Have any one read a good girl’s guitar to Murder please give me review of the book
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This book starts light, but it doesn't take long before you start seeing hints of seriousness. Which is too bad as it can't really bear the load.
Molly just wants to sing about things that matter to her—even while acknowledging that those things aren't world-shattering or expSign up
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Guitar Girl
by Sarra Manning
3.61 3,492 ratings 211 reviews
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Seventeen-year-old Molly Montgomery never planned on becoming famous. Molly's band, The Hormones, was just supposed to be about mucking around with her best mates, Jane and Tara, and having fun. But when the deliciously dangerous Dean and his friend ... More
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Average rating 3.61 · 3,492 ratings · 211 reviews
Jacob Proffitt
Jacob Proffitt rated it liked it
over 5 years ago
Shelves: young-adult
This book starts light, but it doesn't take long before you start seeing hints of seriousness. Which is too bad as it can't really bear the load.
Molly just wants to sing about things that matter to her—even while acknowledging that those things aren't world-shattering or expecting others to find them interesting, themselves. She's somewhat taken aback when her little group starts to get attention and finds herself quickly out of her depth and struggling to find her way with a boatload of distractions pushing and pulling at her.
Her greatest distraction is bandmate, Dean. He runs hot and cold, argues all the time, but he has hints of deeper feelings that are as intriguing as they are confusing. I liked how their relationship progressed, frankly, even though I didn't like him much.
All of that is the good stuff. The problem with the story is that there's an undercurrent of pain, temptation, and excess that dogs Molly's little band and that seriousness undermines the entire book. Take the band's success—their success is beyond unrealistic and their speedy rise to fame just doesn't survive any scrutiny at all. That goofy foundation makes the serious events that rest on it feel trivialized, or, worse, like a tract or rant about the evils of success and putting your faith in the obviously faithless. It's like a modern Red Riding Hood story told to young girls to warn them away from promises of fame and lies about success. "Hey, little girl, where are you heading with that yummy guitar riff and quirky outfits?" It doesn't help that it's a short book and a fast read. If you're going to do serious, you really need a better foundation and, maybe, to take the time to establish enough realism to give it the impact it deserves.
And yes, I truly hated the ending. That's mollified (heh) somewhat by being completely foreshadowed and absolutely right for the characters and what was left of the plot. Still, that doesn't mean I have to like it...
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there is no book named a good girls guitar to murder there is a book named a good girls guide to murder
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