Ratings8
Average rating3
In a world in which everyone has a personal fairy who tends to one aspect of daily life, fourteen-year-old Charlie decides she does not want hers--a parking fairy--and embarks on a series of misadventures designed to rid herself of the invisible sprite and replace it with a better one, like her friend Rochelle's shopping fairy.
Reviews with the most likes.
Cute and sweet, but a little too young for me – we'll ignore that I'm 26 and reading YA in the first place. I liked the world, and I kind of liked that it didn't explain too much about itself and just let the reader catch up. I liked this book a lot, but I didn't love it.
This was cute! I loved the idea that everyone has their own fairy that controls one aspect of their lives (a shopping fairy, a good hair fairy, a parking spot fairy) and liked the way it played out. The whole parallel sports school universe was interesting, but perhaps would have better suited a reader who actually played sports.The plot and ~lesson learned~ was overall kind of predictable but whatever, it was a fun read and I liked the world setup. But if you only read one Justine Larbalestier book, read [b:Liar 6380296 Liar Justine Larbalestier http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255574915s/6380296.jpg 6568189]. Read Liar immediately.