Anatomy of a Misfit. By
Andrea Portes. HarperTeen. $17.99.
The Triple Threat, Book I: The
Walk On. By John Feinstein. Knopf. $16.99.
The Turtle of Oman. By Naomi
Shihab Nye. Illustrations by Betsy Peterschmidt. Greenwillow/HarperCollins.
$16.99.
Death, dislocation and deep
heartache – these are the basics of books that proclaim themselves more serious
than others intended for preteens and teenagers. The angst tends to flow in
predictable channels, although it is edgier in books specifically aimed at ages
14 and up, such as Andrea Portes’ Anatomy
of a Misfit. This is in many ways a typical high-school novel, about
popular kids, ones who do not fit in, ostracism and crowd involvement, loners
and extroverts. Said by Portes to be based on her own high-school experiences,
the book nevertheless reads like a delving into formula writing. There is a
popular girl, protagonist Anika, who is, however, not the queen bee of the
school and who must therefore listen when the queen bee, Becky, tells her what
to do. And one thing Becky tells Anika is not to date Logan, an outsider who
does not quite fit in even though he is, predictably, hot. Instead, Anika dates
Jared, a prototypical “bad boy” and thus a hot guy himself. But Anika’s heart
is not cooperating with what Becky tells her, and things are further
complicated by the usual-in-books-like-this family issues: Anika herself needs
social acceptance because she is living in Nebraska and the background of her
father, who is from Romania, means she does not fit in with the well-scrubbed
Midwesterners who populate the school; Logan, for his part, has genuinely
serious family issues involving, primarily, a father who is both a drunk and
abusive. That seriousness eventually turns explosive, just when Anika is about
to take a chance and reveal her true feelings to Logan – and the result is
violence, heartbreak and Anika’s eventual realization that the only thing that
matters is to listen to your heart and say what is in it as soon as possible,
because tomorrow may be too late. This is so contrived and saccharine an ending
– even if it is based on events that actually occurred – that readers may look
back at it after throwing away the tear-sodden tissues that it will surely
provoke and wonder why exactly they reacted so strongly to something so pat and
expectable. The writing here is drenched in I’m-so-with-it-ness: “This dinner
is gonna be like the most uncomfortable dinner of my lifetime.” “‘So, um,
Anika. You made my night kinda.’” And the book as a whole insists, absolutely
insists, that it Means Something. Or wants to.
The Walk On, football-focused first book of a sports-oriented
trilogy for ages 10 and up, is altogether milder, but it still tries to prove
its real-worldliness by having a positive test for steroids figure
significantly in the plot. The story itself is straightforward: protagonist
Alex is a triple threat (hence the series title), being great at football,
basketball and baseball. Or he was
multiply talented in the place where he used to live – now he and his mom have
moved to a new town, where sports really
matter and where Alex is going to have to prove himself again. And again. He
wants, of course, to be quarterback – why not start at the top in a new town
where everyone’s loyalty has already been established? But Alex comes head-on
against the reality of established relationships in the Philadelphia suburb
where he now lives: the current quarterback, Matt, may not be as good a player
as Alex, but he is settled into his positon and commands the full loyalty of
the coach. So the coach benches Alex, conceals his abilities, and so on – which
is about as real-world as…well, as nothing in the real world, since a
sports-obsessed small town is inevitably going to want the absolutely best
players on the field that it can get, and winning-is-all-that-matters coaches will
gladly dump good and loyal players for a better chance at a championship. This
opposite-of-reality book also has Alex and Matt developing such a good-buddy
sort of rivalry that, when Alex’s dad calls him after a game and says something
about Alex bailing Matt out, Alex responds that Matt is “a really good
quarterback. Plus, he’s been my biggest supporter all season.” Then comes the
drug test, with Alex testing positive for steroids; this sets him and his mom
on a quest to prove his innocence – resulting in a series of charges,
counter-charges, revelations, counter-revelations, and eventual comeuppance for
the bad guys (whose motives are intended to be understandable, if scarcely
admirable) and success for Alex. And onward heads The Triple Threat to the next novel, in which Alex will surely
excel in the next sport. The Walk On
is fine for football-obsessed readers who do not care much about character
development, of which there is none here: even Alex is simply “the talented
quarterback,” which is all anyone needs to know about him, and the other
characters are even thinner.
A planned relocation sets in
motion the events of The Turtle of Oman,
too, but this is a move over a much greater distance than Alex’s. Aref Al-Amri
and his family are about to move to Michigan from their home in Oman, with Aref
continuing a family tradition by making lists of things – including facts about
turtles, which he finds fascinating. Aref does not want to move – he would
prefer somewhere closer, such as India – but he knows he must, since his father
has gone on ahead. Both of Aref’s parents are university teachers, his father
of biology and his mother of English, so Aref comes from a well-to-do and
well-educated family, but he is nevertheless provincial and unsure of what to
expect from the upcoming move. Naomi Shihab Nye’s book is not about adjustment
to the United States, however; it focuses on the necessities of departure from
Oman, as Aref says goodbye to his friends and his homeland and looks forward to
the time when he will return. Nye is at pains to show the multigenerational
love and complete, secular reasonableness of the Al-Amri family, no doubt to
counter concerns that parents of kids ages 8-12 (the book’s target audience)
may have about people and events in the real Arab world. In fact, the book
tries so hard to make readers identify with and like Aref that it becomes a
little fairy-tale-like, with the many lists within the narrative serving to
humanize the characters even more than the story itself does. In one list about
what people eat on airplanes, for instance, one of Aref’s items is, “Maybe the
passengers gobble gigantic mounds of cotton candy since they are above the
clouds.” In one of his lists about turtles, he writes that May 23 is World
Turtle Day. In another, he writes, “People hunt turtles for their meat. Yucko.”
And in a list about Michigan, Aref writes, “The Grand Hotel on Mackinac Island
features the world’s biggest porch.” Everything is so warm, so well-meaning
here that it is difficult to see the book as anything more than a young boy’s
journal – which is most of what The
Turtle of Oman is. It is a pleasant work, certainly a well-meaning one,
largely without drama or, indeed, significant occurrences of any kind – a
slice-of-life book aimed at showing that people from Oman are just like people
from Michigan in all the ways that matter. The real-world terror and trauma
associated with so much of the Arab world simply do not exist here, making the
book one that is curiously divorced from reality even as it accurately explores
some (but only some) aspects of it.
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