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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Christmas in October!
The Private series centers on Reed Brennan, a scholarship student, and the chains of events that unfold when she enters the Easton Academy and moves to the Billing House -- the most exclusive and sought-after girls dormitory in campus. Those who have read the series knows that she falls victim to Ariana Osgood after she starts dating seventeen-year-old resident hottie...
Published on October 8, 2008 by CoffeeGurl

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An okay read
When I read the synopsis of this book, I didn't realize that it was meant for such a juvenile audience. I wasn't sure at first if the characters were in high school or college. I then realized that it was high school.

The story was okay, but I imagine people would get more out of it if they had read other books in the series. I wondered why the lead...
Published on December 10, 2008 by JujubeMBA


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Christmas in October!, October 8, 2008
The Private series centers on Reed Brennan, a scholarship student, and the chains of events that unfold when she enters the Easton Academy and moves to the Billing House -- the most exclusive and sought-after girls dormitory in campus. Those who have read the series knows that she falls victim to Ariana Osgood after she starts dating seventeen-year-old resident hottie and rogue Thomas Pearson. Now we finally get Ariana's side of the story -- the things that occur before Reed sets foot at Easton. Ariana Osgood has always been a good girl. A constant overachiever, she gets the best grades in school, is a Billings girl, has a boyfriend who is a big Easton legacy, and has her eyes set on Princeton. But no one -- not even her best friend Noelle -- knows that she does it all to make her mother, who suffers from a mental illness, happy. She's never done what she wants. In fact, she doesn't know what she wants. That is until Thomas Pearson, the school's drug dealer, begins to seduce her. They end up stuck at Easton during a big blizzard on Christmas vacation. They are not supposed to be there, and they have to hide from the staff as well as from people who might rat their flirtation out to her boyfriend. Falling for Thomas changes Ariana in ways she had never imagined. But she doesn't want to upset her mother, which means she has to continue to live a lie. She is torn between living a lie and living her dream of being Thomas's girlfriend. Not to worry, because they will be together soon, won't have to hide any longer. Thomas loves her, after all -- doesn't he?

I like what Brian has done with this prequel. It is consistent to the things that go on in the Private series and manages to put on a few surprises as well. As usual in this unpredictable series, there are some twists and turns that will leave you gaping and wanting more. Ariana is humanized in this book, so much so that I felt sorry for her. The characterization is excellent. She has psychotic and obsessive tendencies long before everything unfolds. They are subtle, and Brian shows this rather than tell it, which makes it all the more brilliant. Speaking of great characters, Thomas is wonderful. He has his flaws, of course, but he is a far more interesting male character than Gage, Dash, and even Josh. If only Brian hadn't killed him so soon in the series. The disappointing thing in this book is that Noelle seldom appears in this book. However, it is nice to see her in a position where she isn't as powerful or as influential as she becomes later on. Also, Taylor and Kiran are MIA in this book, which kind of confused me. When did they join Billings? Other than that, I loved Last Christmas. It was like getting an early Christmas present. I so look forward to reading Privilege and Paradise Lost.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars interesting, October 17, 2008
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I was extremely excited when I finally saw "last christmas" when I was at the bookstore, because I knew that Kate Brian would eventually write a prequel to the "Private" series, and while I was definitely satisifed with how it turned out (no matter how dramatic and somewhat ridiculous some of the plotlines can get, the author always manages to keep you on the edge of your seat!) I was a bit disappointed to realize that the book was basically all about Ariana, and her downward spiral. Not that that's necessarily a bad thing, but I was looking forward to reading about the rest of the all-powerful Billings Girls, especially Noelle, who is only briefly in the book. And like someone else mentioned, taylor and Kiran weren't mentioned at all in the book. What's up with that?

But dont get me wrong, like I said, I was satisfied with the book and read it in a few hours because I couldn't put it down (all the books in this series tend to have that affect on me)

"Last Christmas" is based on Ariana and tells of her downward spiral and explains how she came to be a bit...well psychotic as I'm sure you may know if you've read the other books in the private series. The story takes place Christmas time during Arianas junior year, before Reed Brennan ever stepped foot at Easton Academy. Ariana is a seemingly good girl, with the "perfect" boyfriend and a member of Billings, the most exclusive house on the campus of her boarding school. So it may seem that Ariana is the perfect girl, with the perfect life, but she's really hiding a dark past, and when she falls for campus bad boy Thomas Pearson, her life begins to unravel, thus leading to her downward spiral.

And ill also mention that even though I was upset that Noelle wasn't really in the book, the parts that she was in were interesting to read because its kind of a relief to know that she wasn't always so powerful and seemingly perfect as she is in the rest of the series!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome look into how it all began, with Ariana at Easton, October 23, 2008
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Length:: 1:06 Mins

Loved this book - it sets the stage perfectly for the new Privilege series starring Ariana Osgood, and gives us some answers to go with Revelation.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good Story for the Intended Audience, May 8, 2009
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Since so many other reviewers have covered the plot, I will steer away from any detail on that. The plot was creative and well done. It had enough twists and turns to keep the reader interested and was fairly creative.

This series does need to be read in sequence in order to keep plots straight. I did get a little lost at times, but only because I had read the later book first.

This will be well received by the intended audience of younger high school age students. I doubt strongly academic readers would have much interest, as the reading is not particularly challenging, although it might prove a good release for upper level students.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars An okay read, December 10, 2008
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When I read the synopsis of this book, I didn't realize that it was meant for such a juvenile audience. I wasn't sure at first if the characters were in high school or college. I then realized that it was high school.

The story was okay, but I imagine people would get more out of it if they had read other books in the series. I wondered why the lead character seemed so off-balance and apparently it was because she was mentally deranged.

Overall it is an okay book, and it's a fast read. I wonder if it's a bit racy for the target audience.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Last Christmas wasn't so private after all, November 20, 2008
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Having not read the previous books in this series, I was afraid I would be totally lost while reading this book. Even though I've read other YA fiction like Gossip Girl or The A List, somehow the Private series never really appealed to me. And after reading this book, I'm still not sure if it does. This is apparently a new trend in the publishing world, to have a prequel come out in between ending a series and then starting a new spin off.

The characters, at least in this book, aren't very likable. Ariana doesn't have a backbone, her boyfriend is controlling, her roommates and other friends are rich spoiled socialites, and the "bad" boy isn't very bad. Something that kind of bugged me throughout the book was if Ariana and Thomas were in a dorm that was freezing and had no heat, how could they even possibly think about having sex? Why would you remove clothes? It kept taking me away from the story.

I noticed less fashion talk that other YA novels which was refreshing. Alcohol consumption is frequent, because obviously drinking laws don't apply to rich kids. Sex is a big factor in the story as usual. A great deal of the story is focused on Ariana picking a time and place to lose her virginity. I did not notice much cursing throughout the book, at least not as much as the Gossip Girl books use.

What does make the story unique is more violence with a mystery in the plot. And after reading some interviews with the author, that was the intention of the series. I wasn't too surprised to see the characters act so callously about death/murder. Money tends to numb your senses. It makes for a very interesting story and it does make me want to go back and see what happens now to Ariana and Thomas. It's just I feel like I don't really care about these characters and the book didn't convince me enough to do so.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Guilty Pleasure Read, November 13, 2008
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I find myself looking to the YA shelves more and more these days. Why? Because they seem to be the best place to go when I just want a good guilty pleasure read. Not too long or particularly brilliant titles perfect for just reading for the fun of being entertained! Lately the young adult shelves are packed with novels like this one, Last Christmas, a prequel to a series centered around the wealthy and elite.

Admit it. While everyone loves a good underdog, outcast type hero, we all secretly want to be the popular, perfect villain. Being the villain is just so much more fun. In the case of books like these half the fun is seeing not so much any villains, but breaking down the illusion of happiness and perfection that comes with having money. Money makes the world go 'round but it certainly can't buy fidelity in a marriage or mental health for a parent.

Though the rest of this series is from the perspective of Reed Brennan, this prequel is all about Ariana Osgood and the beginning of her downward spiral. I chose the prequel because I thought it'd set me up with a good idea of what to expect from the series. The tough part of that is that I ended up really liking Ariana and from what I learned looking into the rest of the series I don't think I'd be getting to really enjoy reading about her again.

The book itself is exactly what you'd expect. Plenty of label-dropping, obsessing over virginity, under-aged drinking and prescription drug-abuse. The romance between Ariana and Thomas is just believable enough to be enjoyable. Ariana's own mental issues are somewhat unrealistic, forced and make her seem a little too inhuman for most readers to truly relate to her. I think, however, that anyone who enjoys the series will enjoy this change in perspective and knowing what motivated Ariana's madness.

It was a very quick read and I actually didn't see the plot twist coming because I'd been so well lead to another conclusion it never occurred to me there could be another. A perfect book to pour through over Christmas break, enjoy!
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars BUYER BEWARE!!!, October 26, 2008
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yes, i know you are looking at the cover of this book and thinking it will be a warm cozy fluffy Christmastime-at-a-boarding-school romance. It isn't.

before you even touch this book you should read Private, Invitation Only (Private, Book 2), Untouchable (Private, Book 3) and Confessions (Private, Book 4) or this book will just seem pointless, idiotic, frustrating and more than a bit psychotic. (and i'm being kind, trust me.)

i loved the first 5 books of this series hence the 3 stars i'm giving this, which (as a stand alone) it really doesn't deserve. (i haven't read books 6, 7 and 8 yet but i still plan to!) so this book was a disappointment for me. I never liked Ariana from the beginning but was hoping this book would give me insight about her (and i always liked Thomas so getting to read more about him was a bonus too.) unfortunately all the insight i got about these kids were of the 'boo hoo i'm rich and privileged and my parents drink and fight and hate each other, feel sorry for me, waah!' kind.

I was not impressed by the fact that there was not one but TWO psycho stalkers in this book, three if we count Ariana herself. I mean wow Kate Brian what are you doing??? it's really hard to suspend disbelief when stuff like that happens in a book, sorry. Just one psycho (Ariana) should have been enough!!

In all the other Kate Brian books i've read, the different chapters jump between characters which makes for variety and breaks up the tedium. Not so with is book. All 260+ pages were all Ariana all the time. A significant portion of the fist half was spent with me going HURRY UP AND DO IT ALREADY!!! As Ariana and Thomas kept getting c**k-blocked on their mission to have sex for the 1st time. it finally happens and we get like literally four sentences. great. (okay fine i wasn't really expecting anything anyways it's a YA book. a YA book with three psycho stalkers and three murders. whee!)

Ariana's paranoia grated on my nerves. and it was sad we never got to see kiran and taylor. And she kept calling Thomas a "drug dealer". please, a dude that peddles unprescribed vicodin and adderall tablets to his classmates, i'd call an "unlicensed pharm-tech", save words like "drug dealer" for the people who sell heroin and cocaine on the streets. and as rich as Thomas "My inheritance" Pearson is i don't understand this whole "drug dealer" business. all his classmates can afford to go to doctors, fork over some $$ and get their painkillers and ADHD pills the legal way. Kate Brian tries to use this "drug dealer" title to make Thomas sound like a bad boy but it just comes out looking naive and silly.

all in all this book is made of suck and fail but if you're a fan of the Private series, you'll read it anyway and try to convince yourself it wasn't really that bad. i got through it in like 3 hours.

AGAIN, do not bother reading this book if you haven't read books 1-4 of Private. Do no read this book FIRST and then start the series. It will ruin the story if you do.

I still believe in Kate Brian and I'll definitely read the other books in the series. actually i'm probably gonna read 1-5 over again with the new knowledge i gained about Ariana in this book, it should be interesting...and creepy...
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars A Little Too Dirty for Something Skewed so Young, November 17, 2008
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Call it a prequel, call it a teen-thriller, but to be perfectly frank, Last Christmas is a book about sex and a psychotic homicidal teen. And while the subject matter might be fine for a book aimed at adults, it was unsettling in a book aimed at younger readers, featuring characters who are worried about high school term papers, boyfriends and peer pressure. Something doesn't jibe here.

This book start with a private boarding school girl offing her boyfriend, then leaps back in time to describe how good-girl Ariana Osgood came to be so "naughty". Was it the arrogance of her classmates? Was it the duplicity of her boyfriend who wanted to take her virginity under false pretenses? Or was it the power of true love that drove her to the brink of jealous insanity?

To be fair, Last Christmas was a decently written book, with good dialog and great descriptions of a preppy campus during a holiday blizzard. The book's plot was well-conceived, building tension convincingly, and the character development was fine, too.

However. This book is very, very dirty and very, very violent. Video taped teacher-student sex. Murder. Losing one's virginity in one's boyfriend's dorm bed, with his rival. I'm not sure the audience. No one over 15 would want to read it; no one under 15 should.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too, October 19, 2008
****SPOILER ALERT**** For readers who haven't read beyond CONFESSIONS in the PRIVATE series, this book is best left unread. Details in LAST CHRISTMAS will ruin much of the suspense in the first four books of the series.

LAST CHRISTMAS is a great addition to the series by Kate Brian. The story gives much needed background insight into Ariana Osgood, the Billings girl arrested for the murder of Thomas Pearson.

The story begins near Christmas break of Ariana's junior year. When we meet Ariana in the first book of the series, PRIVATE, she is one of the privileged senior girls at Easton Academy. But in LAST CHRISTMAS, she is the naïve, innocent roommate to Noelle Lange. Ariana is the good girl that does what is expected of her. She gets top grades, lives in the most respected dormitory, and has the perfect boyfriend, Daniel Ryan. Her mother couldn't be prouder of her.

Daniel isn't 100% perfect though. He's incredibly jealous and protective of Ariana. At the Winter Ball, he torments Sergei, a Latvian exchange student, because he caught Sergei taking photos of Ariana throughout the dance. Ariana is to spend the two weeks of Christmas break at a ski resort with Daniel and his family. And Daniel is expecting her to have sex with him while they are there. They are both (supposedly) virgins, and Ariana didn't want their first time to be in a dorm bed.

It's the final day before the school break, and Ariana has yet to finish an English paper. If she doesn't turn it in before 6pm, she will fail the assignment. So she has Daniel and his twin sister, Paige, head out without her. She promises to take a later train.

But she gets sidetracked by Thomas Pearson. He has been showing up in unexpected places over the last few days. And he shows up in the deserted classroom building as she turns in her completed paper. In a split second, Ariana gives up fighting the electric attraction she's been feeling for Thomas.

From that moment on, the snowball of her actions grows until innocent people start to get hurt. A snowstorm hits campus and strands Thomas and Ariana. Neither can be caught, because Headmaster Cox made it perfectly clear that anyone caught on campus who was not scheduled to be there will be expelled, no exceptions.

LAST CHRISTMAS is the perfect companion to the PRIVATE series. Ariana's specter hangs over the entire series long after she is carted away for Thomas' murder. This gives an inside look to her growing mental problems after she becomes involved with Thomas. I believe it also gives a good basis for the spin-off series, PRIVILEGE, due out in December 2008.

Reviewed by: Jaglvr
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