When she was in eighth grade, Helen's best friend Lauren humiliated and betrayed her in order to start high school in the popular group. Helen moved away with her family for three years, but now she's back and she wants revenge.
I started reading this book a little bit on my moral high horse: Revenge is bad, forgiveness is good, and at first that interfered a little with my enjoyment of Lauren Wood. On the other hand, there was that little dark side of me that remembered being bullied in school and appreciated seeing the nasty kid getting her comeuppance, quite safely within the pages of a book.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEis3OKiyKxCWGeytR54A2zxmVKNb9Xxzynh0RkVpXDStWynFwTWNd-tdZsR0_95zcRvLc80A7zTpkJUyhRE9-ByADF5qQxR24ZtFylzfXDKuaiH_j7qmMq5kE9_ZYGcamKEQrRrilE91p9p/s320/lauren+wood.jpg)
But we are expected to believe that Helen has changed enough over three years to make her unrecogniseable, by losing some weight, cutting her hair and having a nose job, so that she can call herself by her middle name (Claire) and mother's maiden name. I didn't think so, but was quite willing to suspend my disbelief to watch the drama unfold. The plot was fairly predictable, and although Helen-Claire, the boy she liked, and Brenda, the friendly girl who wasn't part of the in-crowd and therefore had to be befriended in secret, were pretty well realised, Lauren could quite easily be Regina George from Mean Girls and her two closest friends, Bailey and Kyla (why are there always two cheerleader/popular girl minions?) looked in my mind like Brittany and Santana from Glee!
All in all, Getting Revenge on Lauren Wood was a trashy but enjoyable guilty-pleasure read. And it has a brilliant cover.
If you enjoyed this, you might like:
Just As Long As We're Together - Judy Blume
Film: Mean Girls
I agree that the plot does sound a little too contrived, but it seems like it was a fast fun read, which is good for a time of the year when things are so hectic :)
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