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{{newreview
|author=Rachel Renee Russell
|title=Dork Diaries: Drama Queen (Dork Diaries 9)
|rating=4
|genre=Confident Readers
|summary=Meet Mackenzie Hollister. She's a typical American tweenager – concerned in popularity, looks, the hot guys like Brandon, and getting one over on all those around her. That's made a lot more easy by her parents being spoilingly rich – if Mackenzie, say, wants a new cover for her diary she will just rip up a new $220 leopard print designer blouse and use that. But the problem is, what she's reading back over, and what she's writing in, isn't ''exactly'' her diary – it's the diary belonging to our beloved heroine, Nikki, and Mackenzie has managed to purloin it for evil deeds. Can Nikki get it back – or live at all without her beloved journal? And could there actually be something worse than her biggest enemy of, like, all time, being the person reading it?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1471117707</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Peter O'Donnell and Enric Badia Romero
|summary= With every turn of the thick, cardboard pages, the Wolf is getting closer. Eek. Can you escape in time? Maybe if you’re clever and make him trip up on himself by tilting the pages? Might he then slide off?
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1927271843</amazonuk>
}}
{{newreview
|author=Elizabeth Swados
|title=My Depression : A Picture Book
|rating=4
|genre=Autobiography
|summary=If you have ever suffered from depression you'll find it very difficult to explain to other people how you're feeling. You're not feeling ''just a little bit down''. A treat or a dollop of positive thinking will not miraculously cure you. You're definitely not swinging the lead, but suffering from a legitimate illness which deserves to be recognised. Elizabeth Swados is a long-term sufferer from severe depression: she's also a talented storyteller and has told her the story of how depression feels for her - complete with drawings, which fill in those gaps which words can never fill for any sufferer from depression.
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1609806042</amazonuk>
}}