Swing Sideways. By Nanci
Turner Steveson. Harper. $16.99.
This Is All Your Fault, Cassie
Parker. By Terra Elan McVoy. Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins. $16.99.
Preteen readers who do not
have enough emotional upheaval and sadness in their own lives seem to be the
intended audience for Nanci Turner Steveson’s Swing Sideways. It is a summertime story about Anabel (Annie), a
city girl, and California, a country girl, their unlikely friendship – and the
secrets that both deepen and ultimately end it in one of those life-changing
ways that authors do not suggest that young readers avoid but actually invite
them to experience. This is all supposed to be cathartic, but it comes across
as rather manipulative – skillfully manipulative, since Steveson writes very
well and knows how to build melodrama effectively. The book is melodrama rather than drama, with the
relationships forced in ways that are designed to heighten tension rather than
resulting from characterization. Annie suffers from panic attacks. Her parents
are typecast Type A schedulers, her mother in particular filling Annie’s life
with demands and spreadsheets. For her part, California is determined to heal the
estrangement between her mother and her grandfather – who, she says, is going
through a cancer drug trial. The healing will occur when California rediscovers
some ponies that her mother rode as a child; California believes they are still
alive, somewhere on the rundown farm where she is spending the summer. The two
girls are, unsurprisingly, opposites, with Annie timid, anxious, sheltered and
having an eating disorder, and California brave, wild and a free spirit.
Equally unsurprisingly, both learn from each other in the usual coming-of-age
manner, with Annie especially forging new relationship patterns within her
family as she develops confidence and assertiveness. Annie’s parents are
cardboard characters through and through, and California’s relatives are not
much better. The whole secrets-within-secrets plotting has a contrived feeling,
and the eventual wrenching sadness of the novel’s conclusion so clearly seeks
to tug at every reader’s heart again and again that, after a while, the tugging
itself becomes formulaic. That does not undermine its effectiveness: young
readers who stay with the book will almost certainly cry at what happens, and
so will many adults, even when it becomes obvious how things are going to go.
Emotional manipulativeness is an authorial skill that Steveson has in
abundance, and she certainly knows how to create a protagonist who finds out
through unexpected adventures and revelations that she is stronger – and braver
– than she ever knew. But that is part of the issue with Swinging Sideways: the directions in which it will go are the ones
in which tearjerkers for this age range (and often ones for adults) typically
go, and this becomes increasingly apparent as more and more secrets are
revealed. This is a book that is easy to love if you are looking for an
emotional wringing-out and do not examine too closely the techniques the author
uses to provide one.
It is instructive for those
so inclined to compare the structure of Swinging
Sideways with that of This Is All
Your Fault, Cassie Parker, another book set in summertime that is also about
best friends, their relationship, their families and their multitude of
problems and issues. The problems here are mostly those of Fiona Coppleton,
whose onetime BFF, Cassie Parker, circulated Fiona’s diary and thereby exposed
Fiona to all sorts of pain, humiliation, etc. It is rather hard to believe that
Fiona would have brought her diary to school, which is where other kids were
able to read it, but except for that element, this novel has the believability
of events that seem as if they really could happen to girls in this age group
(unlike Swinging Sideways, whose
occurrences are over-the-top and extremely unlikely to parallel those of most
readers). After Cassie and Fiona have their falling-out, school ends for the
year and Cassie takes off on a summer adventure that Terra Elan McVoy
previously wrote about in Drive Me Crazy,
to which This Is All Your Fault, Cassie
Parker is a companion (not a sequel: the books take place at essentially
the same time). With Cassie gone, Fiona has to face her own family problems,
which tie to her parents’ divorce. Fiona’s younger sister, Leelu, is fine with
their dad and his girlfriend, but Fiona is not, and she ratchets up the drama
in her own mind to such an extent that she opts for a summer writing workshop
rather than a family trip to Disneyland. This turns out to be a good decision:
she makes new friends among the other would-be writers and comes to terms with
what happened between herself and Cassie. Reader reactions to Fiona herself
will be central to their feelings about the book as a whole. Fiona can
sometimes be rather annoying and unsympathetic, and her interest in a writing
seminar, a linchpin of the plot, seems rather forced (although not to the very
overdone extent of events in Swinging
Sideways), even though it is tied to her keeping of that fateful diary.
Once Fiona is in the seminar, though, her decision to get back at the girls in
the humiliating-diary incident by writing them into her stories makes sense.
And Fiona does seem to grow in believable real-world ways without McVoy needing
to resort to the sort of extreme events favored by Steveson. Neither of these
books is really new – very similar plots have been done many times before, by
many authors. But both have their appeal: Steveson’s to those seeking emotional
release through weepy melodrama and McVoy’s to those searching for possible
role models to help them through their own difficulties in trying to negotiate
middle-school angst.
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