In the third book of the Pink and Green series, Lucy Desberg is in her second semester as an eighth grader. Having handed over the adult problems (her parents' divorce, the family business, her sister's boyfriend) to actual adults, Lucy is now dealing with the normal woes of any middle schooler. First, there is Yamir, her supposed boyfriend, who is now in high school and has just started ignoring her out of nowhere. Then there is mean girl Erica, who occasionally seems to be changing her ways, but mostly wants to control everything around her, including Lucy's relationships and the upcoming eighth grade masquerade, for which she wants the staff at Pink and Green to do everyone's makeup. And finally, there is new boy, Travis, who seems to really like Lucy, even if she doesn't have any particular feelings for him. Lucy wanted the end of eighth grade to be perfect, but with so much going on, she feels sure it will fall short.
The local library from which I borrowed this book shelved it with the YA novels, leaving the first two titles of the series on their own in juvenile fiction. While I think this is a poor decision (no one is going to look for this book in YA), I can understand what might have motivated the staff to make it: this book is markedly different from the first two. The concerns are still very middle grade - much like the April Sinclair series, or the Alice books set during middle school - but the focus has shifted away from the family and ecology issues at the heart of the first two books and on to topics that just seem superficial and almost boring by comparison. The friendship between Lucy and Sunny is still very strong, and it does what it can to hold the book together, but there is just not enough momentum to the plot to keep things interesting. Compared with the excellence of My Summer of Pink & Green, this book is mostly a disappointment.