2022
Although CC has done a little growing up, mainly thanks to finally ditching the fantasy she carried about her formerly-mythical New York Family (who were nothing like she previously imagined) and life experience... Although she's making a couple same-age friends who are girls and, most importantly, NOT the "benefits" variety... Although she's on (somewhat) better terms with her mother and her family in general... While all that is great for character development, she has still yet to ditch that loser she thinks she's in forever love with.
*Begin Rant*
So yeah... I still cannot stand Shrimp (IF that's his real name). He's just too damn squirrely, and I hate how manipulative he is toward CC, running hot and cold, making her think she's got a chance and then "oop! just kidding. psych!". In many ways, he's worse than her druggie, almost-baby-daddy Ex. Or, at least, on the same level of loser-y. He has seemingly no redeeming qualities whatsoever, and those qualities that are mentioned are purely of the physical variety (surfer boi bod and all that). In this book, he and CC have broken up and CC spends the majority of her waking life mooning about and dreaming of how to get back together with him...even though he seems far less interested in perusing things with her. Seriously?!? CC could SO do better!! Hey, I get it... This book is geared toward teens and a teenage love interest character is very different than a love interest in a book aimed at an older demographic. Perhaps the character would be appealing if I was, say, 13. Or maybe not. No...still not. He certainly does add a dramatic element, though. And drama is what keeps stories moving.
*End Rant*
I did enjoy CC's journey, though. The one apart from the whole Shrimp obsession.
Gotta say, I loved Ashley and her Franken-Barbie Makeover Project. Actually, I've been trying for ages to recall where that particular plot element came from. Mystery solved. Finally!
Also, I want a cinnamon brown sugar pop tart. The ONLY ones worth eating (this I agree with wholeheartedly). I can attest that these pair very well with coffee.
2010:
In this sequel to Gingerbread, Cyd Charisse and love-of-her-life Shrimp have decided to take a break so Shrimp can travel halfway around the world to surf. Meanwhile, Cyd is torn: Between her New York family and her San Fransisco family, between who she is and who her parents expect her to be, between wanting Shrimp back and being angry with him. Quite possibly even better than the first book in the series!