Book Summary
The book follows two sisters who are both considering plastic surgery. Overachieving Cameron, who became popular after a nose job, now wants breast implants. Meanwhile, Allie, a down-to-earth soccer player, isn't sure she wants the nose job that everyone is insisting will make her beautiful.
Is It Any Good?
Sure, it's fiction, but FIX is really less of a novel and more of a book to get readers thinking about teen plastic surgery. There are statistics about procedures, descriptions of side effects, and pretty much every female character in the story has gotten -- or is about to get -- something worked on.
Readers will appreciate that the author doesn't judge the characters. She knows that girls often are in a tough spot because of societal pressures -- Cameron's junior high school life really was hell, and her nose was a, um, big reason why. It's easy to understand both characters' obsession with beauty and their sometimes painful decisions to change their looks. The writing isn't always elegant, but the topics raised in Fix can help parents talk to their daughters about a range of body-image issues.

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