Sunday, May 22, 2016

“You’ve never wanted to be my friend. All you’ve done is pity me.” BSC #111: Stacey’s Secret Friend (1997)

This is one of those books where I go into it hoping that it’s not nearly as bad as I expect it’s going to be. Look at the cover for a second. Yes, Tess wasn’t exactly fashionable for 1997, but neither were some of these other kids. And the back cover is so condescending toward Tess: “Why won’t Tess wise up? Doesn’t she want Stacey’s help?”
(Really bad cover copy, sorry.)
Umm, no. I’ve never read this, but I’m pretty sure Tess never walked up to Stacey and said, “Look, the kids are all making fun of me. Can you give me fashion tips?”
I was way more of a Tess than a Stacey in middle school, believe me.
So Tess Swinhart is new at SMS, and Stacey and the other kids think she’s strange. After she accidentally ruins the papier-mâché Stacey and Barbara* were working on and then dumps some papier-mâché on Alan, he nicknames her Swine-heart the Destroyer, because her upturned nose and taste for pink clothing make her look vaguely like a pig. It gets worse and worse until a football game where it all comes to a head. Everyone is voting for a new school mascot, and one of the choices is pig. Someone pastes a picture of Tess over the pig picture, and Stacey doesn’t realize it before she holds it up. People start throwing things at Tess and she falls out of the bleachers, breaking her ankle and spraining her wrist. She then tells Stacey off, because she figured out some time back that Stacey didn’t really like her for her. She does let Stacey help her get back at a boy who was trying to embarrass her, and she ends up good friends with Barbara. And Stacey realizes she was kind of a jerk.
Meanwhile, Jackie and Nicky have been acting odd, with Nicky putting on fake muscles and acting like Jackie’s bodyguard. Eventually, Jackie is able to ‘use his words’ to sort out the disagreement with the three boys, and they’re all friends again. So intellectually stimulating, it hurts.
Interesting Tidbits
*Unlike last week, when I couldn’t place Ethan, I remembered Barbara right away. Even if I’d forgotten, she’s introduced as, basically, the girl whose best friend died in the drunk driving accident. (#93)
Right off the bat, when we meet Tess, one of the first things that gets described is her outfit. Stacey hates it, but I thought two things. 1. I love retro clothes, so I drooled at the white blouse with Peter Pan collar. 2. If Claudia had worn it, Stacey would have thought it looked great. (C’mon, you know you were thinking it too!)
Also, Tess is described as ‘five foot nine and big boned’ and I was wondering, who’s that big in eighth grade? Then I remembered that my best friend from school was even taller (she’s now six foot) and had a solid frame like that, so I shut my mouth.
HA! Claudia: “I’m sure some people think I’m strange because of the way I dress.” Truer words have never been written.
Stacey’s English class is studying The Canterbury Tales. I really hope they’re reading the sparky bits!
King shows up in the story, subtly continuing the pig theme by calling Tess Babe. It actually worked, because he acted like he was flirting with her, calling her Babe because he was interested…not because of the then-current pig movie.
Tess wears huge black-framed glasses, so Stacey tries to drop hints to her, suggesting she should get contact lenses. These days, Tess would be so fashionable and hipster! (Oh, and Stacey brings it up by asking Barbara if she knows Mallory, since Mal wants contacts. Barbara thinks that Mal is cute, which goes along with my theory that Mal actually is a lot cuter than she thinks she is…she’s just awkward and not sure of herself.)
Claudia spelling! Defanately, sumthing, bruther, secrut, ajent, mishon, wut, culd. She also uses wright for right.
Ooh, I love when they reference old plot points! “Shannon thinks Shea has a crush on Claudia.” Not only is this a great referral to #63, but Shannon did hang out with them quite a bit (and still does on occasion) so it’s fun to bring in her point of view.
Mrs. Rodowsky got a new cell phone (cellular phone, of course)! Next thing you know, they’ll talk about emailing each other. Wacky! (That’s what Shea keeps calling Jackie, who actually stole his mother’s phone and took it to school with him. These days, I know kids about his age with cell phones….)
“Glasses are easier. Besides, I like them.” Yes! I feel that way about contact lenses, too.
Stacey keeps trying to help Tess…but only behind the scenes. She keeps pushing her to wear makeup, dress more fashionably, and be more social. Yet she doesn’t really want to be her friend; she just sees her as a project. This becomes clear when she doesn’t invite Tess to sit with her and her friends, but I don’t think Stacey even realizes it. When Kristy asks her why she didn’t invite Tess to sit with them, Stacey knows she should have but can’t figure out why she didn’t. This is it, right here. This is exactly why I never read many of the later Stacey books until now. This aspect of Stacey—the condescending idea that she has that because she’s pretty and popular that everyone wants to be like her—is exactly why I hated the Staceys of my high school.
You know it’s bad when even Claudia suggests that Stacey’s not really helping Tess. I wouldn’t say Stacey is as bad as Alan and Cokie, who keep calling Tess names and making comic strips making fun of her, but trying to force someone to fit in to one narrow view of how a middle school girl should be isn’t exactly being nice, either. I was a very square peg at that age, and, like Tess, I didn’t want to change to fit in. I had a couple friends who accepted me for who I was, and that was all I really needed.
Stacey says you can’t feel mascara, but she’s wrong. Tess says it makes her eyes itch and her eyelashes sticky, but Stacey says you can’t feel your eyelashes. Well, I have very long eyelashes and they hit my skin and glasses on a regular basis. If they’re sticky, I know it, and when I first started wearing mascara, I put on too much of it and it was very sticky and clumpy.
By chapter ten, the following people have all questioned Stacey’s motives with Tess: Claudia, Kristy, Mary Anne…and Tess herself. King is still subtly mocking Tess, and even asks her out on a date to a restaurant called Hog Heaven. But since Stacey knows he’s teasing her, she keeps telling Tess not to fall for his crap. Tess thinks Stacey has a thing for King and that’s why she’s so set on Tess not talking to him. Honestly, if Stacey really wanted to help Tess, instead of trying to make her conform, she should have told her, “I don’t want to be rude, but I’d want to know if it were me…” and then tell Tess that everyone’s making pig jokes about her (based upon her looks, last name and love of the color pink), and tell Tess she thinks King’s part of it. Stacey just keeps deflecting Tess from the jokes instead of explaining them.
It gets even worse when, during the football game, Stacey catches Tess sitting and reading a magazine while everyone else is cheering. She decides Tess is pigheaded (and then gets mad at herself for it) but then says the following: I sighed. Maybe this was all my fault. If I’d sat with her at least I could have taken the magazine away and made her stand up and cheer. I had my work cut out for me. Aaaaaand this is where I want to bitch slap Stacey.
Stacey is the one holding up the pictures of the mascot choices, so a lot of people think she and Barbara—who was reading the choices out loud—are responsible for the Tess picture. Stacey didn’t know it was there until she held it up, and as soon as she realized, she dropped it so no one else could see it, but she still feels guilty about it. She assumes Barbara does as well, but Barbara says she feels terrible for Tess but has nothing to feel guilty about. I liked that because it’s true. Barbara didn’t take that picture and paste it on the poster; she didn’t know it was there. She’s actually been nice to Tess and never tried to make her conform, which makes her a nice contrast to Stacey.
The title quote is what Tess says when Stacey tries to find out why Tess is mad at her. She says she doesn’t need Stacey’s pity, because she’s happy the way she is. Go, Tess, go!
Stacey discovers that Tess’s fashion tastes are what is currently trendy in Paris, where Tess lived until recently, and suddenly she feels a little differently about Tess. Once again, that’s what bothers me about Stacey. If, as Tess said, she’d ever just had a real conversation with her, she might have found out they liked each other and they could have actually been friends. The whole thing is totally Stacey’s fault, and it takes her a while to acknowledge that.
This could have been way worse. If Tess had had less self-esteem, she might have not stood up for herself, and this might have ended very badly.
Outfits
Tess: short pink cardigan, white blouse with lace trimmed Peter Pan collar, brown corduroys, black boots; hot pink sweat suit with lace trim; pink, red and yellow plaid polyester pantsuit; baggy pink overalls, satin shirt with pink and green daisies, pink barrette; blue jeans, blue sweatshirt; pink corduroys and pink nubby sweater; pink blouse with puffy sleeves, short black skirt

Next: Mystery #31

“Judging from that little belly of yours, you could take a tip from him.” BSC Super Special #14: BSC in the USA (1997)

Jack Schafer tries to take over Watson’s role as the cool BSC dad by agreeing to take Dawn, Jeff, and a couple friends across country in an RV. Watson, not to be outdone, decides to take the rest of the BSC along with Elizabeth, David Michael, Karen and Andrew. The groups take two different routes and meet in Palo City.
The Schafer-mobile takes the northern route and includes the following plotlines:
Dawn is a whiny brat, because she wants to see a ghost town and then is shocked to discover that it’s cheesy.
Jeff hates being surrounded by girls and goes rock climbing.
Mary Anne feels like Jack is picking on her by taking shots at Richard repeatedly, and meets her grandmother at the Mall of America.
Stacey meets up with Ethan (who?) in Seattle after a bunch of ridiculous hijinks.
Claudia fights with Stacey and is surprised that her favorite modern bands aren’t in the rock and roll hall of fame.
Kristy wants to go to as many baseball stadiums as possible, and runs into her dad in San Francisco.
Plus, each RV has group drama…this crew runs out of gas in the middle of the Badlands and has a run in with a bear.
Watson’s crew takes a southerly route and this happens:
Mallory gets emotional at Assateague Island after seeing the wild horses.
Abby convinces the kids (Karen, mostly) that Elvis is really alive, and then gets upset at the Grand Canyon.
Jessi inexplicably decides she wants to see the plantation where her ancestors were slaves.
Karen sulks because she almost doesn’t get to see her chosen landmark, while David Michael is shocked to discover that rodeos are inhumane.
This group experiences a tornado and keeps running into another RV with a girl the group finds really annoying.
Interesting Tidbits
The cover. Everyone looks really cute here, as opposed to the internal illustrations. (Most of them are okay, but a few are notably awful.)

The prologue is Dawn’s letter to Sunny, written across the course of a couple days. The only interesting part is that she lets Jeff write his commentary in between paragraphs. He suggests that Jack will be bringing the RV from Palo City, carefully stowed under his seat on the plane.
AWKWARD! The first real chapter starts when Jack Schafer shows up at the Spier household and eats breakfast with Sharon, Richard, and the three kids. He acts like an ass at the table, commenting on the food. It goes very badly until Dawn throws a bagel at Jeff and Richard winds up laughing. I think it was just nervous tension, because I can’t picture Richard thinking throwing food was actually funny.
Everyone gets to pick one place to go during the trip, and who goes in what RV is decided by that. Jessi, Abby and Mal go with the Brewers because their choices are in Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia respectively. That’s how Kristy ends up in the Schafer RV even though her parents are in the other—there weren’t any ‘good’ baseball stadiums along their route. (Also, it’s not exactly fair that Kristy’s one place is ‘as many baseball stadia as possible.’)
Sam and Charlie aren’t going along because they’re going to camp. (Don’t the two of them usually get out of stuff by having to work?) And Nannie is staying home with Emily Michelle, because the Brewers figured out something my father never has: camping (even in an RV) with a two-year-old is a horrible idea.
I like this conversation:
Mary Anne: What does RV stand for, anyway?
Watson: Ridiculous vehicle.
Anyone surprised that Claudia packed three suitcases, including two down parkas, for a summer RV trip? Me neither. Moving on.
When mapping out the trips, Kristy has a Claudia moment. She says that Mallory wants to go to Chinkateeg. To be fair, I don’t know how to spell it either, and Kristy knows it’s wrong. Spell check got me Chincoteague after I tried to spell it twice.
Jessi says everyone loves the smell of fried chicken. Has she met Dawn? I’m sure Dawn doesn’t like the smell of fried chicken (even though she does eat chicken in some of the books.)
Jessi’s grandfather is Arthur Sr. and she has an uncle, Arthur Jr. (I also have a grampa Art and an uncle Artie.) But when she points to a family portrait from when her dad was growing up, it’s her dad, Aunt Cecelia, Uncle Arthur and Uncle John. Umm, what? Jessi’s father is John Phillip Ramsey Sr. Do they have two kids named John? Maybe his name is Alex in this book, like it was in SS #2. In #103, Jessi has an Uncle Charles, so I’m betting that’s who Uncle John is supposed to be.
Baseball stadia and teams that get name-dropped: Cleveland Indians, Jacobs Field; Wrigley Field; Milwaukee Brewers; San Francisco Giants, Candlestick Park.
I had completely forgotten about Ethan, whom Stacey met right as she was breaking up with Robert in book #99. I mean, that was more than 10 books ago, including one Stacey story and one Stacey mystery in which Ethan was mentioned exactly zero times.
For Kristy’s stadium fetish, she originally just insists upon getting a baseball cap at every stadium they pass. But when they arrive in Cleveland while a game is going on, they wind up watching it, and at least several others, along the way.
Oh, and Cleveland lost to the Red Sox, whom Stacey calls the ‘Boston Somethings.’ C’mon. I know she’s supposed to not enjoy sports, but really. The Red Sox are one of the best known teams out there; a lot of people who know nothing about baseball have at least heard of them. And then Stacey grew up in NYC, and anyone who has ever lived in or visited the Northeast knows about the Yankees/Red Sox rivalry.
The girl who annoys the stuffing out of Mal, Jessi and Abby along their trip is Liz, short for Felicitas. I remembered her being Karen-esque and thought she was Karen’s age, but Mal says she’s similar in age to her and Jessi.
Liz says that Assateague is a funny name, which kind of makes me laugh. She’s not allowed to explain why it’s funny—this is a BSC book, after all—but even a ten-year-old should be able to figure that out.
DM, regarding Liz: “She’s either a genius or a robot.”
When Mal finally sees the herd of beautiful wild ponies running free across the plains, she gets all misty-eyed. (I’m just going to let that horse-book pun lie there.)
CLAUDIA SPELLING WOO-HOO! (Sorry; it’s a really long entry, wherein they go to the ‘Rockin Role Hall of fame.’) Exept, anthing, gess, groops, drov, thot, wer’e, cant, abot, dy, ofence, Shafer, Pitsberg. She also uses grate for great; afterword for afterward; ones for one’s; herd for heard; their for there and wile for while.
Claudia also says (spelling intact) that, now that they’re in Chicago, Kristy can’t stop talking about Wriggly Field and Stacy (yes, she spells her best friend’s name wrong, twice) can’t stop talking about Marshal Field. I was wondering whether Kristy would want to go to Wrigley Field or what was then Comisky Park (It was the ‘new’ Comisky, which is now U.S. Cellular Field.) And I remember all the controversy when Marshall Field’s was purchased by Macy’s.
There’s this ridiculous subplot in which Claudia grabs an open notebook, only to realize that it’s Stacey’s diary. So she shuts it, determined not to read it, and Stacey catches her and assumes she was actively reading it. They fight pretty much the entire rest of the trip. (Honestly, I’m surprised those two didn’t fight more often. I kinda loved that subplot in the FF series because it was so realistic.)
Abby spends the ride from Chincoteague to Memphis trying to convince everyone else in the RV that Elvis is still alive. (Her evidence: all those tabloid stories can’t be wrong!) She says that the Brewer adults barely tolerate her musings. Reminds me of how my dad always wanted to tell my friend Teah to shut up when she was spending the night at my house, but never did because she wasn’t his kid. (She would do things like yell EW! when she saw what we were eating for dinner, or make fun of whatever he was watching on television.) She gets so annoying that the Brewers actually drop the kids off at Graceland and refuse to go in with them.
Ha! Stacey has to find shopping everywhere they go, so she convinces everyone they have to go to Woodfield Mall. Woodfield’s not even that exciting, although we always used to drive there in high school…so we could go to Build a Bear, back when that was the only location in the area. (I can understand why she’d go to Water Tower Place, though.)
Mary Anne suggests that Jeff got his knack for really bad jokes from his father. Zing!
Remember when the BSC used to describe Dawn each book by saying she’s strong in her convictions, but she doesn’t lecture? Well, in this book, she lectures a man selling ‘stuffed animal entrails,’ AKA bratwurst.
I suddenly love Mary Anne’s grandma. Jack teases MA because she doesn’t like her seitan cutlet (seitan = wheat gluten, my mortal enemy), suggesting that she and Richard must eat a lot of red meat. Grandma responds with the title quote.
Jessi really wants to see where her family were slaves, even though her grandmother warns her against it. Yet when she gets there, she’s haunted by the images she sees of lynchings and other atrocities, and scoffs the idea that the Daltons, the plantation’s owners, were humane slave owners. Her argument is that they considered their slaves property and only gave them one name, so how humane is that? Of course, we all know that was normal at the time, and the humanity of a slave owner depended on things like how much they whipped their slaves and the like. Racism is a hard topic for a kids’ book, even one for middle grade readers like this. Say too much and you might scare them; say too little and they’re under-informed. This book tries to straddle the line by having Jessi get scared but not really letting the audience see what scared her.
What kind of numbnuts heads into the badlands without first checking the gas gauge? Jack Schafer, ladies and gentlemen (if any are reading this). My favorite part of this semi-realistic but still stupid plotline? Everyone is freaking out, and Jack tells them not to panic…while panicking. Yes, folks, do as I say, not as I do.
Mallory sums up one of her RV-mates in a single sentence: Abby, you are so weird. This is always the truth, but even more so when Abby is writing an entire notebook entry in cowboy vernacular.
Andrew and I are road-trip spiritual buddies. He starts asking “Are we in California yet?” in Arkansas. My dad used to force us to take three week car/camping road trips. My sister and I got sick of each other by day three, by day seven I’d have read all the books I brought with me and by day ten, I’d be sick of sightseeing. (My refrain all through a three-week trip through Eastern Europe was ‘I’m not looking at another church or castle,’ which drove my dad nuts because that’s largely all he wanted to see. That, and Auschwitz….) And I’m not even a four year old who can’t read a book/play a lot of the games kids play in cars.
Watson’s Baylor roommate, whom they visit in Oklahoma, is Chet Romney. And because it’s Oklahoma, they get caught in a tornado. Obviously, someone did a little research: the first hint that something is off is that Abby gets goosebumps on her arm and says all of her hair was standing on end. That’s actually all it takes to get the Romneys to turn on the radio and find out a tornado is coming. (That wouldn’t be enough for me, but that plus the sky turning green would be.) Abby describes the sound of the tornado as an approaching freight train. Think they watched the television special we used to watch in school every year, It Sounded Like a Freight Train?
Woot! More Claudia spelling! Nitime, midle, exept, cyoty (coyote), weerd, cant, disapeered, shoud, sleping, folowing, pepole. Oh, and Claudia’s afraid of gheeler monsters, which took me a while to decipher.
Dawn thinks coyotes are vegetarians. I’m not up on coyotes, but I’m pretty sure they’re scavengers and they eat meat. (Claudia suggests they should have kept a doggy bag of seitan to feed them…so that one of them doesn’t become first course.)
By the way, my spell check doesn’t think that seitan is a real word. Sort of like how Mary Anne didn’t think it was a real food!
Unfortunately, Jack Schafer finds a cop who brings him back to the RV. It would have been so much more entertaining if Watson and company arrived in Palo City and the other RV didn’t. Concerned about Kristy, Watson tracks the path the other RV was supposed to have taken on the way home. He finds it abandoned by the side of the road, with only one person inside. That person’s hair is white, and they keep rocking back and forth, saying the same thing over and over again. Someone else’s bones are found, scattered by coyotes. Rumors come to haunt the area that a ghost is often seen hitchhiking at that site. When people pick her up, she quotes baseball facts at them and then disappears the next time they drive by a stadium of any variety….
When they hit the rodeo, David Michael keeps shouting Yahoo! Karen corrects him, saying that cowboys say Yee-haw! I kept waiting for someone (Abby, most likely) to say Yippee-kay-yay-ay! or however you spell it, but sadly, it didn’t happen.
Jeff’s favorite things about the road trip? Getting a climbing lesson (lessen, as he spells it) at Grand Tetons, seeing the dig site at Mammoth, and, of course, getting stranded and thinking he was going to die. Priorities, that one.
And his least favorite part? Too many girls in his car. He says Dawn’s always been weird, and so are Claudia and Stacey, because they’re fighting. He says he actually likes Mary Anne but she’s been unfriendly on the car trip. (I’d really love more of Jeff’s perspective on Mary Anne, considering how odd MA feels about him. I mean, they’re technically related, but they haven’t really had too much of a chance to get to know each other.) He doesn’t mind Kristy, though, because they can talk baseball and she doesn’t tattle on him.
I like this bit of Jeff’s chapter, just because it’s accurate:” Dawn says the delay [of Old Faithful] is because of what people have done to the environment. But Dawn says that about everything.”
This is actually pretty clever on the whole behind-the-scenes-BSC crew’s part. I don’t know who came up with this idea, but it’s a good use of the massive BSC history. While driving through New Mexico, the Brewer RV sees a sign for Zuni, the town from #44. Since DM had a pen pal, they decide to go visit the town while they have the chance.
I would totally visit the Buzzard Gulch Haunted Village. I have a lot more fun looking at corny cheese (or cheesy corn) than I do looking at nature. No offense, nature.
Andrew: How did the desert get painted? DM: With a sagebrush! This is what happens when you contain people in an RV for too long.
O. M. G. I just realized something. Chapter sixteen is all about Dawn whining because Buzzard Gulch is too touristy. Chapter seventeen starts with Karen whining because her parents are trying to convince her to skip her choice of sites*. I’m totally picturing Karen growing up, getting contact lenses, growing her hair out longer…and being just like Dawn. Only instead of vegetarianism and the environment, Karen will totally be a grammar nazi. She could use those skills for good, by becoming the editor of the school paper and proofreading her classmates’ papers (for free or for a modest profit), but you know that won’t happen. I always imagined Dawn growing up and eventually mellowing out—spending a little time drifting or traveling, then working for a non-profit, or maybe even becoming a lawyer for environmental causes. Karen might someday outgrow her vision of the world as black and white—most kids her age do—but I suspect she’ll always be annoying and rub people the wrong way.
*I’m about to say something nice about Karen here; don’t panic. She’s not even all that whiny about what happens. Plus, I think it is completely unfair for the Brewers to try to talk Karen into another site. That’s the sort of thing that used to happen to me all the time when I was growing up, and I actually responded much the same way Karen did. She doesn’t actually argue; she contemplates choosing another destination, but having to give up her original choice makes her sad, so she cries silently. She doesn’t throw a fit or even make crying sounds. Elizabeth sees her quietly, sadly debating and they manage to fit her choice in.
Stacey’s adventure in Seattle is both dumb and predictable. Ethan is there for the summer, so the two plan to meet at a certain time on a certain day. Stacey remembers that it’s a coffee shop with a name like Corner Coffee, and it’s next to a park. Well, duh, this is Seattle in the 1990s. There was a coffee shop on every corner. (This is now true in almost every city, and every second or third one is a Starbucks. Mary Anne sees a Starthrower coffee shop, which I guess is the BSC version.)  Only there are four different coffee shops with similar names, plus Ethan changed the time and left her a message that she never got. So wackiness ensues, naturally.
But my favorite part of the whole event? Stacey’s all ready to see Ethan: she’s brushed her hair, straightened out her clothes, and put on her shoes. Right as she starts to leave, Kristy points out she has a Chunky wrapper stuck to her tush. I felt like Jeff: I laughed at the part that wasn’t really supposed to be funny.
Apparently, Stacey just needed to get kissed so she could get over her anger at Claudia. I won’t say what that has me thinking about her, because it’s really inappropriate.
Mary Anne did the same type of thing I did before I ever went to San Francisco: she read up on how to deal with earthquakes, so when the ground started rattling a little bit, she dove straight for a doorway. Of course, this just gave Jack another chance to make fun of her. She finally gets the balls to tell him that his comments hurt her feelings, which is awesome. Being MA, though, she doesn’t do it until he asks her if she’s having a good trip.
Jack admits that his teasing can be too much and that he’s sorry. The two of them are in a really weird situation, though. Think back to what I said about Jeff and Mary Anne; now take that a step further out. MA points out that the two of them are almost-family, but they aren’t actually related. (She ponders a name for their relationship, suggesting ‘Dad once removed.’) I really don’t blame Jack, Sharon and Richard for being all awkward when they’re in the same room earlier in the book. Mary Anne knows that Jack’s always been really nice to her, and no one else seems bothered by his teasing, but to be fair, he does tease her more than the others.
Liz from Chincoteague shows up briefly in the middle of the story in a notebook entry, but then she’s also at the San Diego zoo. What I love is that none of the kids is happy to see her. Not the BSC members, nor the little guys. She’s a know-it-all bitch who, among other things, talks down to DM and Karen, and is really rude to Andrew. To sum up the BSC members opinion of Liz:
            Liz: Why would parents do such a thing? [regarding animal parents who reject their babies]
            Abby (to Jessi): Maybe the same reason her parents left her with her grandparents.
Actually, the Liz thing reminds me of a little girl I once met. She was my dad’s best friend’s daughter. I was about BSC aged, and she was about Karen’s age. She was the whiniest, most spoiled brat I have ever met in my life, and she demanded I play all her games with her. After two hours of being ordered around, I told her I was done playing and went to try to read a book. She pulled the book out of my hands and hid it. (My mom had to ask her mother to give it back to me before we left.) She then proceeded to tell her mother that I was rude to her and boring and stupid and annoying…in front of me. I was so happy to leave their house, especially after I heard her say to my dad, “Someday, I want to come to visit you…after Teeki is married.” Liz annoys the poop out of the Brewer crew, and then Jessi catches her whining to her grandparents because the kids are boring and don’t know anything. They make their excuses and leave, making everyone happy.
I don’t know if this is a mistake on the part of the writers or if Kristy was so distracted that she made the mistake. In her notebook entry, she says the Brewers won the game at Candlestick Park where she ran into her father. But the game announcer says that the Giants were playing the Pirates, so I don’t think that’s true. (Kristy did go to the stadium and get a hat when they were in Milwaukee. She should have gotten several, to give to her mom and Watson. It would be appropriate…)
This is so Kristy. Her dad makes a small effort to talk with her when she locates him, but she doesn’t want to sit down and have a soda with him. She says they have to get back to Jack and Jeff, but really, she just wants to be the one to walk away from him this time.
OOH! There’s a picture in the final chapter, featuring the BSC, some of the kids, and the We Heart Kids Club. It’s actually accurate to the notebook entry as to who was talking to whom. Oh, and Abby, who is actually lip-synching Elvis in the picture, appears to have forgotten her pants. I really wish I could upload these drawings, because that part is funny, as is the picture of Kristy and MA in San Francisco. MA looks like someone mashed her face up flat.
Since Claudia had very little to do in this book, there’s an offhand comment about her buying a sketch in an ugly frame that looks like it’s inspired by Georgia O’Keeffe. Jack’s friend, the owner of the RV, sees it when Claudia is trying to remove the frame and agrees that it’s an O’Keeffe knock-off…until the frame comes off and it’s revealed to be an authentic O’Keeffe.
The book ends with a couple of WHKC comments, like how Jill is thirteen going on eleven. This to me is a lead up to the California Diaries books, which had already started to be published. Yet, Maggie’s hair is still all green and punk, while when the CD start, she’s got a blonde bob.
Of course, the epilogue is all letters. It includes the following spelling errors:
            DM: Romny (Romney), Lesster/Leter (Lester), leter, killd; youre for your, hear for here, rite for write, blue for blew
            Jeff: its for it’s, you’re for your
            Claudia: thot, alot, conversasion, generus, scetsh, evury, becuase, inspirred, feling, valuble, scetch, youll; its for it’s
My final super special, except the FFs ones.

Next: #111, also known as ‘Stacey tries to change someone to make her fit in instead of accepting her for who she is.’ Should be fun!

“Which team is this dog registered to play on?” BSC #110: Abby the Bad Sport (1997)

I’ve never read this book before, for one blatant reason: I knew I was going to hate the dated, non-‘people-first’ language. Actually, if I remember correctly, I started reading it and stopped for that exact reason. Let’s see if I have better luck this time.
Abby’s joined what the book calls a Unified Special Olympics team. Special Olympics athletes are playing on a team with athletes without impairments; quite frankly, the only reason I can see for this is that they can throw a PSA about the Special Olympics, because the rest of the plot doesn’t seem to benefit from that fact. One of the other athletes, Erin, is as good at soccer as Abby is, which is something Abby isn’t used to, and she’s given the position Abby wants. The two of them start competing against each other, trying to one up another, and refusing to play nice. The Krushers form a booster club to support the team, so all the kids get to see Abby acting badly and find out that both Abby and Erin get benched for two games. Abby accepts her position, apologizes to Erin (and Kristy, who calls Abby on her B.S.) and moves on.
Meanwhile, Abby’s mother decides the family needs to spend the weekend of their late father’s birthday with his parents, whom they haven’t spent much time with since he’d died. Abby doesn’t want to go, so she sorta lies/sorta misleads her mother into not making her go. He real reason for not wanting to go? She hates visiting her father’s grave, because it’s too real.
Interesting tidbits
Aaaaaand Abby starts the book with a pun on page one. She’s so late to the meeting that she’s running. You know how BSC books almost always start with the narrator describing the scene and then saying, “I’m getting ahead of myself”? This time, Abby is running ahead of herself.
Abby’s now firmly described as being medium, instead of super-tall like she originally was. This is the second book in a row to use that adjective for her.
In order to verify what I’ve said recently, Abby is indeed allergic to tomatoes and shellfish. Going back to the last book, Abby ate with the Brewers and Derek’s friends at a seafood restaurant. There would be plenty of things she could eat there, but depending on how severe her allergy is, she might have problems just eating near shellfish or if the same cooking surface was used.
Aaaaaaaaand, we have our first ‘mental retardation’ on page 6. It definitely could be worse though, because at least it says ‘players with mental retardation.’ By the way, the players with impairments are known as athletes and the ones without are called partners. I think it’s kind of offensive for them to even create a distinction.
Abby tries to convince the rest of the BSC that soccer is awesome. She tells Claudia it’s a moving art form, and Stacey points out that it’s all based in geometry. I don’t think she could convince my cousin, though, who spends the entire World Cup whining each time because it’s taking televised time from ‘real sports people actually care about.’
Did you know that Kid Kits are not kids used to assemble children? Abby is sooo hilarious.
Since when do middle schools have varsity and junior varsity? We always had A team and B team, which is the same thing SMS has in book #129.
Other players on the team: Jojo (lol), Petra, Connie, Sandy, Annalise, and Jeana
Abby admits to expecting less out of the athletes than partners, simply because they have impairments. I think that’s fair enough, because how many people with mental impairments have they ever met before?
I swear they only have a player named Petra so Abby can make the pun that she looked petra-fied.
There are seriously a whole bunch of pages just explaining soccer positions and rules, and it’s wicked boring. And, unlike my cousin, I love soccer.
Abby’s competition with Erin starts before the first practice even begins, when the two of them get into a race during laps. And then Coach Wu gives Abby’s preferred position—center forward, pretty much the plum position on the team—to Erin, so Abby’s jealous.
Ha! The name of the ice cream store Coach Wu takes the soccer team to? Thirty-two Flavors and Then Some. That’s not so subtle there.
Abby really is a horrible sport. She resents Erin for getting ‘her’ position and being more popular with her teammates, so she decides Erin is a ‘showoff’ and the rest of the team are ‘phonies.’ Later, after the team wins, she tells Erin she knows more about soccer than Erin does…after Erin (truthfully) says that they lost because Abby kept leaving her defensive position to try to score. (It may not have been exclusively Abby’s fault, but when she’s spending all her time in midfield or forward, trying to score, it makes it a lot easier for the other team to get past the defense.) Then again, when Abby was first introduced, she said she wasn’t a team player, so maybe that’s the real problem.
The title quote comes from when Shannon-the-dog decided to join the soccer game and a soccer player tripped over her.
At one point Haley calls the soccer team ‘footballers’ and Karen gets ready to argue with her about it. Haley would be right in just about every other country in the world. (Plus, footballers sounds so much cooler than soccer players.)
Mallory mentions that the triplets play soccer, yet I remember at least once Jeff complaining that the triplets didn’t like soccer. I guess it’s just a sign of the times; in 1986, soccer wasn’t very popular, but by 1997, it was a lot more played.
Stoneybrook United loses a second game, largely because Abby refuses to pass the ball to Erin, who was wide open. Instead, she takes the shot herself and misses; the other team scores through the empty hole Abby created in the defense. She and Erin get into a shouting match and nearly pound each other. The most obnoxious part of this, though? Karen and company sitting on the sidelines, saying things like “Isn’t she supposed to pass now?” “They’re not going to fight, are they?” and “They were bad sports.” We all know all that without the kiddie commentary.
Abby doesn’t tell anyone she’s benched. Instead, Karen finds out by talking to Erin, who was also benched. Kristy gives Abby a totally contemptuous look, but I can only imagine the look Kristy would have given if she’d known the whole story. (Abby didn’t tell her mother she’d been benched either, and used the game as an excuse not to go spend the weekend with her paternal grandparents.)
Claudia spelling. Yay! Hapen, rihgt, wasch, allot (a lot), leest, fighte. She also uses your for you’re, twice.
The boosters throw a carwash, which is (mostly) too boring to mention. But the first customer is the Pink Clinker, which Nannie then agrees they can park on the corner to gather attention for the carwash. They describe the Pink Clinker as “the big, old pink car.” I’ve mentioned before that I pictured the Pink Clinker as a Volkswagen Beetle, but this totally has me picturing an early-80s Cadillac: a giant boat of a car.
Odd. Abby goes running in Miller’s Park, mentioning that “from what I’ve heard” there was a fight with a developer over the park that ended with it being declared a historic monument. Umm, that happened in Mystery #24. Abby’s first mystery was #23, so she was around when that happened.
Leave it to Abby to suggest a whole bunch of really punny soccer team names when Kristy suggests a Krushers-spinoff soccer team.
So Abby tells her mother the truth about the soccer team, and about why she didn’t want to visit her father’s grave. Her mom understands her and accepts Abby for who she is and what she’s done, which is really nice, if you think about it. I mean, Abby’s apologizing for not talking to her mother and for not being ready to go back to her father’s grave…and neither of those is really a crime (or even necessarily something to apologize for). And her mom is cool with it because Abby can’t help what she feels, and she’s already worked out for herself that she made some bad choices.
So the Special Olympics aspect could have been way worse. They actually use people-first language throughout the book, and don’t refer to the actual mental impairments much. Instead, a point is made of how similar the athletes and partners are. Most of the time, the only way you can tell the difference between the athletes and partners are that one of the athletes stutters and several of them are described as acting a little younger than the partners. (When I taught special education, my students—ages nine through thirteen—largely still believed in Santa and many of them acted a year or two younger than they really were. It’s not always true, but it’s not horribly offensive, either.) The only awkward part is when Erin calls Abby on her bad sportsmanship. Abby tells Erin she’s a better athlete than Erin is, and Erin replies, “Why? Because I have mental retardation?” I cringed big-time at that point. It’s poorly phrased for a couple different reasons, at least partly because mental retardation is a dated-sounding term. I wouldn’t have been nearly as bothered if Erin had said, “Why? Because I’m in special education?” or used the term special needs or even disability.
Outfits
Claudia: crop top muscle shirt batikked in green and blue, skinny black shorts, one blue sock and one green, Doc Martens, button earrings; oversized t-shirt with purple and white soccer balls and matching earrings
Stacey: purple silk t-shirt
Mary Anne: purple striped shirt
Jessi: purple leotard
Mallory: purple and white socks

Next: Our final super special! Saaaaaaad!

Saturday, April 9, 2016

“This is a stupid way to die.” BSC Mystery #30: Kristy and the Mystery Train (1997)

This is the second Kristy mystery centered around a Derek Masters plotline. Were there any justice in the BSC-universe, those both should have been Jessi plots.
Derek’s back in town, and he’s taking a train trip as publicity for his new mystery movie. Kristy, Abby and Stacey go along for the ride, along with Nicky, David Michael, Linny, James and Buddy. Weird things go on during the ride, odd notes show up everywhere, and then Stacey and Kristy see a man pushed overboard (over rail?) Turns out that the screenwriter stole the script from a student of his, who wanted credit. He’d faked his own death and then tried to kidnap the screenwriter’s son before the BSC and a couple of adults subdue him.
The pool at the country club from mystery #23 opens for the summer, and Stephen Stanton-Cha is acting oddly. Eventually, the sitters find out he doesn’t know how to swim. Jessi helps him feel more comfortable in the water and he has a good time after that.
Interesting Tidbits
The cover is completely hideous. I think the mystery of the train is how horrible Kristy and Abby look here…

Kristy introduces Karen as her stepfather’s daughter, which is kind of an odd way of putting it. I mean, it’s technically true, but sort of roundabout. It’s almost as if I identified my mother as my father’s ex-wife.
The Masterses drive a Mercedes station wagon.
Stacey points out that Mal would like to see Louisa May Alcott’s house, but given that that is Mary Anne’s favorite book, wouldn’t see be just as interested?
Elizabeth and Watson are way too nice. After the Masterses agree to take a total of nine kids* on the train trip, the Brewers take the five Stoneybrook kids and the three sitters up to Boston for the night. The kids are all ramped up, so they have to get them a seafood dinner**, three hotel rooms, and all the expenses related to a day-long walking tour of the building.
*Derek, Todd, DM, Buddy, James, Linny, Nicky, Derek’s friend Greg and Todd’s friend Daniel
**I thought Abby was allergic to seafood? I’m going to need to review her allergies here sometime soon.
I can’t explain why, but every time I try to write Buddy Barrett’s name, I type Butty. And then, because I’m so juvenile, I giggle a little bit.
“I woke up early the next morning to…Abby breath.” This also made me giggle.
Oh, here Stacey goes again. She calls Boston a ‘little’ town because it’s smaller than NYC. If Logan’s superpower is superdickery, Stacey’s is supersnobbery.
People we meet on the train (aka suspects): Rock Harding (love that Hollywood name), the director; Ronald Pierce, screenwriter (and Daniel’s father); Anne Arbour, publicist (named after a city, hee hee); Jane Atlantic, reporter (Kristy keeps pointing out how much she looks like Stacey, so you know that’s going to be important); Benjamin Athens (People’s sexiest man on the planet) and Elle San Carlos, leads in the movie; Charlie, Elle’s husband/ex-husband
I loooove the idea that Benjamin and Elle are having an affair for publicity, yet we’re given the impression that Elle and her hubby aren’t quite divorced yet. It’s all insinuation so far, but it’s a lot more adult than you see in most of these books.
Nicky actually asks if everyone who lives in California is a vegetarian, and Greg (who is Californian and vegetarian, hence the question) says no. But the BSC books tend to give the opposite conclusion.
I like this: Kristy decides to keep an eye on Nicky and Greg, because they’re Derek’s two best friends, meeting for the first time. She equates it to when she got to know Dawn. I also related it to SS#8, when Linny and Nicky—DM’s two best friends—fought all the time. Obviously, they got over it, as they’re both on this trip and getting along.
You have to wonder who’s in charge of this train trip and whether they should be fired. I mean, a bunch of tomfoolery occurs and slips of paper saying ‘The truth will come out’ are everywhere, yet no one seems to be doing too much to stop it. Derek suggests that a rubber severed hand served as a lunch entrée was a publicity stunt. Kristy disagrees because Anne, the publicist, seems horrified by it all. Cynical adult me wonders whether Anne’s worried for the movies stars or whether she’s worried about losing her job…
The BSC members who aren’t on the mystery train show up for the first day of the country club to help man it. Mary Anne shows up looking like she stole her dad’s old clothes, which kind of makes me laugh. And Jessi’s wearing ‘reef runners.’ I had to Google that to see what they were.

Oh, and Claudia is teasing Mallory about her hat and cover-up and high powered SPF sunscreen. Mal does seem like the kind of person who would burn very easily in the sun—reddish hair, fair skin—but we all know it’s usually Mary Anne who has to cover up like that. (Mal says she’s worried about getting more freckles, though.)
Leave it to Karen to make sure everyone is following the pool rules. I have to admit, I was that kind of kid too, but I was never outspoken enough to boss my friends around.
The title quote is Kristy’s thoughts when their train car fills with smoke and they can’t get the door open. (It’s just a smoke bomb, but everyone’s majorly tense afterward…until Linny’s grateful it wasn’t a stink bomb and all the boys start laughing.)
I think the only reason Stacey is in on this mystery is because she’s up on Hollywood gossip in a way most of the BSC wouldn’t be.
Grr. Daniel, Todd’s little friend, is described as being stocky in passing when he first appears in the story. The first time Daniel actually gets to talk, he’s mad at his father because Mr. Pierce said Daniel couldn’t have any more ice cream. It’s more subtle than the BSC always mentioning how fat Norman is, but I still don’t like it. Later, when Daniel is upset after he witnesses someone allegedly going over the side of the train, his dad buys him by…getting him more ice cream.
“Next time you decide to witness a murder, could you wait until I’m around?” –Guess who
This is kind of weird. As I mentioned earlier, Mal, Jessi, Claudia and Mary Anne are supervising the kids at the opening of the country club pool. One of the kids hanging around the pool, waiting for it to reopen after lunch, is Ben Hobart. He keeps making jokes about barfing and teasing the kids. I’m wondering if the ghostwriter got the Hobart boys confused. James, the same age as many of the kids who were at the pool—Karen and friends, Charlotte, Becca, Jackie, Luke, etc—was with Derek on the train. Maybe they’ve confused Mathew, who would also fit into this age range, with Ben? Otherwise, there’s a good reason that Mal and Ben never got their pseudo-relationship off the ground.
Okay, I have a favorite scene in this book, for a very odd reason. Mal is putting on more sunscreen—SPF 60 this time, and waterproof. Karen becomes concerned that if the sunscreen is really waterproof, it will never come off and Mallory would be stuck with sunscreen on her forever! Normally, this would turn into Karen going off on a tangent and being obnoxious. When she starts, Mal shuts her down by pointing off that it will wash off with soap, so Karen’s story is moot. She then won’t let her keep talking about it. I now love Mallory.
Abby tells Kristy there’s an ocean of mystery about Jane Atlantic, and even Kristy thinks it’s her worst pun yet. Oh, and Abby thinks that Anne Arbour’s name is a horrible pun as well.
Why in the hell would the babysitters tell the kids—mostly eight year olds—about the alleged murder they witnessed? That’s horribly irresponsible.
You know someone’s got a lot of clothing on the train when even Stacey says that it’s too much clothing.
Why does everyone on this train leave their compartment unlocked? The babysitters take the seven older boys to do some illegal searches, and every sleeper compartment they go into is open, and no one is inside them.
Claudia spelling. Praty (party…she spells it right 4 out of 5 times), anemals.
At the pool party, there is a silly bathing cap contest, and earlier, Mallory notes that Jenny is wearing one. The only time I ever wore a swim cap when I was growing up was when I went to Girl Scout camp and had to wear one. I would have never worn one when swimming for fun.
Kristy thinks she’d like to be a movie director someday…because it would give her a lot of people to boss around.
I only have five more mysteries left to read: two Mary Annes, a Stacey, an Abby and a Kristy. As flat-out awful as some of these books have been, I’m sort of sad about that. (If I keep up this pace, I’ll be done with this blog by the end of the year. Expect a lot more awwwwww! Ultra-mega-sad-face moments out of me…)
Outfits
Stacey: ‘butter-colored’ linen shirt, chino shorts, cork-sole sandals
Claudia: red shorts, purple crop top, red and white muscle shirt, purple socks, red high tops, apple earrings; tie-dyed t-shirt knotted at the waist, flower sandals and barrette
Jessi: pink leotard, jeans; blue bike shorts and sports bra, red t-shirt, reef runners
Mallory: long sleeved shirt, shorts, sneakers, hat
Mary Anne: green Izod shirt, baseball cap with ‘Ted’s Tools’ on it

Next: #110

“I was born to be a victim.” BSC #109: Mary Anne to the Rescue (1997)

Before I begin this book, I have a ‘joyous’ announcement to make. As of this Friday, my BSC collection is almost officially complete. I now own a copy of every book in the original series, all the mysteries, super specials, super mysteries and Friends Forever books. All I’m missing is a copy of the Claudia graphic novel (I’m waiting on that because I want to get all four of them in color…sweetness) and the Secret Santa book. (Considering I’ve never actually seen a copy of that or even a picture of the cover, I don’t think it really exists. I’m convinced it’s a conspiracy against me.)
Mary Anne becomes convinced she’d be terrible in an emergency, so she and the BSC take a first aid class. The class makes her queasy and she doesn’t think it’s helping. But then, while she and Dawn are babysitting at the Korman house, Timmy Hsu is drowning the pool. Mary Anne is the first to respond, pulling him out and performing CPR until he starts breathing again. It gives her the guts to deal with her other problem: Logan’s dad has decided to send him to boot camp for the summer and then boarding school after that. Logan’s too afraid to confront his father, until Mary Anne supports him. Of course, he gets to stay in Stoneybrook.
Interesting Tidbits
Cover! Mary Anne’s trying to be all sweet, but Logan’s showing his superpower, superdickery. (If you’ve never seen the superdickery website, you need to go check it out…after you finish this blog post, of course.)

The whole basis of the plotline of this book is that Sharon saves a guy who is choking by performing the Heimlich on him. Mary Anne worries that she’s bad in an emergency because she just sat there, open mouthed, and watched. She’s afraid that if Sharon weren’t there, the guy would have died. It’s like she’s forgotten that she’s actually quite good in an emergency. (Dawn reminds her of that in chapter 11, and tells her that if she ever needed someone to ‘maneuver [her] Heimlich’ MA would be the first person she would call.)
Ahh, Peter Lerangis. Claudia goes out and buys special food for Dawn, and Abby calls it…boogers and boulders.
Ooh, remember when, at the beginning of the series, the BSC books just kind of flowed together? Like how the vacations in #8 were established in #7. Well, in this one, Mary Anne mentions how Abby is going to be on a Special Olympics soccer team soon….which happens in the next book.
There’s this really goofy joke at the beginning of the first aid class where the teacher’s last name is Golden, and the first two kids in the class are Pete Black and Alan Gray. Their friend Irv introduces himself as Little Boy Blue, which I guess is supposed to be funny. It’s so lame a joke that even Abby wouldn’t make it.
“You’re allowed to sneak off with your boyfriend. These things are important.” The California Diaries have started by this point, so this is a little more adult than most of the BSC usually sound. I like it.
Logan says he and Mary Anne can email each other if he goes off to boarding school. I find it odd to see the word email in a BSC book. Even when they talk about cell phones, they call them cellular phones, so it doesn’t seem modern or anything.
“I had to perform emergency hair support.” There’s only one person in the entire book series who could have said that…and only one person she could have said it about.
Oh, Dawn. She suggests that Mary Anne’s ‘just grossed out’ by the idea of going to the ER as part of their first aid class…and then says that it’s the same way she feels about a pork chop. ‘Cause bleeding, injured humans is totally the same thing as a hunk of meat.
Sharon-itis: tennis shoes in the kitchen with the pots and pans
Nooo, Kristy. She teaches the Pike kids to use ‘stop, drop and roll’ if they encounter a fire in their house. She says it helps you stay under the smoke. I remember second grade really well (not to mention the fact that I taught for a couple of years) and ‘stop, drop and roll’ is for when your clothes catch on fire. This bugs me more than the usual mistake in these books.
Logan shops like I do. His mom gives him a list and a credit card, but it takes him hours to complete the list…because he looks at everything in Bellair’s except what’s on the list.
The title quote is one of many things Dawn says about the first aid class’s role in the Safety Weekend. She also says that Carol has a friend whose entire professional life is screaming for horror and disaster movies. Logan: Do you have to go for college for that?
I’m amused by who likes the idea of being in the disaster drill and who doesn’t. Claudia finds the whole idea sick (but will do it anyway), Stacey doesn’t want to lie in the sun and the germs and ruin her clothes, and Mal’s not an actress. Dawn’s all about it, and Jessi likes the idea as well. Logan says he’ll be in it…as long as he doesn’t have to be beheaded. And one person doesn’t even come at all…because the disaster is a car accident. I cringed when I read that, because I wasn’t even thinking about Abby’s dad as they were setting up the accident.
Dawn’s a little bitchy in this story. It’s as if being away from Mary Anne for a school year has made her completely forget her stepsister’s personality. Dawn volunteers to be the broken leg victim in the car crash, because it lets her scream. After Logan decides to be the head-wound, Dawn volunteers Mary Anne to lie in the street with a heavily-bleeding leg wound. MA feels violated afterwards, and she blames Dawn for it.
After the two of them fight, MA finds Dawn ‘trying to meditate’ even though she doesn’t know how. I’m kind of surprised that someone—Mrs. Winslow, Carol, Sharon, one of Maggie’s Buddhist friends—hasn’t taught her how to meditate somewhere along the way. “See? Meditating does help. Even if you don’t know how to do it.”
Claudia spelling: Firefitters, becuase, rellative, thot, shoud. She also uses hurry for hurray and fare for fair.
Dawn’s being more preachy than normal. She scolds various BSC members for eating ‘processed animal entrails and spun pancreas poison’: hot dogs and cotton candy.
When Jamie freaks out at the mock-fire, Mrs. Pike offers to drive him, Claudia and Lucy home. Instead of thinking about how nice that was, I worried about Lucy not having a car seat. (Also, I’m wondering about Claudia’s judgment in having Jamie watch that…after he was afraid MA was dead after the mock-car crash.)
I’m still confused about the idea the Delaneys used to have that their kids could use the pool while being babysat if the next door neighbor is home. The Kormans have a similar rule, but poor goodhearted Mr. Sinclair has to be in his own yard, watching. (The Delaney/Kormans live in a massive house with a giant yard, including tennis courts and more. How convenient is it that he is able to put a chair within sight of the Korman pool from his own yard.)
I love when we learn more about the parents of the clients. Mrs. Hsu is head chef at Renwick’s.
Logan and Mary Anne sit down with the Brunos to discuss Logan’s future. Mr. Bruno’s first thought? He asks if they’re getting married. They’re thirteen; that’s not legal in any state that I know of. But I could understand if he thought MA was pregnant. (Heyyyy, if this weren’t a BSC book, someone would have suggested that MA get pregnant to prevent Logan from getting sent up river to boarding school.)
Outfits
Claudia: felt hat, oversized white button-down shirt, hand-painted wide tie, cuffed khaki shorts, white knee highs and brown and white bucks
Shelley Golden, the first aid teacher: chambray shirt, shorts, running shoes

Next: Mystery #30

“Saved by the Mal!” BSC #108: Don’t Give Up, Mallory (1997)

This isn’t the last Mallory book, but it is the last one I’ve never read.
Mallory’s latest Short Takes class is Children’s Literature, which should be a breeze for her. Instead, the class is torturous because the teacher lets the boys dominate the class by shouting out answers, something Mal isn’t comfortable with. Despite not being comfortable speaking out in class, Mal has no problem speaking up to the principal after discovering that money had been set aside for a student lounge was used for building repairs instead. She leads the class to raise enough money to get their lounge, despite the fact that several of her classmates discovering the idea of playing dumb to get boys. She eventually talks to her teacher, who realizes he’s not being fair and starts giving the girls willing to talk equal time.
In the sitting-related subplot, Buddy Barrett claims to be in a marching band so that he can march in a parade. Rather than make him tell the truth and face the consequences, the BSC scramble to amass a band full of random kids with ridiculous homemade instruments that don’t make noises.
Interesting Tidbits
The cover: By this point, the kids—at least, just the sixth graders—have started to look age-appropriate. Also, you kind of get why the teacher is calling on the boys instead of the girls in this set up. Mal is the only girl who is raising her hand, and she looks really reluctant. The boys seem more enthusiastic.

You would think that straight As were really unusual in a middle school, given the way everyone keeps acting at SMS. Mal has straight As on her midterm report—not even a regular report card—and she gets called brainiac and know it all. I had straight As every quarter in middle school…and so did seven other people in my class. And it was a really small school. Anyway, I know for a fact that Kristy had straight As the last quarter of seventh grade, as reported in #6.
I like this: Mal says that Abby talks loud and fast, but Abby blames this on being from Long Island. (As opposed to my gut instinct, which is just that Abby is loud and talks fast simply because she’s Abby.)
Real books: Charlotte’s Web, Where the Wild Things Are, Polar Express, The Mysteries of Harris Burdick, The Wreck of the Zephyr, Make Way for the Ducklings, Dinosaurs and How they Lived, Dinosaur Discovery, Dinosaurs A to Z, Dinosaur Bob, Dinotopia, Goodnight Moon, The Runaway Bunny, Animalia, Eleventh Hour,
Elise, Jessi’s synchronized swimming partner, is in Mal’s literature class. I don’t know why I thought she was in seventh grade. The Complete Guide says she’s in sixth grade, though. I think it’s because Jessi had to switch around lunch periods or something to take ‘synchro.’
I had an experience similar to Mallory’s first day of lit class, with a substitute teacher. Class policy said if you wanted help, you raised your hand and the teacher would come to you. So I sat at my desk with my hand raised for fifteen minutes while the sub ignored me and the other kids all got out of their seats and went to the teacher’s desk. Finally I went over to the teacher’s desk, where I got chewed out for not getting my assignment done, because I was sitting at my desk with my hand raised. Why am I bringing this up? Because it took me fifteen minutes to get into the sub’s groove of how she wanted the class run. Mal’s sitting at her desk with her hand raised, but not getting called on. The back cover says that the teacher is favoring boys, but at one point in the class, a boy and a girl get into a discussion. It’s clear reading the chapter that the teacher isn’t calling on raised hands; he just wants the kids to shout out their opinions. Let’s see how long it takes before Mal figures that out.* Oh, and as the book goes on, he does lean more toward favoring the boys.
*(I get it; she’s also not really comfortable just shouting out her opinions. But there are going to be times in her life where that’s necessary, so maybe it’s time to start acquiring that skill now.)
Claudia spelling time! It’s only one sentence: I dont know, Stacey, waht do you git? This would be a lot less funny if Stacey hadn’t started the notebook entry by asking What do you get… and therefore, modeling the spelling of most of those words for Claudia…
Ooh, I like this, too! The sixth grade class officers have their meeting in the memory garden from book #93. Glad to hear that place is getting some use.
Sandra, the class vice president, figures out that some years back, the funds raised during Sixth Grade Fundraiser Week were earmarked for a student lounge but were used for repairs instead. Sandra says that it’s misappropriation of funds, but I guess it depends upon circumstances. If I were eleven, I’d completely agree with her, but as an adult, I think that roof repairs are way more important.
Mallory is late two BSC meetings in a row. When she’s on time the next meeting, Kristy points it out as first order of business. I think I liked it better when she would just yell at them for being late.
Mallory figures out how to save the ridiculous ‘marching band’ by giving the kids kazoos to play. The title quote is Stacey’s response. (It ends up being ridiculous…twenty kazoos playing twenty different tunes at the same time. Abby calls it an attack of the killer bees.)
Remember when puff paint was cool? That was more like 1989 than 1997.
The whole Sandra plotline is interesting because it’s the most realistic in this book. Sandra is eleven or twelve at this point and she’s really aware of what the boys think of her…as most girls her age are. She purposely tries not to appear too smart or strong so that boys will like her better. She wears shoes that hurt her feet so that she’ll seem more feminine. (I’m picturing Quinn from Daria, who did the same thing for a while but stopped because she didn’t need to wear shoes to make her legs look hot, because her legs look hot no matter what she’s wearing…)
This is ridiculous. The marching band story line is stupid (why, oh why, do the BSC members not just tell Buddy he’s out of luck when he tells them he wants to make a marching band), but the actual parade takes the cake. On practice day, the BSC handed out twenty kazoos to whomever showed up. They never sent out a date everyone had to sign up by or spoke to any parents. Kristy agreed to babysit for a ridiculous 9 children by herself in the time period leading up to the parade. But then, proving that Stoneybrook parents are the worst in the world, various parents start dropping their kids off, assuming the BSC will watch them. In a couple of cases, parents literally pull up in a car, drop off their four year old, and don’t even speak to Kristy (who is left alone with a whopping twenty-three children) before driving off. Horrid, horrid parenting.
I’d expected this book to suck, but it really didn’t. (Well, except the marching band part.) Mal had said, early on, that her parents were proud of all of her siblings, no matter their grades, as long as they did their best. Mal found the courage to speak up to her teacher and point out his unconscious bias to him. He denies calling on boys more than girls or letting boys have more time to think on a topic, but later that day, he realizes it’s true. He apologizes to the class and makes a concerted effort to be more fair. But then Mal realizes that wasn’t the only reason she wasn’t speaking up in class. She proves she knows her stuff in the final written project for the class, and the teacher gives her a B+. Even though it’s her first ever B, Mal’s not disappointed, because she realizes it’s the grade she deserved (and in my opinion, probably nicer than she deserved) and she tried her hardest.
Outfits
Mr. Cobb: collarless white shirt, jeans and a black vest; tan chinos, leather boat shoes, blue linen shirt
Stacey: jeans with rolled cuffs, denim work shirt, backwards painter’s cap
Claudia: shorts, tie-dyed t-shirt with matching scrunchie, red high tops
Helen Gallway (who?): hot pink bike shorts, t-shirt with puff-painted hearts on it

Next: #109