Sky Jumpers 2: The Forbidden
Flats. By Peggy Eddleman. Random House. $16.99.
Cheesie Mack #5: Cheesie Mack Is
Sort of Freaked Out. By Steve Cotler. Illustrated by Douglas Holgate. Random
House. $15.99.
Confessions of a So-Called Middle
Child. By Maria T. Lennon. Harper. $6.99.
Watch Out, Hollywood! More
Confessions of a So-Called Middle Child. By Maria T. Lennon. Harper.
$16.99.
Adventures for preteens,
ages 8-12, tend to be either boy-focused or girl-focused, not both, and tend to
be written to appeal to specific kinds of readers – for example, ones
interested in fantasy or ones preferring twists on their own daily lives. Sky Jumpers is one of many series set in
a future dystopia, although a somewhat milder one than is found in other
sequences. It is girl-focused, its protagonist being aptly named 12-year-old
Hope, who lives in the town of White Rock in the days after World War III. The
town is close to a poisonous, invisible, 15-foot thick area of compressed air
called the Bomb’s Breath, left over from the war. Hope is the only person who
has ever found a way through it – that happened in the first Sky Jumpers book. In the second, The Forbidden Flats, an earthquake
displaces the Bomb’s Breath and it starts to move lower and lower, toward White
Rock. It is up to Hope – in books like this, things are always up to the young,
imperfectly qualified protagonist, never to adults – to journey across the
bandit-controlled areas of the book’s title to find something that can stop the
Bomb’s Breath from continuing to drop lower and eventually wipe out the town. The
whole plot is less believable and less original than that of the original
novel, and the interplay among Hope and the friends who accompany her, Brock
and Aaren, is predictable and not terribly involving. That Hope will face
multiple challenges and overcome all of them is a given; that she will do so in
spite of, or because of, her headstrong ways, is also a given. There are a few
elements here that are intriguing and even amusing, such as Hope’s bringing
back a piece of pavement as a souvenir because “it’s what the roads were made
out of before the bombs.” By and large, though, the adventure here proceeds in
unsurprising ways, its eventual success a foregone conclusion, with Hope’s
mission-accomplished return to home and family being a sure thing.
Books for this age group
that happen in our workaday world also tend to rely on specific central
characters with whom readers are supposed to identify – characters such as
Cheesie Mack (for boy-oriented books) and Charlie C. Cooper (for girl-focused
ones). Steve Cotler’s fifth Cheesie Mack book, Cheesie Mack Is Sort of Freaked Out, has a Halloween theme, with
Cheesie’s best friend, Georgie, planning a prank to end all pranks: convincing
people that a flying saucer filled with aliens is hovering right above their
town. The practical joke works, freaking out everybody in sixth grade, but then
things backfire when Cheesie’s older sister, Goon, plots a revenge prank that
has Cheesie thinking that maybe there really are aliens out there after all. Amusing
illustrations by Douglas Holgate enliven the proceedings, whether showing an
overdone candy-cane costume or a bewildered-looking tortoise; Cheesie’s
innumerable lists help as well; and everything moves at a quick enough pace to
distract readers from the fact that not all that much actually happens here –
the book simply reshuffles characters who have appeared in previous series
entries and has them do somewhat different, somewhat seasonal things. Still,
that will be plenty for preteens who have enjoyed Cheesie’s previous
adventures.
And then there is Maria T.
Lennon’s Watch Out, Hollywood! More
Confessions of a So-Called Middle Child. The book’s title makes it clear
that this is a companion book to Confessions
of a So-Called Middle Child, originally published last year and now
available in paperback. The first book introduces Charlie and develops her into
a reformed bully and basically good person who eventually saves her friend
Marta from being taken away by Social Services as part of a plot by Charlie’s
nasty ex-friend, Trixie, to get Marta off the gym team. It really helps to have
read the first book to enjoy the second one, even though the entire plot of the
original novel is quickly summarized in the follow-up – because Watch Out, Hollywood! More Confessions of a
So-Called Middle Child is all about what happens in the aftermath of the
events of the prior book. Members of the media are falling all over themselves
to get Charlie’s story, calling her a hero and swelling her already-swollen
head as she dreams of becoming a big-time celebrity. She even has her own agent
to help make it happen. But there would be no book if the sequel were only a rehash and update of the events
of the previous novel, so of course there have to be new plot threads in it. And
there are. The problem in Watch Out,
Hollywood! More Confessions of a So-Called Middle Child is that Charlie
decides that to get where she wants to go, she needs to tell a lie, just a
little one, and of course that small untruth quickly expands into a whole pile
of trouble, resulting in Charlie being labeled a “scorpion” by her classmates –
even including Marta, who stops believing that Charlie was at all selfless in
helping her. “Maybe a long time ago I had a little scorpion in me, but now I am
good. I am kind.” So says Charlie – but others are having none of it, and
predictable complications ensue that force Charlie to confront her inner
uncertainties, determine the difference between right and wrong, and rediscover
what friendship is all about. That is, what happens in Watch Out, Hollywood! More Confessions of a So-Called Middle Child is
almost identical to what happens in many other novels for this age group that
are set in an approximation of the real world – even the fact that Charlie
develops an honest-to-goodness crush, a nearly universal element in books for
girls in this age group, is part of this second book’s plot. The sequel may be
formulaic, but girls who enjoy Charlie in the first book will like following
her further misadventures in the second. And that, of course, is the point of
companion books and series for preteens: to continue bringing a pleasantly
comfortable sense of more-of-the-same to readers who already know and like the
central characters.
No comments:
Post a Comment