Sebastian's) and her overwhelming hatred of the smug Will Trombal, who despite being completely infuriating, is also incredibly cute. So, Francesca keeps it all inside-her frustration with school (there aren't enough girl's bathrooms and no girl's sports teams) her fear making new friends (with the few girls who do go to St. Her taciturn father doesn't have much to say on the subject, her beloved little brother Luca is anxiously looking to her for answers, and her so-called friends from her old neighborhood seem to have abandoned her. Sebastian's-a school only recently turned coed: "What a dream come true, right? Seven hundred and fifty boys and thirty girls? But the reality is that it's either like living in a fish bowl or like you don't exist." But now there's this matter of her usually vibrant and annoyingly optimistic mother Mia refusing to get up in the morning. Francesca used to think her biggest problem was transferring to St. "This morning, my mother didn't get out of bed." So begins the saga of Francesca Spinelli, the hilarious and achingly real creation of Aussie author Melina Marchetta.
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