What Parents Should Know
If it's been a while since you've taken a look at this one,
you may want to preview before you share with your kid. There's
a lot about the pains of growing up here (some of it fairly
frank), so be prepared to answer some questions about puberty
(though your preteen may be too embarrassed to ask you
directly!) Also, please note that the main character struggles
with her religion and the idea of God.
Common Sense Media Review
Judy Blume so perfectly captures the obsessions, fantasies,
and colloquialisms of adolescence that her story and writing
seem simple. Her style is a bone of contention for literate
kids. "Looking back," says one fourteen-year-old, "I think it's
really poorly written. Still, it really did remind me of my
friends." Many adult critics think Blume's books are shallow
too, but the loyalty of her readers is real. She discusses
things that many preteen girls worry about, and they take
comfort in hearing they are not alone.
Margaret's greatest strength--and education--comes from the fact that she faces her worries and grapples with them, even if they aren't solved. She discovers that the beautiful, early-maturing girl in her class doesn't really make out with all the boys, as the cruel rumor has it. In fact, her premature curvaceousness carries its own problems. And Margaret sees the depths that her friends will go to fit in when one of her club members lies that she's first to get her period. Margaret never settles on a religion, but she survives her dueling grandmothers, who each want her to join their respective faiths.
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.



