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Sassy Cyd Charisse returns in Shrimp, the “compelling…and light-hearted” ( Publishers Weekly , starred review) sequel to the sharp and funny novel Gingerbread .

If Cyd Charisse knows one thing, it’s that Shrimp is her true love. Shrimp, the hottest pint-size surfer-artist in San Francisco. That boy (as her mother called him), who was the primary cause of Cyd being grounded to Alcatraz, formerly known as her room. The boy who dumped Cyd before she left home to spend the summer in New York City.

Now it’s the start of senior year. Cyd has changed, but maybe Shrimp has changed too—and maybe Cyd and Shrimp will need to get to know each other all over again to figure out if it’s for real. Can Cyd get back together with Shrimp and keep the peace with her mom? And can she get a life outside of her all-encompassing boy radar?

This sequel to Gingerbread has all the sharp humor and searing attitude of the original, which ELLEgirl praised as “not just Another Teen Novel” and Teen People called “unforgettable.” In Shrimp, Cyd might be a little older and a little wiser, but she’s still the same irrepressible free spirit determined to find her own way in the world, on her own terms.

352 pages, Paperback

First published March 1, 2005

34 people are currently reading
1446 people want to read

About the author

Rachel Cohn

34 books2,304 followers
Rachel grew up in the D.C. area and graduated from Barnard College with a B.A. in Political Science. She has written many YA novels, including three that she cowrote with her friend and colleague David Levithan. She lives and writes (when she's not reading other people's books, organizing her music library or looking for the best cappuccino) in New York City.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 156 reviews
Profile Image for Kasia.
404 reviews331 followers
October 7, 2011
The follow up novel to the fun and spunky "Gingerbread" is even better than expected and it succeeds in drawing the reader deeper into the colorful world of teen Cyd Charisse. I would strongly suggest reading the first book to get the full effect of the depth the author has created, after all knowing where Cyd comes from makes her future even more interesting! Cyd is on the lookout for romance, good food and new friends and finding that perfect cup of coffee someone has her obsessed with...

Growing up is hard to do, sure, but Cyd finds the express route into the readers hearts without loosing her coolness and charm. She's got opinions, is very much in love with Shrimp who's status was ambiguous as of last novel and is trying to make new friends her age and make amends with her parents. Not to mention her biological father Frank back in New York is trying to make for more time for her as she gets older, her half siblings are entering her life and changing her perspective on the plans she has made with Shrimp. Torn between what she all ready has in San Francisco and the new prospects in the culinary fields in New York City, Cyd must make some brave choices that are tough when you're sixteen and feel torn between being a kid and a young adult.

This book was so much fun, I was drawn into it and felt irritated whenever I had to put it down and go do life stuff; like going to work, eating dinner or talking to people...I am all ready holding part three of the series "Cupcake" and can't wait to jump back into the witty, charming, funny and grown up world of Cyd Charisse. I wouldn't say that this is a book for young kids since there is some hardcore romantic stuff going on, few bad words but it's what give his book that real edge, it's not all pink and pretty and fairy tales. Being a teenager is hard but oh so fun to read about!
Profile Image for Kasia.
404 reviews331 followers
August 4, 2016
The follow up novel to the fun and spunky "Gingerbread" is even better than expected and it succeeds in drawing the reader deeper into the colorful world of teen Cyd Charisse. I would strongly suggest reading the first book to get the full effect of the depth the author has created, after all knowing where Cyd comes from makes her future even more interesting! Cyd is on the lookout for romance, good food and new friends and finding that perfect cup of coffee someone has her obsessed with...

Growing up is hard to do, sure, but Cyd finds the express route into the readers hearts without loosing her coolness and charm. She's got opinions, is very much in love with Shrimp who's status was ambiguous as of last novel and is trying to make new friends her age and make amends with her parents. Not to mention her biological father Frank back in New York is trying to make for more time for her as she gets older, her half siblings are entering her life and changing her perspective on the plans she has made with Shrimp. Torn between what she all ready has in San Francisco and the new prospects in the culinary fields in New York City, Cyd must make some brave choices that are tough when you're sixteen and feel torn between being a kid and a young adult.

This book was so much fun, I was drawn into it and felt irritated whenever I had to put it down and go do life stuff; like going to work, eating dinner or talking to people...I am all ready holding part three of the series "Cupcake" and can't wait to jump back into the witty, charming, funny and grown up world of Cyd Charisse. I wouldn't say that this is a book for young kids since there is some hardcore romantic stuff going on, few bad words but it's what give his book that real edge, it's not all pink and pretty and fairy tales. Being a teenager is hard but oh so fun to read about!
Profile Image for Jamie.
129 reviews31 followers
February 14, 2010
Please be aware that Shrimp is the second book in a series. In order to give even the briefest synopsis, this review does contain spoilers to the first book.


Shrimp basically picks up right where Gingerbread left off. Cyd Charisse returns from New York City after getting to know her bio-dad Frank and her half-sibs Danny and lisBETH. Back in San Francisco, Cyd's only goal is to get back with her "one true love" Shrimp. And to avoid her mother's endless stack of college applications. CC (as she is now known) survives her senior year of high school with her two new friends Heather and Autumn at her side. Getting away from problems of his own, half-brother Danny visits CC on the west coast and brings her back to NYC for a long weekend away. During her second visit, CC is torn between her old life in San Francisco and the possibility of a new life in New York. CC realizes that growing up is hard to do, and that she needs to make some tough decisions soon that may or may not include Shrimp.

Well, I did not give Gingerbread a very good review, and I'm afraid this one isn't going to be much better. I do want to stress that I enjoyed the story, characters, and writing. I just can't get into Cyd Charisse. I have trouble reading about main characters I can't relate to, and this was my problem with Gingerbread and Shrimp. I'm moving along and am about half-way through the third and final installment of the series, Cupcake. Why, you ask? I told you, I am no quitter!


Read more reviews like this one at http://bookmarkedreviews.blogspot.com
49 reviews
January 18, 2009
I read Gingerbread when I was in middle school, and when I found out there was a sequel called "Shrimp" I couldn't find it anywhere!! But since I have recently reacquainted myself with my local library, I finally came across it and read it. Now, I don't know what the problem was... maybe I should have re-read Gingerbread first because it was so many years ago that I read it, or maybe I just didn't like the story anymore the way I did the first time. Like, some parts of the book were really great and I liked the message it was giving (in very selected parts) but then sometimes I was so mad I just wanted to throw it at the wall and I don't know why, if it was just the story or just me. Either way, not a big fa. But I do recommend the first book, Gingerbread (mostly young girls will like this book)
Profile Image for Sara.
39 reviews
January 22, 2010
I picked this book up because I thought it was a more feminine book. Reading about women issues can open up many doors to make text to self connections. After finishing this book, I realized it was a sequel to Gingerbread. This book was not as good as I expected to be when I first picked it up. The protagonist, Cyd Charisse, comes back from NYC after meeting her biological father. In this book, she goes on a journey where she tries to get her boyfriend, Shrimp, back, whom she broke up with before she went NYC. Even though the protagonist is similar to me in terms of age, I couldn't make many connections than I hoped I could have made. I heard that the first book, Gingerbread, is better than this one, so I'm planning to give that one a try, especially to see what really happened.
Profile Image for Sam.
1,033 reviews5 followers
April 21, 2010
The book was really funny and realistic. I can see some of that happening in real life. I love Danny hes my favorite character! In this book you see different sides of the characters compared to the sides of the characters you saw in the first book. They all grew up in a way which made the book more possible, because we are all growing up everyday we dont always stay the same. I really liked this book it was so funny, realistic, and I enjoyed reading it!
Profile Image for Mattie dawn.
9 reviews2 followers
September 21, 2017
this book was fine, but too much drama. The first one was a lot better
Profile Image for Kathryn Dunn .
213 reviews9 followers
July 1, 2018
so cute nice continuation of gingerbread, CC is not the greatest character ever imagined in the history of novels, but a sweet goth punk princess. :)
Profile Image for Ringo The Cat.
387 reviews18 followers
March 8, 2012
There are only a few books a year that leave such an impression that you want to read as much as you can by that particular author: John Green, Barry Lyga, A.S. King… Last year, the cat was completely enchanted by the Cohn/Levithan collaboration Dash and Lily’s Book of Dares. The result was first checking out what David Levithan was capable of all on his own… The result: Boy Meets Boy, the perfect antidote to doom, gloom and vampire books. Rachel Cohn’s solo-efforts were a little harder to come by for the cat, though, as both Gingerbread and Shrimp were no longer available, except as discarded library books (like, for real???) for the incredible price of 0.01£ each + shipping charges (again, for real??).

In Gingerbread Cyd Charisse gets kicked out of a fancy New England boarding school after a couple of indiscretions with a certain boy, which also, but not exclusively involved drugs, and returns to San Francisco, where she’s better known as the Little Hellion, a true attestation of her rebellious spirit. In San Francisco, she continues her wild adventures, involving coffee and a boy called Shrimp who she is convinced is her True Love. Cyd’s mother clearly cannot handle Cyd and after she’s been up to one too many tricks she has to spend the summer with her biological father Frank, who she’s seen only once in her life, when she was five, and whose only claim to fame was that he gave her a rag doll – Gingerbread – which Cyd still carries around everywhere, and that he helped her deal with a certain Problem she had. Enter a summer in New York City. In Shrimp, Cyd is back in San Francisco after having spent that summer in New York with her bio-dad and her brother Danny and his boyfriend Aaron. Set on rekindling the romance with her True Love Shrimp, Cyd also has to make decisions about her future: college or no college, Shrimp or no Shrimp.

The question whether Cohn’s books are worth the £0.02 is indisputable (I mean, seriously?). In the Cohn/Levithan collaborations it was never a question as to whose writing the cat preferred, because both authors wrote so convincingly and in character, that it was hard to pick a favorite. But after reading solo work by both authors it’s not difficult to see that Levithan is where the heart lies and Cohn is where the edge is: Cyd Charisse is nothing if not an individualist, tense to the max, outspoken in her opinions, and pushes boundaries like no other. Definitely a character that you can’t like all of the time, lots of angst going on there, almost all of the time!

The beauty of the Cohn/Levithan collaboration, though, is that they make each other better in what they are already good at. This is especially true for Rachel Cohn. Cyd Charisse is the definition of edge. But the edge in Cohn’s writing is definitely toned down by Levithan’s heart. Luckily Cohn doesn’t lose the edge, of course, but it’s quite understandable that for some the Cyd Charisse series might come over as too harsh, too gratuitous, too much like your typical teen rebel story with a character you will love to hate. However, the typical teenage antics that Cyd is up to, are just that: typical teenage antics, hiding away a lot of anger and especially fears and insecurities (there’s a lot of stuff that is unresolved, especially concerning her ‘Problem’ with the boy of the boarding school).

Gingerbread was Cohn’s debut novel. There are a few issues, of course, but Cohn’s witty brilliance definitely shines through, and with Cyd Charisse she’s created a character that you will love to hate at first, appreciate and understand later (Shrimp is definitely more fleshed out than Gingerbread), and maybe even love by the end of the trilogy (don’t know, still need to read Cupcake). Still prefer the collaborations with David Levithan, though…

http://ringothecat.wordpress.com/
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for AquaMoon.
1,686 reviews56 followers
May 25, 2022
2022
Although CC has done a little growing up, mainly thanks to finally ditching the fantasy she carried about her formerly-mythical New York Family (who were nothing like she previously imagined) and life experience... Although she's making a couple same-age friends who are girls and, most importantly, NOT the "benefits" variety... Although she's on (somewhat) better terms with her mother and her family in general... While all that is great for character development, she has still yet to ditch that loser she thinks she's in forever love with.

*Begin Rant*
So yeah... I still cannot stand Shrimp (IF that's his real name). He's just too damn squirrely, and I hate how manipulative he is toward CC, running hot and cold, making her think she's got a chance and then "oop! just kidding. psych!". In many ways, he's worse than her druggie, almost-baby-daddy Ex. Or, at least, on the same level of loser-y. He has seemingly no redeeming qualities whatsoever, and those qualities that are mentioned are purely of the physical variety (surfer boi bod and all that). In this book, he and CC have broken up and CC spends the majority of her waking life mooning about and dreaming of how to get back together with him...even though he seems far less interested in perusing things with her. Seriously?!? CC could SO do better!! Hey, I get it... This book is geared toward teens and a teenage love interest character is very different than a love interest in a book aimed at an older demographic. Perhaps the character would be appealing if I was, say, 13. Or maybe not. No...still not. He certainly does add a dramatic element, though. And drama is what keeps stories moving.
*End Rant*

I did enjoy CC's journey, though. The one apart from the whole Shrimp obsession.

Gotta say, I loved Ashley and her Franken-Barbie Makeover Project. Actually, I've been trying for ages to recall where that particular plot element came from. Mystery solved. Finally!

Also, I want a cinnamon brown sugar pop tart. The ONLY ones worth eating (this I agree with wholeheartedly). I can attest that these pair very well with coffee.



2010:
In this sequel to Gingerbread, Cyd Charisse and love-of-her-life Shrimp have decided to take a break so Shrimp can travel halfway around the world to surf. Meanwhile, Cyd is torn: Between her New York family and her San Fransisco family, between who she is and who her parents expect her to be, between wanting Shrimp back and being angry with him. Quite possibly even better than the first book in the series!
3 reviews1 follower
Read
March 5, 2009
The book I am reviewing is “Shrimp” by Rachel Cohn. This book is fiction but it could also call it realistic fiction. This book is the second in its 3 book series. Shrimp is about an already developed character named Cyd Charisse who just returned from New York, where the last book left off. In this book Cyd charisse returns from New York and is ready to get the love of her life back Shrimp. To briefly summarize this book, a girl named Cyd Charisse nicknamed CC is trying to get whom she believes is the love of her life, Shrimp back. Along the way she meets a girl named Helen who becomes her best friend and Alexi her driver’s nephew who she hates at the beginning of the book but by the end she grows to appreciate. She also befriends the least excepted character Autumn who is the reason for her and Shrimps break up in the first place. I think this book was very interesting. I like how they setup the characters like Alexi the horrible as CC calls him I like how once they introduced him I thought immediately that oh of course they are going to hook up or something in that manner . I am not going to give it away but you will be surprised about what happens between them, I was. This book was descriptive enough it was enough for me to visualize but not too much where it gets boring. Like one scene stuck in my head is where something romantic may or may not happen with CC and Alexi. I also like too other scene with one where CC gets high and goes looking for munchies at shrimps house and he brings her to the freezer for hot pockets and she kisses him but he tells her it just wants to be friends for now and then get into the sexual stuff later maybe. Then later in the book they still pretend to be “just friends” but they end up in CC`s shed and they begin to hook up and now this time Cyd turns Shrimp down and says he was right they should just be friends for right now. I think girls are the mostly candidate for reading this book because it is about a girl growing up and maturing so young girls can relate to her. I think you would like this book if you like the book series the Seven deadly Sins because they are both teen dramas in a less of Gossip girl kind a way its not about rich girls acting like idiots. Those are the people I would recommend this book too.

Profile Image for Jennifer.
76 reviews17 followers
September 5, 2009
***WARNING...This may contain spoilers because it is part of a series (and it is kind of hard to discuss this book without referring to the previous novels in the series)***

Cyd Charisse is back in San Francisco for her senior year. This time around she is totally looking forward to her partial attendance of school (Sid-Dad hooked her up with a work experience program) and she's also looking forward to getting back together with Shrimp (her true love).

Things aren't all that simple for CC because she is a teenager. Her little sister tries to doll nap Gingerbread, Sid-Dad learns about the abortion and is totally disappointed, Mom wants Cyd to go to college, and then...her favorite half-brother breaks up with his "true love."

Does true love really exist??? And is Shrimp Cyd's true love???

When I first started this book, I really wanted to know how Cyd Charisse's life would continue. And Shrimp was an awesome follow up to Gingerbread. I really liked how Cyd and Nancy came to a better understanding in their relationship. It wasn't perfect, but no mother/daughter relationship is. Also, this time around it was about Cyd and finding friends and not just boyfriends. She gets to learn that there are other relationships to life besides the physical type.

Again, Cohn deals with teenager topics that aren't usually in the books they read. Topics include lust, sex, oral sex, and the aftermath of abortion. The main character, Cyd Charisse is not your everyday girl in young adult fiction, but one that is unforgettable in her own ways. This is a great read to those who want to know what happens after Gingerbread and I can't wait to read the third and last book of the series.
391 reviews5 followers
June 10, 2012
In spite of her motley past, Cyd Charisse, recovering hellion, is such a mixture of naiveté and wistfulness that you can't help but be in her corner. In her first book, Gingerbread, Cyd backslid a few times too often and was shipped off to New York City to spend time with her 'bio dad.'

In Shrimp, Cyd is back home in San Francisco and beginning her senior year at her alternative high school. She is in a hurry to reclaim her lost love and soul mate, Shrimp. With this mission in mind, Cyd Charisse can't afford to lose her new found freedom so she allows her little sister, Ash, to blackmail her into giving up Gingerbread, her cherished rag doll. Seven-year-old Ash, a hellion-in-training, has a customized Barbie collection that includes Horror Movie Barbie whose head is lopped halfway off and Commando Barbie, complete with guns to pistol whip Ken. Since Gingerbread is ready to retire from being Cyd's constant companion, Cyd agrees to give the doll to Ash, provided Ash promises to keep her safe.

All of Cyd Charisse's remarkable friends from Gingerbread are back, plus two new girlfriends. Shrimp's hippie parents also appear, shedding much needed light on Shrimp's past. Although she is older and wiser in this book, Cyd Charisse is still a fearless risk taker. Her strong voice allows readers to share her outlook and feelings about being seventeen and fighting for control of her destiny.



Profile Image for Liza Wiemer.
Author 5 books744 followers
Read
November 20, 2011
Cyd Charisse's complicated life continues in book two, with a focus on Shrimp and the mixed-up feelings CC has for him. He is her soulmate? Her one and only, or just her first true love? There's more confusion with the relationships CC has with her half-siblings and parents. I'm really glad I read this novel and will most definitely pick up the last one in the series, but I must say that this novel left me feeling really churned up. Seriously, these are really messed-up people. Mistakes are repeated, love battered, opportunities thrown away. It's painful. Life is like that. It just seems like a lot is dumped on these poor souls and the only thing that they don't have to really worry about it money. (But even CC's biological father is dumped by the advertising firm he help build for 30 some-odd years! I'm guessing he got a decent settlement.) Hey, we all know that money is nice, but it doesn't make you immune to life's messes and it truly seems like CC's family has a ton to deal with - many they have brought on themselves, but some just can't be helped. I guess that's why this novel left me feeling churned up inside. :-|
Don't shy away from reading this series. Getting churned up can be a good thing.
Profile Image for Alissa.
119 reviews
December 23, 2010
I never read Gingerbread, even though it’s the first in the series/trilogy. I started with Shrimp. And I have to say, I wasn’t lost one bit. Cohn makes it so you don’t feel as though you’re missing out on anything important and MUST start with Gingerbread, and that’s a plus for me.

As far as characters go, Cyd is very likeable. I love her voice: it’s relatable, edgy, spunky. And Shrimp – he’s adorable. At first the two of them seem shallow and underdeveloped, but then their personalities expand and go deeper, and it’s wonderful. Cohn is able to make their relationship unlike other YA romances. Instead of their relationship being rushed and awkward, Cyd and Shrimp take time to move along, and it’s more believable that way. It’s also sweeter.

The writing itself is engaging. Cyd’s voice isn’t quite one-of-a-kind, but it’s different enough that it’s entertaining. The writing isn’t so much about the descriptions as it is the story. As Cyd and Shrimp go back and forth, you won’t want their story to end.

(www.thegrammariansreviews.blogspot.com)
Profile Image for Miss Bookiverse.
2,236 reviews87 followers
April 19, 2024
Auch das zweite Buch um Cyd Charisse und ihre Familie und Freunde hat mir sehr gefallen. Es hatte Herz, Charme und Witz. Ich mag es, dass Cyd nicht als perfekte junge Dame dargestellt wird, sondern oft auch als naiver Teenager. Sie ist nicht blöd, aber sie verfällt auch schnell dem Gefühl der großen Liebe (oder großen Ungerechtigkeit), das man je älter man wird gern mal belächelt. Im Endeffekt holt sie ihre Cleverness aber auch immer wieder ein und sie erkennt, was die wirklich richtigen Entscheidungen für ihr eigenes Leben sind.

Für den letzten Band Cupcake wünsche ich mir ein bisschen weniger Shrimp und vielleicht mal einen neuen ernsthaften Herzkandidaten. Shrimp hat in diesem Buch zwar bewiesen wie ernst es ihm mit Cyd ist, aber er hat sich auch ein paar dämliche Fehltritte geleistet, die zeigen wie unreif er ist.
Profile Image for J.Elle.
912 reviews128 followers
February 26, 2008
This book was a sequel of sorts to "Gingerbread" which I actually have an amusing story about. I worked at a library for years and was familiar with alot of the books here. We had a teenager come in one day wearing black and white striped tights just like the girl on the cover of "Gingerbread". I immediately ran and found the book and pressed it into the girl's hands to borrow. I didn't see her again, but I like to think she loved the book and related to it specifically. Perhaps I changed her life. I'll never know. I do know that this book "Shrimp" did not change my life. It was at times confusing and I felt overall the the situations were too advanced for the character's ages in the book. Call me old-fashioned or perhaps I was simply very sheltered, but that is my opinion. I won't be reading anything else that continues this story.
Profile Image for eRin.
702 reviews35 followers
September 19, 2008
Cyd Charisse, or CC as she now wants to be called, is back from her summer with bio-dad in New York and ready to get it on again with Shrimp. The only problem is she can't find him. Off visiting his parents in some country, Shrimp is MIA so CC does the unthinkable: become friends with girls. Gasp. Starting senior year isn't all that thrilling to CC except that it's the last year of torture (finally!). But the real problem she's facing is how to maintain the truce with Nancy and how to get back with her one true love, Shrimp.

The follow-up to Gingerbread is just as delightful as the original. CC is funny and bright; witty and full of angst. She grows up a lot in this novel and it's nice to see the slow change in what is quickly becoming one of my fave literary characters. I'm stoked to find out that there's a third in the series, Cupcake.
9 reviews
September 29, 2010
So far, this book is got my attention. It really keeps me reading. It's about this young girl, Cyd Charisse, "The Little Hellion," who is a 17 year old girl in love with a boy named Shrimp. She's not an ordinary girl, she's into her own things. The opra music, coffee, into surfer guys, lives in San Francisco, and she's got 2 younger siblings, and 2 older siblings, a mom and a step dad who she lives with, and her bio-dad lives in New York. She recently just got back from being kicked out of a boarding school, and is currently going to a regular public high school. Cyd has a ragdoll named Ginerbread that she's had for as long as she can remember. Since Cyd is 17, she's thinking about retiring Ginger to her little sister Ash, who would do devilish things with that doll.

This book is good, and i would deffinitly recommend it to many people.
12 reviews1 follower
October 20, 2010
Shrimp at first was not recommended to me. A friend was reading it and she told me she did not like it. I decided to give it a try to figure it out myself. Looking at the title was kind of weird. Shrimp? Shrimp is one of the characters in the book. The main character CC was in love with Shrimp and needed to get him back. This book really interested me as I was reading because first of all it was about love. My favorite subject to read and write about. Second reason why I really liked it was because it was a diary of this girl named CC. She goes through a lot of situations and shes learning how to grow up and make her own decisions. She is going to collage and as I read about everything that is going on it helps me see what may happen to me in the future as I am growing up and making my own decisions.
Profile Image for Jaemi.
282 reviews27 followers
January 24, 2009
After her summer in NYC, Cyd Charisse has a slightly different outlook on life arriving back in California. Happy to have her freedom, she’s lookingg forward to the year, which she plans to make the year of Shrimp.

Much to her dismay, Shrimp is MIA, and rumors abound about his whereabouts and whether he’ll be back or not. After running into his brother’s girlfriend, Cyd finds out that he will indeed be back, but with a slight change: his parents.

As it turns out, that will be only the first of many surprises, and it won’t be the year Cyd, now CC, expected. The uneasy peace with Nancy, the making of actual girl friends, who turn out to be not so bad, the roller coaster of CC and Shrimp. But through it all, CC learns a lot–about herself, people in general, and life.
Profile Image for Marilyn.
1,318 reviews9 followers
February 20, 2009
What can I say - I tried to like this book. The writing is well-done, most of the characters were interesting, GREAT setting (San Francisco), it just didn't work for me. Maybe because I really didn't care about the main character and her "one true love". I found them both to be navel gazers to such a degree that they were no longer believable. Maybe it would've been better if I'd read the first two books in the series, Gingerbread and Cupcake. I don't know, but I can tell you right now, I have too many other books I want to read before I'll read those two. Some language, rather a lot of talk of sex, and some drug use.
Profile Image for Kiera.
137 reviews6 followers
June 24, 2012
I really loved this series of books. Cyd Charisse is a lovable and relateable character which is what really made me stay with the series. She is a character that goes through all the trials and tribulations of being a teenager. Misunderstood, feeling like she doesn't belong anywhere not even with her own family and falling in love for the first time. Granted CC is quite the wild child, but it was as if I, the reader, reformed with her throughout the series. I think Shrimp and Cupcake are definitely the strongest books of the series for sure. I feel for Cyd Charisse and feel as if I have become friends with her after reading. Rachel Cohn did an excellent job.
Profile Image for Penny.
188 reviews10 followers
August 12, 2012
I want to say I really liked this book, but compared to "Gingerbread" it was just okay. I re-read "Gingerbread" to prep for this sequel only to be surprised that Cohn takes you through all the important events of the previous book much in the beginning. I still adore the main character, Cyd Charisse, now referred to as CC, and really liked the introduction of some new characters like the Wonderwoman drawing, punk asian Helen, but the storyline in this one wasn't as special. The next book in the series is "Cupcake" and I knew that a head of time so the way it ends was already spoiled for me (it's easy to put two and two together for this one).
Profile Image for Jennifer.
212 reviews
March 24, 2011
3 1/2 stars. This is the second book in the trilogy about CeeCee. It picks up where the first book left off after she returns to San Francisco to live with her mother, stepfather, and younger half siblings. She resumes her relationship with her artist/surfer boyfriend, Shrimp, and she makes some girl friends for the first time. We get the sense that CeeCee is ready to grow up and become the person we, the readers, know she can be.

I enjoyed this book very much and again have to acknowledge the author’s skill in developing her characters.
Profile Image for Nguyet.
10 reviews12 followers
June 6, 2011
I swear, this is the best book ever! Well, besides the Vampire Academy series :) I read this book non-stop for two days :D I still kept reading when my mom calls me in for lunch/dinner. I only do this with really great books, like this. I don't like drama, but I love reading books about them, because the way the author wrote it caught me attention. I was a bit sad coming to the end of this book because our school doesn't have the follow up book for this series :/ Overall, it was a great book and I think girls would like to read this more the guys :)
Profile Image for Taylor Sanchez.
5 reviews
February 13, 2009
This book was very good. CC wanted her "true love" to come back. She grew up over the summer very fast, when she went to her bio-dad's house in New York. There she meet her step-brother Danny who became her best friend. She was planning on what to do with her life after high school. CC ended up getting Shrimp back, but soon realized in order to go on her in life that she has to leave him.
Profile Image for Kat Drennan-Scace.
807 reviews30 followers
December 29, 2009
Really liked this continuation of the Cyd/Shrimp relationship. Cyd's forced to make some tough decisions but she finds some good friends along the way which I liked. It was a quick read but the narrative voice really comes through, making it memorable. Definitely recommend, but only if you read Gingerbread first!
Profile Image for Hannah.
10 reviews
May 11, 2010
Cyd Charrise is everyone's dream best friend. A story that tracks her life, I felt as if I watched her mature from Gingerbread to Shrimp to the final book: Cupcake.
I learned from my friend CC and I know what I want to do with my future. CC is vibrant as well as Rachel Cohan's well written trilogy!
I love you! Ditto.
Profile Image for dearlittledeer.
881 reviews4 followers
August 16, 2011
Finally read this on my Kindle after NEVER being able to find a real copy that matches my Gingerbread and Cupcake covers. It was cool to read more about CC and get to know Shrimp a little better. He's definitely hot (um, sort of reminds me of my boyfriend, actually), but not the "perfect boy," which I guess is a good thing. I'm looking forward to Cupcake.
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