Many YA novelists seem to feel an obligation to teach a lesson, either in how to deal with the ordinary trials of growing up or in coming to grips with major tragedy. Which is fine, and some of the books I’ve read of that sort are very good indeed. But Strohm’s intent is mostly to entertain, to make her readers laugh, and she accomplishes that goal very successfully. These two books focus on events in two successive years at San Anselmo Prep, a small but high-powered private school in Marin County, California, and there’s some overlap in characters, so I’ll review them together.
Avery Dennis is the do-everything girl of the school, the vivacious blonde no one can say “No: to when she goes hunting for volunteers. She also hasn’t been without a boyfriend since before middle school, has always been the dumper, never the dumpee. That changes when her latest boyfriend, the school’s star athlete, golden boy, and all-around nice guy, breaks up with her a two weeks before prom. Avery is Prom Chairman (naturally) -- how can she not have a date for prom?
Coincidentally, her AP English teacher assigns an oral history project for their last big grade before graduation, and Avery decides to chronicle her entire personal dating history in order to figure out why she was dumped. Unorthodox, but no one can stop Amery when she gets a bee in her bonnet, not even the faculty. She recruits James “Hutch” Hutcherson, her lab partner of four years, class valedictorian, dungeon master extraordinaire, and a national-level young scholar, to help her because no one can solve problems the way he can. Of course, he has his own reasons for helping her out.
Strohm adopts the unusual narrative device of reprinting all the responses to the interviews Avery carries out for her project -- long-time enemies as well as friends and supporters -- which works surprisingly well. The characterizations themselves are sometimes almost clichéd, but every school really does have people like that. And the author has an excellent ear for intelligent teen-speak (San Anselmo Prep has no room for dummies), as when one student observes, upon hearing of Avery being dumped, “It was like we’d all just seen a zebra eat a lion. The world had lost its natural order.” Or the observation by Principal Patel (one of the best characters in the book) that addenda to the student handbook usually originate in reaction to some idea of Avery’s.
Avery and Hutch reappear as supporting characters is The Date to Save, when they both come back for San Anselmo Prep’s homecoming from their freshman year in college, but the focus this time is on Hutch’s kid sister, Angelica, now a sophomore and a very smart cookie in her own right. Angelica is in love with words and yearns to have her fiction printed in the school’s paper, but she keeps getting stonewalled by Colin von Kohorn, the editor, who uses black Post-Its.
Actually, the core of the plot is the fact that Principal Patel doesn’t really understand Google Calendar, so the homecoming football game, the big local competition for Academic Battle (in which Hutch had previously led the school’s team to victory for four solid years, including the national championship his senior year), the fall play, and class elections for student government all fall on the same day in October. What will people like Holly do? She’s not only a cheerleader for the big game, and a key member of the AcaBat team, she’s also running for Sophomore Class President -- and she can’t possibly be in all three places at once, but she can’t skip any of them, either.
Angelica’s assignment for the paper -- she finally has one -- is an article on Academic Battle, since she’s attended the competition for years to watch her brother win, but she discovers the great scheduling screw-up, and also discovers that certain parts of it were deliberate for evil purposes, not just an administrative screw-up. And as she documents her attempts to produce the best news story ever, it becomes an oral history similar to that in the first book. And again, the results are frequently hilarious. I recommend both books to readers of any age.