Claudia breaks her leg due to a prank executed by one of her baby sitting charges. She has an internal crisis about her identity as a baby sitter and an artist, while her fellow baby sitters wage war on the client who caused the prank in the first place. I read this book when I was about nine. I remember I left it at a friend's house and was furious when she later pretended it was her book (even going so far as to write her name in the cover!)
Things I remember from reading this as a kid:
The book begins when the library shows films of people getting hit in the face with a pie. Even as a kid this sounded incredibly stupid, and a terrible waste of time.
Claudia getting her friends to sneak in junk food to her hospital room, and sharing her flowers with her cranky roommate, which is something I never would have done. In this book Claudia is a way better person than I am.
The baby sitters going to war with Betsy Sobak even though they don't tell her about it. I also remember that Betsy makes someone a sundae with shaving cream, which to me was more mean spirited and horrible than even Claudia's broken leg. (The broken leg was an accident, but the shaving cream sundae was intentional.)
Claudia getting her cast cut off her leg. She dreads having the saw so close to her (which I could relate to) and she can't believe that she can't just jump up and start using her leg once the cast is off. It hadn't occurred to me until I read this book that keeping your limb in a cast would mean you weren't using the muscles, which would mean you couldn't use the limb again without some major physical therapy. I'm glad this book pointed out such a thing to me because it made me extra, extra careful about not breaking bones.
Things I've considered since reading this as an adult:
I can dimly remember a time when I thought practical jokes were funny, but for years I have been adamantly against them. I wonder if reading this book changed my mind because I hated all the so-called jokes described here, even the ones that didn't seem too harmless like Dawn's fainting act, or Kristy's disappearing ink pen.
Claudia's parents are disappointed in her B-minus on a math quiz, which made me think that the reason Claudia doesn't try harder to be good in school is because she knows that no matter what she does, it will never be good enough for her tiger parents and their high expectations. I would have been THRILLED with a B-minus in math when I was thirteen. I never once made a math grade that was higher than a C after fifth grade.
Betsy Sobak is totally an oops baby. Her sister is 23, and has a child of her own. Betsy's parents don't pay any attention to her, let her run wild and drive away all her baby sitters. Even when she maims the teenage girl put in charge of her they barely notice. Betsy is going to have some issues when she realizes her parents really, really didn't want another child so late in life. In fact, that's probably why she plays these dangerous, mean jokes, because she knows something is wrong with the way her parents treat her, and she is desperate to get their attention. She is also sneaky in a way that most eight year olds aren't, and she does things that aren't exactly practical jokes, like pretending that someone was at the door, and then hiding from her baby sitter, then jumping out to scare her. To me that's not really a "joke", it's a cry for help. To pretend that someone showed up and rang the doorbell, then to disappear and listen to your sitter search the whole house for you and start to panic, and then frighten her is the work of a sociopath. I hope to god she and Sean Addison don't hook up in high school, or things could get scary for the happy town of Stoneybrook.
Claudia is pissed when she breaks her leg because of Betsy's jokes, and I don't blame her. I can't believe her parents didn't sue the Sobaks, or at the very least call them and yell at them. There is no mention at all of how the adults handled this situation, or if Cookie Sobak even acknowledges her daughter's role in it. If my daughter got her leg broken so badly that she had to stay in the hospital for a week (racking up quite a bill I would imagine) and she had to miss school for a few weeks (especially if I thought she made bad grades) I would not just let it go. At the very least I wouldn't allow my daughter to baby sit for Betsy again. I'm surprised that the BSC continues to sit for her, even if they do want to get back at her for what she did to Claudia. There's really no hesitation when they decide to sit for her again -- they just jump right in. When Becky continues her pranks on them even when the explicitly tell her not to I am pretty concerned for her. She desperately needs mental help, or possibly a psychiatric ward.
Claudia's homeroom calls her while she at home recovering. Her teacher puts the call on speakerphone, and aims the receiver of the phone at the class so they can shout "Hi" and "Good-bye" at Claudia. Kristy and Mary Anne planned the whole thing, and were hoping Claudia would come home on a school day so they could surprise her. In this day and age this is the saddest, most pathetic thing ever, but Claudia is living in 1988 and she is thrilled. I know this scene was written to show how popular and "with it" Claudia is, but it makes her sound so dorky.
Claudia mentions very briefly that she has thoughts of becoming a clothing designer, which from what I recall, is the only time she expresses something like this in the entire series. I think it's the perfect career choice for her, and I wish the series had focused more on it, even though Claudia's heart is clearly in mediums of art like sculpting and painting. Still. . . with her love of "wild" clothes, and her interesting outfit combos, I think fashion design would be an amazing career choice. If Claudia ever grows up I like to envision her and Janine starting an online clothing company like Modcloth but way better, and making millions of dollars to the delight (maybe) of their parents. To this day I feel like the spirit of Claudia whispers in my ear when I buy clothes, or (most especially) when I choose my clothes in the morning. (Try not to wear the same outfit twice, black and white is fine but don't be afraid of colors, if you wear it with confidence you will pull it off, etc.) I think Claudia, a fictional character, has had more influence on my fashion choices than any real life designer.
I thought it was funny that in this book Kristy makes notes in the BSC notebook where the members write up their jobs. They look to be about reimbursing club members for business expenses with money from the club treasury, which is so fiscally responsible and adorable. I know that most of the events the BSC is involved with are paid for with the treasury funds, but you don't hear much about unexpected club expenses. Kristy noting it in the notebook, and making Dawn keep a record of it seems a bit much for middle school girls running a lowly baby sitting club, but is a sign of great things to come from future CEO Kristy Thomas.