Margins
Southern Fried Makeover book cover
Southern Fried Makeover
1999
First Published
3.40
Average Rating
160
Number of Pages

Part of Series

It's a clothes encounter of the ethical kind. Bronson Alcott High has been invaded—by Gigi Rabinowitz, the new transfer student from Georgia. Gigi is looking to take over some major turf—like Murray, De's Known Boyfriend. And, segue—where did Gigi get her sense of style It's as Jurassic as her attitude toward boyfriends. Now De declares all-out war, and it's not civil. But the invasion sensation sees new worlds to conquer. A TV exec is scouting for high school veejay talent, and Gigi figures that with Cher as her image consultant she'll be the belle of the music video ball. Dilemma! Cher doesn't want to help her t.b.'s enemy, but De's cool—as long as Cher doesn't exchange Gigi's grievous garments for tasteful togs. In fact, she wants Cher to make Gigi look like her usual heinous self, only worse. Cher wants to stay loyal to her best bud, but if she doesn't turn Gigi into a Betty, will everyone think she's lost her makeover touch?

Avg Rating
3.40
Number of Ratings
5
5 STARS
20%
4 STARS
0%
3 STARS
80%
2 STARS
0%
1 STARS
0%
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Author

Carla Jablonski
Carla Jablonski
Author · 16 books

Carla Jablonski is the author and editor of dozens of best-selling books for teenage and middle-grade readers. She grew up in New York City, where she attended public schools and the Bronx High School of Science. She has a BA in anthropology from Vassar College and an MA from NYU's Gallatin School, an interdisciplinary program for which she combined playwriting, the history of gender issues in 19th Century Circus, and arts administration. "I wanted to write the play, contextualize the play, and learn how to produce the play for my degree," she explains. "I think I may have been the happiest graduate student at NYU—I SO loved working toward my thesis." While still in graduate school she supported herself as the editor of The Hardy Boys Mysteries. "When I interviewed for the job they asked me if I'd ever read the Hardy Boys as a kid. 'No way,' I scoffed. 'Those are BOY books! It was Nancy Drew for me!' Luckily my future boss had a sense of humor. She hired me after I promised I'd read the books if I got the job." She has participated in the renowned Breadloaf Writers' Conference as well as Zoetrope's All-Story highly competitive writing workshop held at Francis Ford Coppella's resort in Belize. She has taught writing for the children's market, as well as "cold-reading" skills for teachers as part of Project:Read. Several of her books have been selected as part of the Accelerated Reader's program. She continues to work freelance as an editor for publishers and for private clients, even as she writes novels and creates new series. She also has another career (and identity!) as a playwright, an actress, and a trapeze performer. "I try to keep the worlds separate," she explains about her multiple identities. "The different work I do has different audiences, so I want to keep them apart. But they're all me—they're all ways of expressing what I'm thinking and feeling—just in different mediums."

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