Katharine Blankenship's Reviews > Twenties Girl
Twenties Girl
by Sophie Kinsella
by Sophie Kinsella
As a recent fan of Kinsella, I seem to keep uncovering new books of hers that I never knew existed. Twenties Girl is one of those books. This is a heart-warming and funny story about a young girl who attends the funeral of her great-aunt Sadie, whom no one really liked. While sitting by herself, Lara suddenly finds herself talking to a young, beautiful woman, who looks suspiciously like her great-aunt did when she was in her 20s, who is confused about why she is at this solemn occasion. Lara is forced to team up with her great-aunt’s 20-something-year-old ghost, to find a necklace that Sadie claims she can’t rest without knowing the location of.
As with her other books, Kinsella continues to make me laugh out loud with her humor and whit. I also like how she is able to fit a romantic story-line in the story, but she doesn’t have to make it a central point of the entire story. She still focuses on the bonds that are formed between two young women who have nothing in common.
As with her other books, Kinsella continues to make me laugh out loud with her humor and whit. I also like how she is able to fit a romantic story-line in the story, but she doesn’t have to make it a central point of the entire story. She still focuses on the bonds that are formed between two young women who have nothing in common.
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