FRINGE GIRL by Valerie Frankel
    Category:  Contemporary
    Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
    Release Date:  4/4/06
    Publisher:  NAL
    Reviewed by:  Jennifer Wardrip, aka "The Genius"
    Rating:  5 Stars


    If Adora Benet had her way, the first day of junior year at the Brownstone Collegiate Institute in Brooklyn Heights,
    New York, could be summed up like this:  "I am hot.  My heat could melt the belly of an airplane.  I am only slightly
    less on fire than the surface of the sun."  Unfortunately, as soon as Adora utters this mantra, she knows it's not true.  
    More matchstick than burning ember, more generally pretty than outstandingly beautiful, Adora knows that she'll never
    be A-list quality.  Sure, she has friends, and yes, she's pretty well ensconced in middle class, but she'll never be the girl
    who sits comfortably atop the popularity pyramid.

    It doesn't help that her well-known parents, Gloria and Ed Benet, are authors of the tomes of wisdom like His-And-
    Her Seduction and His-And-Her Dating.  Those kinds of books, and she can't even get gorgeous, track athlete Vin
    Transom to notice her.  Not even attempting to jog across the Brooklyn Bridge had garnered her a passing glance,
    even though she did, admittedly, quit three blocks from home for an iced coffee.  Nevertheless, Adora wants junior
    year to be different.  Others, though, like Sondra Fortune, queen of the A-listers, most popular of populars, insists on
    calling Adora Fringe Girl.  Sure, it started out when she had a haircut with bangs, or fringe, but it's continued because,
    Adora suspects, Sondra knows just how accurate the nickname is.

    But now Adora has a plan.  Mr. Sagebrush, her social studies teacher, has presented an interesting idea to the class.  
    Their term project will be based on the three tenets of bloodless revolution:  undermine authority, present an
    alternative government, and enlist the masses.  Adora needs to come up with a proposal, and suddenly the idea is
    brought to life--why couldn't she, along with her best friends Eli and Liza, stage her own school revolution?  Who said
    Sondra Fortune had to be the undisputed queen of the school's halls?  Where was it written, anyway, that a girl on the
    fringe couldn't rise to queendom?

    And so begins Adora's ascent--or descent--into the ups and downs of becoming an A-lister, the queen of cool, the
    undisputed champion of popularity.  Except, as these things have a way of happening, Adora's life as an anti-fringe girl
    seems to have some really disappointing consequences.  Will Adora ever find her place in life, somewhere in the
    middle of the top and bottom of the social pyramid?

    What makes FRINGE GIRL such a fun, fascinating read is the true-to-life characters, the great dialogue, and the
    interaction between everyone involved.  You won't be able to help yourself from rooting for Adora during her
    bloodless revolution, just as you won't be able to stop yourself from feeling her heartbreak along the way.  This is
    definitely a read that's well worth your time!
Fringe Girl
by Valerie Frankel