Review by New York Times Review
SEVERAL YEARS AGO, my sixth-grader son was struggling to figure out why he had drifted away from an old school friend. After taking a few stabs at the problem, he dug down to its hard bitter core and brought it to the light, in a voice of unmasked disgust: "He's become a bookworm." Impossible, in that moment, not to become my own middle-school self: the pale, larval, solitary creature whose idea of bliss was to read whatever titles my parents had forgotten to send back to the Book of the Month Club and who was making a quixotic and doomed project of their caramel-bound Great Books collection, inching through each volume (Plato? Homer?) without a particle of understanding but with the happy assurance that there were all these words, waiting for me to find them. Which is to say that every writer begins as a reader - often the peculiarly helpless and darkly alienated kind. So I couldn't help but feel an ache of shared sorrow for Alec, the "fried bookworm" and sixthgrade hero of Andrew Clements's "The Losers Club," who, upon being given the present of a book, promptly sits down to read it while his own birthday party unravels around him. For five years now, Alec has been spending more time with books than with kids, and he resents anything that gets between him and the printed page, be it classwork, homework, sports or girls. That edenic solitude is threatened when his school's after-school program requires him (imagine the horror) to join an organized activity. Thinking fast, he convinces another bibliophile, Nina, to form a reading group, and together, they stake out a quiet table in the back corner of the gym and call themselves the Losers Club - the better to keep other students at bay. Their plan backfires, but you knew this. With each passing day, aspiring losers - refugees from the hostile lands of kickball and origami - gravitate toward the corner table. Worse, some of them want to talk about their books, which requires a whole other table. Then there's Kent, the nasty alpha boy with eyes for Nina, a situation that requires Alec to clarify his own feelings for Nina, which takes him further and further away from books and into the realm of the actual. Life, in short, insists on being lived, and Alec, after a bitter encounter with his romantic rival, realizes with a start that he "had actually done things, and as he did them, he became the owner of a collection of interlocking moments, moments that belonged only to him. And those moments were not fiction." That neatly describes the narrative tension, such as it is, in "The Losers Club." On the one side, the static glory of literature, which "stays put, right there all the time, always the same, with the words perfectly lined up one after another, waiting." On the other side: undependable, disorderly life. "Books are great," suggests Alec's dad, "but they shouldn't be like a hideout." That schematic divide may not persuade a grown-up reader - books don't always console, and they never keep still - but Clements doesn't pound the theme too hard. He's out to celebrate reading in all its obsessiveness, and as a marker of his sincerity and humility, he tosses in shout-outs to a passel of other writers (the "Hatchet" author Gary Paulsen owes him a bottle of Scotch) and even goes so far as to offer an ancillary reading list at story's end. Will "The Losers Club" win its own place on tomorrow's reading lists? I don't think even Clements's most fervent admirers would rank it in his upper echelon - certainly, it lacks the larkishness and left-hook pathos of his classic "Frindle" - but it has the low-key geniality common to all his work, and it gives fried bookworms everywhere the satisfaction of knowing that friends may desert them (if only temporarily) but books never will. Forever at arm's reach lies the seductive world that, in Alec's words, has "a beginning, a middle, and out there a few hundred pages in the future, a tidy, satisfying ending." ? Clements is out to celebrate reading in all its obsessiveness, with shout-outs to a passel of other writers. LOUIS bayard's most recent novel was "Lucky Strikes."
Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review
A best-selling author of beloved school stories, Clements (Frindle, 1998) celebrates readers, inclusion, and the joy of discovering new books. Alec starts sixth grade with two problems: he's not allowed to read in class anymore, and he's consigned to the extended day program after school. Solving both problems at once, Alec forms his own club and dubs it the Losers Club so people will leave him to read quietly with just a few fellow bookworms. What starts as an excuse for isolation turns into a social experiment of sorts that brings the extended day program together as Alec triumphantly rebrands the club's image: books do that they make us lose some ignorance, and lose some fear. And losing fear might mean losing some anger, too. This may be more appealing to book lovers like Alec, rather than reluctant readers like athletic Kent, but Clements' portrayal of a sensitive, honest boy who delights in the comfort and familiarity of rereading favorite books is refreshing and empowering.--Kling, Caitlin Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Sixth grader Alec Spencer spends most of his time reading-in real life he's harassed by his neighbor and former friend Kent, and books are a welcome escape. But Alec's constant reading is putting him in the academic danger zone (summer school is a distinct possibility). At the after-school program Alec is participating in, the options are to do homework, join a club, or create one; just sitting and reading isn't allowed. So he starts a club for silent reading and calls it the Losers Club to keep membership small, though he does invite new student Nina. But others soon want to join, and both Alec and Kent develop a crush on Nina. Inveterate readers will instantly relate to Alec's passion and plight, and Clements (The Map Trap) once again effectively taps into the challenges of middle school social politics and mapping out one's identity. This empathetic coming-of-age journey makes it clear how limiting and pointless labels can be, and that both books and real life have quite a bit to offer. Ages 8-12. Agent: Amy Berkower, Writers House. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 3-6-Sixth grader Alec, a true bibliophile, would rather read for pleasure than listen to his teachers, which often lands him in trouble with his parents, his teachers, and the principal. When Alec joins the after-school program, he is forced to pick a club, and quietly reading is not an option. Alec comes up with a plan to create a club that no kid would ever want to join, the Losers Club, where he can sit alone and read. He does not anticipate, however, that there are others like him who might want to join. Much to Alec's dismay, the Losers Club soon becomes the most popular group in the program. As the club thrives and Alec makes new friends and reconnects with old ones, he learns that while he does not have to change who he is, he should not let real life pass him by. Clements's latest is engaging and funny. Book lovers and reluctant readers alike will enjoy the relatable characters, realistic dialogue, and humorous scenes. Alec's confidence in himself and his ability to solve his problems while staying true to himself are refreshing. A list of the titles mentioned throughout the novel is included. VERDICT A laugh-out-loud first purchase for all middle grade collections, and a solid read-aloud choice for classrooms.-Marissa Lieberman, East Orange Public Library, NJ © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
There's no such thing as too much readinguntil it gets you in trouble.Sixth-grader Alec loves to read. For the past five years he has been sent to principal Mrs. Vance's office multiple times for reading instead of paying attention in class. As sixth grade starts, Mrs. Vance gives the white preteen an ultimatum: stop reading when he should be listening or end up in summer school (which will destroy the annual family trip to New Hampshire). Worse than that, his parents will be spending longer hours at work, so he and his brother have to stay three extra hours in the Extended Day Program at school. According to EDP rules you either do homework in the library or you join a club. Happily, Alec learns he can actually start his own club, which he calls the Losers Club in order to scare kids away and ensure quiet reading time. Former best friend and now popular kid Kent delights in tormenting Alec, especially when the boys realize they both like new girl Nina (co-founder of the Losers Club). Can Alec navigate the rough waters of sixth grade, keep his grades up, and, most importantly, read? Clements adds to his growing oeuvre this tale peopled with likably familiar, mostly white kid characters in realistic situations; black Losers Club recruit Lily provides some diversity. Avid readers will cheer Alec on and wish their school bullies were as easily managed as Kent. Backmatter includes a list of the books, classics and popular, that the kids read throughout the story. Another upbeat, modern school story sure to please fans and teachers. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.