Maggie Diaz is back for the second half of seventh grade, cellphone in hand, ready for more adventures.
Set a few months after the first volume, this lighthearted second installment follows Maggie, now nearly 13, as she and best friends Julian and Zoey prepare for their Miami middle school’s big spring break trip to Saint Augustine. The spring semester arrival of new classmate Vanessa, who was formerly home-schooled, changes the trio’s dynamic, and things get even more awkward when Maggie’s recently widowed Abuela decides to be a chaperone for the trip. As friends and classmates begin to experience first crushes, Maggie explores her complicated feelings for her pal Eddie, who now sports earrings and eyeliner. The author packs an emotional punch into this fun middle school dramedy: sibling issues (Maggie continues to feel like she can’t compare to her perfect 16-year-old sister, Caro), loss (Abuela and the whole family are mourning Abuelo’s death), friendship jealousy, and first love. In addition to the Cuban American Diazes, the multicultural cast includes Haitian, Creole-speaking Zoey and Japanese and Puerto Rican Vanessa. There’s positive queer representation as well, since Caro now has a cool girlfriend. The cheerful, evocative spot-art illustrations vividly support the text. This is ideal reading for fans of Meg Medina’s Merci Suárez trilogy and anyone looking for stories about plucky girls with close-knit, multigenerational families.
A sweet, amusing tale about navigating friendship and family drama.
(Fiction. 10-14)