Oh, Snap! appears to be the end of the Cruisers series and its offbeat look at the lives of four eighth-graders at Da Vinci Academy for the Gifted and Talented. Zander, LaShonda, Bobbi, and Kambui are fun-loving kids of mellow temperament, but aren't afraid to get serious about issues that matter to them. That's why they founded The Cruiser, their alternative publication to the academy's official newspaper. The Cruiser is cooler and more laid-back than its traditional counterpart, The Palette, and the rhythmic jive of the paper is catching attention all over Harlem. A recent report by the local School Journalism Association ranks The Cruiser third-best school paper in the city, behind two high school publications. That's cool with Zander and his friends, but Ashley, editor of The Palette, is hopping mad. The Cruisers generally get along okay with Ashley, so they don't want to start a protracted battle over this one SJA report, but they'll have to prioritize making it up to her if they don't want to end up on her bad side.
While Zander adjusts to the announcement of his father's new small role in a low-budget, straight-to-video flick—a casting choice that shocked Zander's mother, who's actually in showbiz and has never been offered a movie contract—he and the other Cruisers get caught in the middle of a dispute between Phat Tony, a classmate of theirs, and the local law. A holdup went down at the mall recently, and Phat Tony is suspected of colluding with the three stickup men to pull off the heist. In a strange twist of fate, Kambui snapped a picture of Phat Tony hanging around the mall that same day, though he's repeatedly insisted he wasn't anywhere near the place. Afraid of Phat Tony going literally ballistic on them if they bring the photo to the cops, but equally afraid of facing abetting charges if it's discovered they sat on evidence that could have implicated Phat Tony, the Cruisers vacillate as to what they should do. A high IQ isn't always enough to make a hard choice clear.
Old nemeses of the Cruisers are back for this last hurrah of the series, including Charles Lord, wannabe social activist whose efforts to make a name for himself are consistently nipped in the bud by the smarter, more articulate Cruisers. Try as he might to cut funding for Da Vinci Academy under pretense of leveling the playing field for all city kids, Mr. Lord isn't much but a whetstone for the sharp minds of our four protagonists, who are sitting pretty to parlay their elite education into a fine future that will do their families proud. They've hit bumps along the road, but nothing they're about to let wreck the ride. If Oh, Snap! is the last we see of Zander, LaShonda, Bobbi, and Kambui, I have the feeling things are going to turn out all right for them beyond the pages of this series. They have a good thing going with their tight friendship and curious, pliant minds. I'd put money on them doing a few extraordinary things in life.
Walter Dean Myers is known for the wisdom and insight of his books, and there's a bit of that in Oh, Snap!, which is why I would give it one and a half stars and considered rounding up to two. Have you ever wondered what to say when someone proposes you try to do something you know has virtually no chance of working out, and the person pushing you to do it says "Anyway, it's worth a try. Are you afraid of trying?" Zander has a good response to that: "No, but I don't want to look stupid, either". If your chances of success are practically nil, why invite unnecessary rejection? It's savvier to weigh the odds and choose where you should go for broke and where it makes more sense to back-pedal. Zander and his friends have a knack for discerning these little truths of life. Overall, The Cruisers is a peculiar series, but good in its own way, though I feel the narrative hints at many more adventures to come that were just never written. The best of the four books is by far the first, The Cruisers, but fans of Walter Dean Myers should consider reading to the end of the series. Good luck to you, Zander, LaShonda, Bobbi, Kambui, and my best wishes wherever your destiny takes you next.