Nora’s summer vacation turns out to be the best—and also the worst—ever.
Narrator Nora’s sixth grade year—her first in a new school—ends with the disclosure that her classmates from the middle-class neighborhood of Solvang Heights have summer plans for travel with their families. Put on the spot, an ashamed Nora lies and says she’s going to the tropics. Only Nora and Wilmer, the boy who dropped by on the last day of school to meet the class he’ll join in the fall, live in Chaplin Court, a low-income apartment block dubbed Craplin Court. Nora’s reluctance to befriend Wilmer—he’s not cool or handsome in the way that her crush, Marcus, is—gradually eases as she struggles with the long stretch of summer, lack of friends, and an unemployed mother who seems to sleep all the time. Wilmer shares with Nora his discovery of the long-unoccupied former apartment complex caretaker’s flat, and the two resourcefully create a summer getaway they do their best to turn into a tropical escape. Evidence of the caretaker’s long-ago romance and heartbreak captures Nora’s and Wilmer’s imaginations. The transformation of the flat and the innocent playing house seem magical until the class mean girls find a way to bully Nora’s happiness out of her. Hints of the Norwegian setting come through in this translation that sheds light on socio-economic disparities. The resolution is satisfyingly happy.
Absorbing relationship drama with a convincing protagonist.
(Fiction. 9-12)