Synopses & Reviews
"If I really wanted to open up, I'd confess that I really am the liar everyone believes I am."
High-school junior Tola Riley has green hair, a nose ring, an attitude problem, and a fondness for fairy tales, which are a great escape from real life. Everyone thinks she's crazy; everyone says so. Everyone except Mr. Mymer, her art teacher. He gets her paintings and lets her hang out in the art room during lonely lunch periods.
But then rumors start flying and Tola is suddenly the center of a scandal. The whole town is judging her—even her family. When Mr. Mymer is suspended for what everyone thinks is an affair, she has no choice but to break her silence. Fairy tales won't help her this time . . . so how can she tell the truth? And, more importantly, will anyone believe her?
Review
“A clever, sardonic character study. Tola and her family are fascinating, quirky-yet-believable, and wholly likable. Visual artists will love this homage to creativity, and teens outside the status quo will find a kindred spirit in plucky Tola.” Booklist
Review
“A provocative premise, which is by turns hilarious and touching.” Kirkus
Review
“Pervaded by melancholy, witty, frank about sex, at pains not to indulge in stereotyping, GOOD GIRLS will undoubtedly appeal to readers made savvy about the otherworld of American school life.” Financial Times
Review
“A creatively constructed story with a modern-day scandal.” Publishers Weekly
Review
“[Tola] is an unusual and likable narrator. Readers will laugh, hurt, and roll their eyes along with this witty individualist of a heroine and her friends and supporters.” School Library Journal
Review
Praise for Good Girls: “Harrowing, honest and wickedly funny.” Libba Bray, Printz Award winning author of Going Bovine
Review
“A frank, realistic portrayal of teen life.” Voice of Youth Advocates (VOYA) (Starred Review)
Review
Praise for Play Me: “Guy lit with a brain and a heart, this has plenty to offer both romantics and cynics about love, film, and transformation.” Bulletin of the Center for Children & #8217;s Books
Review
“A good coming-of-age story where boy meets reality and discovers he may have to rethink the rest of the story.” KLIATT
Review
“Theres wit and cleverness as well as sympathy in both the writing and in the touches of fairytale allusion. This is both an absorbing read and a thoughtprovoking one.” Bulletin of the Center for Children & #8217;s Books (starred review)
Review
“Rubys novel has plenty to distinguish it. Tola is one of a kinda creative artist with a distinct worldview.” The Horn Book
About the Author
Laura Ruby is the author of books for adults, teens, and children, including the Edgar-nominated mystery Lily's Ghosts, the 2006 Book Sense Pick Good Girls, and the acclaimed novels Play Me and Bad Apple. She is on the faculty of Hamline University's MFA in writing for children and young adults program and lives in the Chicago area.