| Confessions from the group chat Author: Meadows, Jodi | ||
| Price: $14.24 | ||
Summary:
Virginia Vaughn just wants to fit in with her super-popular friend group. That means she doesn't let them know how much she loves the library, she never speaks a word about her massive crush on tragically unpopular Grayson, and she says nasty things she doesn't actually mean. But only in the group chat, so it's harmless, right?
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews (10/01/25)
School Library Journal (+) (10/00/25)
Booklist (09/01/25)
The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (A) (00/11/25)
Full Text Reviews:
School Library Journal - 09/26/2025 Gr 5–8—Posting online reviews of hometown shops and restaurants with her three friends gives eighth grader Virginia the popularity and sense of belonging she craves. But group leader Kat's cruel teasing continually undermines Virginia's confidence among the four friends. Their fragile relationship implodes when Virginia pushes back against Kat during a spat in the school cafeteria. Kat's revenge is swift and socially lethal: she posts online the private texts Virginia sent among the group, with nasty comments about classmates. Making it worse is that Mary Heather and Jess, the rest of her alleged friend group, don't defend Virginia. Fortunately, support from caring parents and a wise 18-year-old sister encourage Virginia to be herself and find new friends. One new friend turns out to be a teen boy she knows only through texts (enter the "hidden identity" trope), who in reality is Grayson, the cute guy Virginia's secretly crushing on in school and at the public library where she volunteers. The novel's swift timeline takes place over five weeks, following Virginia's realistic growth towards self-acceptance and embracing what makes her truly happy. Her light romance with Grayson and reconciliation with Jess provide a satisfying, upbeat ending. Meadows lightly tackles challenges teens face—toxic friendships, cyberbullying—without diminishing their serious impact on readers' lives. Cover art suggests one of Victoria's three friends has dark skin, other main characters are depicted as white. VERDICT Timely and immediately engaging, this is a clear first purchase for all middle grade and YA collections—Marybeth Kozikowski - Copyright 2025 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.
Booklist - 09/01/2025 Thirteen-year-old Virginia and her best friends, Jess, Kat, and Mary Heather, are small-town famous, thanks to their popular Scrollr account. Their group chat gets out of hand, however, when Virginia’s friends find out about her secret crush, Grayson, and begin teasing her. The girls’ steadfast alliance blows up in the school cafeteria when Virginia calls Kat out on her mean-girl behavior, and suddenly a new Scrollr account starts publicly posting unkind things Virginia has said privately in the group chat, casting her in a terrible light. Meanwhile, Virginia messages her “text-door neighbor,” a phone number one digit off from her own, and the two—both confirmed to be 13—hit it off immediately. Using pseudonyms, Virginia and “Knight Errant” text, their conversations unfolding on the page in text-message bubbles that afford Virginia the chance to reflect on what it means to be a good friend—and to have one. Featuring the same vibe as Bye Forever, I Guess (2024), this tween romance’s reveal may be predictable, but that doesn’t stop it from being a satisfying read with realistic middle-school drama. - Copyright 2025 Booklist.


