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List Price: $15.95Amazon.com's Price: $10.85 You Save: $5.10 (32%)Prices subject to change.
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Binding: Paperback
EAN: 9780312367671
ISBN: 0312367678
Label: Feiwel & Friends
Manufacturer: Feiwel & Friends
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 720
Publication Date: October 30, 2007
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Reading Level: Young Adult
Release Date: October 30, 2007
Sales Rank: 43786
Studio: Feiwel & Friends
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Editorial Review:
Product Description:
Meg Powers is the daughter of the President of the United States. She’s about to enter her first year of college. She’s living through the worst year of her life. Last June Meg was kidnapped by terrorists – brutalized, starved, and left for dead. She was shackled in a deserted mine shaft and had to smash the bones in her own hand to escape. Meg Powers survived the unthinkable, the stuff of nightmares. Her terrorist captor is still at large. But still she must live each day. Ahead of her is the grueling physical therapy to heal her broken body; the challenge of leaving the safety of the White House for her freshman year at college. But harder still than the physical and social challenges ahead are her shattered sense of herself and her family. Will she ever forgive her mother, the President, for her “can not, have not and will not negotiate with terrorists” stance – even when it came to her own daughter? And more difficult still, can Meg forgive herself for having the strength, the intelligence and the wit to survive? In a brilliant novel, Ellen Emerson White tells her most ambitious and intense story about a most unlikely but deeply affecting heroine.
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
I read the first three books in this series. I read Long Live the Queen, in fact, probably twenty times. It is one of my top five books of all time. I loved these books, and longed for the day when Ellen Emerson White would continue Meg's story. When I saw Long May She Reign, I was ecstatic, and I chowed down on this 700-plus page book.
I wanted to love it. I did, I did, I did.
But when I realized that I was reading day-turns-to-night-turns-to-day-turns-to-night with barely ... Read More
Rating: -
I have to preface this review by saying I've been an Ellen Emerson White addict for years. Ever since I found a used copy of Life Without Friends and took it home with me because I liked the girl on the cover so much. I've never read a "new" EEW book in my life. They've all been out of print or used when I've come across them. So sitting down with a brand spanking new copy of a brand spanking new book of hers...well, let's just say it was a religious experience and leave it at that. LONG MAY SHE REIGN ... Read More
Rating: -
Meg Powers is back, after a twenty-year hiatus. Like everybody else, she's been affected by the times: she now drinks Coke instead of Tab, reads Anne Tyler instead of Alison Lurie, has a computer and an iPod instead of pens and a boom box -- but, reassuringly, she still loves herself a little Joan Jett.
In this very long-awaited sequel to The President's Daughter series, Meg, at age 18, is dealing with the kidnapping that has left her with a permanently damaged knee and hand, recurring nightmares, ... Read More
Rating: -
I read all the Meg books as a teen, so often that I had to replace them all as they fell apart. I am now 32, and happened across this book by pure accident, and immediately had to purchase it. I read it, ignoring everything but work, and just finished it. I agreed with the others, Meg got to be a bit whiney, page after page of being in pain, not eating, etc, got a bit repetitive. Go to counseling! Use crutches! Tell someone you're in pain! But, on the other hand, that wouldn't be Meg. I liked the Susan tie in, though. ... Read More
Rating: -
This novel has potential, but the character doesn't. Meg is the ultimate teenager--self-centered to the point of icon. The whining and self-pity destroy the themes of hope and recovery.
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