FICTION

Prettiest Doll

240p. Clarion. 2012. Tr $16.99. ISBN 978-0-547-68170-2; ebook $16.99. ISBN 978-0-547-68171-9.
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Gr 6–8—Olivia Tatum has won beauty pageants since she was a small child. Now 13, she is starting to question this activity, thinking her only asset is being pretty. Meanwhile, her overweight mother and pageant coach are drilling her for the upcoming Prettiest Doll competition, and she's had enough. Then she meets Dan, an unusually short 15-year-old who has landed in her Missouri town, camping out, having run away from his home in Texas after his mother pressured him to get growth hormone shots. He intends to go to Chicago, and, after a sleepless night, Liv decides to join him. During the bus ride north, they talk about their lives, and in Chicago make their way to the apartment of Liv's deceased father's brother. They visit some of the city's sights as their mutual attraction grows. Both of them are trying to work on issues with the adults in their lives, but as runaways, they are wary of encountering police, spending a risky night hiding in a movie theater. Dan gathers the courage to go see his divorced father, and the encounter is an exchange laced with disappointment and anger, but reflecting on it, Dan sees himself anew. Liv also has a candid talk with Uncle Fred, and both teens return to their homes with changed perspectives. Considering the vulnerability of Liv, the self-assertion she seeks, and the hint of romance, this coming-of-age novel will strike a resonant chord with middle school girls.—Susan W. Hunter, Riverside Middle School, Springfield, VT
Thirteen-year-old Missourian Olivia Jane knows she's pretty, and she's grateful for it. Pushed by her shallow, obsessed mom ("Being pretty is the best thing to be good at because that's what people really care about"), Liv has competed in pageants all her life and has mostly enjoyed herself. Though there are hints from the beginning that there's much more to vacant-seeming Liv, it's when she meets diminutive fifteen-year-old runaway Dan that she really begins to question the pageant world and her own identity. She runs away, too, following Dan to Chicago on an adventure during which they develop an intense bond. Liv's character slowly un-flattens, revealing personality, intelligence, sadness, depth -- and a backbone we didn't expect. Dan is also a profound character: whip-smart, quirky, stubborn, but deeply fragile and grappling with insecurities about his growth disorder. It's satisfying that Dan ignites something already lurking inside of Liv rather than being the reason she changes, and the relationship that forms between them is first love at its most genuine -- mature beyond their years and tenderly reciprocal. Messages about obsession with physical beauty, the complexities of parent-child relationships, and being true to oneself abound in this self-actualization story, but Willner-Pardo delivers them poignantly. katrina hedeen

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