FICTION

Don't You Wish

360p. CIP. Delacorte. 2012. Tr $17.99. ISBN 978-0-385-74156-9; PLB $20.99. ISBN 978-0-375-99011-3; ebook $10.99. ISBN 978-0-375-98577-5. LC 2011049124.
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Gr 9 Up—Awkward Annie Nutter is tormented by the rich, popular kids whom she both envies and reviles at Pittsburgh's South Hills High. Her home life isn't any better: her brother is annoying, her father is a failed inventor, and her realtor mother has just discovered that the med student she could have married is now a billionaire in Miami. One stormy night, when trying out her dad's latest invention, Annie gets zapped into an alternate universe in which her mother is married to the former med student and she's Ayla Monroe, the rich, beautiful queen bee of a ritzy private school. At first she enjoys the perks of her status, but eventually she realizes that her so-called friends are shallow, she feels nothing for her jerky boyfriend, her new dad is a womanizer, and her mom is miserable. In a satisfying feel-good twist, the school's brilliant but bullied scholarship student helps her get back to her old world as they fall in love. There is plenty here that readers will find compelling. Unfortunately, cartoonish stereotypes of socioeconomic groups (rich people are horrible; poor people have hearts of gold); a plot that moves forward largely by way of lucky coincidences; and some problematic treatment of race (Ayla's ethnically ambiguous best friend is ridiculously described as "a little bit of everything-Asian, Hispanic, black, white, with some island flair thrown in for added spice.") make this novel more of a light read than the deeper exploration of identity, family relationships, and society it strives to be.—Riva Pollard, American Indian Public Charter School, Oakland, CA
"Invisible" Annie fantasizes about how her painful social life would be different if her dad were a famous plastic surgeon instead of a bumbling inventor. Thanks to one of those inventions, she winds up in a parallel universe where she's Ayla, high school queen. Superficial characterizations and awkward scientific explanations undermine the potential philosophical and moral depths in this lightweight tale.

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