Skip to Content

The Fab Girls Guide to Friendship Hardship by Discovery Girls

**Giveaway at end of review!!**

Stars: *****

The creators of Discovery Girls magazine has created a set of four books for preteens about situations they often encounter. Discovery Girls asked me to review one of their books and I was happy to. The four books in the series are Friendship Hardship, Sticky Situations, Getting Your Questions Answered and Getting Through Tough Times. I received The Fab Girls Guide to Friendship Hardship.

If I had to sum the book up in one word it would be “Wow.” I wish I had this book when I was a preteen. I had such trouble with making friends and getting along and this book would have been a big help. I’ve read other books on tween/teen friendship both as a tween/teen and as an adult and none have even remotely measured up to this book.

Synopsis: She knows everything about you… she’d never tell your secrets… she’s your biggest fan. Who doesn’t want a friend like that? True friendship is a gift… but it can be hard to find. Whether you’re stuck in a fading friendship, caught in the popularity trap, or dealing with mean girls, we’ll break down the solutions to the problems step by step. Best of all, we’ll teach you how to free yourself from poisonous friendships forever and be the best friend you can be. Soon, you’ll be meeting new people and making friends who truly respect and understand you…because you deserve first-rate friendships.

The book is written as if the “Fab Girls” Carmen and Dallas are talking, which makes it very tween friendly. No tween wants to hear an adult preach about friendships. Talking from their point of view and adding comments from real tweens and teens makes this book attractive to the girls.

Chapter headings include: “How Do Your Friendships Rate?, Mean Girls and Frenemies, To Clique or Not to Clique, This Friendship Is So Over, Stop Playing The Popularity Game!, How To Be Truly Popular, All the Fabulous Friends You Want, Be the Best Friend You Can Be and Summing It All Up.”

Sprinkled throughout the easily readable text are quizzes such as “Is Your Group a Bad Clique?” and “Do You Project Confidence?” A lot of the other books I’ve read on the topic seem to encourage girls to be popular as long as they don’t hurt other to do it. This book explains that real popularity is “having a lot of friends and being well-liked and respected.” (pg 74), NOT “belonging to the coolest, meanest and most exclusive clique around.” (pg 74) Friendship Hardship directs girls to learn how to be friendly to everyone, even to those who aren’t friendly back. Everyone knows the kid who doesn’t seem to really belong to a clique but is friendly with everyone and liked by most. This is true popularity and the one kids should be striving for.

Although this book doesn’t cover what to do if you are being constantly teased or harassed at school (this is probably covered in Getting Through Tough Times) the section on self-confidence probably would have helped me a bit in that department. I had no self-confidence or self-respect so I was “fun” to tease. If you don’t let it bother you, you’re no longer “fun” to tease.

As I said there are quotes from the Fab Girls as well as real girls from around the U.S. peppered throughout the book. The book is long enough to cover the important topics but not too long that the reader would lose interest. The only thing I could think of that would make this book better would be to have it in colour. The many shades of grey gets a little drab after awhile.

At the end of the book are the 8 Friendship Rules which along would provide help to many tweens/teens struggling with Friendship Hardships. Also check out the Discovery Girls website for more information and a great website for your tween/teen.Giveaway Info!How would you like to win the whole set of four Fab Girls Guides? All you have to do is leave a comment on this message and you're entered. Make sure I have a way to contact you. Contest Ends Saturday, January 26 11:59PM EST.Contest open to residents of Canada and U.S. only.

Similar entries
  • This challenge was created by Wendy and is done by members of the A Novel Challenge group. I will be making notes here on progress and for the books that need to be reviewed, they will have the tag: A Novel Challenge

    In the year 2008 I need to:

    1. Read a short story and review it
    2. Read a children's book and review it
    3. Read a poem and review it
    4. Read a banned book and review it
    5. Give a book away - gave my copy of The Fab Girl's Guide to Friendship Hardships by Discovery Girls to a teen I know.
    6. read 2 articles from any one magazine and tell about them.
    7. Read a classic and review it Read Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass by Lewis Carroll, review here.
    8. Got to a book event and tell about your experience
    9. Read an essay and tell about it
    10. Read something inspirational and tell why it inspired you

  • These are the books I finished January 2008 along with some stats.

    Persian Girls by Nahid Rachlin
    The Rabbi's Girls by Johanna Hurwitz
    Julia's Mending by Kathy Lynn Emerson
    The Slave Dancer by Paula Fox
    The Fab Girls Guide to Friendship Hardship
    The Daring Game by Kit Pearson
    Misfit McCabe by L.K. Gardner-Griffie
    Anastasia At Your Service by Lois Lowry
    The No-Cry Sleep Solution by Elizabeth Pantley
    Smart-opedia by Maple Tree Press

    Total Books: 10
    Total Pages: 1822

    Fav Book: Smart-opedia
    Least Fav: Julia's Mending

  • This review is part of the Mother Talk Blog Tour.

    Stars: *****

    The Daring Book for Girls was written because the authors felt it was necessary to have a kind of companion book to The Dangerous Book for Boys by Conn and Hal Iggulden.

  • Stars: *****

    I chose this book because I picked it up at a library sale but I’m 95% sure I’ve actually read this once before. This is also the first 5 Star book of 2008. (Even thought it's not the first 5-star review posted.) I also read this for the Casual Reading Challenge.

    It’s the story of Lauren and her friend Andrea who both feel too fat and want to lose weight. Only Andrea takes it too far. It’s the story of Anorexia and a teen girl’s pressure to be thin. It’s told very well and I think it would be the perfect book to read along with your teen and discuss. I think if more parents discussed this book with their teens, we might make teens more aware of anorexia and the warning signs.
    I HIGHLY recommend this book to all teen girls ages 12 and up.

  • Stars: *****

    This was read for the Book Awards Challenge, Read it Again Challenge and Newbery Project.

    I first read this in grade school and loved it. When I saw I needed to read it for the Newbery Project I decided to reread it and I'm glad I did. I remembered it almost exactly and I enjoyed it very much again. I love his writing and would like to try some more of his books to see if they are as well written.

  • Stars: **** This book was read for the Young Adult Challenge and the Reading My Name Challenge

    Summary: At first Eliza is happy with her new life at boarding school. But a bond begins to develop between Eliza and Helen, a mischievous, unpopular girl, who defies authority, plays practical jokes and doesn’t seem to care what others think of her. It is Helen who starts the daring game among the five girls in the Yellow Dorm…

    I really enjoyed this book. It was nice to get a taste of boarding school other than Harry Potter. Many things were the same though, such as the strict rules and dress code and collecting house points. This school (Ashdown Academy) is also open to day students and takes students from Grade 1- Grade 12. Eliza and her friends are in Grade 7 which I think is quite young to board. I could never do it at age 12.

  • Stars: *****

    I recieved this book for review from Random House.
    Wow. Received for review and I’m so glad. This is similar to A Far Cry From Home but mostly the story of one girl instead of many. I have not read Girlbomb which is the author’s story of herself homeless.

  • Stars: ****

    I recieved this book from MotherTalk.

    I asked to review this book because I’ve been intrigued by life in Muslim countries. I’ve read other books on Muslim culture so I asked to review this one.

  • Stars: ****

    This is a novel for ages 8-12, mostly for girls. It’s the story of the daughters of Rabbi Levin after they move to Lorain, Ohio in 1923.

    There are good things and bad things that happen, just like in real life. This is a good book for non-Jewish kids to learn what it’s like to be Jewish. Many aspects of Judaism are explained. How the Shabbos is celebrated (like the Christian Sabbath), what Rosh Hashanah is all about, the special preparations for Passover and how the Jewish wedding works.

  • I received this book to review along with two giveaway copies. Details on giveaway at end of the review!

    Stars: ****

  • Fans of Elizabeth and Victoria Kann's Pinkalicious and Jane O'Connor's Fancy Nancy,

  • Book Number 46: The Red Tent, tells the story of Jacob and his family through the eyes of his obscurely known daughter Dinah. The bible only says that Dinah was rapped and her brothers avenged the rape by tricking and killing her rapist and all of his family. The Red Tent tells the story though through the young girls point of view. The main point I got out of the story is that this was a story about celebrating women and mothers. We each have a story to tell and we deserve our moment to be heard. All over the world there are red tent events where women gather together and tell their birth stories as well as other activities. Its goal is to educate and empower women and girls. To learn more about it, click here. As for the book I enjoyed the fictional female perspective of the story.

  • All in Together Girls / Kate Sutherland
    Saskatoon : Thistledown, c2007.

  • Extras by Scott Westerfeld (Uglies Trilogy)

    It's a few years after rebel Tally Youngblood took down the uglies/pretties/specials regime. Without those strict roles and rules, the world is in a complete cultural renaissance. "Tech-heads" flaunt their latest gadgets, "kickers" spread gossip and trends, and "surge monkeys" are hooked on extreme plastic surgery. And it's all monitored on a bazillion different cameras. The world is like a gigantic game of American Idol. Whoever is getting the most buzz gets the most votes. Popularity rules.

    As if being fifteen doesn't suck enough, Aya Fuse's rank of 451,369 is so low, she's a total nobody. An extra. But Aya doesn't care; she just wants to lie low with her drone, Moggle. And maybe kick a good story for herself. Then Aya meets a clique of girls who pull crazy tricks, yet are deeply secretive of it. Aya wants desperately to kick their story, to show everyone how intensely cool the Sly Girls are. But doing so would propel her out of extra-land and into the world of fame, celebrity...and extreme danger. A world she's not prepared for.

  • This week's Booking Through Thursday question is actually inspired by Buy a Friend a Book Week. If you don't know anything about Buy a Friend a Book Week definitely check out the program's website (or read about it in this post).

    Anyway, here's the question:
    What book would you choose to give to a friend and why?

  • Title: Summer Sisters
    Author: Judy Blume
    ISBN: 0440226430
    Publisher: Dell Publishing/1998
    Pages: 399/Fiction

  • Ehmagawd! Say it isn't so, Massie!

    Massie Block, CEO of the New Pretty Committee, is having self doubts. As Briarwood-Octavian Day School is primed to begin their eighth grade year, Massie admits to herself that she's afraid of the Briarwood boys, afraid her alpha status is in jeopardy, afraid she's in extreme danger of becoming an LBR (Loser Beyond Repair).

    Because of the unforeseen consequences of their secret spying on the Briarwood guys' sensitivity group, Briarwood Academy is in shambles and the boys are forced to share the girls' campus, now renamed the Briarwood-Octavian Day School (BOCD). Think that's a good thing? Nawt! The boys are the absolute center of attention as school begins. The boys are the new ALPHAS!

    However, Massie has a plan.

  • Stars: ****1/2I read this book for the Celebrate the Author challenge and the Reading My Name challenge.

    Celebrate the Author Note:
    Dr. Seuss is one of my favourite children’s authors so I didn’t want to cheat and just re-read some of his books that I’ve read a million times. So I decided I’d read a few of this books I haven’t read yet as well as a book about his life.

    This book is a Children’s Non-Fiction book about he early life of Dr. Seuss, before he was known as that. It explains who he was as a boy and how he came to be an author and artist. The story itself is written like a picture book and ends when he is 22 and his writing life is taking off. After that is an explanation of how he came up with the idea for some of his books as well as information on his life after 22 such as when he was married and how The Cat in the Hat and Green Eggs and Ham were the result of bets by his publisher.

  • I decided that I wanted to log the number of pages read too since I read short books too and it will seem like I read more than I did. My review lists also don't include all the picture books I read.

    The Daring Book for Girls by Andrea J. Buchanan and Miriam Peskowitz (thumbed through, not cover to cover)
    Island of the Blue Dolphins by Scott O'Dell (192)
    Booked to Die by John Dunning (317)
    The Biography of Bananas by Rachel Eagen(32)
    Bananas! by Jacqueline Farmer (32)
    Splitting Harriet by Tamara Leigh (388)
    Death in Kingsport by Curtis Parkinson (315)
    Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame (272)
    Through a Brief Darkness by Richard Peck (142)
    Tuesdays With Morrie by Mitch Albom (192)
    For Parents Only by Shaunti Feldhahn and Lisa Rice (179)
    A Long Way From Chicago by Richard Peck(148)
    Strays Like Us by Richard Peck (155)
    The Bookman's Wake by John Dunning (362)

    Total: 14 Books
    Fiction: 10

  • Stars: *****

    I recieved this book from Annick Press for review. I also read it for the Baby Steps challenge.

    Red Rage is a translation of a German book. It is about a teen girl with a violent temper and an unstable home. It is a very good book but very hard to read. It made me angry when she was angry and feel depressed when she was depressed. Don’t read if you are already depressed, definitely not if you are severly depressed. What is says on back of book is totally true: “Filled with raw emotion and unflinching honesty, Red Rage is a vivid portrait of one teen lost in the vortex of her own aggression.”

  • Here's a blogging meme I stole from Dewey. I should have another review posted tomorrow on The Grass is Singing, another Doris Lessing novel.

    1. Do you remember learning to read? How old were you?
    According to my grandmother, I learned to read at two. I can’t help but think she’s exaggerating, though. Perhaps she just means that I would read back the stories that she read to me. If she is correct, I’m a genius and I should be elected next ruler of the world. That is all.

    2. What do you find most challenging to read?
    I don't so much find anything in particular challenging to read; I do, however, find it challenging to read after a long day or when I'm tired. It's right to sleep if I do.

    3. What are your library habits?

  • Khaled Hosseini
    372 pages
    Library Book

    I didn't know what to expect when I picked up this book. I just read "The Kite Runner" a few months ago and I thought that it was an incredible book. Wonderful as engaging fiction, yet with an amazing amount of information packed in there also.

    To be honest, I was a little skeptical that I would like this book as well as I liked "The Kite Runner" since the second book by an author, oftentimes, doesn't stand up to the hype generated by the first.

  • Stars: ****

    I received this book for review from Tundra Books.

  • "What’s your favorite book that nobody else has heard of? You know, not Little Women or Huckleberry Finn, not the latest best-seller . . . whether they’ve read them or not, everybody “knows” those books. I’m talking about the best book that, when you tell people that you love it, they go, “Huh? Never heard of it?”"

  • Mary and Clare are the best of friends who greet each other with hugs every day at their preschool. But when Mary celebrates her fourth birthday, Clare feels left out, her importance as best friend seriously diminished.

    Mary gets hugs from everybody, sits beside the teacher instead of Clare at storytime, and gets to be first in line for playtime, leaving Clare far behind. Mary wears a golden crown and passes out pink cupcakes, a perfect match for her pink dress, shoes and socks, at snacktime.

  • Stars: *****
    I received a copy of this book to review from Tundra Books back in the Fall but it slipped into the back burner of books to read. Now that I’ve read it, I wish I had read it sooner! I'm counting it towards the Book Around the World challenge too.

    Summary: The setting is Sri Lanka, 1980, and it is the season of monsoons, Fourteen-year-old Amrith is submerged in the cheerful, well-to-do lifestyle in which his vibrant Auntie Bundle and kindly Uncle Lucky have raised him. Still, Amrith can’t seem to shake the blurred memories of his life “before,” when his doting mother was still alive. School is out for the summer and Amrith’s holiday plans seem unpromising. Until, like and unexpected monsoon, his cousin arrives from Canada, and his life suddenly becomes storm-tossed. Shakespeare’s Othello, with its powerful them of disastrous jealousy, plays in the backdrop of the drama in which Amrith finds himself immersed.

  • **GIVEAWAY!!! DETAILS AT END OF REVIEW**
    Stars: *****

    I received this book for review and I also read it for the Four-Legged Friends Challenge.

    I’ve read lots of dog training books (although they haven’t been reviewed here) and have tried different training plans as well as none. Although I know what needs to be done, I don’t have the ambition and determination required to properly train my dogs. However their misbehaviour is getting to me so I’m going to start working with them.

  • I haven't participated in BTT lately, not because of my lack of internet access but because I didn't have anything to say for the topics. But this week I'm back.

    "What fiction book (or books) would you nominate to be the best new book
    published in 2007?(Older books that you read for the first time in 2007
    don’t count.)

    What non-fiction book (or books) would you nominate to be the best new
    book published in 2007?(Older books that you read for the first time in 2007
    don’t count.)

    And, do “best of” lists influence your reading?"

  • As it is Buy A Friend A Book Week, there are many book giveaways going on. I will keep on adding to this post about new giveaways! Don't forget to check this out!

    1) Dewey at The Hidden Side of the Leaf is holding one here. Do check out her link for further details!

    2) Literary Feline at Musings of a Bookish Kitty is giving out two books. Check it for further details!

  • Stars: ***1/2

    This book was read as part of the R.I.P. II challenge. It was an extra book.

    I'm glad I got to this book. It was a good book, but I rated it 3 1/2 stars because it wasn't what I would want in a ghost-hunting manual. Most of it was about different kinds of ghosts and lots of case stories. Although I imagine you would need to know about types of ghosts to be a ghost-hunter I do think more information would be needed on actually looking for ghosts. There was a section on making and using some tools to find ghosts but there should have been much more. This book was more of a guide to types of ghosts.