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Title:Going Vintage
Author:Lindsey Leavitt
Book Format:Hardcover
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 320 pages
Published:March 26th 2013 by Bloomsbury
Categories:Young Adult. Contemporary. Romance. Womens Fiction. Chick Lit. Realistic Fiction. Fiction. Teen
Books Download Free Going Vintage  Online
Going Vintage Hardcover | Pages: 320 pages
Rating: 3.6 | 7124 Users | 1176 Reviews

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When Mallory’s boyfriend, Jeremy, cheats on her with an online girlfriend, Mallory decides the best way to de-Jeremy her life is to de-modernize things too. Inspired by a list of goals her grandmother made in 1962, Mallory swears off technology and returns to a simpler time (when boyfriends couldn’t cheat with computer avatars). The List:
1. Run for pep club secretary
2. Host a fancy dinner party/soiree
3. Sew a dress for Homecoming
4. Find a steady
5. Do something dangerous
But simple proves to be crazy-complicated, and the details of the past begin to change Mallory’s present. Add in a too-busy grandmother, a sassy sister, and the cute pep-club president–who just happens to be her ex’s cousin–and soon Mallory begins to wonder if going vintage is going too far.

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Original Title: Going Vintage
ISBN: 1599907879 (ISBN13: 9781599907871)
Edition Language: English

Rating Out Of Books Going Vintage
Ratings: 3.6 From 7124 Users | 1176 Reviews

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I think most people will fall into one of two camps with Going Vintage. It'll either be a fairly enjoyable reading experience, because it's a cute, fluff read - or, it'll be an about average reading experience, precisely because it's a cute, fluff read. I on the other hand fall into a third camp, I actually think Going Vintage is more than a cute, fluff read, and it only seems like one because its message is scattered and ineffective.First of all, the message is right there, in the summary.

What a wonderfully charming story. A pleasantly young-for-her-age teenager, after some drama blows up online, decides life was simpler back in her grandma's high school days of yore and commits to divesting herself of any technology or other products available after 1962. She takes that part to slight extremes (she won't use the internet even for a class assignment that requires it, and agrees to buy a poorly working rotary phone because apparently just using a landline is still too conveniently

Ooh, Going Vintage was much better than I expected! Before I read the book I would have bet I'd give it 3 bookcases. No, this is worth at least 4! (And you know I'm a tough rater) Lindsey Leavitt tells us a witty and sweet story with characters worth cheering for.Okay, to start out, this book is filled with fab lists! And they are not annoying at all. Just stuff that made me laugh like, really hard! Also, Mallory and the lists go in hand in hand. Mallory is just a lot of fun. She also says some

I've put off reviewing this book for a while, but not for my usual reasons. I'm not scared that this will turn into a massive rant or a bunch of fangirling nonsense. No, I simply do not know how to express myself here. I know what I'm feeling but I have no clue on how to say it.GOING VINTAGE is the kind of book that makes you happy while reading even though you know it's absolute fluff. I don't like reading fluff for some reason. My "chick lit" (and I use this term very loosely) needs something

3.5 StarsGoing Vintage was cute, funny and sweet. It was an easy read one you could get through fairly quickly. When Mallory finds out her boyfriend of over a year has been cyber cheating on her, she feels betrayed not only by her boyfriend, but by technology. If there were no such things as Friendspace or Authentic Life her boyfriend wouldnt have been betraying her with a girl named BubbleYum his cyber wife. When Mallory finds a list her Grandma made back in 1962, when she was sixteen, she

I had so much fun writing this book.

So much fun!Mallory breaks up with her boyfriend over . . . well, I hate to spoil it because it was very interesting, but essentially technology was involved. She decides to swear off technology and live like it's 1962, back when her grandmother was also a junior in high school. Using an old to-do list of her grandmother's, she decides to sew a dress for homecoming, join the pep club (after first starting a pep club), and find a "steady" for her younger sister if not for herself. But 1962 was

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