Odessa Again. By Dana
Reinhardt. Illustrated by Susan Reagan. Wendy Lamb Books. $15.99.
Twerp. By Mark Goldblatt.
Random House. $16.99.
Kevin Spencer 3: Crush. By
Gary Paulsen. Yearling. $6.99.
Kevin Spencer 4: Vote. By
Gary Paulsen. Wendy Lamb Books. $12.99.
The saying is that you can’t
go home again, but preteens and young teens can and do return to the past in a
variety of different ways – taking readers with them – in these novels. Odessa
Green-Light – yes, that is her name – really does return to the past in young-adult
author Dana Reinhardt’s first book for ages 8-12. The basic plot here is
identical to the basic plots of many other books for girls in this age group:
Mom and Dad have split up, Odessa is unhappy about it, and she needs to adjust
to her new life and cope with her annoying younger brother; but what she really
wants to do is get her parents back together again. The basic story framework
is so familiar that young readers might think they have read the book before,
under some other title – except for the gimmick. That gimmick is time travel,
of a specific and humorous sort. Odessa, brother Oliver and their mom have
moved into a new house, and when Odessa gets angry and stomps on the attic
floor, she falls through and lands in the same place – a day earlier. So now
she has the chance to change and correct all sorts of things, big and little,
hopefully culminating in the correction of the biggest thing of all: her
parents’ divorce and her father’s upcoming remarriage. However, it turns out
that there are restrictions on the time travel: Odessa initially goes back 24
hours, but when she reverses time again, it is for 23 hours, then 22, and so
on, so she realizes she has only a limited number of chances to get done what
she really wants to accomplish. Working toward that goal, she develops a GMOP
(Grand Master Oliver Plan) that later changes to a GMOOP (Grand Master
Oliver/Odessa Plan), eventually using her last jump back in time – a one-hour
trip – to maneuver her mother into driving her and Oliver to her father’s
marriage to his new girlfriend. By that time, Odessa knows just how to disrupt
the ceremony and get her parents back together again; except that there is just
enough reality in this frothy and unreal story so that her plans do not go as
she wants them to, and everything is for the best because her magically boosted ideas go awry. Odessa Again is often silly and sometimes amusing, with all the
characters exceedingly pleasant to each other (including the divorced parents),
so it is more an exercise in escapism than anything else.
Twerp is a much more serious book that involves a different sort of
escape, or attempted escape, and a different sort of revisiting of the past.
This is a novel about bullying – an increasingly common topic for preteen and
young teenage readers – and is unusual for being told from the viewpoint of the
bully, not the victim. Mark Goldblatt, like Reinhardt, here offers his first
book for readers in this age group; and also like Reinhardt, Goldblatt creates
a novel with a familiar story arc and one specific gimmick (hers is magic; his
is the bully’s point of view). Twerp
is told in the first person by Julian Twerski, who has just returned to school
after a week-long suspension and walks right into an English assignment of
doing a report on Shakespeare’s Julius
Caesar. But his teacher, Mr. Selkirk, offers him an alternative: write
about the occurrence that got him and some of his friends suspended and he can
skip the Shakespeare essay. Julian promptly agrees, and starts writing about
everything but the suspension-causing
incident. Goldblatt’s idea here is to flesh Julian out as a character and
provide insight into his personality and his motivation for doing what he did,
whatever that turns out to be; but what Goldblatt actually produces is the
story of a pretty ordinary sixth-grader who has done some mildly interesting
things and some moderately silly ones, but who has nothing in his background or
activities that would point toward the event that got him suspended – except
maybe for his closeness with a specific group of friends, one of whom is more
of a troublemaker than Julian himself is. So Julian writes about the
love-letter incident in which he sent something on behalf of his best friend,
and the whole thing backfired; and about why he and his friends call a lot
where they hung out Ponzini; and about what the word “twerp,” which Julian uses
to refer to himself, means. And it is only at the end of the book, finally,
that Julian drags the story of the incident that led to his suspension out of
himself – and a harrowing one it turns out to be, to such an extent that it is
out of keeping with the tone of the rest of the book. The feel-good aftermath
of the incident – or feel-reasonably-good, anyway – ends the book on a positive
note, but some readers will likely consider themselves whipsawed by the very
different focuses of Twerp between
its opening and its conclusion.
No such issues will affect
readers of Gary Paulsen’s short books about Kevin Spencer: they are always
light and amusing, and come and go so quickly that it is good to have a pair of
them around rather than just one. So it is fortunate that a couple of them are
available right now for anyone who wants to revisit the series, or visit it for
the first time: the third, Crush,
originally published last year, is now available in paperback, and there is a
new, fourth book as well, called Vote.
The first two books – Liar, Liar and Flat Broke – are moderately enjoyable as
a double dose as well. They introduce Kevin, an eighth-grader whose talent for
lying lands him in hot water as his lies continue to mount. In the first book,
he tries to overcome his propensity for mistruths; in the second, needing
money, he again finds himself in the midst of a series of misunderstandings. Crush brings romance into Kevin’s life,
in the person of Tina Zabinski, whom Kevin plans to get as his girlfriend
through science – since he knows that love is based on chemistry (well, some kind of chemistry). Paulsen’s
subtitle for Crush pretty well sums
it up: “The Theory, Practice and Destructive Properties of Love.” And the
individual chapter titles move the story along just as quickly as the narrative
does: “The Scientific Mind Embraces Experimental Difficulties,” “The Scientific
Mind Studies Truth vs. Theories,” “The Scientific Mind Is Sometimes Clueless,”
and so on. By the end of the book, Kevin is poised to have some enjoyable time
with Tina despite all his earlier missteps and despite the lurking presence of
a new kid, Cash Devine, whom Kevin sees as an inevitable rival. And then comes Vote, in which smooth-talking Cash is
running for class president – abetted by his female opposite number and Kevin’s
sort-of-friend, Katie Knowles – and Kevin, who at the start of this book has
officially become Tina’s boyfriend, decides that the only way to keep his love
life intact is to run for class president himself, and defeat Cash. This isn’t
terribly logical, but logic is not a strong point of the Kevin Spencer books
and is not intended to be a driving force. The whole point of Paulsen’s series
is to have fun with a pleasant central character who has big ideas and big
thoughts and who keeps messing things up but somehow always comes out all right
in the end – not an original plot design for books for this age range, but a
reliable one. The books’ subtitles and chapter titles all follow the same
pattern, so it is only to be expected that Vote
is subtitled “The Theory, Practice, and Destructive Properties of Politics,”
and contains such chapters as “The True Politician Relishes the Opportunity to
Switch Things Up” and “The True Politician Studies, Evaluates and Benefits from
What Others Would Consider a Setback.” By the end of Vote, Kevin realizes that he didn’t have to do all the things he
thought he had to do in order to keep Tina as his girlfriend, and he is all set
for his next lighthearted adventure. Or two.
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