It's summer 1936 and changes are in the air on Alcatraz Island, home to the notorious Al Capone, or 85. 13-and-a-half year old Moose Flanagan can't wait for school to get out so he can play baseball all summer in training for the high school team next year. Freshmen aren't usually allowed but he KNOWS he has what it takes. Unfortunately, the warden has other ideas. He wants Moose to watch Piper all summer! Moose knows Piper is trouble with a capital T! She may be pretty but watching her will take too much time and end with him getting into trouble. Plus he also has to keep an eye on his sister Natalie who is home from her special school for the summer. Natalie is turning 17 and growing up quickly. When Bea Trixel takes an interest in Natalie Moose is suspicious. He doesn't like seeing his sister fall prey to what he fears it some kind of trick. Or it could be that the Trixels are trying to get in good with Dad because rumor has it, Mr. Flanagan is up for a promotion to warden! His potential promotion comes at a difficult time when the prison workers are about to declare a strike. Moose discovers a mysterious note from Al Capone in his dad's uniform pocket and wonders what the prisoner wants now! Can Moose make the baseball team and keep everyone out of trouble?
I picked this up a long time ago but couldn't get into it. The plots of all 4 books all have the same outline. The dramatic, heart-pounding ending was really unbelievable. The author's notes at the end are always interesting, especially when she reveals a bit about her sister's struggles with autism in more recent times than the 1930s but long enough ago that understanding and treatment were barely available. Natalie's story comes to a conclusion at the end of this book and I'd like to think there's hop for her future.
In this one Moose is still trying to suck up to a kid he shouldn't be friends with for the sake of joining a baseball team. Piper calls Moose a doormat and even Natalie can see what's going on! I don't think Moose is a doormat but he takes ALL the drama on himself and it's killing him. Trying to make friends with a mean boy is pretty typical for that age but Moose is also being pressured by his best school friend who REALLY REALLY wants to make the team. Moose ties himself in knots trying to make everyone happy and it backfires. He's a good kid but sometimes makes dumb decisions and sometimes things just happen to him. What happens to him at the end is not his fault but stuff like that happens ALL THE TIME! This time it's magnified and the stakes are higher. Every book pretty much ends the same way.
I love Natalie. She's really grown up a lot. Even though she's 17, her mother keeps persisting in pushing Natalie into fitting into a mold of a much younger child. Mrs. F seems to think Natalie is a perpetual child and has some kind of intellectual impairment. I know they didn't even have a name for autism yet let alone understand it but it really, really makes me angry at Mrs. F that she never even TRIES to understand her daughter or treat her daughter like she's a normal teenager. She may not understand everything you say but in this book it becomes clear that she has normal teenage thoughts and feelings about growing up and even has her first crush on a boy. Way to go Natalie! Of course her growing up causes problems because she's a young woman on an island full of criminals and lacks the understanding that they're a)dangerous and b)haven't seen/been with a woman in a long time and that makes them a threat. Poor Natalie just wants to be normal. Like Moose, I was uncomfortable with Bea Trixel giving Natalie a makeover without Mrs. F's approval and pushing Natalie to believe marriage at 17 is acceptable. (For the most poor who don't have the money to finish high school and go to college, maybe but would Bea Trixel be that giddy and excited if it was Piper?) I think Bea is trying to get rid of Natalie any way she can and if marriage is the answer, so be it.
Natalie proves herself more intelligent and wise than everyone gives her credit for. SHE sees what's going on with Moose , really for the first time, and wants to help. Of course she doesn't realize her help gets them into a whole heap of trouble. I think Moose's resentment of his sister is very realistic and valid at times. He's frustrated because his mother is awful and unable to cope with having a special needs child. He's frustrated because the adults never see what's going on with Natalie. Natalie now makes a new BFF and that has Moose and this reader worried! Never fear, Natalie does indeed know what she's doing and proves that she is more than her "problem". She'll always struggle for acceptance and understanding but she's making great strides and trying hard.
Piper is trying to make amends for what she did. I don't trust her any more than Moose does but as an adult reader I can read between the lines and see a girl on the cusp of young womanhood who desperately wants her father's unconditional love. He seemed to give it to her when she was younger but now she feels her baby brother has usurped her place in the family and her father doesn't love her. I doubt that's the case but she's older now and he has to hold her accountable for her actions. What she did affects the other kids, her dad and the convicts too. She says she's sorry but the other kids don't believe it. Only Jimmy feels sorry for her. Piper also reaches out to Natalie when previously she had always been mean to Natalie. Does Piper have a new trick up her sleeve? Does she wants to date Moose now Annie is off island for the summer and that couple is split? Does she think befriending his sister will help her chances? Does she have some evil plan in mind? Or is Piper just a lonely teenage girl who finds a kindred spirit in another lonely teenage girl. With Annie gone, they're the only teen girls left.
There's not enough Theresa in the story. She usually provides a lot of comic relief and I think she's cute. She's too young to hang out with the teenagers now they're growing older. She also doesn't trust Piper anymore. Theresa and Jimmy are sadly only in one scene.
Moose's best school friend Scout takes the place of the Alcatraz kids. I don't like him. He keeps getting Moose into trouble. This time he knows better but he's too eager to join the high school kids in playing baseball. The boys don't seem to care that an older boy is jerking them around, manipulating them and probably has no intentions of letting the freshmen on the team. Beck is a nasty kid. He's so eager to see proof that Moose lives on Alcatraz but I bet he will end up there some day. Why does this kid have so much power? Passerini is a good kid. He's kind and knows just what to say. I like his solution to the problem.
The cons are either good or evil- with Moose's dad or against him. Most of the cons like Moose's dad because he advocates for better treatment. Mr. Flannagan is moral and uncorruptable and those who have a chance to get out appreciate that. Al Capone wants better treatment- a fancier cell and thinks he deserves it. He wants whoever will be on his side to be the warden. Fastball, on the other hand, is eligible for parole soon and he's aware that one corrupt guard can keep Fastball in prison if Nose so much as sets a toenail out of line. Fastball seems to have repented his crime. He's adopted a kitten, against the rules, and is kind and protective of the children too. He won't last a minute on the outside! Moose ponders the fate of Fastball and nothing has really changed since then for convinced criminals. I hope Fastball has a family or someone to help him out.
I enjoyed this series and getting to know Alcatraz. My niece may visit there this summer and I'm hoping she will so I can push this series on her and so I can see pictures of Moose's home! Any ideas on how to convince an "I only read graphic novels or very short books" kid to read this series? I'm going to see if she'll let me download the audiobook on her iPad or phone.