." - Booklist "A snappy and smart read that goes by far too quickly!" -- The Compulsive Reader "...Em's witty character keeps this read both grounded and fun." -- Kirkus Reviews "Cabot pulls readers in and makes them care about Em... This book is sure to fly off the shelves and leave readers breathlessly awaiting the promised sequel." -- School Library Journal "Getting inside a teenager's head seems like a scary idea... but Meg channels this age group

Product Description

EM WATTS IS GONE. Emerson Watts didn't even want to go to the new SoHo Stark Megastore grand opening. But someone needed to look out for her sister, Frida, whose crush, British heartthrob Gabriel Luna, would be singing and signing autographs there -- along with the newly appointed Face of Stark, teen supermodel sensation Nikki Howard. How was Em to know that disaster would strike, changing her, and life as she'd known it, forever? One bizarre accident later, and Em Watts, always the tomboy, never the party princess, is no longer herself. Literally. Now getting her best friend, Christopher, to notice that she's actually a girl is the least of Em's problems. But what Em's pretty sure she'll never be able to accept might just turn out to be the one thing that's going to make her dream come true... NIKKI HOWARD IS HERE TO STAY.

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5.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, May 16 2008
This review is from: Airhead (Hardcover)
I can't lie; this had to be the oddest book that I have read by one of my favorite authors!

Emerson Watts is a pretty typical nerdy girl at a good school. She has one best friend, who she is secretly in love with (It is a guy, by the way.) But she is only typical until she goes to a store opening with her sister and gets injured in a very freak accident.

When she wakes up after about a month of being unconscious, she feels like she is someone else.

And she actually is.

This is not a paranormal book. She gets a brain transplant.

At the end of the book I literally said, "Get me the next book! NOW!" The ending is a total cliffhanger!

The characters are smart, witty, and a little weird, as with typical Meg Cabot books. A fun read, even though the beginning is a little hard to understand, and can be difficult to get into. However, it is definitely worth reading the whole thing, because it is truly hilarious!

Reviewed by: Taylor Rector
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (72 customer reviews)

20 of 23 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, May 16 2008
By TeensReadToo "Eat. Drink. Read. Be Merrier." - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Airhead (Hardcover)
I can't lie; this had to be the oddest book that I have read by one of my favorite authors!

Emerson Watts is a pretty typical nerdy girl at a good school. She has one best friend, who she is secretly in love with (It is a guy, by the way.) But she is only typical until she goes to a store opening with her sister and gets injured in a very freak accident.

When she wakes up after about a month of being unconscious, she feels like she is someone else.

And she actually is.

This is not a paranormal book. She gets a brain transplant.

At the end of the book I literally said, "Get me the next book! NOW!" The ending is a total cliffhanger!

The characters are smart, witty, and a little weird, as with typical Meg Cabot books. A fun read, even though the beginning is a little hard to understand, and can be difficult to get into. However, it is definitely worth reading the whole thing, because it is truly hilarious!

Reviewed by: Taylor Rector

11 of 14 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars Meg Cabot does sci-fi?, Jun 30 2008
By Kathryn Gaglione "The Bibliophile" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Airhead (Hardcover)
Really, I should have seen it coming. Meg Cabot is obsessed with Star Wars, watches way too much TV and has already done the psychic thing, the princess thing, the paranormal thing and the historical fiction thing. And with the popularity of Stephenie Meyer's The Host: A Novel, why shouldn't she jump on the body-snatcher bandwagon?

Emerson Watts loves to play video games, has never kissed a boy and refers to the popular crowed at her alternative college prep school in Manhattan as the Walking Dead. So when she wakes up as a $4,000-dress-wearing, boyfriend-stealing, high-school-drop-outing supermodel, she doesn't know how she can take over Nikki Howard's identity let alone walk in her stiletto shoes.

While this book was interesting, and Nikki's best friend Lulu is definitely a stand-out character with her philosophies on love, skin care and house-keeping, I just didn't really buy it. I mean, come on, a music mega-story paying for a body transplant so they don't have to find a new spokes-model? It's a stretch, even for the author who brought us a princess in hiding, a kick-boxing ghost shrink, Arthur reincarnated, a lighting-struck person-finder and an unlucky teenage witch. Not that it was really a bad book, just not up to par.

Plus, can we please get a completed series sometime soon? With Princess Diaries, Volume X: Forever Princess (Princess Diaries) and Queen of Babble Gets Hitched (Queen of Babble) looming in the distance, two more books promised for the Heather Wells Mystery series, the unfinished Jinx series, the unfinished Avalon High series, her new middle-grade Allie Finkle series and who knows what other series rolling around in her head, do we really need a sci-fi version of America's Next Top Model?

But if you want a light read that is classic Meg Cabot, you can't pass up this book. Her books are always filled with characters that are quirky and relatable, romance and teenaged angst that keep YA lit lovers coming back for more, and dialogue that will inevitably win you over.

11 of 14 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars Okay, but not up to par, Jun 8 2008
By B. Hodgkiss - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Airhead (Hardcover)
I enjoy reading just about all of her books. They are funny, light, and well-written.

This, one, however, just went no where. It was boring, and it just didn't have the spark or fun of previous works. The ending was extremely unsatisfying, and absolutely nothing happened. Seriously.

Here is just about everything that happened: Em Watts getts into an accident, has her brain transplanted into a model. This confuses her for a while. Then she goes to live as a model with the models best friend. She is in love with her best friend who thinks she is dead now that she is in a new body.

That is all that happens. Their wasn't resolution to anything, Em wasn't a particularly funny, wise, interesting or anything character.

Also, It seemed like the book wanted to have a 'point', or try to say something, about looks, and society's judgement of people, being different, and how you have to be pretty to fit in, but at the end it just seemed like, "Yeah, being pretty is AWESOME! I'm way cooler now that I am pretty! Everyone wants to be my friend and I can have any guy I want. And now I like wearing pretty clothes, because I am pretty!" Uh, yeah, I buy that.

It was a quick read, but not satisfying in any dimension. I'll get the next one out of the library.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 72 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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