Fly Away Home

Ballard, C. (2001). Fly Away Home. DVD, Sony Pictures.
ASIN: B00005LK94
$14.94


Viewer's Annotation: Fourteen year old Amy Alden and her dad lead a flock of geese on their annual migration using ultralight planes.


Summary: When Amy's mom dies in a car accident, she moves from New Zealand to Canada to live with her dad. She has a hard time adjusting to life at her dad's house. He is an inventor and sculptor and a pilot of ultralight planes. He also has a girlfriend he failed to mention. When developers knock down part of the woodland nearby, Amy finds several goose eggs that have been abandoned by their mother. She collects and incubates them until they hatch. When her dad, Thomas, discovers the hatchlings, he asks a local game warden for advice. The warden points out that the geese, raised without geese parents, will not know how to migrate. They will have the urge to fly, but will become disoriented and lost when they take off. Amy and Thomas decide they will lead the geese on their annual migration in ultralight planes.


Genre: movie, environment, adventure, family


Series : This movie is not part of a series.


Evaluation: One of the best movies I watched for this project.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Amy is a daring and likable heroine and tweens will probably find her inspiring. The environmental message will also speak to a tween audience. If neither of those two things call out to tween viewers, there is also about an hour of cute gosling footage, sure to win anyone over. This is another great family movie.

Watchalikes :
  • Flicka
  • Moondance Alexander

Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
From Common Sense Media

FLY AWAY HOME is a thrilling adventure, exquisitely told, by the same director and photographer who made The Black Stallion. Ballard has the patience to let the story tell itself, and the quiet moments are breathtakingly beautiful and heartbreakingly touching.

Gathering Blue by Lois Lowry

Lowry, L. (2006). Gathering Blue. (p. 240). Delacorte Books for Young Readers.

ISBN:0385732562

Price :$8.95 paperback


Reader's Annotation: Kira is alone after her mother dies and must survive among the villagers who would normally leave a crippled girl to die in the forest.


Summary: Kira's mother has just died, and her father died long ago, attacked by beasts. Kira, who has a deformed leg, would normally be left to die in the forest. When she returns from burying her mother, her neighbors are fighting over her possessions. A council of the Guardians is called to determine the fate of Kira and her land. At the Council, a man named Jamison speaks of Kira's talent with needlepoint. She is offered the chance to live in the Edifice and work on a great task, repairing the Singer's robe. She is pleased at first. She has a comfortable place to live, plenty to eat, and friends to talk to. As she learns more about the Guardians, however, she begins to question everything about the way Village has been run. When she meets Christopher, a blind man living on the other side of Forest, she discovers the secret of her own past.


Genre: family, fantasy, fiction, friends, identity, mystery, series


Series : Though this book can be read as a stand alone, it is part of trilogy that also includes The Giver and The Messenger.


Evaluation: All three of the books in this series are simply written, but powerful in their message.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Lois Lowry is a well known tween author with a variety of styles and characters. Readers who loved her Anastasia Krumpnik books when they were younger will enjoy reading some of her works for older readers. Also, these are good choices for readers with a capacity to understand a complex plot and big ideas but who might have some trouble reading. The prose is simple, the ideas are huge.

Readalikes :
  • Skellig by David Almond
  • Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbit
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
From School Library Journal
Grade 5-9-In Kira's community, people's cotts, or homes, are burned after an illness. After her mother dies suddenly, homeless Kira finds her former neighbors coveting the land where her cott once stood. They also resent that Kira, who was born with a deformed leg, wasn't abandoned at birth, in accordance with the society's rules. The Council of Guardians recognizes her skill at embroidery and lets her live in the Council Edifice, the one large old building left after the Ruin. Her job is to repair and restore the robe that the Singer wears during the annual Gathering that recounts the history of her community and to complete a blank section, which is to depict the future. When her young friend Matt journeys "yonder" and returns with the plants Kira needs to create blue dye and knowledge of a wider world, she pieces together the truth. The power-hungry Guardians have lied and manipulated the villagers in order to maintain their status. Kira is united with her father, whom she had believed was dead, but decides to stay at the Edifice until she embroiders a peaceful future on the robe. As in Lowry's The Giver (Houghton, 1993), the young protagonist is chosen by powerful adults to carry out an important task; through the exploration of this responsibility, knowledge grows, and a life-altering choice must be made. Lowry has once again created a fully realized world full of drama, suspense, and even humor. Readers won't forget these memorable characters or their struggles in an inhospitable world.-Ellen Fader, Multnomah County Library, Portland, OR MCNICOLL, Sylvia. Bringing Up Beauty. 204p. CIP. Stoddart. 2000. pap. $5.95. ISBN 0-7736-7479-9. LC C99-930791-6. Grade 4-6-A story of love, responsibility, growing up, and letting go. Elizabeth and her family have signed up as puppy trainers for Canine Vision Canada. It is their duty to teach an ungainly black Lab some of the elementary commands and behaviors she will need in order to become a guide dog, and most of the responsibility has fallen on Elizabeth. While she trains Beauty, the dog teaches her some useful lessons that help her deal with turning 13, finding and going beyond her first crush, and coping with loss. Elizabeth's voice is often too mature for a 12-year-old, and the story is sometimes overwritten. The real strength here is the bond that McNicoll develops between Beauty and Elizabeth. It is strong and heartwarming, resulting in an emotionally satisfying read.
Randi Hacker, Montgomery Elementary School, VT

Book of a Thousand Days by Shannon Hale

Hale, S. (2008). Book of a Thousand Days (Unabridged, 6 discs). Full Cast Audio.

ISBN:1599900513

Price :$17.95 hardback


Reader's Annotation: The Lady Saren and her maid Dashti are locked in a tower for seven years, because Saren wouldn't marry the man her father chose for her.


Summary: On her first day as a lady's maid, Dashti chooses to endure confinement with the Lady Saren. Saren is to be locked in a tower for seven years, as punishment for refusing the man her father has chosen for her to marry. Though they are locked away from the world, Dashti and the Lady Saren have food and supplies enough to last. Dashti tries to keep Lady Saren's spirits up, and she keeps a journal of their time in the tower. Then the girls get two visitors. One is the man Saren would like to marry, and the other is the man her father had chosen. In both cases, Saren makes Dashti pretend to be her, to speak to the men through the small opening in the wall of the tower. Saren and Dashti eventually break free of the tower, but the land they knew is gone, replaced by scorched fields of war. Dashti leads Saren on a quest for answers.


Genre: audiobook, action, book, fairy tale, family, fantasy, fiction, friends, love story, identity, royalty, war


Series : This book is not part of a series.


Evaluation: Another fantastic adaptation of a lesser-known fairy tale by Shannon Hale.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Shannon Hale already has a strong following of tween readers, for her books The Goose Girl and The Princess Academy, among others. Her fans will be anxious to get her hands on this books as well.

Readalikes :
  • Princess Ben by Catherine Murdock
  • Fairest by Gail Carson Levine
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
from Booklist

The author of the Newbery Honor Book Princess Academy (2005) offers another captivating fantasy filled with romance, magic, and strong female characters. The story, based on a little-known fairy tale from the Brothers Grimm, takes place in an imagined ancient Central Asia. Orphaned Dashti is a hardworking, pragmatic girl, who grew up in the open, windswept steppes. She finds work in the city with a young noblewoman, Lady Saren. Then Lady Saren refuses an advantageous marriage, and as punishment, she and Dashti are sentenced to seven years in a sealed tower. A tiny window is the tower’s only connection to the outside world, and it’s there that Saren’s two suitors, the terrifying Khasar and the handsome Tegus, come calling. Written in diary form in Dashti’s voice, the gripping tale follows the two young women through their imprisonment and their escape into a grim world of warring societies. Readers will quickly embrace Dashti, an invincible storybook heroine with a healer’s touch, who accomplishes battlefield heroics while nurturing a powerful, secret love for a lord. Fans of Gail Carson Levin’s Fairest (2006) will embrace this similar mix of exotic, fully realized setting; thrilling, enchanted adventure; and heart-melting romance.

— Gillian Engberg

Princess Ben by Catherine Murdock

Murdock, C. (2008). Princess Ben. (p. 344). Houghton Mifflin.

ISBN:0618959718

Price :$16.00 hardback


Reader's Annotation: Benevolence never wanted to be a princess, but when her parents were killed she became the unwilling heir to the throne.


Summary: Princess Benevolence led a fairly quiet life. She and her parents lived in town, rather than at the castle, and she stayed out of the way of the court. Until the day her parents and the king were all killed by assassins. Ben moved into the castle and under the watchful eye of her Aunt Sophia, who is determined to turn the grieving Ben into a "proper" princess, and a puppet monarch. Sophia has ideas about Ben's demeanor and her figure, and her methods are harsh. Then Ben discovers a secret room off behind her own tower prison. Inside there is a spell book, and Ben begins to study magic. Ultimately, Ben will have to use all her royal skills, and her unroyal skills, to save her kingdom.


Genre: book, fairy tale, fantasy, fiction, family, love story, magic, war


Series : This book is not part of a series.


Evaluation: This is a good modern fairy tale with a spunky heroine. I was slightly disappointed that I didn't end up loving this book as much as I loved Dairy Queen and The Off Season, but it was still a good read.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: A new generation of princess stories, with smart girls and magic, has been a hit with tween readers. This one will be no exception.

Readalikes :
  • Ella Enchanted by Gail Carson Levine
  • The Goose Girl or The Princess Academy by Shannon Hale
  • The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley (for older readers)
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:

from Young Adults Books Central

A Bewitching Tale
a review by Ed Goldberg

In this fairytale, fifteen-year-old Princess Ben’s mother and her uncle, the King, are killed while on their annual trip to visit her grandfather’s tomb. Her father disappears and his whereabouts are unknown. It was assumed that Drachensbett, the neighboring country, is involved in the attack as they have been trying to annex Montagne for centuries. Ben is immediately moved from her small home into the castle and, under the tutelage of the Queen Regent Sophia, she begins to learn what it takes to be a queen…or rather what it takes to attract a potential husband who would make a good strategic alliance for Montagne. This involves comportment, dancing, table manners befitting royalty (i.e. eating very little and carrying on meaningless conversation). Unfortunately, her round figure and rebellious attitude frighten away most promising suitors.

Ben was used to running free while her parents were alive; used to a very loving family. The castle and its inhabitants are cold, bossy, clammy and totally uninviting. She doesn’t want a husband. She wants to do something important. After a particularly rebellious dinner, Queen Sophia has enough and decides to teach Ben a lesson. Ben is removed from her luxurious bedroom suite, moved to a tiny room at the top of a long, round stairway of stone and forced to sleep on a bed of straw. She is at the uppermost point of the highest tower in Chateau de Montagne. Hopefully her bleak surroundings will cause some introspection.

The walls in Chateau de Montagne are made of thick stone and each room has an antechamber two to three feet wide. Unintentionally, Ben finds that these thick walls hide secret stairwells, one of which leads to a room equipped for a witch, complete with a book of spells. Ben becomes intrigued and begins studying witchcraft every chance she gets. It is with this magic that Ben will fulfill her goal of doing something important.

Murdock, author of Dairy Queen and The Off Season, two excellent books, has written another winner in Princess Ben. The characters are marvelous. The story is exciting. The action is captivating. The writing is superb and descriptive. Readers will love Princess Ben and root for her to triumph and become the queen she is destined to be. Catherine Gilbert Murdock is one of my favorite writers and Princess Ben reminds me of another of my favorite writers, Shannon Hale, author of Princess Academy, Goose Girl, and Book of a Thousand Days. You will want to read Princess Ben in one sitting, it’s that good.


The Clique by Lisi Harrison

Harrison, L. (2004). The Clique. (p. 220). Poppy.

ISBN:0316155772

Price :$9.99 paperback


Reader's Annotation: Claire moves to a new fancy school and has trouble fitting in, especial when super-popular Massie decides to make her life miserable.


Summary: When Claire Lyons and her family move from Florida to New York, they move into the guest house of a good friend of Mr. Lyons until they get settled. It's also the home of Massie Block, the alpha girl in the most popular clique at Octavian County Day school. Because Claire and Massie are both in seventh grade, their parents assume they will be good friends. Massie has no tolerance for Claire's lack of fashion sense, and is determined to make her life miserable. With the help of the other members of her clique, Massie sets to work. Claire is overwhelmed, but determined to get on Massie's good side.


Genre: book, fiction, friends, new school, identity, series, popularity


Series : This book is the first of the Clique series, which currently has 14 titles, including the Clique Summer books.


Evaluation: Surprisingly enjoyable. Obviously full of shallow characters and questionable morals, but these books are hard to put down, and even if I'm mad at the characters, I find myself getting on the hold list for the next installment.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: These books are wildly popular, and the concientious tween librarian will probably get multiple copies to keep wait lists down. Though the characters are shallow and frequently mean to one another, the books are still compelling, because they are fun.

Readalikes :
  • The Girls by Amy Goldman Kloss
  • Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
from Teenreads.com

Rich girl Massie is ticked off. She's missing out on her friends' Labor Day shopping spree and spa visit, because her father's friend is moving into their guesthouse with his family. Just because their daughter, Claire, is starting seventh grade at Massie's school, Massie is expected to pal around with her. Never mind that the new girl is a loser in old Keds and overalls who will never fit into Massie's tight circle. So that friend thing? It's never going to happen.

Meanwhile, Claire is nervous. Westchester, New York seems like a new planet compared to Orlando, Florida. And Massie and her friends are the opposite of welcoming. At school, Claire finds all the students dressed identically, and expensively. Massie's group is all about designer wear --- a whole new concept for Claire.

Massie's friends do a number on Claire, including viciously sneaking dabs of red paint onto the back of Claire's white jeans. When Claire's embarrassed male teacher sends her directly to the nurse's office, Massie's friends give her the wrong directions, sending her bumbling into the photography class darkroom.

The clique continues in its unrelentingly cruel tricks on Claire. Claire, however, earns a certain secret grudging respect by handling the harassment with graceful pride. Massie would never admit it to anyone, but she starts to feel a tiny magnetic pull to the new girl, and even feels the slightest twinge of remorse at the way she and her friends treat her. That doesn't change their behavior, though.

In the meantime, Claire wishes deep down that Massie and her pals could be her friends. Instead, she buddies up with fun and funny Layne, who is also not A-list. That friendship ends, though, when Massie steals Claire's new (and only) friend.

Claire enjoys the rare occasions when she is accepted into Massie's group, but she inevitably pays for the pleasure by being targeted with mean pranks by them afterward. Claire's grace under pressure finally cracks, and she deals Massie some payback, sinking low for revenge.

THE CLIQUE is a fun, fast read. The girls slowly reveal that they are more than the cardboard characters they appear to be. Claire is classy and intelligent, but occasionally shows some lapses in judgment. Massie and her friends gradually let slip intriguing hints that they are not quite the shallow monsters they seem.

Any girl who has struggled with wanting to fit in will no doubt gobble this book down, while eagerly reaching for the next one in the series. What will happen next with Claire and Massie? Stay tuned.

Peeled by Joan Bauer

Bauer, J. (2008). Peeled. (1st ed., p. 256). Putnam Juvenile.

ISBN: 0399234756

Price :$16.99 hardcover


Reader's Annotation: Hildy Biddle is a teenage investigative journalist who is determined to get to the bottom of the mysterious haunted house in her small town.


Summary: Hildy lives in Banesville, a community of apple farmers. The last few years have seen bad crops, and the growers are nervous. Not to mention, there are strange things happening at the Old Ludlow House. The rumors say the place is haunted. Hildy, who is an investigative reporter isn't buying this story. She begins asking questions that upset some people in her town. A big company wants to buy some of the local apple farms and redevelop. Hildy's school newspaper is shut down. As Hildy continues to search for answers about the Ludlow house and the company seeking to buy orchards, the community becomes more and more divided. With the help of her family and some good friends, though, Hildy continues her quest for the truth.


Genre: mystery, environment, family, fiction, friends, love story


Series : This book is not part of a series, though it will certainly feel familiar to fans of Joan Bauer.


Evaluation: I'm a huge Joan Bauer fan, and love that her books are populated with hard working teen girls and solid family relationships. This one wasn't one of my favorite Joan Bauer books, but it's still a great read.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: This book has a mystery at its heart, so fans of Nancy Drew and other tween slueths will find it a good fit. Also, Bauer always creates a great main character and supporting cast that will appeal to tween readers.


Readalikes :
  • Every Soul a Star by Wendy Mass
  • Hoot by Carl Hiassen
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
from Teenreads.com

Rumors of a haunted house ignite the curiosity of teen reporter Hildy Biddle. She starts investigating the story only to have her school newspaper shut down. What Hildy uncovers and how she overcomes the obstacles that would have her silenced are at the core of Joan Bauer's new book, PEELED.

Bauer regularly writes about adolescents who work. Her Newbery Honor book HOPE WAS HERE is about a teen waitress. RULES OF THE ROAD features a young shoe salesperson. PEELED ambitiously takes on the subject of investigative reporting and responsible journalism.

The book is set in the community of Banesville, which has an economy almost entirely dependent on apple growers. Several bad harvests have the farmers and the town struggling. The mayor keeps promising a community redevelopment project without providing any details. The ensuing conflict --- pitting town farmers against the forces of commerce with an inevitable showdown against a bulldozer --- has a hint of melodrama some readers may have encountered before.

The story's villains --- a turban-wearing psychic, a muckraking journalist who goes by the name of Pen Piedmont, and an unscrupulous mayor --- are also stock characters from melodrama, as is the mysterious “haunted” house at the center of the controversy.

It is the other characters in the novel --- the “good guys” --- who make PEELED worth reading. Hildy's plucky heroism puts her in the company of other teenage sleuths. What makes her unique is her methods of investigation and reporting. Her extensive research and interviewing techniques provide excellent models for effective and responsible investigative journalism. Her journalism teacher --- a man who is clearly far more experienced and talented than his work as an advisor for a school newspaper would indicate --- is also an intriguing, original character.

But Hildy's biggest supporter is Minska, a Polish immigrant who grew up under Poland's repressive Communist regime. Minska tells her about Poland's solidarity movement and the prominent role female journalists played in the underground press:

"'They called the women in the underground press the Dark Circles,' she said. 'because they didn't get enough sleep; they wrote night and day. When you have something so important, something that you'll stay awake for, something you know that you were designed to do, well, it's worth getting a few dark circles, don't you think?'"

Drawing inspiration from Minska's stories about Poland's solidarity movement, Hildy and the rest of her school newspaper's staff run their underground newspaper from the back room of Minska's restaurant. Together they provide the momentum to get other members of the community to stand up for themselves.

PEELED works best as a fable about a community facing a campaign of fear-mongering to influence their behavior to the advantage of those who would control them. The book takes the often tedious work of investigative reporting and makes it interesting and relevant to the experience of young people. It is also a reminder that teens are an important part of every community and that the work they do matters.

Crispin Cross of Lead by Avi

Avi. (2002). Crispin: The Cross of Lead. (Unabridged, 5 discs). Prince Frederick, MD: Recorded Books.

ISBN: 1402545533

Price :$32.95

CD audiobook


Reader's Annotation: Crispin must flee the only home he's ever known when he is accused of a crime he didn't commit.


Summary: When the book opens, Crispin, the main character, doesn't even know that his name is Crispin. He's known only as "Asta's Son." His mother has died, and life on the 14th century manor is not going to be easy for the boy on his own. Then he happens to overhear the lord of his manor say something incriminating. Suddenly, his very life is in danger. Crispin learns the secret of his true name from the priest of the manor, who says there is more to his birth and family than he knows. Unfortunately, the priest is murdered before Crispin learns the true story. He is declared a "wolf's head." Anyone who sees him may kill him like an animal, and get a reward for doing so. He runs away, carrying only the lead cross his mother wore before she died.


Genre: historical fiction, action, fiction, friends, identity, mystery, audiobook


Series : The sequel to this book is Crispin: At The Edge of the World.


Evaluation: I wasn't wild about this book, though I recognize a good adventure plot and fine writing when I see it. I frequently recommend it to kids who like similar books, but it wasn't my thing.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Crispin won a Newbery so any librarian would be remiss if they didn't have it on their shelves. The story gives a good look at life for a peasant in 14th century England, mixed in with a healthy dose of adventure. The story keeps on moving, so it will be a good choice for reluctant readers. The range of new words and concepts makes it a good choice for audio.


Readalikes :
  • Redwall by Brian Jacques
  • A Single Shard by Linda Sue Park
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
from Kidsread.com

He is a 13-year-old boy living in 14th century England, a time when life was hard for most people. He's less than a serf, working the land for people who are his betters and totally dependent upon them. He's really a nothing. He doesn't know why, but he and his mother have always been outcasts in their little village, and everybody seems to hate them. In fact, he is so despised that he doesn't even have a name --- he's just "Asta's son."

The village he lives in is owned entirely by Lord Furnival, who is always gone fighting wars for the king. So his steward, John Aycliffe, manages all Furnival's property, which includes the lives of everybody in the village. And Aycliffe seems to hate Asta's son even more than the villagers do. When Asta dies, her son's life becomes more unbearable than ever. Aycliffe declares that Asta's son must give his only ox to Lord Furnival's manor as a death tax for his mother. This means that the boy can't work the land for his meager livelihood. Then Aycliffe accuses Asta's son of stealing and declares him a wolf's head. This means that anybody who meets the boy may kill him on sight, since a wolf's head is not considered a human being.

The boy's only friend is Father Quinel. He knows things about Asta's son that the boy, himself, doesn't know. For example, he knows about the boy's father, and he says that Asta's son was christened with the name Crispin, even though his mother had kept that a secret. Father Quinel gives Crispin the lead cross that belonged to Asta and promises that he will tell him all about his father. But when he tries to help Crispin escape from the village, things don't go quite as they planned.

Crispin barely escapes, running for his life, with nothing but the cross and the knowledge that he has a real name. The cross has something written on it by Asta but Crispin can't read, and he's astonished to learn that his mother could. Does the writing somehow explain why his mother seemed to both love him and hate him? As Crispin flees his mind is filled with many questions about why he's been falsely accused by Aycliffe, why the people want him dead, and why he and his mother were so despised.

Eventually Crispin meets a giant juggler and jester named Bear, who befriends him, but Crispin isn't really sure whether Bear is a friend or foe. He doesn't know if there's anyone that he can trust. Will Crispin ever become a free man? Read his exciting story and discover the secrets about the life of the boy named Crispin.

--- Reviewed by Tamara Penny


Molly: An American Girl on the Homefront

Chopra, J. (2006). Molly - An American Girl on the Home Front. DVD, Warner Home Video.
ASIN: B000HEWEFS
$19.98


Viewer's Annotation: Molly wants to help the soldiers fighting oversees any way she can, but mostly by dancing Miss Victory in the school show.


Summary: Molly McIntire from the series of books by American Girl has come to the big screen. Molly is a typical tween living during the second World War. She and her friends go to school, watch movies, roller skate, and dream about their favorite teacher's wedding. They also practice black out drills, roll bandages, skip tea parties because there are no rations, and help sell war bonds. Molly's father is a doctor who ships out to England. Then her mother goes to work on an airplane assembly line. Then, her family takes in Emily, a refugee from England. Through it all, Molly is generous, but real and familiar. What she wants most is to star as Miss Victory in the school concert, to use her tap dance skills to show support for the soldiers fighting overseas.


Genre: family, friends, historical fiction, movie


Series : This movie is not part of a series, but it based on the Molly books which are part of the prolific American Girl series.


Evaluation: A great film--it took me four tissues to finish it.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Like Kit Kittredge, this movie has a great mix of story and history, which will get tweens interested in life during World War II. Molly is so familiar, it's impossible not to sympathize with her situation, and tweens will wonder what their lives would have been like in 1943.

Watchalikes :
  • Kit Kittredge
  • Nim's Island

Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
New York Times TV review
Molly: An American Girl on the Home Front
A Girl, a War and a Bunch of Gentle Lessons

By ANITA GATES
Published: November 24, 2006

“Molly: An American Girl on the Home Front” is to sincere as “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” is to camp. So it’s both odd and satisfying, while watching this sweet holiday television movie (Sunday night on the Disney Channel), to come upon a “Mommie Dearest” moment.


When little Molly McIntire (Maya Ritter) refuses to eat the turnips served at dinner, the neighbor looking after her and her siblings orders her to sit at the table until she has cleaned her plate. “Which means I’ll be here until I die,” Molly announces woefully.

But unlike Christina Crawford, Molly has a mother (played by Molly Ringwald) who is willing to compromise. When Mom comes home from her job at the airplane factory, she warms up the turnips, mixing in a little butter and sugar (to heck with the rations!), and Molly happily finishes her meal.

It is wartime — 1944 to be exact — and Molly is learning about sacrifice, hardship, doing her part and the preciousness of family. As she does, viewers may be concerned about manipulation on more than one front.

First there’s Molly’s provenance. She is one of the dolls-with-historically-significant-back-stories that make up the lucrative American Girl empire. (The Fifth Avenue store has its own restaurant and its own on-site theater production, as well as floors of dolls, doll clothing, doll books and other accessories.) Clearly, at least one of the reasons the movie exists is to sell merchandise.

Then there’s the war. Granted, this is World War II, the one that even protesters in the Vietnam era could see as “the good war,” totally justified and noble. But it may seem to some viewers that Molly’s lessons in the necessity of the ultimate sacrifice are meant to persuade young viewers to see the current war in Iraq as equally noble.

Parents can talk to their children about that issue and then safely allow them to enjoy “Molly” for what it mostly is, a heartwarming, dreamlike vision of American small-town life six decades ago, with universal lessons around every corner.

In addition to loving her parents and tolerating her brother and sister, Molly has a rich life. She and her best friends go to the movies and learn about the world from the newsreels (in which young Princess Elizabeth of Britain makes a reassuring speech to children around the globe). They idolize a pretty young teacher, Miss Campbell (Sarah Manninen), and fantasize about her romance with and coming marriage to a handsome young soldier.

Molly desperately wants to win the lead in the big tap-dancing finale of the school’s Christmas show. She acknowledges that she isn’t a very good dancer but is willing to do whatever it takes to become one.

“I’ll practice day and night,” she announces, although she hates to practice. Her father (David Aaron Baker) supports her completely. “Once my girl makes up her mind, there’s no stopping her,” he tells her with an approving smile.

Molly’s trials include dealing with a wartime shortage of ice cream, saying a tearful goodbye to her father as he leaves for Britain, watching her mother take a job (horrors!) and, most intrusive of all, being forced to share her bedroom with a total stranger.

That stranger is Emily Bennett (Tory Green), a young refugee from London who modestly talks about living in a manor house and having the royal family to tea. (“It was only once.”) Not surprisingly, Molly’s resentment of Emily diminishes, and they become friends, even before Emily apologetically reveals her terrible secret.

“Molly: An American Girl” is poignant but carefully avoids difficult choices and long-term disappointment. A spelling bee that pits two major characters against each other is interrupted and declared a tie. Telegrams from the War Department arrive regularly, but really bad things happen only to minor characters. Hard work and sacrifice always pay off in victory. (Molly isn’t that great a tap dancer, but what are the odds of her winning the starring role in the show?) That, come to think of it, may be the most subversive message of all.


Nim's Island

Flackett, J., & Levin, M. (2008). Nim's Island. DVD, 20th Century Fox.
ASIN: B001APZMJI
$29.99


Viewer's Annotation: Nim must protect the secret island home she and her father inhabit from invaders while her father is stranded at sea.


Summary: Nim and her dad live on their own tropical island in the South Pacific. Nim's mom died when she was a baby, and her dad works a lot, so her friends are a seal, a lizard, and a pelican. When Nim's dad goes on a research expedition and gets shipwrecked, Nim is on her own. She writes to the author of her favorite novels, Alex Rover, asking for help from the great adventurer. What she doesn't realize is that the author, Alexandra Rover, doesn't even like to leave her apartment, let alone rescue kids stranded on remote islands. Then, Nim spots invaders headed towards her beach. She must keep the island secret and safe!


Genre: movie, adventure, family, fantasy,


Series : This movie is not part of a series, but it is based on the book by Wendy Orr.


Evaluation: Plenty of adventure, a good choice for families with tweens.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: This is another Abigail Breslin movie, so tweens who enjoyed Kit Kittredge may be interested in this film. Also, this is a great adventure title, with plenty of fantasy mixed in, so it's a good choice for thrill seekers or would be Swiss Family Robinsons.

Watchalikes :
  • Kit Kittredge: An American Girl
  • Swiss Family Robinson

Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
from The New York Times

If “Nim’s Island” were anything but a children’s movie, the casting genius who suggested Jodie Foster as a potential love interest for Gerard Butler would be looking for a new occupation. But miscasting isn’t the only problem with this sweet but ho-hum adaptation of Wendy Orr’s novel, a comedy-adventure that never quite finds its tone.

The island in question lies deep in the South Pacific (beautifully played by the Gold Coast of Australia) and is home to Nim (Abigail Breslin) and her father, Jack (Mr. Butler). Motherless and near-fatherless (Jack spends his days studying plankton), Nim amuses herself with a stable of performing pets and the literary adventures of an Indiana Jones-style hero named Alex Rover. When Jack is trapped by a storm at sea, and Nim sends an e-mail message to Rover for help, she’s unaware that the recipient is his agoraphobic creator, Alexandra (Ms. Foster).

Playing yet another tightly wound woman, Ms. Foster makes a slapstick meal of rushing to Nim’s aid. Yet this is a story about hiding from the world — whether on a remote island or inside your head — and the film’s sensitive notes are too often jarred by its attempts to score cheap comic points from sea lion flatulence and obese Australian tourists. The message that lifelong connections can be forged through books is a lovely one; too bad it’s obscured by flying lizards.


Kit Kittredge: An American Girl

Rozema, P. (2008). Kit Kittredge - An American Girl. DVD, New Line Cinema.
ASIN: B000WGVEAC
$28.98


Viewer's Annotation: Kit uses her ace reporting skills to help two friends who have been unfairly accused of stealing.


Summary: Kit Kittredge is nine years old during the Great Depression, and determined to be a reporter. There is plenty of news in her world. She and her friends have a treehouse club. Her mom has given work to two hobo children in exchange for food. Her dad has gone to Chicago to look for work. They have boarders living in their house now. Kit still finds time, after her chores to write to her father and to write articles for the Cincinnati newspaper. Then, two of her friends are accused of stealing, and Kit is sure they are innocent. Can she use her reporting skills to help her friends?


Genre: adventure, family, friends, historical fiction, movie


Series : This movie is not part of a series, but it based on the Kit Kittredge books which are part of the prolific American Girl series.


Evaluation: A sweet film with an amazing cast -- even my husband enjoyed it!

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Kit is nine years old, so this film may appeal more to younger tweens. Girls fresh from their American Girls years will want to see this film adaptation. It's a great choice for families, and a good way to get a glimpse of life during the Great Depression.

Watchalikes :
  • Nim's Island
  • Molly : An American Girl on the Homefront

Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
from Newsweek

Three TV movies have been spun off the popular American Girl book series (and the dolls, outfits, accessories and furniture that accompany them). Now we have the first feature film, "Kit Kittredge: An American Girl," aimed squarely—in all senses of that word—at the female demographic that's too young for "Sex and the City" (3-to-12 is the American Girl target audience). The movie, like the books, is both history lesson and inspirational tale, filled with commendable life lessons.

Kit's story is set during the Great Depression, and comes complete with bank foreclosures, soup kitchens, hobos and photos of Eleanor Roosevelt. When the producers (who include Julia Roberts) dreamed up the project, they couldn't have predicted that it would reach the screens amidst the home mortgage crisis, soaring gas prices and NEWSWEEK cover stories on recession, all of which give director Patricia ("Mansfield Park") Rozema's film added resonance—at least for the parents in the audience, some of whom may have to explain to their daughters that the American Doll ensembles are a luxury few in the Depression could have afforded.

Kit, the plucky 9-year-old heroine, is played by "Little Miss Sunshine"'s Abigail Breslin in a blond wig (read an interview with Breslin here). Kit wants to be a reporter: her dream is to convince the cranky editor (Wallace Shawn) of the Cincinnati Register to publish her child's-eye view of the Depression. Over the course of the movie, she gets an eyeful. Her dad (Chris O'Donnell) loses his car dealership and heads to Chicago to search for work, while her mom (Julia Ormond) is forced to take in boarders (and sell eggs) to hang on to their home. The colorful boarders liven up Kit's life (and the movie) considerably: Stanley Tucci's traveling magician; Jane Krakowski's husband-hunting dance instructor; Glenn Headley's prim, censorious mom accompanied by her sensitive, big-eared son (Zach Mills), and Joan Cusack's ditsy librarian. There is also a cute stray basset hound Kit takes in, along with two young hobos (Max Theriot and Willow Smith), who will figure in the tale's mystery. A rash of robberies has been plaguing the neighborhood, and the finger of suspicion--fueled by anti-hobo hysteria—points to the two boys, at which point Kit merges her reportorial expertise with a touch of Nancy Drew to uncover the true villains.

Rozema has a soft, unhurried touch (even the bad guys are more clownish than truly threatening), and Ann Peacock's screenplay, based on the Valerie Tripp stories, takes its sweet, didactic time getting its mystery plot in gear. Whether young girls, used to jazzier movie editing, will find this pokey, is beyond my expertise, but I like that Rozema doesn't condescend to her target audience, and there are only a few moments when the cuteness gets out of hand. Breslin, so pitch perfect in "Little Miss Sunshine," was a little too much the professional kid actress in "Definitely, Maybe": with her wide, laser-beam eyes, she can turn on spunk like a spigot and has to be carefully directed. Here, surrounded by a formidable cast, her go-get-'em energy works well. As role models go, an aspiring journalist with a dawning social conscience beats Barbie any day.

Aquamarine

Allen, E. (2006). Aquamarine. DVD, 20th Century Fox.
ASIN: B000FCW15A
$14.98


Viewer's Annotation: Claire and Hailey agree to help a mermaid find someone to fall in love with her in just three days.


Summary: Best friends Claire and Hailey are crushed, as Hailey is scheduled to move to Australia in five days. They make a wish for a miracle to keep them together. What they get is a mermaid tossed into their swimming pool by a freak storm. Aquamarine, the mermaid, has struck a deal with her father. If she can prove the existence of love in three days, she doesn't have to marry them merman her father has chosen for her. Aquamarine offers Claire and Hailey a wish, if they will help her find someone to fall in love with her over the next three days.


Genre: movie, fairy tale, family, fantasy, friends, love story


Series : This movie is not part of a series, but it is loosely based on a novel by Alice Hoffman with the same title.


Evaluation: A lighthearted movie that will provide entertainment, if not enlightenment.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: All three of the actresses in this movie will be familiar to tweens, and that alone would be a draw. Combine the big names with a fairy tale love story, and you've got a winning combination. Probably bound to be a slumber party classic.

Watchalikes :
  • Nancy Drew
  • The Prince and Me
Other Useful Info:
Reviews:
from the Boston Globe
She lives in the sea, but still needs a hunk
By Wesley Morris 03/03/2006

I'm not a lust-ridden 'tween-age girl, but if I were and a mermaid happened to find her way into my swimming pool, the last thing I'd do is take her shopping and let her steal the boy of my dreams. But I'm catty and shallow. The two best friends in "Aquamarine" are sweet and fair. So when the bubbly Aquamarine (Sara Paxton) winds up in a Florida beach town after a storm, Claire (Emma Roberts, who's Eric's daughter and Julia's niece) and Hailey (the pop singer known as JoJo) try to give her what she wants. Love. Of course, at sundown Aqua's legs turn back into a tail, which means she doesn't have much time to find it.

According to Aqua, her father plans to marry her off to a merman she doesn't love. Dad doesn't believe love exists. She insists it does, and daddy gives her three days to prove it. The boy she picks is Raymond (Jake McDorman), the same permanently shirtless lifeguard Hailey and Claire have been wanting all summer. But if they help a mermaid, they get a wish, and since Hailey is about to move to Australia, they enlist in Project Love and plan to use their wish to stay together.

If I were these two I'd be wishing for filmmaking better than the ABC Family Channel stuff they've got. But 12-year-old girls won't care that some of the overdubbed dialogue in "Aquamarine" makes it seem like a lesser work of Italian neorealism. (The ones who do should write me. I might know some 13-year-old nerds who'd love to watch "Open City" with you.)

Most girls will just be pleased that Alice Hoffman's book has been faithfully adapted, that Roberts has inherited the family's good dental work, that Paxton is like Reese Witherspoon with a tail, and that JoJo is playing someone other than the underage vixen she does in her PG music videos. The town vamp is Cecilia (Arielle Kebbel), the dangerously tan, Mandy Moore-monster who is also in pursuit of Raymond. (He's the only boy in town worth wanting.) Girls will hate her, but if the intended audience is anything like Claire and Hailey, they will come to feel sorry for her, too.

"Aquamarine" is part "Splash" and part "Clueless" (when that dressing-room montage comes hurtling toward you, duck). But girls will know "Aquamarine" is unique because it's the rare movie that fiercely respects the altruistic loyalty that bonds girls to one another. Cute boys Hasselhoffing in slow motion on the sand come and go, but a best friend is forever.

Kiki Strike : Inside the Shadow City by Kirsten Miller

Miller, K. (2007). Kiki Strike: Inside the Shadow City (p. 387). Topeka Bindery.

ISBN:1417808128

Price : $17.50 library binding


Reader's Annotation: Ananka Fishbein, Kiki Strike and the rest of The Irregulars are determined to discover the hidden city beneath the streets of New York.


Summary: Ananka Fishbein's adventures begin when she looks out her window to see a pale figure climbing out of a hole that has suddenly appeared in the park across the street. The hole leads to an city beneath the streets of New York. The girl is Kiki Strike, who calmly responds to the question "What do you want to be when you grow up?" by saying only "Dangerous." Kiki befriends Ananka, and together they gather other girls to form The Irregulars, a group of slueths determined to map the Shadow City. Then, Kiki disappears, and The Irregulars begin to wonder if she really was who she claimed to be.


Genre: action, adventure, book, friends, mystery, royalty


Series : The sequel to this book is Kiki Strike: The Empress's Tomb.


Evaluation: A fantastic read, with twists and turns in each chapter. This book was sassy and quick, I hardly noticed it was 387 pages long.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Kiki and The Irregulars are strong, smart and bold, and scoff at those who underestimate the power of tween girls. This is a fantastic longer read for fans of mysteries and adventure, or for anyone who thought Nancy Drew was too outdated for their tastes.

Readalikes :
  • The City of Ember by Jeanne Du Prau
  • Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy by Ally Carter
Other Useful Info:
Reviews:

From Booklist
*Starred Review* Gr. 5-8. White-haired, leprechaun-size Kiki Strike is a new student at Atalanta School in New York City when she meets 12-year-old Ananka Fishbein, the narrator of Miller's debut novel. Together they begin a detailed exploration of the Shadow City, the subterranean rooms and streets under New York's subway system, and Kiki recruits a team of other precocious 12-year-olds, whose skills include hacking, chemistry, lock picking, forging, making handmade explosives, and mechanical engineering, to join them. Ananka, the team's urban archaeologist, will supply her family's extensive library and learn everything about rats, the current Shadow City inhabitants. As the girls try to obtain layered maps of New York City's infrastructure, they fear that terrorists with the same goals are putting the city in terrible danger. The peripheral plotline about a nefarious, exiled princess of Pokrovia, who is a fellow Atalanta School student, adds intrigue. First-time author Miller has created a fascinating, convoluted mystery-adventure, which features early-adolescent girls with talents and abilities far beyond their years. The novel will attract both male and female readers, as Harry Potter did, especially since many chapters conclude with perspectives on such universally appealing topics as "How to Be a Master of Disguise" and "How to Foil a Kidnapping." While some discerning readers may complain that the conclusion is too quick and tidy, readers will welcome the hints of sequels, all hopefully narrated by Ananka, the most intriguing and carefully developed of Miller's characters.

Every Soul a Star by Wendy Mass

Mass, W. (2008). Every Soul A Star (p. 336). Little, Brown Young Readers.

ISBN: 0316002569

Price : $15.99 hardcover


Reader's Annotation: Three fifteen year old strangers share two weeks and one life-altering experience at Moon Shadow Campground.


Summary: Ally has lived most of her life at the Moon Shadow Campground, which her parents bought when she was young because it would be in the path of a solar eclipse a decade or so after they bought it. Bree's parents are taking over the campground after the eclipse. This means Bree, who is beautiful and wants to be a model, will be living in the middle of nowhere and going to homeschool, while Ally, who doesn't remember to brush her hair most days will be moving to a public school in Chicago. Also, there's Jack, who is helping out on an eclipse tour to get out of going to summer school. He's a pudgy recluse who ends up in the middle of Ally and Bree's drama.


Genre: book, coming of age, family, fiction, friends, identity, love story, siblings


Series : This book is not part of a series.


Evaluation: I loved this book. I found the characters to be well realized, even beautiful Bree, and though the circumstances were unusual, I was willing to go along with the plot. I've already recommended this book to several tweens.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: I think multiple POV books are good choices for tweens, because it's good to understand a situation or story from different viewpoints, and what better way to do that than to have several people telling the same story. The characters in this book feel familiar, and readers will find themselves in Ally, Bree and Jack.


Readalikes :
  • My One Hundred Adventures by Polly Horvath
  • The Penderwicks by Jeanne Birdsall
Other Useful Info:
Reviews:

excerpt of School Library Journal Review, found in full here

I always enjoy a kid's book that works against my natural expectations of what's going to happen next. I mean, look at this equation: Popular girl meets unpopular girl at campground. There are only a couple of different ways you can go with a storyline like that, so Mass gets points for taking the road less traveled. For one thing, the kids in this book get along. I sort of expected this to be a novel where people fought, bickered, and came to learn about themselves through conflict. But this is a little different. The kids have essentially been tossed out onto their own by the adults in their lives, or have left those adults voluntarily for the first time. Adrift they end up clinging to people in similar situations. And Mass toys with her canny readers, TOYS I say! You simply cannot have a boy reading the Ray Bradbury story All Summer in a Day (it's never named but you know that's what it is) in the first act without implying that something similar is going to happen to him in the third. I won't give anything away, but it's nerve wracking to say the last.

Ally is one of the few homeschooled heroines I've found in middle grade fiction lately. That's neat. It's nice to have a detail like that interwoven with a tale about the death of the sun and that equally awesome event, our entrance into teenagerhood. And I really do think that you could sell this book equally well to the kid who loves books about science and realism as to the kid who'll only touch titles that contain fashion forward females. I could be wrong, but I think it's worth trying. Give it a look yourself. It's a pretty neat juggling act.

The Bat-Chen Diaries by Bat-chen Shahak

Shahak, B. (2008). The Bat-Chen Diaries (p. 110). Kar-Ben Publishing.

ISBN: 0822588072

Price : $16.95 library binding


Reader's Annotation: Selected writings, diaries and letters of Bat Chen Shehak, who was killed in 1996, on her 15th birthday, in a terrorist bombing.


Summary: In the same way the diaries of Anne Frank and Zlata Filipovic have illustrated the day to day lives of tweens during the Holocaust and Bosnia, the Bat-Chen diaries paint a picture of life growing up in modern day Israel. Bat-Chen began to keep a diary when she was in the fifth grade, and she wrote frequent letters and poems. Collections of her writing have been published in Arabic, Japanese, Italian, Dutch and German. Her familiar concerns, friends, school, siblings, first romances are set against a backdrop of war and an enduring hope for peace.


Genre: book, nonfiction, war, identity, friends, coming of age, siblings, family


Series : This book is not part of a series.


Evaluation: This collection of journal entries, letters, and poems is all the more touching for the places in which it is sometimes overly dramatic or simplistic. It looks like the diaries we all wrote when we were tweens, and that is what makes it so powerful.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: First person accounts make history and current events real to readers. Tweens will identifiy with Bat-Chen, who fights with her siblings and hates homework even while she's contemplating living in a country at war. Bat-Chen will make Middle East politics real for tweens.

Readalikes :
  • The Diary of Anne Frank
  • Zlata's Diary by Zlata Filipovic
Other Useful Info:




Reviews:

School Library Journal Review

he Bat-Chen Diaries released in February, 2008, nearly slipped beneath my notice. Perhaps because I love bats or the Chen portion may have caught my eye. Whatever reason, I'm glad that I read this title from Kar-Ben Publishing.

I know The Bat-chen Diaries have been published in other languages (Hebrew, Japanese, Arabic, Italian, Dutch, and German) and this is the first English translation of her work. There is a free teaching guide that can be downloaded from the publisher.

In March 1996, Bat-Chen Shahak was killed by a suicide bomber in Tel Aviv's Dizengoff Center. It was Purim, and it was her 15th birthday. Interestingly she had written a condolence poem to widow Leah Rabin after the assassination of her husband Israel's Prime Minister Yizhak Rabin in November, 1995. After Bat-Chen's death her family gathered together pieces of her writings in notebooks, diaries, letters, and drawings to produce this tribute to Bat-Chen's life and desire for peace.

Knowing the main character's fate and that there is no happy ending can make reading war diaries by children very difficult. Even reading grown-up accounts of tragedies is difficult to accept.

Raucous Royals by Carlyn Beccia

Beccia, C. (2008). Raucous Royals: Test your Royal Wits: Crack Codes, Solve Mysteries, and Deduce WhichRoyal Rumors are True (p. 64). Houghton Mifflin.

ISBN: 0618891307

Price : $17.00 hardcover


Reader's Annotation: Learn about some of Europe's kookiest monarchs, and decide for yourself whether the rumors about them are true.


Summary: This book encourages tweens to be "history detectives" by asking questions about well known rumors about some of Europe's most notorious monarchs. Did Marie Antoinette say "Let them eat cake?" Did Richard III kill his nephews? Was Napoleon short? With plenty of factual information, humorous illustrations, and a thought provoking question and answer style, Beccia digs deep into the mysteries of royalty.


Genre: book, nonfiction, women's history, tudors, royalty


Series : This book is not part of a series.


Evaluation: This picture book for tweens has a good balance of fact and fun, and will capture the interests of even reluctant readers.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: It's history, but it's fun. It's non-fiction, but thoroughly readable. Keep this book around for tweens who need to liven up their history lessons.


Readalikes :
  • Oh, Rats: The Story of Rats and People by Albert Merrin
  • Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voice from a Medieval Village by Laura Schlitz
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:

"[Beccia's] stylish mélange of witty illustrations—silhouettes with speech bubbles, dramatic tableaux, caricatures—and interactive text demands reader participation: rather than provide a historical narrative, the author presents statements as true-or-false quizzes, then theorizes why a rumor might have come to exist." Starred, September 29, 2008 (Publishers Weekly, Starred )

Allie Finkle's Rules for Girls by Meg Cabot

Cabot, M. (2009). Moving Day. (p. 256). Scholastic Paperbacks.

ISBN: 00545040418

Price : $15.99 hardcover


Reader's Annotation: Allie Finkle must stop her parents from moving into a haunted house away from her school and friends.


Summary: Nine year old Allie keeps a list of rules to remind her how to be a good person and a good friend. She knows that even good people sometimes have a hard time remembering all the rules, like "never stick a spatula down your friend's throat." When her parents announce they have bought a new house (which Allie is sure is infested with a zombie hand), Allie does all she can to prevent them from moving. She's not wild about her school or her best friend, but she knows being the new kid won't be great either.


Genre: book, family, fiction, friends, siblings, new school


Series : This book is the first in a series of Allie Finkle stories. There are two books out currently (Moving Day and The New Girl) with more planned.


Evaluation: Allie is wise and silly, gutsy and scared, smart and foolish all at the same time. The book is funny, approachable, and will be well liked by young tweens.

Why it belongs in a Tween Collection: Allie tells it like it is. She's an animal rights activist, she doesn't like it when her best friend whines, and she's clever enough to try and thwart her parents move. Tweens will love this heroine. Also, Meg Cabot is a well known name, and younger tweens will be glad to have something just for them.


Readalikes :
  • Rules by Cynthia Lord
  • Anastasia Krumpnik by Lois Lowry
Other Useful Info:

Reviews:
From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. SignatureReviewed by Rachel Vail
In Cabot's (the Princess Diaries) first foray into novels for kids who are still in single digits, her trademark frank humor makes for compulsive reading—as always. The first installment of a new series presents a nine-year-old girl attempting to impose rules for living on her increasingly complex world. Allie is funny, believable and plucky (of course; all girls are plucky, at least in books), but most of all, and most interestingly, Allie is ambivalent.As the book starts, Allie learns that her family is moving across town. It is a mark of Cabot's insight to understand that, to a nine-year-old, a car ride's separation from the world she has known makes that distance as vast as the universe. Allie will be enrolled in a different elementary school, and will therefore be that most hideous thing: the new kid. To make matters worse, the Finkle family will be moving to a dark, old, creaky Victorian, which, Allie becomes convinced, has a zombie hand in the attic. Moving will mean leaving behind not only her geode collection but also her best friend. And here is where the story deepens. Allie's best friend is difficult. She cries easily and always insists on getting her own way. To keep the peace, Allie makes rules for herself, often after the fact, to teach herself such important friendship truisms as Don't Shove a Spatula Down Your Best Friend's Throat.Mary Kate is the kind of best friend anybody would want to shove a spatula down the throat of, is the thing.As Allie marshals her energies to fight the move in increasingly desperate ways, sophisticated readers may well conclude ahead of Allie that the friends she is meeting at the new school are more fun and better for her than spoiled Mary Kate and the cat-torturer, Brittany Hauser. Coming to this realization on their own, however, is part of the empowering fun. Told from the distinctive perspective of a good-hearted, impulsive, morally centered kid, this is a story that captures the conflicted feelings with which so many seemingly strong nine-year-olds struggle. Ambivalence is uncomfortable. It is also a sign of growing up. Early elementary school is all about primary colors, where rules, imposed by adults, are clear guidelines to good behavior and getting along. The more complex hues of the second half of elementary school, when complicated friendship dynamics begin to outpace the adult-imposed rules of home and school, leave many kids floundering and confused. In the character Allie Finkle, Cabot captures this moment of transition and makes it feel not just real, but also fun, and funny.