Sometimes sticking your neck out is the only way to move forward.
Twelve-year-old Hazel misses the comfort of fifth grade when clothes didn’t matter, looks didn’t matter, and the boys weren’t such huge jerks. Fortunately, she still has her best friend, Tori, who understands why this year is the worst. The school dress code shames girls, two boys deliberately trip Tori and Hazel every day, and Tori’s brother, 13-year-old Ben, no longer wants to hang out with them. Hazel is resigned to spending the rest of sixth grade eating lunch in the library, writing haiku, and looking after Pip, the tortoise she found, until she stumbles across a journal. Some of the boys are rating the girls’ attractiveness and leaving awful comments about the ones they don’t like. Her new friend, Dion, is also being bullied by other boys. Hazel knows she must do something, but what? Hazel’s journey to finding her voice is brimming with lessons on toxic masculinity, sexism, bullying, and how students can work together to make change. The anxiety of transitioning to middle school and Hazel’s insecurities about her changing body are equally relatable. Schroeder’s slight nods to racism and homophobia are a bit anemic but do not detract from the overall theme. Hazel’s actions may inspire readers to stand up for what’s right. Characters follow a White default; Dion is cued as Black. Tori has two lesbian moms.
An empowering read. (Fiction. 10-13)