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Some Girls Are: A Novel
Some Girls Are: A Novel
Some Girls Are: A Novel
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Some Girls Are: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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About this ebook

Classic Courtney Summers with a brand new look and exclusive bonus material! This ebook edition of Some Girls Are includes updated text and a discussion guide.

The only thing worse than being Anna Morrison's best friend is being her enemy—and Regina Afton is about to discover that the hard way. After she's set-up by a fellow member of their vicious, all-girl clique, Regina ends up on the receiving end of the same acts of cruelty she spent years committing and seeks solace in the unexpected company of Michael Hayden, a quiet loner she used to bully. As tensions grow and the abuse worsens, the two question whether a mean girl can ever truly be redeemed for her past, and if not, just how much should she be made to pay. As their feelings for each other grow more complicated and the final days of senior year march toward an explosive conclusion, they're terrified to find out . . .

Also available from Courtney Summers: I'M THE GIRL, the new "brutally captivating" (Publishers Weekly, starred review) queer thriller based loosely on The Epstein case.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 5, 2010
ISBN9781429986953
Some Girls Are: A Novel
Author

Courtney Summers

Courtney Summers is the bestselling and critically acclaimed author of several novels for young adults, including Cracked Up to Be, All the Rage and Sadie. Her work has been released to multiple starred reviews, received numerous awards and honors--including the Edgar Award, John Spray Mystery Award, Cybils Award, Odyssey Award, and International Thriller Award--and has been recognized by many library, 'Best Of' and Readers' Choice lists. She lives and writes in Canada.

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Reviews for Some Girls Are

Rating: 3.953974919665272 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    i thought i would like it, but i didn't. it frustrated me and it made me angry and that's why i didn't finish it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Regina has climbed to the top of the school's social ladder. She is mean girl Anna's sidekick. But then another member of the clique lies to Anna, and says that Regina slept with Anna's boyfriend. Suddenly Regina is out, and the target of vicious bullying.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book definitely brought me back to high school, which was not really a great thing but not a bad thing either. I love the way Courtney Summers writes- it's so visceral, you can feel everything. Everytime a character has a physical reaction, you feel that. You root so hard for Anna to get her come uppance that it almost feels as if you are one of the characters she has harrassed or taunted. Some Girls Are is definitely one of Courtneys best books.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    With bullying being such a big issue in today's schools, this book is a real eye-opener and it absolutely astounds me how vicious girls can be when they feel they have been slighted by another. Regina Afton suddenly finds herself on the outer of the popular group of mean girls that she used to belong to. No longer a perpetrator, Regina is now the victim, and not a very likeable one at that. Even though some of the things she does are really cruel, Regina is largely unrepentant. Yet, despite this, you find yourself sympathising with her as her friends turn against her and she has to face social isolation, physical abuse, cyber-bullying and verbal intimidation. Regina's emotions are honest. There are times when she wants to cause pain, but there are others where she is utterly broken by the treatment she is receiving. This is a powerful novel dealing with some serious issues including revenge, friendship, drug use, alcohol abuse and teenage sex. Whilst probably more suitable for older teens this is still a compelling read.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    A dark, depressing book about the underbelly of high school popularity. Regina is the right hand man of Anna, the most popular girl in her high school, until everything gets out of hand at a party. Anna's boyfriend comes on to Regina, almost raping her, but the story is twisted so it sounds like Regina came onto him. Anna exiles her from the popular crowd and makes her life miserable. I had a hard time believing Regina, who used to be so passive and needed Anna's approval for everything, was the type who would stand up to her and be vicious enough to get back at her, regardless of what was at stake. It's a well-written book, and very interested to read because the main character isn't likable, but you still find yourself rooting for her.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book was incredibly stressful and I am not okay.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Regina Afton is one of the Fearsome Fivesome, the most popular clique of girls at her high school. They rule by intimidation and seem to have absolute power in the school. After Regina is nearly raped by her best friend’s boyfriend, she makes the mistake of confiding in one of her frenemies, who is also a Fearsome Fivesome member, Kara. Instead of being supportive, Kara starts a vicious rumor about Regina and just like that, she’s frozen out of the group.Regina is flawed, to say the least. She makes bad choices over and over, to the point that you want to shake her. But she’s still in high school so I think that’s totally realistic, even if completely frustrating. There was so much tension in this book that my stomach was in knots pretty much the entire time I was reading it. Regina’s former friends are vicious in their full scale attack on her to get revenge for what Kara says Regina did.The heart of this book is what happens when the bully becomes the bullied. I appreciated the realism this book brought forth. It wasn’t the formulaic story you would expect where Regina learns her lesson straight away and embarks on a path of redemption. Do normal high schoolers do that? No. Most are self-absorbed teenagers, they don’t always get things right away, if at all. This is a good book for high schoolers to read, everyone will relate to at least one of the characters and realize that they are not alone. It would also make for a lively classroom discussion. There is mention of sex but no graphic sex scenes. There is also quite a bit of swearing but like I’ve said before, it you’re teenager hasn’t heard those words before, you might want to let them out from under that rock you’ve got them trapped under. I think this is a great book about that high school kids will appreciate.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This is essentially, "Mean Girls" on steroids. No exaggeration. One of the girls is even named Regina and they wear matching clothes on certain days, plus... they're evil. Regina is almost raped by her best friend's boyfriend, and no one believes her. She goes from being the best friend of the most popular girl to the most hated girl in high school. She is a social pariah. She seeks solace in Michael, one of the boys she used to mercilessly bully and torment but that doesn't seem to be enough. She's angry and she wants revenge. Now that she knows how awful it feels to be bullies, beat up, and laughed at she suddenly has sympathy for all those she used to torture. Rather than lying low and dealing with the bullies (like she deserves!) she keeps trying to get even. Michael tries to get her to stop but she's convinced that it's not fair and she needs to take down others with her. Ugh. Soo much ugh! Thank goodness high school was nothing like this. Super violent, bullying is the norm, and no one seems to learn their lesson. I couldn't stop reading it though, it was a train wreck and I wanted Regina to grow up. I would have even taken a cheesy ending but instead... ugh!!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I had a definitively strong reaction to this book. I wanted to strangle everyone. Every character is awful–they’re all terrible people. This book showcased the ugly side of people. It was disgusting how appalling everyone’s actions are. And yet, I felt so hard reading this. My emotional reactions were all over the board because this book and these characters made me think. I couldn’t help but put myself into the situation and ask, what if? What if I were in Regina’s shoes–what would I do? What if I were Michael, or Liz? I tried analyzing the situation from every perspective. I immersed myself in the plot trying to understand the characters. I was in a constant state of suffering due to the vise tightening around my chest because I was experiencing every terrible thing alongside Regina. But I hated her at the same time, and the emotions were so conflicting that I had my own personal struggle while reading. And I’m still left wondering about how I feel toward this book. I didn’t feel the closure I usually have when finishing a book–I feel like there should have been more resolution. But then, nothing tied up neatly in this story because this story isn’t neat–it’s messy and hard and a constant struggle. The ending fit the story and I’m left feeling suspended in a paused storyline, waiting for it to resume. RATING: 3.5
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This book is BRUTAL. What happens in it is brutal, and I felt like I had been put through the ringer reading it. It makes Mean Girls look like Sesame Street. It's a gritty and intense (and I mean intense) look at social hierarchy, the cruel kind of bullying that girls inflict upon one another, guilt, redemption, friendship, and revenge. Despite the fact that this book is action-free and takes place in high school, I found my heart pounding so hard at moments that I could've been watching The Dark Knight. It may seem odd/unrealistic that the adults are not involved or present really at all, but I can understand the choice and see past it. (but teens do manage to hide a lot, and certainly when you are a teen it seems like the adults are oblivious--especially when it comes to cliques.) It's not an enjoyable read per say. But it's thought-provoking, and made quite the impression on me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Best young adult book i have read by far! this book is about bullying in school. yet the girl who is getting bullied was that popualr girl who made everyone's life hell.it was easy to relate to her, but how can you care about a girl that teased, beat up and made your life hell and now its happening to her?the things those girls did to her is heart breaking and just a great book to read. A must read for all Teen Girls.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a great book. Some Girls Are… tackles the subject of bullying in girl world. What makes this story unique is who the main heroine is…a popular girl who has ruined the lives of others now gets a brutal taste of her own medicine, sounds like the type of person you would hate and definitely not root for in a story. Well, that’s what’s brilliant about this book, not only does Courtney Summers make you care about the girl, you also want those other students persecuting her to meet evil fates. In essence, the reader gets so caught up in the story, you feel like a victim too, wanting the heroine to dish out terrible reprisals on those she sees as “wrong”. Yet, both sides get hurt and everyone loses to some extent. The story is hard to read because it is so wonderfully honest and raw. But the book rewards you if you can hang in there through the brutal punches. When it comes to bullying, girls can be just as vicious as guys. I never really believed that…until I read this book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Regina has climbed to the top of the school's social ladder. She is mean girl Anna's sidekick. But then another member of the clique lies to Anna, and says that Regina slept with Anna's boyfriend. Suddenly Regina is out, and the target of vicious bullying.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book! Even though it was a terrible topic to read about, it was still amazing. It was so well written and I just couldn't put it down. Reading this book was like doing something even when you know you shouldn't.. when reading this you think to yourself, wow i should really read a different book because this is just so sad but i couldn't put it down, I read it in 3 hours!!!! I recommended this book to all of my friends and most of them read it (even some guy friends). I highly recommend this book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Courtney Summers is one of my favorite authors. Every book I've read by her is amazing and this one wasn't an exception at all. I hope that Summers continues to write books because I would hate to see her waste her awe-inspiring talent.Her characters are so easy to relate to and so realistic, and she's not one to hold back on controversial topics or language. I think that contributes more to the story than actually hindering it. I love how she always makes her characters have a flair of wit or sarcasm. It makes them pop to life more than in other stories. Honestly, Summers knows what she's doing
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I found some girls are much more captivating than cracked up to be – which should be the way it goes for a sophomore release. Courtney Summers has sharpened her talent and delivered an unforgettable novel that will make everyone wonder how high school could have gotten this bad.The stunts that the Fearsome now-Foursome pull really shocked me. Especially given the knowledge that they had and STILL chose to “punish” Regina for allegedly hooking up with her best friend’s boyfriend. It made me sick to my stomach that someone could be that deliberately cruel – what are we FEEDING these girls to think that this is acceptable? I seriously hope that Courtney Summers was only going to the extreme case scenario to illustrate how WRONG this would be – and not basing it off a real situation. I hope that women of all ages realize that one should never, ever belittle sexual assault and use it as a weapon against the victim.What I loved about this book is that there are both forgiving and unforgiving characters – and that Regina’s past wrongs are not always wiped clean from her slate. Her wronged peers never promise friendship – they may be nice to her, but their hurt far exceeds their good nature. Regina may deserve the reaping that she sowed as far as friends go, but she definitely does not deserve all the bullying. No one does. I loved how each character had their vulnerability, their strengths, their bottled-up secrets and troubles. These teenagers felt very real, and you watched how their hurts and triumphs are received by their peers.some girls are is a powerful punch to the stomach that will leave your heart troubled for today’s teenaged generation. As timeless as speak but even more disturbing, this book needs to taken to heart – if this is as real as it gets, I think we need to work even harder on changing reality then.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    While this book is ten times better than Cracked Up To Be, yet again there's a passive protagonist (Regina) who doesn't do much of anything to stand up to bullies. And when she does make an effort, she fails. After Regina's shunned by her ex-clique for supposedly sleeping with the clique leader's boyfriend (when she was almost raped), Regina has nowhere to turn. So she sits at a lunch table with Michael. By the end of the book, I actually felt something for these two, and I rooted for them. What kept me reading this book were the pranks, though. I kept waiting for the clique to go overboard, but they never did. And then, of course, I was swept up in the Regina/Michael relationship. The ending left me wanting more. It just felt too sudden, too rushed. I'm a little disappointed.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Regina Afton, former Mean Girl at Hallowell High School, is tortured by the popular girls after she is nearly raped by the queen bee's boyfriend. I can't say that I liked it, but part of what made it hard to read was how achingly real the characters were. This is a book to spark discussions (I hope). It's a very dark story that won't be for everyone, but I'd try it on fans of intense issue books like Laurie Halse Anderson's Speak and Inexcusable by Chris Lynch.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I liked this book. My school never had a problem with bullying. maybe because of how incredibly small it was, but I know that it's out there and this book brings it to life. I couldn't believe some of the things that Regina went through. Everything from have "Whore" spray painted on her locker to being pushed down a flight of steps and no one doing anything about it. No matter what a person has done to me in the past I don't think I could just stand by and watch something like that happen.It all started at a party where Regina was out with her group of friends- The Fearsome Fivesome- and she was the designated driver. Her best friend (and the leader of the group) Anna's boyfriend tried to rape her and she ran from the party and told another member of the group, Kara. Kara told Regina to not tell Anna what happened. When Regina goes to school that Monday it is clear that Kara told Anna instead, only making it appear that Regina wanted it to happen. The outcome is Regina being "frozen out" of the group.I can't believe girls would do those kinds of things. This book was tough to read at some points. The things that were done were so brutal. You'll have to read it for yourself.I loved the character of Michael though. He was not your typical loner. He wasn't emo, he didn't have the usual long scraggly hair. In truth, he was described to be kind of cute. But he was made an outsider by The Fearsome Fivesome. When Regina is cast out of the group she starts to sit with Michael at lunch. And their friendship develops. One of the reasons I liked this relationship, and the book in general is that it stays true to life. Regina and Michael don't find each other and suddenly nothing else matters. All the problems don't magically fall away. That's one of the reasons the book is so haunting, while reading it you know something exactly like this can be happening at the school in your town.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    At first glance at the synopsis of Some Girls Are, I completely passed it up. It sounded like your average popular girl bullies loser girl story. But after noticing the extremely high ranking on Goodreads and extreme praises of my blogger friends, I decided to give it a try. I could smack myself for not picking it up sooner.Some Girls Are is a demented combination of Mean Girls and Sarah Dessen’s Just Listen. The bullying, pranks and humiliation in this novel are so intense. The things these girls do to Regina are just unthinkable. Inhumane, even. Though it’s contemporary, I found myself shivering more than I’ve done with legit horror novels.Courtney Summers writes incredible characters. I didn’t want to like Regina. She was just as much of a bitch as any of the other girls in the Fearsome Fivesome. But I did like her, because her emotions were so well written that I couldn’t help but feel pity for her. Also, the developing relationship between Regina and Michael was another thing I loved. In the beginning, I wanted Michael to jump into another novel and fall in love with some other literary character more deserving of his attention. Courtney Summers wrote me out of that as well.Overall, Some Girls Are had me appreciating that I went to a decent high school with decent human beings. With raw emotions, an authentic teenage voice and morbid shenanigans, this is definitely a novel you should check out!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This was the first novel I have read by Courtney Summers and it was an utterly compelling read, I could not put it down, I was so absorbed in the world and the characters Summers crafted that I read it in a couple of hours. The book begins at a party full of drunken high school teenagers, Regina, our protagonist, is the designated driver so while everyone else is drunk she has to stay sober and watch out for her friends. Soon she only has her best friend, Anna the queen bee of the clique, to look after and finds her lying passed out on a couch with her boyfriend Donnie sitting opposite looking stoned. One minute Donnie is talking to Regina the next he’s attacking her and trying to rape her. Regina puts up a good fight and manages to get away, distraught she runs to Kara’s house (one of the members of her clique at school, the Fearsome Fivesome and Regina’s frenemy) and tells her everything, big mistake. Kara is a real BITCH with a vendetta against Regina and tells Anna that Regina slept with Donnie. Back at school Regina soon finds herself frozen-out of her group, her boyfriend dumps her without a word, her best friend doesn’t believe her that Donnie tried to rape her when she tries to explain what happened and she has no friends left. What follows is a harrowing story of how cruel girls can be to one another. At first I didn’t think I would feel sympathy for Regina, after all she was part of the clique that made many peoples life at the school miserable, okay I’ll say it she was a bitch and now she was getting a taste of her own medicine, but in a testament to Summers writing I started to feel sympathy for Regina’s situation and wanted everything to work out for her especially her developing relationship with Michael. The relationship portrayed with Michael was realistic, it wasn’t instantaneous but was slow burning which is understandable after years of mean gossiping about him from Regina and her clique. At first Michael (and I have to say me as well) didn’t trust Regina’s motives, is she sorry for what she did because she has no one now or is she really sorry? It became apparent that it was the latter, she was indeed sorry for what she did. Regina was so much more than a one-dimensional character which she could have been if not for Summers writing. It’s would have been much easier to portray Regina as a simply a mean girl like everyone at the school though she was but in reality she was much more than simply a mean character. She was a complex character with many issues, her parents were never around, she never really liked her so called friends and she feels exceptionally guilty for what she and her clique did to their old friend Liz which as it happens is exactly what is happening to Regina now. As a consequence of this freeze-out the clique performed on Liz, Regina pops antacids like its no one business which shows that whilst what Regina did was a real bitchy thing to do she did feel guilty about not like some of the other girls. Regina also discovers the consequences of her previous actions not only from Michael but Liz as well as a particularly nasty website set up where people can discuss how much they hate Regina. As the book goes on the bullying towards Regina intensifies both emotionally and physically. While some people would sit back and take it others like Regina take a stand and say no more and boy can she give as well as she can receive. Whilst some of her actions were questionable I could understand why she did it, sometimes even I was cheering her on because boy oh boy these girls were mean and vindictive. However, this ‘I’m not taking this bullying anymore’ attitude may not only hurt Regina but also Michael soon Regina must make a hard choice and it is in this choice she makes that proved to me that Regina was indeed really sorry for her previous actions. It was this part in the book that took me by surprise and took the book in another direction I was not expecting some of the things those girls came up with to make Regina’s life miserable were just astounding. Some Girls Are was a raw, intense and sometimes difficult reading but well worth the read. Perhaps as the title suggest Some Girls Are … just bitchy. A must read for all teenage girls, utter perfection. Sign me up for more Courtney Summers.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Some will find this book unbelievable. How can one girl experience so much physical and mental abuse at the hands of her fellow students and it goes almost completely unnoticed? I'm living proof that you can be bullied like the girl in this book. Because of my connection to Regina (though I NEVER was mean to anyone, I was simply bullied), this book made me sob. I thought, as a 38 year old adult that I moved on from my past. I guess not. I cried so much, I had a hard time reading. I felt stupid because my family had no clue what was wrong with me. Then they were wondering why I'd continue to torment myself and continue to read.The story was beautifully written and that is what made me continue to read. Why only 4 stars and not 5, because I wanted more! I want a book 2.This book should be mandatory reading for any teenage girl!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In a word: Brutal**possible spoilers**This was hard to read. The pure viciousness of a group of teens brutalizing other teens verbally, emotionally and physically was very disturbing. They were like a pack of rabid animals turning on everyone around them who didn't bow down to them.Regina used to be one of the 'in girls' who did what Anna (the leader -who must be obeyed) wanted. Regina wasn't nice. She was often cruel but that cruelty was getting to her. She couldn't eat because of the horrible things she had done. It was physically making her sick and sending her to therapy. But Regina could never find the courage to say 'no' to Anna. She continued to be Anna's lapdog - doing her bidding and treating others like they were less than nothing.Then one party changes everything. Anna's boyfriend- who has been after Regina for years- tries to rape Regina. She fights him off and gets away then confides in Kara. Kara is the wanna-be. She has been in the shadows at the edge of the "in group" for years, taking what crumbs they toss her way. When Regina confides the attempted rape incident to Kara, Kara lies and goes to Anna telling her that Regina slept with her boyfriend. Anna is crushed and out for vengeance.In a moment Regina is on the outs and Anna has replaced her with Kara- who is glowing with her new status with the "in group". Regina is now not only out of the group, she has also been placed at the top of the hit list. It's open season on Regina. Her locker is vandalized, "whore" is written on it, her books are tossed in the pool and a new website is set up for everyone who hates Regina to gather together and trash talk her.Regina is lost and finally feeling what it feels like to be on the receiving end of Anna's hit list. She doesn't like it and tries to make things right but Kara has complete control of Anna by feeding her lies. Regina spends her days hiding in closets at school and avoiding everyone. Except Michael, the guy she destroyed when he first moved to town. Regina, at Anna's request, spread rumors about Michael and destroyed any chance he had at making friends in their high school. He was the loner, the outcast without friends who sat alone at lunch near the garbage cans. The only table Regina is able to sit at once she's been shunned. Michael can't stand her and sees right through her to the coward she is. She doesn't like that at all. But she's still thankful to sit with someone, even if they can't stand her.The entire book is chapter after chapter of teens at their very worst. It was all disturbing, but what was most disturbing was that no one stood up for anyone else to stop it. They all watched it happen and allowed it. To me, that makes them ALL as guilty as those doing the actual abuse. But I am not sure the book conveyed that.The writing was great, but the story was terribly depressing, brutal and disheartening. I felt bad for all teenagers, not just the 'victims' in this story because even the aggressors were the victims and they didn't even know it. It was a pathetic situation told in a graphic, this-is-it-in-your-face way of what happens when people have the "it's not me" philosophy and turn a blind-eye to injustice and abuse.This is the scary side of humanity in our society.**this book contains drug & alcohol abuse by minors, violence, strong language and attempted rape**
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Some Girls Are is raw and honest. One can't help but become absorbed in it's realness, even if they've never ecountered a similar situation. What really sets it apart is that Regina isn't always the lovable or the victim. A must read.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I'm going to try and at least sound semi-coherent in my review. So, let me just start out by saying, "WOW!" Some Girls Are takes all of your fears about high school and just puts them right there: out in the open. It was amazing, yet extremely terrible. I went through so many emotions while reading this book. I was appalled at the behavior of the girls and saddened by what was happening. But the emotion that was stronger than all the others was this extreme sense of anger. The main character in Some Girls Are is Regina and she's a bitch. There's just no other way to say it. You know from the beginning that she's part of this elite group of popular, yet extremely mean girls. Regina partook in all of the previous bullying that the Fearsome Fivesome have inflicted. The readers should hate her. If not hate her than at least think, that the bullying she's experiencing is justified because she had villified so many other people. However, Courtney Summers has written a main character that you sympathize with. This is done by simply making all the rest of the girls in the group completely loathsome. I don't think I've ever hated a character in literature as much as I've hated Anna (and Kara, Jeanette, and the other one who's name currently escapes me). She was just a terrible human being. As wrong as it was, I internally cheered when Regina started fighting back. Every time that the Fearsome Foursome did something terrible to Regina, she did something just as horrible to them. I was a little bit sickened with myself because I wanted her to do those things. If she was having second thoughts about doing these things, I would think "Uhhh, they deserve it. What you're doing is not even as terrible as what they're doing to you." I know that violence does not help any situation. I know this with every fiber of my being. Yet I was so into Some Girls Are that I was trying to justify and excuse it. The high school experience that's in Some Girls Are is something that I'm not too familiar with. I know that high school girls have the potential to be really mean and I'm sure they were mean in my high school. However, most of the time if someone didn't like you, they just didn't talk to you. We had fights here and there, but I don't think it was nothing like in this book. So, I can't really say with certainty how true Some Girls Are is in regards to the viciousness of girls' social circles in high school. I'm hoping it's not really as bad as the book portrays, but maybe that's just my naivete getting the better of me. Another thing that was frustrating to me in Some Girls Are is how all of the adults seemed to turn a blind eye. When they weren't turning a blind eye, they were just being plain ignorant. Yes, they can say that they didn't have a clue about what was going on, but the truth is that they didn't want to know. They wanted to remain in their little bubble and think "Girls can't possibly be that mean to each other", but apparently they can. Some Girls Are was just an amazing, heartbreaking, and eye-opening novel. For students it shows how quickly you can fall from being popular and maybe they shouldn't strive to be that way, especially if it's going to make other people feel like crap. For teachers and parents, it shows that it's true, you may never completely know your kids, but you shouldn't use that as an excuse to not look. I think it's something that everyone should read because it really showcases what bullying can do to a person and how that terrible cycle can really continue. When you finish reading it, you may feel a bit frustrated (or really pissed off like I was), but I assure you, you won't regret reading it. Just make sure you have some fluff nearby.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Have you seen the movie Odd Girl Out? If you decide to read this book, you should watch that movie. It's so like the premise of this book. It's infuriating and disgusting how mean this girls are. I sincerely hope that it is not happening out there, and if it is well man the girl who gets the "freeze out" needs a lot of strength.After a huge weekend party at her boyfriend's house Regina suddenly becomes an outcast. Anna Morrison, her supposedly girlfriend believed a gossip that the spiteful Kara fed her. Yes, the movie Mean Girls (minus the comic parts) jumps in mind too or if you read Thirteen Reason Why by Jay Asher, you'll hope that Regina won't end up as Hannah. I don't really enjoy reading books about high school snobs torturing their peers but I love the fact that this girls fight back after such emotional turmoil and zero self esteem. Summer did a wonderful job of sendiong out the message "you reap what you sow". It's a story of how a rumor can ruin a person, how your actions and words can be turned against you. I love how Regina fought back but at the same time I find myself frowning on her actions. Intense, menacing, and fascinating. Definitely worth reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Oh my God! True moral story of what happens when you don't treat people right. To think that your own friends would turn on you and resort to gang-like activity is terrible. I know my sister would never do that to me and I owuld definitely never do that to her but, God that scared me! Never go to a party 1. unchaperoned, 2. always bring a tape recorder, and 3.have a best friend you can really trust-not those evil people.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Unfortunately Some Girls Are just didn’t sit well with me. I found it written well but the subject matter I found overly offensive. The entire novel surrounds horrendous school bullying and the bullying is not what was offensive to me, maybe the real offense came reading this book at a time when a young girl killed herself over a situation just like this. Although the circumstances in -Some Girls Are- were frightening for the victim I felt the novel tried to push this off as “cool”. I can’t explain why I felt this way but the story seemed sleazed out. School bullying is such a serious issue and I felt the drinking and drug glamorization took away from the seriousness of the main issue. Also I had a lot of problems connecting with the main character Regina and with no connection to her-- there was no connection to the book. She is a follower of the worst kind; the kind of person who has no back bone and goes along with crowd, even when it’s wrong.Perhaps it was Regina’s unbelievable weakness as a follower that made me dislike her, or maybe it was the fact that even after she seems to gain a little strength she is still weak. Even when she stands up for herself it’s all retaliatory violence.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This novel is very similar to two other books I?ve read Just listen and Speak. It?s about Regina Afton who at a party one night gets attacked by her best friend Anna?s boyfriend she manages to get away and while hurt and confused goes to confide in her frenemy Kara. Regina?s part of the most popular girl clique in school and plays second in command to her best friend Anna but the day after the rape when she goes into school she finds that she?s been frozen out by the group. Kara?s told Anna that Regina hooked up with her boyfriend and Anna doesn?t believe Regina when she try?s to tell her that she was nearly rapped. Anna?s out for revenge and Anna?s a mean girl - a lethal combination. As the year goes on and the bullying gets worse Regina gets closer to social outcast Michael who she herself used to bully. What starts of as a freeze out from her friends soon takes a cruel turn to some nasty rumours and some malicious pranks and when Regina decides that she?s not going down without a fight she just might not only be putting herself but also Michael in serious danger.I didn?t love Courtney Summers debut novel Cracked up to be that much so I was a bit weary about reading this one but I?m so glad I did because it was so much better. This is very dark and shows exactly how mean some girls can be out of all the books I?ve read on this subject I think this is my favourite because it felt so real. I would recommend this to any girl going through high school because it?s a very important novel that makes you understand that what you say to people and bullying can have a very serious effect on that person. I?m so excited to see what Courtney Summers brings out next because she just gets better and better! 4.5 stars.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Words cannot describe the intensity of this book. I’d try, but I’d fail to convey how this story sucks you into its grip and overtakes you. It’s dirty and gritty and raw, and even though it hurts to read, it hurts more to put it down. Courtney Summers is kind of the Chuck Pahlahniuk of the YA world in that she can punch you in the face (metaphorically, of course, in case you were confused) and you come back, begging for more, because her writing is just that good.Anna, the leader of the Fearsome Fivesome, is like Hitler. Okay, she doesn't round people up and kill them, but at least Hitler thought, in his twisted way, that he was improving the world. Anna is just evil because she can be. Regina was her best friend and henchman until the day Anna decides to freeze her out. Think it’s impossible to care about someone like that, someone who willingly did the dirty work to bring about people’s pain? Think again. Summers not only makes you care about her, she actually makes you cheer for her, even though it seems like she’s getting exactly what she deserves for causing so much pain. As Regina spends more time outside of her circle, she begins to understand just how horrible of a person she was. It wasn’t like she didn’t know she was doing horrible things to people; her behavior toward one person in particular haunts her. She doesn’t really expect forgiveness, and I think that’s one of the reasons that I could sympathize with her. The truth is that, for me anyway, it hurts to see people hurting, even if it seems like karmic payback.The one bright spot in the story is Michael. He has every reason in the world to despise Regina, but when he discovers a connection between them, he feels obligated to help her. Their relationship is filled with a mix of disdain, compassion, and attraction. And since the Fearsome Foursome is out for revenge, no one even slightly associated with Regina is safe from their venom. Yet even in the midst of hell, Michael shows that he’s a better person than any of them.There are many surprises in this book, from the ways the girls torture Regina to Regina’s own responses to them. However, I must say that I found the end to be the most shocking. It doesn’t disappoint, and it’s not unbelievable, but after everything that happened in the story, I never expected it to end on that note.The bottom line is this: read this book. This is an example of storytelling at its best.

Book preview

Some Girls Are - Courtney Summers

friday

Everyone is wasted.

Anna is wasted. Josh is wasted. Marta is wasted. Jeanette is wasted. Bruce is wasted. Donnie’s always wasted. I’m not wasted. I had my turn at the last party, called shotgun in Anna’s Benz after it was over. My head was out the window, the world was spinning. I puked my guts out. It wasn’t fun, but it’s not like there was anything else to do. Tonight, there’s even less to do than that. Tonight, I’m the designated driver.

Boring.

Okay, okay, just— Josh fumbles into his pocket and pulls out a little baggie of capsules. He tips one, two, three, four into his palm while Charlie Simmons, a cranky sophomore, waits impatiently. I have to restock. He drops the pills into Charlie’s sweaty hands. That’s all I can give you right now, man.

Charlie sniffs. Fitting: All that Adderall is going up his nose.

How much?

Oh . . . Josh’s eyes glaze over. Forget about it. I like you, Chuck.

Charlie grins. Cool. Thanks.

"Hey, Chuck, you’re paying, I say, grabbing his arm. Instant scowl. Bring the money on Monday."

Bitch, he mutters.

He stalks off. Payment secured. I only strong-arm Josh’s clientele when Josh gives his merchandise away, which is every time he gets this drunk.

Jesus, Regina. He somehow manages to trip over his feet, even though he’s just standing there. He wraps an arm around me. Show a little respect, huh?

Fuck Charlie Simmons.

He laughs, and the ability to remain upright completely abandons him, forcing all his weight on me. I struggle to keep us standing, casting my gaze around the property for help. The lights are on, the music’s loud, and I spot a few people puking in the topiary, but none of them are my friends.

Josh buries his head into my neck. You look hot tonight. His blond hair tickles my face, and I push him back. It’s too hot out to be this close. I mentioned that, right?

Let’s go inside, I tell him.

He laughs again, like Let’s go inside is code for something it’s not, but I guess he’s right: I guess I look hot tonight. Anna loaned me a shirt and skirt, and everything she owns is nice. I want you to look really good for once, Regina. I’ve spent the last seven hours afraid someone’s going to vomit all over me, because I can’t afford to replace the labels I’m wearing.

I help Josh up the path to his front door. He stops abruptly, opens his arms wide, and shouts, Is everybody having a good time?

He’s met with scattered applause and cheers that barely make it over the music. He shakes his head ruefully, listing sideways. I wonder what would happen if I just let him fall this time, but he manages to regain his balance without my help.

We’re graduating in like, eight months, he tells me very seriously. "I’m going to Yale. Who will supply these poor kids while I’m gone?"

I roll my eyes and right him for the thousandth time, forcing him into the house, where it’s a different kind of party-chaos—quieter, but just as corrupt. Music filters in from outside, clashing with the music playing inside. Four seniors are toking up at the kitchen table. Drinking games. People making out in the living room. It’s boring—it always is—but it’s all there is. I just wish I was trashed enough to be able to pretend to enjoy it. I hate being designated driver. It was Kara’s turn this time, but she’s at home, sick.

Are we going upstairs? Josh asks when we reach the stairs. Before I can answer, he crumples onto the steps in a heap, too heavy for me to pick up. He rolls onto his back and blinks twice, struggling to focus. Is this my bedroom?

Yes, I lie.

I bend down and kiss his cheek.

The smoke wafting in from the kitchen is giving me a headache, or maybe it’s the music—I don’t know. I lean against the wall and check my watch. It’s officially Too Late, but Anna says the designated driver doesn’t get to decide when the party is over; everyone else gets to decide when they’re over the party. And Anna—I lost her an hour ago. Her face was as red as her hair, and she was slobbering all over Donnie.

I sigh.

Jeanette lurches up from out of nowhere looking like a guarantied good time. Strung out. I can never tell when she’s over the party; the party’s usually all over her.

I’m leaving, she declares. With Henry.

Is Henry sober?

Yes, he is, Henry says in my ear, startling me. He grins and points to Josh, sprawled out on the stairs. You can’t just leave him there.

I ignore him and turn to her. Where’s Marta?

Waiting in the car. She brushes her hair out of her eyes. We’re dropping her off at her house, and then me and Henry are going back to his place.

Is Henry sober?

I’m right here, Henry says, annoyed. And you already asked that.

"Do you really want to go to his place?" I ask Jeanette. Another of my duties as designated driver. If I can’t prevent an undesirable drunken hookup, then why bother being here sober in the first place? Jeanette grins and nods.

You know, I’m in the circle, Henry points out. I get an automatic pass.

But you’re kind of an asshole, I tell him.

He smirks and laces his fingers through Jeanette’s. They amble through the smoke. He glances back at me once. Have fun babysitting, Afton.

Josh on the stairs. Marta in the car. Henry taking her home. Henry taking Jeanette back to his place. I don’t care about Bruce, so that just leaves Anna and Donnie. I know they’re in the den. They always end up in the den if Josh and I don’t get there first. The den is off-limits.

But we’re in the circle.

I bypass the living-room festivities, open the door to the den, step inside, and close it behind me. The party noises fade and the room is dim, moonlight slivering in through the curtain drawn over the glass doors that lead to the backyard. I close my eyes briefly, inhaling slowly, letting the semiquiet of it all kill my headache.

When I open my eyes, I spot Anna at one end of the room. She’s curled up on the couch, a picture of six shots of Jack chased with one Heineken too many. She drinks too much around Donnie, desperate to keep up with him, like the difference between him staying with her and leaving her is her blood-alcohol level.

I need a girlfriend who can hold her liquor, he says.

Maybe it is. Donnie’s lounging in the chair at the opposite end of the room, looking as half awake as he always does. No matter how hard I try, I can’t seem to talk Anna out of him. He has a convertible.

She’d kill me if I left her here like this, so I lean over her ear and say her name, loud and sharp: Anna. She doesn’t move. I pull on her arm, tap her face, shake her. Nothing. I make my way over to the pitcher of water sitting on the end table beside Donnie.

Help me get her to the car, I say.

He stares at me. Why? Where are you going?

Home.

What about me? I’m in no condition to get myself back to my place.

I don’t care what happens to you. I’m going home and I’m taking Anna with me. I grab the water and pour a glass, cross the room, and try to get her upright enough to take a sip, somehow. Anna, come on . . .

She flops back on the couch. I rub my forehead—my headache’s returning—and make my way back to Donnie with the glass.

Would you give me a hand? He stares at me and then grabs my arm. The water sloshes onto the table. "Christ, Donnie."

He keeps his hand on my arm, and I’m suddenly aware of how much skin Anna’s shirt isn’t covering, but I guess that’s the point.

Why don’t you care what happens to me?

He sounds as pathetic as he looks.

God, you’re drunk. I step back, but he keeps his hand on my arm. Just crash here, I say. I’m not driving you home. He digs his nails into my skin. I yank his hand off me. Don’t.

Don’t, he repeats in a soft falsetto, and then he grabs my other arm before I can move, gripping them both so tightly, I know I’ll still feel his fingers tomorrow. He uses me to get to his feet, and then he’s on his feet and he’s close.

Too close.

I turned him down in the ninth grade. Anna likes to say we’ve been close to hate-fucking ever since, which is too gross for me to even contemplate. It’s a gunshot kind of thing for her to say—a warning. The way she says it, it’s like she can see it happening, and the way she says it lets me know I better not let it happen.

As if I’d ever let Donnie get that close to me, anyway.

Except now he’s that close to me, and I think he’s thinking the wrong things.

He is. He presses his mouth against mine, mashing my lips against my teeth. The inevitability of every party: Someone will kiss you and you won’t want it. Except this is worse than that. Way, way worse. This is my best friend’s boyfriend, and my best friend is passed out on a couch eight feet away, and she will kill me for this, and I really, really don’t want it. I press my hands against his chest and push him back, trying to force stop out of my mouth and past his. He detaches himself and fumbles backward. I wipe my mouth on the back of my hand, trying to get the taste of him out. I need water. I need to spit. He grabs my arm. I try to jerk away, but he holds fast.

"You better not breathe a word about this to her—"

Donnie, fuck off.

He keeps tightening his grip until I can’t keep the pain off my face—it hurts—so I bring my foot down on his foot and watch that happen on his face. It bursts red and I’m free. I rush to the door, but before I can open it, he’s on me, crushing me into place from behind and breathing so hard in my ear, I can’t even hear the vague sounds of the music outside or in. What turns a moment into this—me against the door, him against me. He puts his hand on my shoulder and turns me around roughly, and I’m afraid.

I’ve never been afraid of Donnie Henderson before.

He forces another kiss on me, lips working overtime, trying to get something out of mine. I grab a fistful of his hair and pull. He shoves me, but I stumble past him. The brief space I put between us makes me think it’ll be okay, that this is as out of hand as it gets, but it’s too close or it’s not close enough and he lunges for me and we both go down.

We’re on the floor.

He pushes me into the carpet. I glimpse Anna, tangled red hair, eyes closed. Anna, wake up. What turns a moment into this—he’s on top of me, panting, and my face is smashed against the rug. I focus on the strands of hair laid gently across Anna’s face.

This isn’t happening.

But he turns me over and slides his hand up my skirt, and this is really really really really happening.

No—

I reach out and grip one of the table legs. His hand up my skirt. One hand up my skirt. Touching me. And the other clumsily feeling every part of me it can. His mouth on my neck. I yank the leg. The table tips and the pitcher rolls off, vomiting water all over us. Wet. Hands all over me.

I grab the pitcher and bring it up and then down on him. It’s hardly a hit, but he feels it. I raise it up again and he dodges me and I’m crawling away. Last shot, Regina. Get out. I grab the chair and pull myself to my feet while he tries to stand, but the last of his coordination is gone on his hand up my skirt. Anna’s skirt.

Anna! I turn to her. Anna, help!

But she just lays there, and Donnie’s blocking my path to the door, swearing, trying to stand, and my heart is trying to race me out of this room before that happens. I stumble over to the sliding glass door and yank it open. I step outside, into the heat, into the party, the last of the party, but the music is as loud as it was at the start of the night.

I need to tell someone, but everyone is wasted.

I walk fast. I walk forever, blind, numb. I wrap my arms around myself. I need to tell someone. I lick my lips and taste salt: I’m crying. How long have I been—

Kara.

I’m standing in front of Kara’s house. My feet walked me here. Kara. Kara is someone. The walk to her door sets off the motion sensor, soaking me in artificial too-bright light. I knock and wait, fighting the urge to throw up. I wipe my eyes and pull at Anna’s skirt. It’s torn.

A minute later, the door opens. Kara’s there, a fevered doll with blond curls hanging in front of her flushed face. She crinkles her snotty nose.

Jesus, Regina. What part of ‘designated driver’ don’t you understand?

The contempt in her voice almost tricks me into feeling normal. For a second. And then she looks closer and I remember the skirt—Anna’s skirt—and his hand up Anna’s skirt. And I’m still crying.

What happened to you? she asks.

A million words fight their way up my throat, all lobbying to be first out of my mouth. They pile up, stuck. Only one manages its way out: Help.

She lets me inside, and the rest of the words come, falling from my lips, a stupid, stuttering truth. By the time I collapse in a chair at the kitchen table, she knows what he did to me. And then it gets really quiet while I wait for her to tell me what to do.

I need someone to tell me what to do.

Anna always tells me what to do.

God, Kara murmurs, pressing her fingers against the angry spots on my arm where he grabbed me. The skin is tender and marked, but by Monday it will be splotchy purples, browns, and yellows.

The police? I ask. My voice cracks. Do you think? Do I go to the police?

Kara stares at me, and then she stands and goes into the fridge and gets a bottle of water. I can’t read her expression.

You really want to put yourself through that?

I could put Donnie through that. I rub my forehead. But I don’t really want to go through that. I don’t want to talk to the police about his hand up my skirt. And then—my parents. It’s not like you can do that and not tell your parents, and I don’t want them to know. I don’t want them to think of me on the floor, with Donnie’s hands there. Kara sets the water in front of me. Maybe Anna—

"You’re going to tell Anna?"

She has to know— I swallow. That’s her boyfriend. She won’t let him get away with it. She’ll take care of him. Me. She takes care of everything.

If she believes you.

I open my mouth and nothing comes out. If she believes you. I should’ve known Kara would do this. There’s a reason we hate each other. If she believes you.

"Look, I believe you, Kara says, reading my mind. I know you hate Donnie, and I can see him doing something like this, but . . . Anna’s always thought . . ."

You’re like, this close to hate-fucking.

I pick at the hem of Anna’s skirt. The jagged rip in it finally hits me. She’ll kill me. She will kill me for ruining her skirt. Shit. I stand and try to force the ragged sides together, like that’s how you fix these things. I need to—I told her I’d be careful—

Regina—

I told Anna I wouldn’t—

Regina. She snaps her fingers twice. I let the skirt go and sink back into the chair. I need to get it together. Kara stares at me, concerned. I never thought I’d live a moment that could exist outside our hate for each other. I could go my whole life without one. But this feels . . . safe.

What do you—so what do I do, Kara? What . . . ?

She sits across from me, quiet, for a long time. My stomach knots itself up while I wait for her to speak. If I have to live with this, I don’t want it to be hard.

Donnie’s not going to tell Anna, she finally says. And Anna’s not going to believe Donnie would do that to you. She’d think you were screwing around behind her back. It’s not fair, but that’s Anna.

My best friend.

I mean . . . She taps her fingers along the table. He was really wasted, right? It’s not like he does that all the time. . . . I don’t say anything. And I feel really bad for you, Regina . . . but there are some things worth keeping your mouth shut for.

She’s my best friend. A tear manages its way down my cheek. I wipe at my eyes. I mean—

But you know what she’d do to you if she found out, right?

I nod slowly. I know. And then I nod again: I know, I know, I know.

And I’m totally here for you, she says. Kara. Totally here. Nothing makes sense anymore. I’m not going to say anything.

Thanks, I whisper.

Kara presses her fingers against my arm again.

Her touch is cool and strange.

monday

I wake up, and the bruises on my arms have turned really yellow and brown, so I have to wear long sleeves, even though fall is doing its best impression of summer and the air is sticky and hot. Anna likes us to coordinate our outfits more often than not and has decided tank tops and miniskirts this week—and I agreed, so I don’t know what I’ll tell her when she sees me today, but it might be the last thing on her mind. I ignored the flurry of texts she sent on Saturday, because I couldn’t tell her the truth. I still can’t.

I debate various lies over breakfast, a pale pink antacid with coffee. I’m a pretty good liar as long as I’m talking to an easy sell, but Anna is not an easy sell. If she finds out I’m hiding something, she’ll want to know what. Maybe she’ll be mad. Maybe she won’t give a damn. Anna is funny like

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