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Paperback Jessi and the Awful Secret Book

ISBN: 0590456636

ISBN13: 9780590456630

Jessi and the Awful Secret

(Book #61 in the The Baby-Sitters Club Series)

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Recommended

Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$5.99
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Book Overview

Jessi discovers that one of the girls in her dance class is anorexic, and she and her friends soon learn about the seriousness of the illness. This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Cool!

Jessi volunteers to help little kids who want to do ballet. One day, she notices Mary who gets thinner and thinner. But will telling the secret mean losing a friend?

Cool!

In this book, Jessi offers to help Madame Noelle's other students. When she finds Mary, she notices something strange she becomes thiner and thinner. But will telling the truth lose a friend?

a book that teaches

This book teaches teh reader what annorexia can be like when it happens to a friend. In thsi book jessi voulenteers to help with a dance class for poor kids. She meets a girl Mary, and starts to notice some strange things going on.

Pretty good

Eleven-year-old Jessi Ramsey loves to dance. She makes a new friend, Mary. But soon Jessi notices some strange things about Mary. She starts getting thinner and thinner, and she's not eating. When she talks about it with her friends in the baby-sitters club, she finds out that Mary is anorexic. Jessi knows Mary is in danger. But if she tells someone, it could mean losing a friend. Read this book and find out what happens!

Food for Thought

"Jessi and the Awful Secret" takes a personal look at the dangers of eating disorders in young dancers. Author Anne M. Martin uses familiar, established characters that regular readers of the series will have already met, and adds a new element to their lives in this story. She is thus able to discuss eating disorders in a healthy, comfortable environment; she does not frighten readers who may not be familiar with the subject. The way in which Jessi, the narrator and main character, comes to understand anorexia and why her friend Mary has developed the disorder is realistic and honest. A scene in a fast-food restaurant depicts Jessi's initial naivete about Mary's reasons for not eating, but combines that reaction with sensitivity and concern. There are no accusations in this book. Girls who read this and who themselves may have experienced anorexia will not feel threatened nor judged. The regular subjects of baby-sitting and friendship surround the story of Mary's anorexia; the book is not solely a documentary on eating disorders.
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