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OverviewFor seventeen-year-old Flannery Fields, the only respite from the plaid-skirted mean girls at Sacred Heart High School at is her beloved teacher Miss Sweeney’s AP English class. But when Miss Sweeney doesn't show up to teach Flannery's favourite book, Wuthering Heights, leaving behind her purse, Flannery knows something is wrong. The police are called, and Flannery gives them everything - except Miss Sweeney's copy of Wuthering Heights. This she holds onto. And good thing she does, because when she opens it, it has somehow transformed into Miss Sweeney's real-time diary. It seems Miss Sweeney is in New York City - and she's in trouble. So Flannery does something very unFlannery-like: she skips school and sets out for Manhattan, with the book as her guide. But as soon as she arrives, she meets a boy named Heath. Heath is British, on a gap year, incredibly smart - yet he's never heard of Albert Einstein or Anne Frank. In fact, Flannery can't help thinking that he seems to have stepped from the pages of Bronte's novel. Could it be? With inimitable wit and heart, Mary O'Connell has crafted a love letter to reading, to the books that make us who we are. Dear Reader, charming and heartbreaking, is a novel about finding your people, on the page in the world. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mary O'ConnellPublisher: Flatiron Books Imprint: Flatiron Books Dimensions: Width: 13.70cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 21.10cm ISBN: 9781250077097ISBN 10: 1250077095 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 01 January 2019 Recommended Age: From 13 to 18 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAn IndieNext Pick! Audacious. Like much classic literature and like growing up, reading this immersive novel is all about the experience. Bookish readers will be entranced--and perhaps inspired to seek out the source text. --The Horn Book Dear Reader is so real, even the magic of books is literal. It's imaginative and exhilarating and genre-bending and one of the best YA novels of the year. --Book Riot Illuminates the complex chaos of life and love, demonstrating that seemingly inconsequential choices and people can have lingering effects. The use of Wuthering Heights intensifies the impact of Flannery and Miss Sweeney's corresponding journeys; even readers who haven't read the classic will find significance in the parallels. --Publishers Weekly I loved Dear Reader--the wild romance of it, the joy in the language, and the celebration of the imagination that the whole book is. It's like a book dipped in love, and I can't think of another quite like it. --Alison Umminger, author of American Girls Dear Reader breaks the YA genre wide open. Captivating, intelligent, and the most exquisitely written of this year or any year. --Wendy Lawless, New York Times bestselling author of Chanel Bonfire Imaginative, fresh, and sometimes wickedly funny, and a book with real compassion at its core. I loved everything about it. --Laura Moriarty, New York Times bestselling author of The Chaperone In a world of Apple stores and texts, can literature still be a guide to life? Mary O'Connell's Dear Reader sends its heroine, Flannery Fields, on a daring mission to find out. Armed with a dog-eared copy of Wuthering Heights and O'Connell's intoxicating, funny, and genre-bending prose, she discovers that reading remains the key to understanding the human heart, even in modern day New York. And readers of this novel will discover an unforgettable testament to the power of imagination, friendship, and our enduring capacity for self-discovery. --Whitney Terrell, author of The Good Lieutenant I am broken-hearted that these characters aren't my real-life friends. --Katrina Leno, author of The Lost & Found Author InformationMARY O'CONNELL is a graduate of the Iowa Writer's Workshop and the author of the short story collection, Living With Saints, and the YA novel, The Sharp Time. Her short fiction and essays have appeared in several literary magazines, and she is the recipient of a James Michener Fellowship and a Chicago Tribune Nelson Algren Award. She lives with her husband and her three children in Lawrence, Kansas. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |