In this first novel, the life of a teenager from the upper east side of Manhattan is wonderful. They are very rich and they are very beautiful, they know. Blair Waldorf is the leader of the crew including her handsome but weak boyfriend nate. The beauty of the trained woman worked well in her role and I was convinced that she and Nate will be together forever. Then, teenagers and girls like to hate, Serena Van der Woodson returns from Connecticut boarding school, and young women start to get angry.
Each episode starts with the same view as Serena van der Woodsen's gossip site (played by Blake Lively), "The gossip girl is here, you are the only source of Manhattan's elite scandal." Unlike a desperate housewife who knows who the narrator is, I do not know who the gossip girl is. In the book of Cecily von Ziegesar, Gossip Girl is one of the characters, and everyone is rumored to be "suspect". She did not provide details about himself in the TV series; while in the book version she informed the reader about her new purchase. For example, "So, I have my own Christmas list, even the Orange Pigskin Hermes Birkin Bag" (Ziegesar, 2003: 161), or "Oh, I'm late for my fake sunburn in bliss" I said. (Ziegesar, 2003: 69). If she can handle herself with expensive accessories, not only is her personality very rich but gossip girl must also be one of them.
Consider getting feedback that kids can find it online, error messages and abuses are awful, throughout the book, yeah. (A series like Gossip Girl will explore the power of wealth, sex, beauty and compare it to produce a bloom monologue with a brassieres PG.) However, these resources alleviate anxiety of individual emotions and explore A public opinion that can serve as an "escape valve" to do may make families uncomfortable. Bloom's readers asked her to "explain what parents had not had," and she wrote in a series of letters in 1986 "Comments to Judy: Children told them to you What I wanted "was entitled. The New York Times book reviewer Elizabeth Winship wrote as follows. "Young journalists do not want to meet the high expectations of their parents and do not want to take risks of losing respect, because they feel that their parents really do not listen to them, Mr. Bloom."
New York's high school is like the experience of many people when going to college. People look at the gossip girls and they are shocked by what they see, parents complain, but in reality, gossip girls are very accurate for many children on the upper East Side. I grew up in Greenwich Village and grew up in East Village, West Village, and SOHO, so I was influenced by various communities. I got up late and entered the club and met people of all walks of my life. When you grow up in New York, you will grow faster, open your mind, become a culturally conscious, adventurous, and curious person. I think this has played a very good role in my adult life, and of course let me stand out at the university.