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Lorinda Dauphinee

thirteen never changes

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When Lorinda inherits her grandmother's diaries, she discovers that she is not entirely alone in the ways she sometimes feels, and that she finally has a chance to spend time with the grandmother she never knew.

Paperback

First published January 1, 1989

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75 people want to read

About the author

Budge Wilson

43 books86 followers
Budge was educated in Halifax schools and at Dalhousie University (degree in Philosophy and Psychology, Diploma in Education, Physical Education teaching certificate). She did two years of graduate work in English at the University of Toronto, and worked at the Institute of Child Study (U. of T.) for four years--filing, illustrating, editing, writing. She illustrated three books for the University of Toronto Press, worked for several years as a freelance commercial artist and child photographer, and was a fitness instructor from 1968 to 1989. She has been writing juvenile and adult fiction since 1978, with her first book published in 1984. Her work has been published in ten countries and in seven languages.

After living in Ontario for over twenty-five years, Budge and Alan returned to Nova Scotia in 1989, and live in a small fishing village on the South Shore of the province.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Joey Larcher.
1 review2 followers
March 29, 2020
I read this book 📚 as a teenager and I just loved it. I love how the girl reconnected with her grandmother through her diaries and saw how it was like for her when she was her age. I love the story and history in the story as well. I want to reread it again. I have been trying to find it to read again.
Profile Image for Brynn.
38 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2019
This book did a great job discribing how being thirteen is really like. All other books about thirteen year olds dont do it as well as this book. It also starts of with a death and this is just like my 13th year.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Andreu.
71 reviews
October 20, 2019
No està pas malament tot i que al principi fa una mica de mandra. Veurem si funciona amb adolescents.
Profile Image for Sadhana C.
17 reviews22 followers
June 10, 2012


This was one of my favourite books as a kid and I can still read some parts of it every now and then. It traces the stories of two young Canadians, two generations apart, but bound by blood and the common thread of adolescence. When Laura's grandmother passes away, she receives her all her journals from age 12 to 35. Laura begins with her journal recording the events of when her grandmother was 13. The author takes us back and forth between what happens in her grandmother's life and her own, and what happens in her grandmother's life is pretty interesting because it was the first world war then. We get an insight into how war manages to affect everyone, even in a small town in nova scotia in Canada. This is a good book about growing up, and life in general.
Profile Image for Nikki.
143 reviews26 followers
April 24, 2016
This is a great historical fiction about a thirteen year old girl getting to know her recently deceased grandmother through her old diaries from WWII in Halifax. Very Canadian and full of heart, while still delivering accurate historical information, as the author herself lived through WWII in Halifax and used her first hand experiences to inform the story.

Well-written for any age, but definitely recommend it to young readers and especially preteen girls.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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