April Sinclair is back - and her social life is more complicated than ever. With the start of the new year, she makes a resolution to get back together with Billy, her best friend who recently broke up with her. She worries, though, that her other best friend, Brynn, might also like Billy, and that her next door neighbor, Matt Parker, might like her a little too much. In the meantime, April continues to participate in the dance team, whose members are mentoring elementary school students, and she looks ahead to the Valentine’s Day dance, where she is sure the perfect romantic scenario will unfold.
This series, though somewhat fixated on dating and drama, is utterly addictive. April’s voice vacillates realistically between joyful and exasperated, and her infinite hope that things will work out in her favor is something all young teens with crushes can understand. Her selfishness is, at times, a bit grating for an adult reader, as are all the plans she makes to win over a boy, but for middle school girls, who are at a very self-absorbed point in their development, this will reflect their own attitudes and experiences.
Up to now, this series has been a mostly innocent exploration of young love, but with the introduction of a relationship with Matt Parker, it looks like things might become a bit more mature from here on out. While I think the first two books made decent read-alikes for Dork Diaries, this one is more similar to the Alice series, or to the Winnie years books, which deal a bit more frankly with the physical developments of puberty and the logistics of kissing. This is why these are perfect middle school books - not too mature, but not too babyish, either.