In which our heroine enters the workforce, is disillusioned, scared almost to death, behaves like a real jerk, and learns valuable lessons!
Yes, Anastasia is back for Round Three. Summer is dragging in the new suburban house the Krupniks have moved into, and Anastasia is bored. She wants a job, and not just any job. No, Anastasia wants to be a lady's companion, like in old mystery stories. She has blissful visions of polishing her rich and generous employer's jewelry, serving tea, and drawing the blinds when the boss wants a nap.
But when she posts an ad on the grocery store's bulletin board (for it is the eighties when our story takes place) she's contacted by Mrs. Willa Bellingham, an extremely wealthy, imperious woman in town who errs on the abrupt side of businesslike, to the point of rudeness. Anastasia is dismayed to learn that she will be doing scut work. Polishing silverware, dusting, serving snacks at the birthday party for Mrs. Bellingham's granddaughter, who, horror of horrors, is just Anastasia's age.
Anastasia further complicates things by accidentally dropping a spoon into the garbage disposal on her very first day. "Because of that debacle" Mrs. Bellingham says, Anastasia owes $35 more, so she's stuck. (She is also stuck thinking that what she calls a spoon is actually called a bockle.)
Anastasia is a very smart twelve-year-old, but sometimes she is too smart for her own good, and other times, she is not nearly smart enough. She attempts to look like a middle-aged woman at the birthday party so birthday-girl Daphne won't realize they are the same age, only to have Daphne see straight through her disguise.
It turns out that Daphne is something of a rebel, a minister's daughter whose parents never lose their tempers with her, never yell and always forgive. In an ongoing effort to see just how far she can push her parents before they act like everyone else's parents, Daphne devotes herself to causing as much trouble and embarrassment as possible. (In the original version of the book, she mowed a swastika into the lawn; in the later edition, this has been changed to her giving the cat a mohawk, doubtless on the correct theory that there is nothing funny or likable about Nazi symbolism.) And she dislikes her grandmother, Mrs. Bellingham, as much as Anastasia does.
Daphne's devious mind conjures up a clever revenge plot involving randomly distributing invitations to Mrs. B's upcoming charity gala ... distributing them to what most consider society's undesirables: former mental patients, the town drunk, a couple of stoners.
Anastasia is happy to go along with this, but is distracted from the plot when her little brother Sam takes a bad fall and ends up in the hospital. But she's confronted with the potential consequences of the scheme when, after she makes a very snobbish comment in imitation of her despised employer, her father takes her to visit the section of Boston where he grew up as the son of poor Czech immigrants. Anastasia feels guilty for the snobbish remark, which she thought was only making fun of Mrs. B but may have been at least a small reflection of her own feelings, and is further shocked and ashamed to learn that the party she and Daphne planned to ruin is in fact a fundraiser for the local hospital ... the very one that saved Sam's life after his fall!
Can Anastasia stop this runaway train and make amends?
I love Anastasia and her family. If I had ever had to pick a fictional family to grow up in, the Krupniks would be my choice, hands down. Wonderful story with wonderful messages taught so smoothly they don't feel like teaching.