To annoy her older sister Thea, satisfy her own ego, and raise much-needed funds for her sick younger sister, sixteen-year-old Claire, a past master at deceit and manipulation, uses a boy in love with Thea to delve into ugly secrets in the past.
Susan Beth Pfeffer was an American author best known for young adult and science fiction. After writing for 35 years, she received wider notice for her series of post-apocalyptic novels, officially titled "The Life as We Knew It Series", but often called "The Last Survivors" or "Moon Crash" series, some of which appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list.
There are plots that work for the time that would not work now because technology has changed. This is one of those plots. Claire has guts and determination. It’s objectively speaking a terrible plan but it is definitely the kind of plan a teenage girl would come up with.
I've used Novelist to try and track down this book. What I remember is a book about three sisters who live without their parents for some reason. Over the course of the book, one of them starts to get a little wild and the one who was wild calms down to take care of the family. That's all I remember. I am hazy on if this was a book I finished or not. I feel like I did because I remember an interest in reading the sequel, because this is part of a series. However, even though the title seems familiar, I'm not totally sure this is the correct book. Either way, although this author turned out to write Life as We Knew It, this book wasn't very memorable.
Claire was my friend Stacy's favorite, and I think it was because she--intellectual and kind--watched Dynasty and stuff with her older sister. Like, she understood this type of story. Now I see Scruples Lite, and even though I know the scene by heart, I saved the confrontation with Sebastian Prescott to savor.
A cute little trick I finally noticed--in both Thea and Claire, each girl is hungry as heck and relieved to find an apple in a refrigerator. I'm starting to think that probably happened in Evvie, too.
I loved these stories as a teenager! Unfortunately, I don't really remember the story which means I should go out and see if I can find this book again so it can jog my memory.
Not my favorite thus far but you get a much better idea for how Claire ticks. And even though she's not always pleasant she does have her own brand of family loyalty.