Clea gets easily distracted but she’s always been able to
cope and get her work done up to now. But in
seventh grade the work has gotten more difficult and her systems for coping can no longer keep up. She’s not finishing her
assignments and she’s failing tests. Her
parents are worried, but Clea figures that she just needs to double down – work
harder and stop being so dumb. If she
doesn’t figure things out, she risks getting kicked off the chess team – the one thing at
which she’s actually good.
A counselor at school suggests to Clea’s parents that she
should get tested for ADHD. That seems
unlikely to Clea since she’s not hyperactive like those kids usually are, but
her parents insist. When it is found out
that she does have ADHD, she is shocked but slowly comes to welcome outside help. But even with medication and special accommodations, she finds it is still going to be
hard work to overcome her condition.
A dense middle grade reader about ADHD and what it
is like to cope with it. I don’t
generally like books that are basically non-fiction cloaked in a story.
They seem too preachy to me and more work than fun. The characters just sound like they are taken off the
pages of an encyclopedia with long speeches full of facts that are unlikely to roll off the tongue. Clea's character does get
to hang with friends, have a romantic crush, and deal with a fairly ineffectual
bully, but it’s thin framework upon which to drape the factual information that Gerber really wants to talk about.
[Disclaimer: I received an ARC of this book from the publisher in exchange
for an unbiased review. The book is
scheduled for release on March 26th.]
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