![]() ![]() ![]() She is a graduate of Brown University, and lives with her family outside of Philadelphia, PA.more Susan has also written as half of the Two Nerdy History Girls (), a popular book & history blog with a worldwide following. With more than three million copies of her books in print, she has been published in nineteen foreign countries around the world and translated into fourteen different languages. Writing under several pen names, she has received numerous awards and honors for her bestselling books. Susan Holloway Scott is the author of over fifty historical novels and historical romances. She is a graduate of Brown University, and lives with her family out Aka Miranda Jarrett ![]() Aka Miranda Jarrett Aka Isabella Bradford Susan Holloway Scott is the author of over fifty historical novels and historical romances. ![]()
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![]() There's also some teen drinking, and one character wakes up with a terrible hangover, tortured by the memory of a drunk-driving incident that caused a fatality. The book shows teens engaging in some sexual behavior: kissing intensely and partially undressing. ![]() Working from this premise, the author shows a broad variety of teen lifestyles, diverse sexual orientations, and gender identifications, as well as different approaches to parenting. Parents need to know that David Levithan's best-selling novel Every Day is about a character called "A," who's a whole person emotionally and intellectually but wakes up every morning in the body of a different teen. ![]() The older brother of a girl whom "A" inhabits smokes pot while driving his sister to school.ĭid you know you can flag iffy content? Adjust limits for Drinking, Drugs & Smoking in your kid's entertainment guide. ![]() "A" wakes up in the body of a drug addict and struggles with the cravings/needs of the person's body for a day. A teenage drinker wakes up with a hangover and remembers causing a fatal accident. ![]() ![]() "Deliberate cruelty is not forgivable"-Blanche, scene 10 Blanche explains here how she has been deliberately hurt by the males in the play and never once deliberately been cruel to someone, yet she is the fallen woman? Provoking sympathy from the audience. "Swine, huh?"-scene 10, Blanche Again Stanley cares less about what Blanche has to say and more about his ego that has been harmed by Blanche's reference of him as a swine.īelieves her romantic company should be valued. Interesting she still thinks she is cultivated woman, despite her promisculinity "But I have been foolish - casting my pearls before swine!" "A cultivated woman, a woman of intelligence and breeding, can enrich a man's life - immeasurably!"-scene 10, BLanche This whole monologue is Blanche explaining how the "beauty of the mind and richness of the spirit" are more important than her fading looks. ![]() |