Mousetraps

Michael Wood READ TIME: 1 MIN.

Pat Schmatz
Carolrhoda Books

Meet the Judy Blume of the post-Columbine generation and her charming protagonist, Maxie. High school is tough for Maxie for all the usual reasons; not to mention that she's overshadowed by her athletic best friend and her over-achieving cousin, Sean, who's already taking college classes and is secretly dating the school's star football player. Maxie seems fated to be unnoticed until Rick returns to her high school. Close friends in elementary school, Maxie dropped Rick in sixth grade when she saw he was fated to be the kid everybody picked on. After a nasty bullying incident, Rick transferred to another school. Now he's back and assigned to be Maxie's lab partner in chemistry. This simple twist of fate unleashes an inexorable chain of "37 significant events," like the Rube Goldberg style mousetraps that Maxie doodles in her sketchpad, that leads to a troubled new friendship, mysterious pranks at school, and Maxie's first real kiss. Along the way Schmatz sensitively delves into alternative families, homophobia, and the ugly side of the unspoken class system of adolescence. It's rare to find an adult who writes young people so well; Rick's unhappiness and Maxie's confusion are handled with deft authenticity that is a pleasure to read, even when painful.


by Michael Wood

Michael Wood is a contributor and Editorial Assistant for EDGE Publications.

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