Gr 5–8—Diminutive, biracial, freckled Isadora "Tink" Aaron-Martin is grounded for most of the summer after an incident with her best friend. She decides to write an encyclopedia, and in spite of the artificiality of the alphabetical format, Rivers has created a warm, funny, fast-paced story about an endearing middle schooler who keeps her cool and sense of humor when events spin out of control. Tink explains her role as the "Peacemaker" in a dysfunctional family whose lives tiptoe around the moods and rages of Tink's autistic older brother, Seb. As the summer progresses she finds friendship and a tender and diffident love interest in the boy next door, is humiliated in a disastrous photo shoot for a magazine article about families living with autistic children, and becomes good at skateboarding, an activity that replaces the detested ballet classes she has been taking at her mother's behest. When Seb becomes violent, leaving his twin brother badly hurt, Tink finally decides she has had enough of her peacemaking role. "Z" finds her in the arms of her boyfriend at the Zetroc Prom. Rivers delivers an appealingly heroine in Tink. She is original and authentic, and her story flows easily in spite of the tricky format.—Jane Barrer, Steinway Intermediate School, Long Island City, NY
With time on her hands due to serial groundings, narrator Isadora (Tink) Aaron-Martin chronicles her twelve-going-on-thirteen summer and fall in encyclopedia form -- complete with detailed footnotes, cross-references, and long tangents. The book starts with "Aa" (defined as "some kind of lava"), but then the entry veers off into a flurry of introductory details. Moving through the alphabet with Tink is an amusing, emotional journey. One of her older twin brothers is autistic, and the resulting tension and exhaustion bring the family to a breaking point. She and her longtime BFF Freddie Blue grow apart amidst confusion, cruelty, and a life-changing thirteenth birthday party. Meanwhile the new blue-haired, skateboarding neighbor boy further complicates everything. Some entries in this cleverly constructed book move the plot along while other seemingly trivial ones (such as "Barbie Dolls") come back to play key roles later. Through the alphabet, the summer, and the start of the new school year, Tink remains true to herself, but her personality and confidence grow stronger, creating a light but sincere and spirited story. julie roach
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