![]() ![]() We're supposed to believe Ginny as a high-school senior, but it seems she's already living a basically independent life. ![]() (view spoiler) And she's so out of touch with her family that it starts to feel like it really is a mash-up. It's still lovely and charming, but it's more predictable than the first one, too. In the second one, she's back where you already know her, so you lose that fish-out-of-water aspect of it. I think part of it was that in the first one, you feel like Ginny is totally out of her element, and you're there with her. I really liked this one, though it didn't have the same magic as the first one, to me. But instead of ending her journey, the last letter starts a new adventure, and Ginny finds she must hold on to her wits. ![]() Finally Ginny can finish what she started. Now a mysterious boy has contacted Ginny from London, saying he’s found her bag. When someone stole Ginny’s backpack-and the last little blue envelope inside-she resigned herself to never knowing how the adventure was supposed to end. Ginny Blackstone spent last summer traveling around Europe, following the tasks her aunt laid out in a series of letters before she died. New York Times bestselling author Maureen Johnson’s fun, romantic, and hilarious sequel to her breakout hit 13 Little Blue Envelopes gets a brand-new cover! ![]()
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