Book Resume
for American Girls by Alison Umminger
Professional book information and credentials for American Girls.
6 Professional Reviews (3 Starred)
3 Book Awards
Selected for 2 State/Province Lists
Anna, 15, ran away to her older sister Delia’s in Los Angeles. She used her ...read more
- Booklist:
- Grades 9 - 12
- School Library Journal:
- Grades 8 and up
- Kirkus:
- Ages 14 and up
- Publisher's Weekly:
- Ages 13 and up
- TeachingBooks:*
- Grades 9-12
- Word Count:
- 73,470
- Lexile Level:
- 920L
- ATOS Reading Level:
- 5.8
- Genre:
- Realistic Fiction
- Year Published:
- 2016
19 Subject Headings
The following 19 subject headings were determined by the U.S. Library of Congress and the Book Industry Study Group (BISAC) to reveal themes from the content of this book (American Girls).
- Stepsisters--Fiction
- JUVENILE FICTION / Performing Arts / Film
- JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Alternative Family
- Young Adult Fiction | Family | Alternative Family
- Runaways--Fiction
- Self-realization
- Young Adult Fiction | Girls & Women
- Young Adult Fiction | Performing Arts | Film
- Stepsisters
- Self-realization--Fiction
- Runaways
- Motion picture industry
- Motion picture industry--Fiction
- Los Angeles (Calif.)
- Los Angeles (Calif.)--Fiction
- Runaway teenagers
- JUVENILE FICTION / Girls & Women
- JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Alternative Famil
- Young Adult Fiction
6 Full Professional Reviews (3 Starred)
The following unabridged reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers. Reviews may be used for educational purposes consistent with the fair use doctrine in your jurisdiction, and may not be reproduced or repurposed without permission from the rights holders.
Note: This section may include reviews for related titles (e.g., same author, series, or related edition).
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Anna, 15, ran away to her older sister Delia’s in Los Angeles. She used her stepmother’s credit card to buy a plane ticket, a cost Anna’s now expected to repay. Delia’s boyfriend, Dex, writes for a Disneyesque series called Chips Ahoy! Anna spends days with Dex while Delia goes to auditions and appears in her former boyfriend Roger’s independent movie. Roger hires Anna to research Charles Manson for his film, and the inanity of Chips Ahoy! is stark contrast to the Manson murders, not to mention the uneasy life of beautiful Delia, whom Anna fears is being stalked. Anna can’t understand what made young women follow Manson and commit such atrocities. How and why did they fall under his thrall? In a startling, original, complex debut novel, Anna’s voice is sharp, witty, and also honest. Her mother is incredibly self-centered; her sister supportive but worrisome and frustrating; her stepmother annoying yet stable. The brilliantly realized Los Angeles setting also works as a means to magnify the ways women and girls everywhere are too often objectified, invisible, exploited, and sometimes abused. Anna's increasing clarity is poignant, and at times profound. “Los Angeles … is not really so different from the rest of America.” (Age 14 and older)
CCBC Choices 2017 © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2017. Used with permission.
From Booklist
Starred review from May 15, 2016
Grades 9-12 *Starred Review* Anna, 15, is tired of her life. She feels like a relic from her parents' first marriage, and now that her mother and new stepmother have had a baby together, Anna feels even more out of place. So she borrows her stepmother's credit card and books herself a flight to L.A., where her half sister Delia lives. Despite the ensuing blow-up, Anna is granted a summer furlough during which she watches Delia, a struggling actress, at work and becomes involved in a project involving Charles Manson and the women who murdered for him. Through her research and observations on the dark side of celebrity and the struggles Delia faces, both as an actress and as a woman in Hollywood, Anna slowly comes to terms with her family and herself. In some ways, this debut is a by-the-book bildungsroman, but Anna's wry, biting voice elevates it to something more. The Manson girls are certainly an evocative lens, but their presence is effectively understated; this is not a sensationalized look at a family of serial killers, but a mirror held up to a certain type of violence that effects women in America every day. Bittersweet and true, Anna's journey to self-discovery is one that should be widely read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)
From School Library Journal
May 1, 2016
Gr 8 Up-A meandering look at a murderous time in America's history and how the behavior of the young girls who carried out those atrocious crimes compares to the emotional viciousness of teenage girls of today. Umminger's novel offers a glimpse into the life of Anna as she in turn explores the lives of serial killers, the infamous Manson Girls. Anna is 14 and feels like a castaway in her own life; her mom has started a new life with a new family she doesn't fit in with, her dad has a new girlfriend as well, and her best friend may not be the greatest influence. Running away to stay with her glamorous sister in California seems like her best escape route, but life in L.A. brings problems and dangers of its own. To earn her plane fare back, Anna agrees to do film research on Charles Manson's female followers, who committed a series of murders in 1969, and learns that the line between good and evil is often less defined than it may at first seem. This is an introspective account of how deeply the invisible scars of familial emotional abuse can run and how easily they can wreak havoc on the lives of everyone close by.
Copyright 2016 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
From Kirkus
Starred review from April 15, 2016
A bright, prickly teenager struggles to find her place while spending a summer exploring the contradictions of Hollywood, replete with beautiful actors, has-been pop stars, and the specter of the Manson girls.Umminger's debut novel follows 15-year-old Anna, a smart, cynical white girl who escapes a complicated home situation by "borrowing" her stepmother's credit card to run away to Los Angeles. There, she reunites with her actress sister for the summer and is recruited by her sister's dubious director (and ex-boyfriend) to research the Manson girls for his film project. The more time Anna spends tagging along on TV and film sets, the more she begins to notice the surprising ways in which the subtle yet pervasive emotional violence in her own life and the lives of those around her mirror the personal histories of the Manson girls, who were, after all, once "regular" girls. Setting her tale against the glittery, gritty backdrop of modern-day Los Angeles, the author deftly weaves together multiple story strands to create a razor-sharp commentary on our culture, observed with keen wit from the perspective of one honest and complex American girl.An insightful, original take on the coming-of-age story, this novel plumbs the depths of American culture to arrive at a poignant emotional truth. (author's note) (Fiction. 14 & up)
COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
From Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from March 28, 2016
Tired of being the “leftover” of her parents’ divorce and eager to disappear after a prank goes too far, 15-year-old Anna uses her stepmother’s credit card to buy a ticket to Los Angeles, where her sister Delia, a struggling actress, lives. Surrounded by Hollywood’s beautiful and morally corrupt, Anna navigates interactions with Delia’s ex-boyfriend, Roger, who is shooting a movie about L.A. murders, and her sister’s current love interest, a writer on a kids’ show, as well as her own blossoming romance with a teen actor. Forced to pay back the money she stole for her flight, Anna takes a job researching the Manson girls for Roger. Her immersion into the Manson murders leads to paranoia when it appears that Delia is being stalked. Debut author Umminger’s humor is biting (“My family was clearly the place where optimism went to die”), yet it reveals richly complicated relationships among mothers, daughters, and sisters. Umminger crafts a Los Angeles both glittering and soulless, leading to Anna’s realization that she may have more in common with the Manson girls than she thought, but it’s the choices she makes that set her apart
. Ages 13–up. Agent: Neeti Madan, Sterling Lord Literistic.
From AudioFile Magazine
Narrator Jennifer Grace embodies the cynicism of 15-year-old Anna, who certainly has a right to her 'tude. Her mother and stepmother are raising a new baby, and Anna feels invisible, at best. So she "borrows" a credit card, flies to Los Angeles, and surprises her half-sister, Delia. As Anna turns a jaded eye on the glamorous Hollywood lifestyle, Grace adds wry humor, but she also expresses Anna's sensitive, fearful side as she attempts to understand the girls who committed the Manson murders. As those young women become more real to her, Anna sees her similarities to them, acknowledges brutalities in her own life, and develops a more mature view. Grace does a magnificent job of balancing horror and humor in this gripping coming-of-age debut. S.W. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine
3 Book Awards & Distinctions
American Girls was recognized by committees of professional librarians and educators for the following book awards and distinctions.
2 Selections for State & Provincial Recommended Reading Lists
American Girls was selected by educational and library professionals to be included on the following state/provincial reading lists.
United States Lists (2)
Arkansas
- Arkansas Teen Book Award, 2017-2018, for Grades 7-12
New Jersey
- Garden State Teen Book Awards, 2019 -- High School Fiction for Grades 9-12
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This Book Resume for American Girls is compiled from TeachingBooks, a library of professional resources about children's and young adult books. This page may be shared for educational purposes and must include copyright information. Reviews are made available under license from their respective rights holders and publishers.
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Retrieved from TeachingBooks on December 24, 2025. © 2001-2025 TeachingBooks.net, LLC. All rights reserved by rights holders.







Best Fiction for Young Adults, 2011-2025, Selection, 2017
CCBC Choices, Selection, 2017
Junior Library Guild Selections, 2012-2025, City Selection, 2016