Dizzy is a book about dreams, love, and a wish. Every night before her birthday, Dizzy stays awake, hoping, wishing, that she will get the present she is hoping for. Not the latest CD or a caramel coloured guitar, (which is what she's going to get anyway-- Dad said) but a postcard at the least, with loopy writing in gel pen.
She is hoping for a present from her mum, the mum that left when she was four years old. The mum that ran away with her boyfriend, leaving Dizzy and her dad to find a house, to clear up the mess she made, while she was lounging around the beach. Dizzy loves her friends, her school, sharing two cans of coke with her three best mates, but the day of her twelfth birthday, nothing arrives in the post. She has been there before: her present when she was eight arrived three weeks late. But Dizzy has more than a postcard or a letter this year. Her mum is going to turn up on her door step, and put her world into a spin...
Dizzy is a good book, and is very fun to read. This book is good, but not as good as some of Cathy's other books. I wouldn't say it is exactly addicting, but it is still very good. In the middle, it is a little bit of a bore, as nothing seems to bee going on that catches your interest, but it gets amazing, especially at the end.
I rated this book three stars, as I enjoyed it, but not Cathy Cassidy's best, as it doesn't make my heart race, not really, and doesn't capture my imagination, but it is stilly very good story, and very well written.
I think that a good suggestion to the author for this book is to maybe try to capture the readers attention a little more. Like I have said,it is still very good, but not the author's best.
I hope that you enjoy this book, and I think that sit is a definite goodread.
Faye x x