When I was in school, in the dark ages, children who were disabled didn’t have a right to education. If they came to school at all, they were kept away from the main stream kids.
Apparently the guarantee of a free public school education didn’t become a law until President Geral Ford signed it into law in 1975. But, as the author’s note, at the end of Fooled states, just because it became law didn’t mean that all the schools started acting accordingly.
In Fooled, Lil, the main character has MS, and has a wheel chair to get her around, as well as a text to speech computer. She can speak, but it is very hard and slow. She wants to go to college. She wants to learn, but she has been put into an Exceptional Children’s class, along with Scoot, who is neurodivergent, and loves to tinker, and two other children, one who can’t talk, but can sing, and a girl who loves to jump and cheer. However, the vice principal doesn’t want to mainstream the kids, and forbids them from doing extra curricular activities.
But Lil doesn’t take no for an answer, and fights to get everyone in the after school classes that suit them best.
What I really like about this story, other than the daughter of the mother daughter trio, is disabled, so knows how people like her are treated, is that the class president, Eva, isn’t a mean girl, the way so many middle school stories like to do to popular girls. When Lil asks her about that, later in the book, she has an excellent response. “Yeah, maybe they talk better, but talk is all they do. They never stop to think or listen. You and the other ECs don’t waste your time trying to convince everyone around you how great you are. You just do you.”
Loved this book. Hopefully a lot of kids out there will love it as well. And oh, yes, Lil really wants to go to a magic school, when the story starts, but gradually realizes that remaining the in the real world is where she really wants to be.
Thanks to Netgalley for making this book available for an honest review. This book is being published on the 21st of October 2025.