This book follows a group of friends on the cusp of adolescence, as they
explore new ideas, find new interests, and form first crushes. The plot
structure is very loose and episodic; the content is rooted in
nostalgia. There are occasional illustrations that don't do a whole lot
for the story. Set in a small town in the 1970s, I found myself
wondering what sort of appeal this book would have for young readers
today. It won the Newbery Medal in 2006, inexplicably. This reads like a
book for adults who grew up in the 1970s, and not a book for children
at all. The writing is good, and the characters are interesting, if not
always fully realized (I had trouble distinguishing some of the boys,
particularly, and Debbie's best friend Patty has no personality to speak
of), but there's so little action that I really had to push myself to
stay engaged. I wouldn't recommend this for kids, but adults who were
teenagers in the '70s might find it a nice walk down memory lane.
(Reviewed from a copy borrowed through my library system.)
Inexplicably, indeed. I never did purchase this for my library!
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