I can (but really only very grudgingly) appreciate that with Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff (a what I would label partial graphic novel published in 2006 and to date the first of a two book series) Jennifer L. Holm and Elicia Castaldi present an eclectic verbal and visual assemblage of so-called stuff, of objects, text messages, post-it notes, report cards, newspaper clippings, school assignments, letters, notes-to-self, scrap book entries etc. to chronicle the bumpy (but also interesting) school year of smartly sassy seventh grader Ginny Davis. And as the months pass and the school year progresses in Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff Ginny is shown by Holm and Castaldi (both textually and visually) as trying to tackle an impressive to-do list (such as for example getting a new father, which happens when Ginny's widowed mother remarries, obtaining the role of the sugarplum fairy in The Nutcracker ballet, which unfortunately is not successful, convincing her mother that she, that Ginny should be allowed to visit her grandfather in Florida on her own for Easter, with yes, this being another success story) and with Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff also showing Ginny's poems and some of her older brother Henry's comics.
But while Elicia Castaldi's collages for Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff show lively, present visually appealing mixes of objects to tell Ginny Davis' story (bottle-cap linings, candy wrappers, hair dye boxes, drugstore receipts, salon bills, a bank check and so on and so on) and that both they and Jennifer L. Holm's bits and pieces of short texts also focus on some darker themes in Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff like Ginny being upset regarding her brother Henry's drinking and driving and his not so innocent and potentially dangerous pranks (and how her manyfold worries as well as Ginny's adjustment issues regarding her new stepfather are also causing er normally excellent school grades to suddenly plummet), sorry, but for me personally (and particularly for my inner middle school aged young teenager) Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff has NOT AT ALL been a reading pleasure but rather a slogging and annoyingly frustrating chore devoid of any true joy and majorly lacking all and sundry necessary emotionality.
For with Holm and Castaldi focussing mostly on the "stuff" mentioned in the book title, I have for one found Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff majorly distracting and tediously uninteresting and that for two, Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff also never lets me get to know Ginny Davis all that closely, personally and deeply, so that Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff leaves pretty much everything to be desired for me, features nothing that I textually would want or need (and that while my after considerable inner debate one star rating for Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff might seem rather overly harsh, I really and truly have not even somewhat remotely enjoyed what Jennifer L. Holm and Elicia Castaldi have created and provided with and in Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff and that I do find Ginny Davis and in fact all of the characters encountered in Middle School Is Worse Than Meatloaf: A Year Told Through Stuff woefully, brutally one-sided, hugely boring and indeed as annoyingly uninteresting, distracting and frustrating as all that presented and featured stuff, stuff, stuff and more stuff).