Kristy decides she doesn't have enough to do with bossing around the girls of the BSC -- she would like to boss around the entire eighth grade, so she runs for class president. In the meantime Jamie Newton has trouble learning to ride his bike.
Things I remember from reading this as a kid:
I remember Alan Gray running for president and making all the kids stand up and sit down during his presentation, and he thought that qualified him to be president.
I think I did not understand the implications of being class president when I read this book when I was nine or ten. I assumed it was something like the random extra curriculars the girls get into in every other book, so I was a little puzzled by Kristy's inability to keep on top of other things she was doing. I remember so little of the actual book, but I do remember reading it, and being somewhat confused by what I was reading.
Things I've considered since reading this as an adult:
Kristy is a classic politician, especially for the year 2017. She is super organized and she enjoys being the one in charge. She also feels there is no way to enact change without being the one leading the way, and making sure she is a part of everything that happens because the other candidates aren't worthy. She doesn't think any of them have any good ideas of any kind, and seems pretty reluctant to offer them support of any kind. She has to run for president to "save the eighth grade," and even when she knows she should drop out, she doesn't because she feels the responsibility to run. However, Kristy is not like a politician because she realizes her short-comings, and she understands that even though she really doesn't want to, she has to drop out of the race in order to make time for her failing grades, and her current responsibilities to the BSC and her Krushers softball team.
One of Kristy's reasons for running for class president is that she wants to stage more "mature" plays like "Our Town", or "A Raisin in the Sun" (with the white students of Stoneybrook Middle School changing the themes of the play to be about poor white families instead of poor black families?). She thinks middle school isn't the place to stage a play like "Mary Poppins", even though big-city sophisticate Stacey has called it her favorite movie over and over. In one of the Super Specials further down the road, SMS joins forces with the high school and elementary school to stage a production of "Peter Pan". And Kristy gets the part of Peter Pan. What is the difference between Mary Poppins and Peter Pan? Both are written by British writers, and feature spoiled, racist children. Both were written for a young audience. Both were adapted by Disney in the 1960s. It's interesting that Kristy was offended by Mary Poppins, but A-OK with Peter Pan. I would rather be in the play where the main character is an awesome, loner woman. At the end of the book, after Kristy has decided she's too busy to take on any more major projects, she wonders if maybe she should try out for "Our Town". And the baby sitters have to remind her that she just learned a lesson about not taking on more than she can handle. But later, she accepts the lead in "Peter Pan"! These overachieving baby sitters never learn!
This book was interesting to read because it showed the unstoppable force that is the collective BSC. Together they decide that Kristy will be elected class president, and they go all out to help her. They make suggestions about her campaign, her slogan, her speeches. They get their baby sitting charges involved. They paper the town with her campaign fliers. If she hadn't dropped out of the race she would have won by the sheer force of will of the BSC. It's bittersweet for me to read about now; the determination of strong women, and how far they still have to go. It was also interesting to read about the class elections. I never took them seriously when I was in middle school or high school, but they are very much like small-scale actual presidential elections. They require a lot of commitment, and a lot of personal time. If you can't keep up with the work you currently do while running for president then maybe you have no business being president. I'm actually surprised that the BSC pushed Kristy so hard to run for president when being part of the BSC is such a lot of work already.
Kristy is such a goody-goody about her school work, and it kind of bothered me. She commits herself to do too much, so of course her grades suffer. She freaks out about her bad science tests because she is someone who does well in school even if they don't like the subject. She wonders if Claudia is used to seeing her bad grades because Claudia is always a bad student, and she knows that she could never get used to bad grades, no matter what. I think I was annoyed by this because I always got bad grades on tests, no matter how hard I studied. Later Kristy fails the same test again, which is something even Claudia has never done.
The Jamie bike saga was so boring to read. The baby sitters are much too patient with him. I wonder if his parents couldn't deal with his inability to ride his bike anymore and told him, "Oh you can practice when the baby sitter comes over," so they wouldn't have to deal with him. Also, Lucy the baby is really just OK sitting on the lawn, just watching? It seems like Jamie shouldn't monopolize the baby sitter's time, when he has a baby sister. I would tell him that I could help him up and down the driveway five times, then I would have to spend some time playing with Lucy. I wouldn't risk my back, or my knees to spend endless amounts of time with stubborn Jamie, but then I am probably older than his parents.