Anne Emery was born Anne Eleanor McGuigan, in Fargo, North Dakota, and moved to Evanston, Illinois, when she was nine years old. Miss McGuigan attended Evanston Township High School and Northwestern University. Following her graduation from college, her father, a university professor, took the family of five children abroad for a year, where they visited his birthplace in Northern Ireland, as well as the British Isles, France, Switzerland, and Italy. Miss McGuigan spent nine months studying at the University of Grenoble in France. She taught seventh and eighth grades for four years in the Evanston Schools, and fourth and fifth grades for six more years after her marriage to John Emery. She retired from teaching to care for her husband and five children, Mary, Kate, Joan, Robert, and Martha.
Anne Emery wrote books and short stories for teen girls throughout the 1950s and 1960s. Her understanding of the lives of teenaged girls creates believable stories and characters that are readable and re-readable!
This book was better than the previous one, "Sorority Girl". Maybe I just got used to Jean Burnaby, not her older sister Sally, being the protagonist. It's Jean's senior year in high school. She agrees to go steady with her long-time boyfriend, Jeff, and just like Sally before her, finds that it isn't what she wants. There's an added element in this book. A new girl, Kim, who would be fun to know, drags Jean into a lot of trouble simply because Jean feels responsible for her. But eventually irresponsible Kim would drive me crazy too.
The book is 1954, a book of the times and the customs. It's nostalgic to read about it, even though I was a small child then. I remember teens going to a place called Barney's to hang out and I couldn't wait to be old enough to go there with a boy. Alas, Barney's closed long before that time and maltshops were not longer popular in my time of dating. I did like Jean's concentration on her music- it reminds me of my granddaughter. There's one more book in this series. I wish that Emery had continued to make the youngest sister, Betsy, star in a future book. I think she would have been the most interesting Burnaby girl of all.
I liked this one much better than the third book (but I still missed Sally). With Anne Emery, as soon as someone starts going steady, you know it won't go well - she doesn't disappoint here. Jeff goes from being a seemingly stable, calm, intelligent guy, to being clingy and irritable. Why is he so demanding of Jean's time? I also can't believe Jean was so silly to be friends with that girl Kim.
I was in hi school in the late 60s when everything was changing. For me these books are the decade just before that (my brothers were in the late 50s, older than me) and this a lovely time I just like to sink into, partly because it’s Not my years, even though teen problems are still around. I appreciate how connected many of the parents are in these books. So far, Anne Emery’s books have become a place for me to go to escape what’s going on USA these days. A place to leave the dark news behind for awhile! And there’s more still for me to read! 📚
If you buy into the notion that children may form steady boyfriend/girlfriend relationships before leaving high school, then this is an encouraging and wholesome book. If you're trying to get children to get to know people without pairing off, then this is still a good book but the hero and heroine are paired off at the end. I've decided that I would rather my children get to know more people and know them better, not as steadies, but as friends in groups getting to know their attitudes and aspirations, their goals and ideals, and particularly how they treat other people of all ages, before forming even a semi-permanent attachment. So while this book is really good, its basic premise is off base.
I actually quite enjoyed this story, especially now that I read it in the context of the rest of the series. There was a little too much angst about Jean/Jeff, but it was still a solid read. I'm really very fond of Jean's parents, who are so sensible.