By Booki Vivat. HarperCollins, 2016.
ISBN: #978-0-06-239879-6.
Click here to purchase.
Click here to purchase.
Abbie Wu is starting middle school, and
she desperately needs to figure out what her THING is. She’s not perfect like
her big brother Peter, or adorable like her little sister Clara (who can get
away with anything). She’s not a master gamer like her best friend Logan, or a
super actress like her other best friend, Maxine. When Maxine and Logan get
assigned to the same homeroom, Abbie’s anxieties skyrocket. To make things
worse, the lunchroom is corrupt, with the 8th graders dominating the
only line providing delicious food. When Abbie overhears her study hall
companions complaining about the cafeteria, she realizes that they have shared
problems, and that they can work together towards a solution. Abbie leads her
new friends (and soon all of Pointdexter Middle School) in a “lunch
revolution,” where the kids exchange food. When parent pushback puts an end to
the lunch trade, big brother Peter takes her out for pastries and provides
encouragement, reinforcing that “not everything has to work out” all the time. Setbacks
aside, Abbie learns that she makes a decent “voice of the people” and that
maybe she isn’t “100% doomed” after all.
Although Abbie’s Asian American
identity is not mentioned specifically (Wu is a name with Chinese origins), readers
will find themselves relating to and learning from various aspects of Abbie’s
story—especially her status as “middle child” and the stress and anxiety she carries.
Vivat’s simple, black and white illustrations bring to mind notetaking and
doodling in the margins, which is appropriate for this hybrid novel about school.
The pictures add humor and support the plot, too. For example, as Abbie
reflects on how middle school “changes everything,” she watches her friends
float away while holding onto helium balloons, denoting the distance growing
between them. Abbie speaks openly about her emotions, but she casually uses
ableist language (like “crazy”) and pokes fun at a teacher rumored to be “shipped
off to a psych ward” after a mental breakdown.
All in all, Frazzled is a back-to-school story that will appeal to fans of
Rachel Renée Russell’s Dork Diaries and Grace Lin’s Pacy Lin Novel series. The story wraps
up at the end, but the sequel possibilities are wide open. I suspect young readers,
after getting a chance to read Frazzled upon its release on 9/27, will be asking
for more.
Reviewed by Elisa Gall
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