Kate is changing for better, worse, and everything in between.
Seventh grade is starting, and Kate’s mom has moved away, leaving her with her dad. She has been growing apart from former bestie Haddie, a nonconformist who doesn’t feel like a good fit for Kate anymore. Popular mean girl Taylor, who befriends Kate, may not be the best fit, either. But Kate is—mostly—happy to be in Taylor’s orbit, where she doesn’t have to talk about her situation the way she would with Haddie, who is genuinely interested in her life. Kate even follows along when Taylor’s clique harasses Haddie, resulting in Haddie’s fall through the ice on a frozen pond. Narrated by Kate, the scene and her ugly, conflicting emotions are vividly described. Instinct kicks in, and Kate saves Haddie. Video of the rescue makes national media, and celebrities dub her Kate the Great. Is she? Tensions mount, and Kate anxiously treads water until her full role in the incident is exposed, forcing her to confront Haddie, Taylor, her mother, and herself. Kate must decide who she is: bully, hero, friend, foe, beloved daughter, dependent, all of the above. Characters are three-dimensional and realistically flawed, as Kate becomes increasingly aware. The resolution feels familiar but Kate’s solution is unique; she won’t be defined by one moment. This messy middle-school drama shines a light on what it means to develop identity. Main characters read as White.
Illuminating.
(Fiction. 8-12)