Middle-Grade Review: Dear Jackie by Jessixa Bagley

 

About This Book:

A middle schooler’s plan to fit in with her new friends by writing herself a fake love letter backfires spectacularly in this funny and all-too-relatable graphic novel perfect for fans of Raina Telgemeier and the Berrybrook Middle School series.

 

Jackie and Milo have been best friends since they were born. Whether they’re reading comic books in their tree house hideout, playing video games, or spying on their neighbors using walkie talkies and code names, it’s always been the two of them versus the world. But in middle school, things are changing. Milo joins the soccer team and starts hanging out with a new crew. Jackie gets taken under the wing of Adelle, who wants to give her a total makeover and find her a crush. Suddenly, it seems like there are certain acceptable ways to be a girl or a boy, and Jackie starts to feel like everything about her is wrong.

In an effort to get Adelle and her new friends off her back, Jackie sends herself an anonymous love letter. But her plan backfires, and soon Jackie’s secret admirer is all anybody at school can talk about. Now she’s wondering: Dear Jackie, how are you going to get out of this?

 

*Review Contributed By Karen Yingling, Staff Reviewer*

Middle School is always hard!

 

Jackie and Milo are next door neighbors who have been friends forever, spying on neighbors and calling each other endearing nicknames like “Stankbreath”. When middle school starts, Milo spends more time with his soccer teammates, and Jackies mother encourages her to spend more time hanging out with Adele and embracing more “feminine” pursuits. Jackie doesn’t care about clothes or boys, but when Adele ane her friends give her a hard time, Jackie leaves herself a note that she’s typed on her brother’s typewriter from a “secret admirer” to divert their attention. She also tries some hair dye, which ends disasterously, and is the subject of teasing when her leg hair shows through the tights of a costume she wears at a school assembly. Milo’s new soccer friends often make fun of her, and Milo does not stand up to them. Jabari, Jackie’s brother who is away at college, often counsels her about being true to herself. It’s something he has struggled with, since he occasionally wears dresses and has had some trouble getting support from their parents. As Jackie continues to get notes, fellow students opine on who might have sent them. Is it Milo? After some Valentine’s Day drama, Jackie is angry with Milo, and at a sleepover, agrees to toilet paper his house, uses the paper to spell out his nickname, Stankbreath. They manage to overcome this, but when Jackie stands Milo up for the end of the year dance, he is angry again and tells the others that she’s been sending notes to herself. Will Jackie be able to find a way to be herself in middle school without alienating her friends.
Good Points
The back and forth of who-likes-whom is very typical of middle school, and doesn’t get enough coverage in most novels. Students still use the notes with the check boxes (“Do you like me? Yes, No”); I found one just last month! Fitting in is also a hard thing for middle schoolers to figure out, and Jackie’s fights with Milo over their diverging interests are quite realistic. This follows the two through the school year, so covers major holidays and events. Jabari supporting Milo from college was good to see, and it’s always good to have sibling and parent relationships depicted. Jackie is able to navigate some issues with her parents after her final blow up at the dance in a productive way. Fans of the Bagleys’ Duel will be glad to see this new title.

I did have to laugh a little at Jackie’s “problem”– the students at my school all dress like Jackie– the halls are a sea of black and gray hoodies over dark track pants or pajama pants. I’m sure all schools are different, but no one would be giving Jackie a hard time at my school.

My daughter was a big fan of reading about other middle school students’ problems, because she said they made her feel better about her own life. Graphic novels tend towards students who struggle with anxiety and awkwardness, so this is a good choice for readers who like the friend drama in Meeker and Davidson’s Swing, Libenson’s Invisible Emmie, or Scrivan’s Nat Enough.

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