Pages:
272
Publisher:
S&S
Release
Date: 23rd
April 2015
Edition:
e-proof,
NetGalley review copy
Other
Titles by this Author: Have
a Little Faith, Keep
the Faith and as CJ Harper: The
Disappeared, The Wilderness
Oldest
sister Amelia wants to be Left Alone to have deep thoughts, so she’s grown a
fringe to hide under. Second up is Chloe who’s sport-crazy and in training to
be a wrestling star (this week anyway). Little sister Lucy is the cute one who’s
training an army of earwigs. Then there’s Ella. The middle one who’s still
trying to figure out what makes her ‘perfectly Ella’ and how to stand out in a
house full of big personalities. And now there’s a new Strawberry Sister. Baby
Kirsti who lives with Dad and his Finnish girlfriend.
Along
with her sisters and one very tired Mum who’s struggling to keep it all
together, Ella’s small home is crammed with almost-finished homework,
nearly-clean jumpers and a vampire bunny called Buttercup. With so much going
on, life can sometimes feel totally crazy but the Strawberry Sisters have a
weapon against the craziness of the world they live in, each other.
I’m a huge fan of Candy Harper’s
fun, heartwarming and incredibly sweet teen novels and Perfectly Ella was exception – I devoured it in one sitting.
Ella’s sisters are delightfully
bonkers and I love them all. I have two sisters myself so I always enjoy it
when that relationship is at the heart of a novel and the complex relationships
between Ella, Amelia, Chloe and Lucy so multi-faceted. Like all siblings they
bicker and argue and forget to consider how each other feel, but they
ultimately have each other’s backs.
The girls’ mum and dad divorced a
year and a half ago and everything has changed really fast – now Mum is super
stressed with looking after them on her own while being a Year Two teacher and
Dad has just had a baby with his girlfriend, Suvi. Baby Kirsti becomes the
fifth Strawberry Sister and brings up some mixed feelings. All of the girls are
struggling with the changes in their lives and that was portrayed realistically
and sensitively. I remember going through the exact same emotions that the girls
are: anger at Dad; jealousy of the new baby; feeling abandoned, ignored and not
enough – Candy Harper hit the nail on the head.
I really liked that each
Strawberry sister reacted in a different way, or at least focused on a
different aspect of the fall out of the divorce. The result was the
bittersweet, touching and brilliantly funny adventure of Perfectly Ella, but it really was Ella that sung for me. I empathised
with her a lot. Ella’s voice is often drowned out by her loud, dominating
sisters – all she has to define her is that she’s ‘nice’, and we know how
English teachers view the use of that word… She puts everybody’s needs above
her own in hope that everything will go smoothly and people will get on, often
to her own detriment. I loved that she eventually found her voice and realised
its significance.
I want more from the Strawberry
sisters, please!
Thanks to S&S and NetGalley
for the review copy.
Sophie
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