Plot:
Bradley had the best summer vacation. Sure it was not what popular people would call fun, but in the middle of the pandemic, Bradley had the best summer of watching K-pop music videos, dancing along to them in his living room, and spending all day in the living room recliner. After an unfortunate incident in grade 3, Bradley had a hard time making friends and hated school. That was until it went online. Going to class in his PJ with no video camera, Bradley was in heaven. When the school, Bladerstein Virtual Junior High was announced, Bradley begged his mom to sign him up - and she did. Receiving a VR headset and gloves, Bradley was able to make his own custom avatar and a new name. Going undercover as the Bradley he could have been, his avatar was the definition of cool, with pink hair and a leather jacket, Bradley started off school to be known as Daebak, giving himself a new start. Like Bradley, other students had a chance to make a new start, whether they wanted to know. Edelle's mother signed her up for virtual school, hoping the school will make her daughter less obsessed with her physical appearance. After having her avatar rejected three times by her mother, Edelle went with the basic model, a shirt with a star on it, jeans, no makeup, and no jewelry. Edelle wanted to prove to her mother that she could make the same friends as Vanya without her looks, and who could not be the more perfect candidate than Hunter. Hunter was Edelle's friend in real life and was also attending virtual school, but unlike the others, Hunter was going in as himself, well almost himself. During the pandemic, Hunter has been diagnosed with alopecia, which means that part of his head has been balding, which totally kills his cool guy vibe. Being sat with Daebak, Vanya, and Jasper, the four of them decide to be a team for the school-wide tournament, the closest thing they have for sports. As our unlikely friends navigate their way through virtual reality middle school, they are faced with the test of friendship, learning who they truly are, and accepting others for who they are, throughout this wacky adventure that contains alien bugs, science, and fluffy bunnies.
Thought:
Chad Morris and Shelly Brown write this fantastic tale about a made-up VR school for kids trying to do junior high during a pandemic. With a fast writing pace, you could not tell the difference between the two authors, as they kept the story flowing with multiple plot points to keep you interested. To keep the story hype we constantly switch between the point of view of Bradley, Edelle, and Hunter, getting their point of view of how things are going, and the emotions as the story is told from their first perspective. Slightly disappointed that we never got to hear from the perspective of Jasper, despite them being the fourth member of our team, Morris and Brown did a fantastic job fully developing our character as they each had some insecurities about themselves that they wanted to change in this VR school world. After all, Morris and Brown really capture the idea of students in middle school wishing they could reinvent themselves like Bradley and go from a kid who always got bullied, into the cool kid everyone says hi to in the hallway. For Bradley, he needed an image change, which allowed him to grow his confidence so high he could dance in the hallway to his favorite K-pop songs. For Edella it was to prove that she was more than just her looks, and with her funny personality and helpfulness, she gained good friends like Bradley and Jasper, whereas Hunter seemed to only be friends with her because she was pretty. Hunter, his insecurity was a bit harder to find, as throughout the story Hunter was mainly the bully through putting Edelle down when she was bad at games, making friends with the other avatar that looked good, and constantly worrying about his image, even his online one. Throughout the story, Morris and Brown make Hunter kind of the villain to Edelle and Bradley, which is why including his perspective was so valuable to this story. It showed Hunter not to be the uncaring guy that he acted, but someone who does not know the pain they are causing because they focus on not letting others know how uncomfortable they are in these situations, that Hunter was literally losing his hair. Overall, Morris and Brown write a fun story with a diverse cast of characters that explores the ideas of insecurity and belonging from the point of view of our three middle schoolers just trying to survive online school during a pandemic.