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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Jean and Johnny
Jean and Johnny was about a girl that was fifteen years old and falls in love with a popular boy. It all started when Johnny asked her to dance at a local school party. Jean was amazed that he had actually asked her. Jean found out that Johnny went to the same school as her and they started hanging out together. Johnny would wait for Jean after classes and go out to lunch...
Published on March 17, 2002 by Katalina Villalba

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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The "no illustrations" edition.
The publishers did this book a great disservice by not including the charming illustrations that were in the original 1959 edition (and most of its subsequent editions). Though these drawings were a bit dated - Jean's dad wears horn rimmed glasses, Jean and the other girls wear long skirts and saddle oxfords to school - so is the book! Keeping these 1950s-esque...
Published on September 2, 2002


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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The "no illustrations" edition., September 2, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
The publishers did this book a great disservice by not including the charming illustrations that were in the original 1959 edition (and most of its subsequent editions). Though these drawings were a bit dated - Jean's dad wears horn rimmed glasses, Jean and the other girls wear long skirts and saddle oxfords to school - so is the book! Keeping these 1950s-esque illustrations would just seem appropriate for a book that is so quintessentially 1950s. Without these illustrations, a first-time reader would think that this book was about Jehovah's witnesses, what with Jean and her sister making their own clothes, the high school sewing class for girls and the lavishness of going out for Cokes. With the recent return of retro, it's amazing that the publishers didn't opt with including the old illustrations. The same goes for the new editions of "Fifteen" and "Sister of the Bride" - both Beverly Cleary books that were given the same treatment. For the full effect of these charming books, better find an older edition.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Jean and Johnny, March 17, 2002
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
Jean and Johnny was about a girl that was fifteen years old and falls in love with a popular boy. It all started when Johnny asked her to dance at a local school party. Jean was amazed that he had actually asked her. Jean found out that Johnny went to the same school as her and they started hanging out together. Johnny would wait for Jean after classes and go out to lunch with her. Jean started liking him and asked him to the dance. He canceled because, supposedly, his grandmother was very sick. Jean knew that he didn't want to go with her, so she asked his best friend. Johnny ended up going to the dance with another girl and Jean felt that his friend was much better than he was.
I liked this book because it shows what a real teenager goes through when they like a boy. It shows how they get nervous whenever a phone rings. It shows that they cringe when their father talks about a specific boy. I like the way it shows her perspective of how life works and goes into detail about what she's thinkning.This book is a great way to learn how other people think and feel.
My favorite part of the book is when Jean dumps Johnny for Homer. Even though Homer is the best looking and is really shy, Jean looks past that. She doesn't go only looks and she likes his personality. Also, when they are at the dance and she tells Johnny, "Wonder drugs? Im so glad your grandmother is feeling better." I think it takes a lot of pride to say that and that's why I admire Jean.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent first-love story; dated but with a definite edge., April 23, 1999
By 
E. Fagan (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
I'm 35, & have read this book many times since childhood. I loved Jean's likable awkwardness, her loving and supportive family, her tight relationship with an even more awkward best friend. The charm of this story was in the painfully familiar adolescent details: mortification on being dressed completely wrong; tailing a crush all over and calling on weak pretexts; slighting a "dorky" best friend to earn a place with the popular crowd, etc. All the characters just jumped out at me. There's a definite edginess to the writing that I haven't seen elsewhere: Johnny is portrayed as a vain, shallow jerk...but in the end not only does he go unpunished & unguilty for his selfishness, but Jean still carries a torch! An absolutely delightful, memorable tale of unrequited love and all its humiliations.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Jean and Johnny, December 5, 2009
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
My best friend had this book when we were preteens and I borrowed and read it numerous times. Now as as adult I wanted to revisit the past and see if it was still the book I remembered. The excitement of "young love" (as it was in the 60s) is still evident in all its innocence. I don't know that modern teens would find this titillating enough for their tastes, but I found it to be still refreshing.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars We've all lived through it..., December 1, 2006
The closest that 15-year-old Jean and her best friend Elaine have gotten to boys is dreaming about Kip Laddish, a handsome singer with a weekly TV program. Then, one day when she least expects it, Jean meets Johnny, a handsome popular 17-year-old, and her world is turned upside down.

No longer content with imagining "what if," Jean begins to live her whole life for Johnny. Making sure she looks pretty in case she meets Johnny, replaying every conversation in her mind and walking past his house in the hopes of meeting him "accidentally on purpose" consume all of Jean's time...so much so, that she barely notices when she begins ostacizing her family and Elaine. And it takes "the hard way" for Jean to realize that just because a boy is handsome and popular doesn't mean he is kind...
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars some things do stay the same, December 29, 2004
By 
Cynthia Rucker "crucker@laca.org" (Mount Perry, OH United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)

The characters in this young adult novel are so wonderfully alive! Shy but determined Jean, Johnny the adorable snake-in-the-grass, and Homer the science nerd (but not so nerdy that he doesn't ask Jean for a good-night kiss!), and Jean's sensible sister Sue and straight-arrow parents make this an interesting read. Yeah, yeah, it's set in the 50's! So what?--kids today will be both intrigued and amused by the retro references. And, it would make a great grandparent/teen together read: The grandparent could explain all the freaky references, like girls-only sewing classes in high school, and how car ownership for a teenager back then was even more of a status symbol than it is today.

This is tame enough for 5th and 6th graders to read; at that age, they are definitely interested in what adults (read "teens") do, even if they don't quite want to enter the adult world just yet.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars As realistic a depiction of first love as I've ever seen, July 29, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Paperback)
Both when I read it as a youngster and, years later, with my own fifth grade class, I found Jean and Johnny to be a highly accurate picture of a first love. Even an adult is kept guessing, at first, whether Johnny is "interested but shy" or merely totally conceited (though the latter is the case). Every woman either has been in Jean's place or knew someone who was - and, if the young can read this delightful novel without looking for 90s self-help interpretations that do not apply, I don't doubt they'll see how very familiar the characters are!
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent portrayal of a first love, September 29, 2000
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
It's safe to say that every woman alive can identify with this very "on target" tale, which Beverly Cleary depicts with warmth, humour, occasional pathos, and perfect realism. Perhaps we are not much like Jean (I know that I never was ... seems strange she has no interests, no involvement in activities, and only one friend), but which of us has not, in some fashion, had the idea that love was mutual as long as we kept talking about a particular dream boat?

I used this book, which I'd originally read over 30 years ago, with a class when I was teaching pre-teen girls. I noticed that even an adult reader would be wondering whether the gorgeous Johnny really "liked" Jean, or was merely one with a big ego. (I'll not spoil the story by saying which was the case.) I smiled in nostalgic, if bittersweet, recognition when, for example, Jean searched the dictionary for the definition of "cute."

Fortunately, the book was written in the last days of when a conceited type could be taken at face value. We are spared the boring diversions into the psychology of the "hunk" which undoubtedly would divert us today.

As usual, Beverly Cleary presents vivid and highly enjoyable characters and situations, with which readers of any age can identify. Top fare.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Confusing, March 13, 2010
A Kid's Review
This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
When I first started to read this book I liked it. In the middle of the book I was a little bored. And in the end I was satisfied with what I had read. This book is a goood book for tweens, it helps a little bit to know that your not the only one who is obssesed with their crush :).
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5.0 out of 5 stars A throwback to a simpler time that bridges the gap between generations, March 6, 2007
By 
Erika Sorocco (Southern California, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) (Paperback)
It's the first night of Christmas vacation when fifteen-year-old Jean Jarrett feels something wonderful brewing in the air. Sadly, she can't place her finger on it, all she can say is that she can feel that something nice will happen. And it does. Jean is simply accompanying her best friend, Elaine Mundy, and her mother to the local country club to drop off holiday decorations, when Jean is picked out of the crowd by a tall, handsome boy and asked to dance. And so kicks off a whirlwind adventure. While Jean does not get the boy's name, Elaine is determined to find him again, and seeks him out at school where he begins speaking to Jean on a regular basis, and making her feel special. Jean absolutely adores the attention that she's receiving, but she can't help but question it at times. After all, Johnny is a seventeen-year-old senior who is tall and handsome, and could easily have his pick of any girl at Northgate High, yet he seems genuinely interested in Jean. Short, ungraceful, glasses-wearing Jean, who can't sew a skirt together evenly, and spends her Friday and Saturday nights fantasizing about the slightly musically inept TV star, Kip Laddish, and writing to her pen pals across the world. However, as the school year progresses, Johnny seems to pay even more attention to Jean. He goes out of his way to meat her in the school hallways, calls on her to go to the drive-in for a Coke, invites her to hang out with him and his friends during lunch, and even attempts to come around to her house on the weekends to hang out with her and her folks. Jean can't help but believe that Johnny really does like her, but Jean's older sister, Sue, seems slightly skeptical. Jean is sure that Sue is simply jealous because no boys ever come calling for her. But, as Jean continues to learn more about Johnny, she begins to wonder if Sue isn't correct. Maybe Johnny doesn't feel as strongly towards her as she thought. But as long as he's spending time pursuing her, Jean feels inclined to savor each and every moment with Johnny.

With the amount of racy books on the market nowadays, it's a wonderful feeling to have the opportunity to go back to basics, and relive the nostalgia and innocence of a simpler time, when girls spent their afternoons sewing and baking, and going out to eat at a restaurant was a big deal that happened on very rare occasions. And that is what readers are treated to with Beverly Cleary's JEAN AND JOHNNY. Jean is such an adorable character, whose awkwardness is charming, and really brings her tale to life. The tight-knit relationship she experiences with her parents, and her older sister, Sue, is adorable, and is such a pleasure to read about in a sea of novels filled with teenagers who do nothing but bicker with their parents, and share rivalries with their siblings. The hard-time's that seem to plague Jean's family, while bittersweet, are also quite enjoyable to read about, as they illustrate the meaning of a penny, and the hardships that people fell upon during this particular era, when scrimping and saving was a way of life. Johnny is perfect as the cad-like big man on campus, whose ego is large, and love of himself is slightly laughable. Even as the hunk-esque character, however, Johnny is likable, in a slightly obnoxious way, who will appeal to readers of all ages. A throwback to a simpler time that bridges the gap between generations.

Erika Sorocco
Freelance Reviewer
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Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books)
Jean and Johnny (Avon Camelot Books) by Beverly Cleary (Paperback - October 1, 1996)
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