The Losers Club
by Andrew Clements
Intermediate Random 233 pp. 8/17
ISBN 978-0-399-55755-2 $16.99
Library ed. 978-0-399-55756-9 $19.99
e-book ed. 978-0-399-55757-6 $10.99
There’s a pattern we’ve come to expect from Clements’s middle-grade novels (beginning with Frindle, rev. 11/96): a kid gets a big idea and sees it through to results neither he (usually he) nor readers expect. Here, all sixth-grader Alec wants to do is read. When forced by the afterschool program to join or create a club, he comes up with the Losers Club, whose name he feels will sufficiently put off any intruders into his dream of solitary reading bliss. But there’s a catch: the rules require him to sign up at least one other person. He does, and as the club slowly increases its members — who sign on for reasons both worthy and calculating — Alec finds his expectations of the club and himself changing. The story easily works in themes of friends becoming former friends; friends becoming more than friends (in the most innocent of ways); bullying and teasing; and how reading is the best thing ever. Clements appends the fifty-odd short stories, books, and series Alec and his friends enthusiastically read and share throughout the novel; it is to the author’s credit that his own story makes all those titles (a catholic list, but Hatchet is first in Alec’s heart) seem like great fun indeed.
From the September/October 2017 Horn Book Magazine.
We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing.
Add Comment :-
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!