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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Jaime, March 11, 2004
A Kid's Review
There are two main characters. They are Mickey and Margalo. Mickey is a tough kid who is always getting into fights, but nobody realy knows her other side except Margalo. Margalo is part of a big family that dosen't really have much money to spend, so that makes them both unpopular, but they are best friends. The story begins with Mickey and Margalo having a conversation about not wanting to be unpopular. So they decide that they are going to make plans to become more popular. The most exciting part is when Margalo went to the Thrift Store and picked out a cool outfit and when she went to school every one loved it. The story ends when they both become popular and they finally realize that having their friendship is better than being popular. I like this book because it was funny and it makes me think about all the crazy things people my age do just to fit in. I recomend this book to anybody who wants to read a funny adventure about friendship and life as a 7th. grader.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
3rd Book and Margalo and Mikey are still great!, May 14, 2001
Mikey Elsinger and Margalo Epps are not your typical type of teenagers. They love causing trouble and hide their feelings. They were best friends from the first day of 5th grade or so they say. Mikey is a short, stocky, girl who is always seen as the bad girl. She always goes for what SHE wants and always tries to leave in a mess. Margalo is a quiet girl who can pretend to be like other girls. She is in a large family and therefore her family is not very rich. Mikey is the only one in the universe who can figure out Margalo and Margalo is known as the bad girl's friend. In this 3rd book, both girls experience middle school. The school where they are all nobodies. Mikey and Margalo will not let this pass and so begins another great book of the lovable, yet defensive, unforgettable best friends.
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4.0 out of 5 stars
Pure fun, but surprisingly thoughtful, June 27, 2010
You don't have to have read any of the other Bad Girls novels to enjoy this third offering in the series, but once you've finished it, you may just find yourself tempted to get your hands on all of Mikey and Margalo's adventures. In "It's Not Easy Being Bad," Cynthia Voigt gives us an inside look at the perhaps unlikely friendship between two seventh-grade girls. Mikey is outspoken, athletic, and wholly her own person; Margalo is sensible, a bit exotic, and sometimes yearns to be accepted. Throughout the course of the novel, the two struggle to find their place in seventh grade society, while still retaining their individuality. Mikey is full of wild ideas, and Margalo is the voice of reason, as they navigate cliques, vendettas, and unjust school policies. The novel is full of thoughtful passages highlighting the difference that so often exists between our inner lives and the personas we present to the world, and Voigt possesses an understanding of middle-school social structure and mores that would do a sociologist proud. There are no pat answers in this novel; it's not a road map to popularity, nor an idealistic "be-true-to-yourself" screed. Margalo becomes a social chameleon of sorts, becoming all things to all people, without ever really getting to know them or revealing anything of herself; the superficial friendships she develops with girls from various cliques stand in sharp contrast to her all-genuine bond with Mikey. Although the girls, Mikey in particular, find themselves in trouble several times over the course of the novel, they're not really "bad" girls - just a couple of kids trying to find their place. Their personality and wit will win readers' hearts, and young readers, if not acutely aware of Voigt's insight and deft use of irony, will most likely find this novel appealingly sympathetic and hilariously funny.
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