E ARC Provided by Edelweiss Plus
Grace is stressing about her last exams in 8th grade; ever since she started middle school, she has wanted to win the top scholar award and have her name on a plaque in the school hallway. She has two major motivations for this plan; she hopes that maybe her father, a famous writer who was impressed by the award, will want to spend more time with her after her parents' divorce, and also, she hopes to beat her former friend Jonah, with whom she has been in competition since 6th grade. That was the year that her parents divorced, and also the year that Jonah's father died. There were a series of miscommunications that have estranged the two. This is even more difficult because Jonah's grandmother lives right next door to Grace. Her older sister, Celia, and her cousin Avery (who was born the same week she was) tell her to calm down, and to make plans for the summer that don't involve competition, because people should be more than their accomplishments. Devastated when she doesn't win, Grace makes plans for her summer, since she did not make it into an exclusive writing workship she had hoped to attend. Her goals include getting a haircut (Avery's idea), having her first kiss (also Avery's idea), and taking a class. When she meets Jonah when she is out running, a new goal emerges: run a half marathon and beat Jonah. She finds a training plan, and increases the distance on her already long runs. Since Jonah is just starting, she hopes that it will be an easy task. Her training is interrupted by having to babysit the son of her father's new girlfriend, Brie, when Brie is running a storytime at the community center. Sometimes she takes him to the park, where the four year old, experiencing some frustration, runs away. Luckily, Jonah is in the park and catches him. Brie teaches Grace a lot about how to interact with young children so that they can control what they do, and Grace recognizes that this helps a bit what her emotions as well. She and Jonah fall into a pleasant rhythm when they reluctantly train for the marathon together, and do talk about what led to their problems in the past, but in true middle grade fashion, there is another miscommunication. Will Grace be able to set a proper pace for her life, and will she and Jonah be able to communicate properly and remain friends?
Strengths: Morrison is a big advocate for upper middle grade, a cause I support completely. Most midde grade books would benefit from having 8th grade characters, because most children want to read about older characters. Grace is getting ready to go to high school, which intrigues all of my students. I also love that Morrison works sports into her books in such an intriguing way. Grace's lists of things to get done spoke to me VERY loudly; I have a quarter sheet of scrap paper every day with a lengthy list, especilly in the summer! I coached cross country, and it is definitely a sport that appeals to self-driven personalities like Grace. Her animosity towards Jonah is very realistic; I may still hold grudges about people with whom I went to middle school. It's more likely that children have parents who are divorced than deceased, and the logistics of going between two houses could be addressed much more in middle school literature. If authors want emotional dynamite to mine, this is the way to go! Celia and Grace have a great relationship, and having a cousin nearby is fantastic, especially since the two are so different; Avery admitting that sometimes SHE would like to be the one to help Grace was great. There is some age appropriate, very sweet romance that just puts the perfect icing on this story.
Weaknesses: Grace is very obsessed with grades, and it's good to see her trying to balance her emotions about that, but the comment is made several times that we are not our accomplishments. Boy, did that make me think all day! I even posed this question to many staff members. This seems to fall along generational lines. People my age and older agree with me that we are most certainly our accomplishments. Younger people don't. I will have to agree to disagree on this topic philosophically. Even though my GPA in high school was lousy (3.2? I managed to get a scholarship to study Latin, the money being available because few others were foolish enough to agree to a major that would not lead to permanent employment!), my entire self identity is tied to what I can accomplish. Is Morrison's message a better one for young people? Only time will tell.
What I really think:Like Morrison's Coming Up Short, Up For Air, and Every Shiny Thing, which she cowrote with Celia Jensen (who gets a shout out in this book), this is a thought provoking novel of friendship and life lessons that will appeal to a wide range of readers. I'm glad to add this to my list of cross country running books that includes Vicker's Half Moon Summer.