Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

American Girl: Molly #6

Changes for Molly: A Winter Story

Rate this book
Molly can’t wait for Dad to come home--he’ll arrive in time to see her dance the part of Miss Victory in the big Red Cross show! Molly isn’t worried about her tap dancing, but she wants to look sophisticated so that Dad will know how much she’s grown up while he’s been away at war. Unfortunately, Molly’s hair is all wrong. When Jill finally finds a way to give Molly glorious curls, everything seems to be perfect. Then Molly gets sick. Things couldn’t be worse--until the doctor comes just in time.

67 pages, Paperback

First published September 1, 1988

18 people are currently reading
627 people want to read

About the author

Valerie Tripp

273 books439 followers
Valerie Tripp is a children's book author, best known for her work with the American Girl series.

She grew up in Mount Kisco, New York with three sisters and one brother. A member of the first co-educated class at Yale University, Tripp also has a M.Ed. from Harvard. Since 1985 she has lived in Silver Spring, Maryland. Her husband teaches history at Montgomery College.

Right out of college, Tripp started writing songs, stories, and nonfiction for The Superkids Reading Program, working with Pleasant Rowland, the founder of American Girl. For that series, Tripp wrote all the books about Felicity, Josefina, Kit, Molly, and Maryellen and many of the books about Samantha. She also wrote the "Best Friends" character stories to date, plays, mysteries, and short stories about all her characters.. Film dramatizations of the lives of Samantha, Felicity, Molly, and Kit have been based on her stories. Currently, Tripp is writing a STEM series for National Geographic and adapting Greek Myths for Starry Forest Publishing. A frequent speaker at schools and libraries, Tripp has also spoken at the Library of Congress, the Smithsonian, The New York Historical Society, and Williamsburg.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
1,371 (37%)
4 stars
1,170 (31%)
3 stars
973 (26%)
2 stars
137 (3%)
1 star
37 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 137 reviews
Profile Image for Eva B..
1,573 reviews443 followers
October 26, 2022
Full series review for Molly:
Molly, Molly, Molly, possibly one of the most contentious AG dolls. Opinions on her seem fairly split and while I used to be in the camp of "Molly is so annoying and boring!", rereading her books made me really like her. She isn't in my top five or anything but I have a soft spot for good old olly Molly. Her books are in an odd in-between where it's kind of hard to see her struggles like "I don't want to eat turnips" and "my birthday party isn't what I want it to be" as, well, struggles given the broader context of World War Two--even outside of the soldiers, whenever I was reading about Molly not wanting to eat turnips all I could think was "this is so, SO minor compared to what kids in Europe (especially Jewish kids!) are going through right now", but also I think the book is, to some extent, aware of this, at least in Happy Birthday, Molly! when Emily criticizes the McIntire kids for the lighthearted way they treat the war. As a portrait of life on the Home Front, the Molly books are very good, but you can't really take the story out of the Home Front without its conflicts seeming incredibly petty in scale. However, Changes For Molly was incredibly anticlimactic--while a part of me really likes the message of
Also, while I know I mentioned this in my Brave Emily review, I'm always so surprised by the fact that Emily is in one book and one mystery given her Best Friend Doll status and how she's such a memorable part of the books. I wish that she had been a bit more prominent in the series since you have to read the Molly mysteries to understand why she disappears between books 4 and 5 (her aunt recovers from pneumonia and she moves in with her). I think she should have been in the entire series (or at least the last three books), especially since it would give Molly a sharper point of contrast from the start and a conflict that was more than "I don't like turnips and my Halloween costume got ruined :(".
Profile Image for Katie.
468 reviews50 followers
March 27, 2023
Re-reading as an adult, here's what stands out:

- Having experimented a little with pin curls, Molly's hair is definitely on the long side for that to work well - no wonder the curls don't last.

- Sometimes Molly and her friends really wind up egging each other on into ideas that they know deep down are no good. Molly's sudden relief when Jill nixes the perm scheme is palpable - but you know that if Jill hadn't walked in, Molly 100% would have gone through with it.

- All of the tap dancing scenes read as though Tripp has zero knowledge or research on the subject.

- Like Happy Birthday, Molly, the ending of this one feels like it really wants to have one more scene. Both endings come up really suddenly.

Compared to the other original AG series, Molly has a clearer six-book arc than Kirsten or Samantha. Jill's comments about how much Molly has grown up over the course of the series while Dad has been away are a fairly obvious way of tying a bow on the whole series, but she's not wrong. Molly's arc is about embracing change. Where the early books focus heavily on how the war has changed Molly's life in a negative way, later books are more about leadership and problem solving.

Consider the Lend a Hand project in Molly Learns a Lesson where Molly drags her friends around their neighborhood in the rain because she can't bring herself to speak up to critique the knitting idea in class versus her leadership at camp in Molly Saves the Day. Even though the other girls don't take her side at first, she's willing to speak up and point out the flaws in Dorinda's plan. We first meet Molly dreaming about ways to convince her mother to make an impossible costume and her friends to be ugly stepsisters. By "Changes," she - with help from her friends and sister - goes beyond dreaming and is ready to take action to get the results she wants.
Profile Image for Angela.
15 reviews
January 28, 2015
I have never been able to read this book without crying. I'm not usually one to cry over books, but this one gets to me every time. So good!
Profile Image for Eleanor.
58 reviews
April 18, 2022
I love Moly’s show.But I am sad that moly gets a cold.
Profile Image for Emily.
852 reviews5 followers
April 26, 2018
I just love this book. And the whole series for that matter. I love the patriotism of the time and wish it were still so today. I also love that Molly’s dad came home I just wish we had more of him in the story!
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for RaspberryRoses.
445 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2024
honestly. kind of wild that molly's insistence that her hair isn't beautiful enough isn't really pushed back on by the narrative. i feel like this has the potential to fuck with a girls self-image.

like don't get me wrong. i don't think its wrong for her to want to curl her hair. and it leads to some lovely scenes with jill that i adored. i guess i just wish we had a more specific look into that issue.

more general thoughts on the series:

golly miss molly... she was an absolute favorite of mine as a kid. i had a real fondness for her, so despite never actually reading her books, that fondness did transfer over to the book series.

It's an odd one, though. I think a lot of the oddness of her books tone is that prevalance of her friends Linda and Susan - they're pretty constantly with her. She's always got her posse of girlies, and they can often bring out the worst in each other. Not in an evil way just in a "let's get a perm" sort of way.

It's also so weird that, throughout this entire series, I don't think the Holocaust is mentioned once...? It's a WW2 book. We are constantly talking about WW2 and the fact we're fighting Nazi's. But even in the peek into the past, it never once discusses why we hated Hitler. It's a pretty shocking omission and it's pretty noticeable throughout the text.
Profile Image for Sadie.
58 reviews
August 27, 2024
Molly is pretty cute in this one. I especially liked the author’s portrayal of her self deprecating inner monologue (I can relate). The ending was perfectly imperfect. I will say though I think this book is very different from the movie… I guess I’ll have to rewatch it to find out!
Profile Image for Shayla Salazar.
166 reviews1 follower
October 17, 2025
Wow…the girl’s conversation about the cost of war was so beautiful and so innocent it would give anyone pause to think. That was incredible!
752 reviews
October 21, 2021
This review is from the perspective of a mother. I am reading the books to decided when they are age appropriate for my daughter.

I'm torn on this book. The early Molly books are about how she resists change, she wishes everything was like before the war, with her family together, and everyone the same. And then she begins to mature in the later books, taking on leadership roles and wanting the spotlight, sometimes in a childish way, but usually good.

Then this book flips everything around and she wishes she was different, that her dad would see how different she is now. So while all ends well for the McIntyres, even if things don't work out 100% for Molly, I feel like the message in this book was confusing compared to where the rest of the series went.

I think the series has highs and lows, but overall, the messages and lessons were well presented.
Profile Image for Laura.
397 reviews22 followers
Read
December 19, 2018
I don't see a lot of point in adding star ratings to these as an adult. . . five stars for nostalgia, but also five stars for laughing a bit at my own nostalgia. My friend and I were discussing how over-the-top this one was, and I just had to revisit it! (However, I also misremembered events from the Christmas book as being included in this one, so the over-the-top content was essentially halved.)
Profile Image for Alex.
6,638 reviews1 follower
December 14, 2019
I’ve really enjoyed re-reading these books. I forgot how good they are, and I especially love the “looking back” historical pages at the end.

This series is a huge part of the reason that I became such a historical fiction nut, and now I can’t wait to re-read the books featuring the other four original girls.
Profile Image for Holly.
768 reviews12 followers
March 15, 2025
Okay so the Molly books didn’t hit as hard as the Addy books. A number of factors are probably at play—maybe because I live abroad in enemy territory, maybe because it’s hard to feel patriotic these days, maybe because the stakes felt flat, maybe because Molly is simply more insufferable. But no matter. I’m still excited to continue reading the American Girl series this year.
44 reviews
Read
March 28, 2025
I also remember this literal fit from her movie molly my patriotic queen
Profile Image for Katie.
43 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2025
A good story but it needs some sensitivity editing out of a line or two.
Profile Image for Sarah.
555 reviews3 followers
May 13, 2021
As someone who identified strongly as a Molly as a child (and still does as an adult), I have had to take a good hard look at myself in this really uncomfortable way. Did I have an existential crisis? No. Is that because I just had one a few months ago during the pandemic? Probably. There's been moments in this series where I've read this and been like, "Oh god..am I really like that?" (Ex. Betraying a friend by dumping her worst fear on her - literally (Molly Saves the Day) ) Or other times where Molly has been kind of a brat (Happy Birthday Molly!) when she concocted an elaborate revenge scheme on a British girl who had been relocated to their home. (Also, total side not on that one - why not make her Jewish? Then they could touch upon all the horrors of the Holocaust which was barely noted in the Peek into the Past in Book 6. Book 6!)

Anyway, onto this book. Perms had had a presence in my childhood, as had crimping and other brutal forms of hair torture. So, I had been totally along with the 'Molly Gets a Perm' ride. I remember being ready to be horrified by the poofy results, but instead her older sister had come to save Molly from a poor life choice. This was relatable content for me, since I took have an older sister who has certainly saved me from other poor life choices.

As an adult reading this, it was hard to deal with the idea that a girl with straight brown hair and glasses couldn't be viewed as pretty enough, and that so much of this book focused on Molly's looks. She's 10. It's gross how as a society in general we've always placed a certain inherent value on a woman's looks, and seeing that in a book for young children is not something that I came here for. I remember distinctly not wanting to wear my glasses when I was around this age, and could it be Val Tripp's fault that I went blindly about life mistaking strangers for friends and friends for strangers? Maybe.

I do think there is a saving grace at the end of this book, where the fact that Molly looks the same as she always did has meaning to her father. As a parent, it's probably a gift to have someone who hasn't changed so drastically you worry you won't fit in anymore after being gone for so long. Has Molly grown? Debatable - the examples Jill gave were kind of trash. She cited Molly's 'generosity' towards Emily as a sign of growth when we all know Molly had been fully ready to banish her from it and had been pretty nasty to her when Jill wasn't around. If she has, it's not enough for her Dad to have missed major points in her life. She is still kind of a kid, and she's still stubbornly sticking to her guns.

(As a reviewer, I try to keep in mind that this book is written for little girls, and not me, but whatever. Once a Molly, always a Molly, so this is all about me no matter the age. Kidding - or am I?)
Profile Image for Laura (Book Scrounger).
770 reviews56 followers
March 7, 2022
Molly is involved in a patriotic dance production, and works hard to get a lead role. Along the way, she tries different ways to make her hair to look the way she wants it to -- hopefully not something that second- or third-grade readers are too caught up in just yet -- but certainly something that most girls experiment with at some point or another (to varying degrees). By the end of the story, things have not worked out the way she wants them to, but it all pales in comparison when she gets the best gift she could have asked for.

Update: My kids enjoyed this one -- I think it's one of my favorites in the series and the ending makes me cry. My kids were a bit distressed at how set Molly was on changing the way she looked -- even though she learns a good lesson, I wish there'd been a bit more discussion about it.
Profile Image for Heather.
52 reviews
August 1, 2025
Time for a series recap! This was such a sweet, family-centric story. I enjoyed getting to see an English perspective of the war in book three/seeing the similarities and differences between that and Molly’s experience as an American child, far away from the war but also missing someone dear to her. I loved the homey and realistic vibes of the family dynamic. The ending came abruptly to me, but was so sweet. The Looking Back sections gave a pretty good basic overview of aspects of WWII in a digestible way for the target audience, while still staying true about how war is not cute and not fun. Being patriotic and having hope against fear was a common reminder for Molly, as it was in the real life 1940s. A good series!
Profile Image for Panda Incognito.
4,665 reviews95 followers
April 1, 2020
Even though I remembered everything about this book's ending and didn't intend to cry, I still had happy tears streaming down my face as I read the last two pages.

This book is a roller coaster of joys and disappointments. When I was a child, I was unhappy with one of the key plot developments, and when the Molly movie adaptation came out, I preferred its picture-perfect ending. Now, however, I am older and know that the book is perfect the way that it is. Sometimes life doesn't go the way that you want and is still beautiful anyway.
Profile Image for Elaine Shipley-pope.
145 reviews13 followers
July 2, 2015
This is the last book in Molly's American Girl Series. Molly has become the star of her dance class and she fights to get the lead part. It comes at a price though and all the pain and toil for her hair has thrown a wrench in her plans. But in the end she gets and even better gift. I thought Changes for Molly was a good and sweet way to wrap up the series. Its a great one for young ladies and gentlemen to read.
39 reviews4 followers
January 8, 2016
I liked this book because it was a true story, and also because it was a girl that didn't have her dads with her and she was really brave and I like characters that believe in themselves also because my dad left to but it was not because he wanted to. It was about a girl that her dad helped the soldiers and was away for 2 years and she wanted to change her style for him. I recommend this book to persons who don't have a family member with them and that likes dancing.
Profile Image for Marian.
875 reviews25 followers
August 8, 2016
The end of the book will probably always make me cry, at least a little.
Profile Image for Kristi Drillien.
Author 4 books25 followers
July 27, 2023
This may be one of the most difficult to relate to in the series, which is sad, because it's the final one (in the main series, at least). I wish the focus hadn't been so strongly on Molly "looking the part," that perhaps she could have learned that talent and ability were more important. But that's not how it plays out and is probably the only one in the series that I rated 4/5, instead of 5/5. Still, the ending is really great!

I thought these books might be silly or feel too light, since these books were written to go along with actual dolls, thus they could have been very quick and simple. However, they don't smack of a marketing ploy; the author did a great job with them, and they're really just like any other book series written for kids this age. Also, the "Looking Back" section at the end of each book is really interesting! I love that it gives a little history of the time period, generally relating to the story, with pictures and even examples of ads/posters/propaganda from that time period. The focus is on children and even women, which is something that you really aren't going to see a lot of places. I think these books could be a great resource for teaching kids age 7+ about the time period, how kids lived in those days, and the hardships they had to deal with. If I'd gotten to these books when my daughter was younger, I would have had her read them and then discussed them with her afterward.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 137 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.