Better you than me

Jessica Brody

Book - 2018

When two twelve-year-old girls--one a famous TV star, the other an obsessive fan--switch bodies the results are nothing but disastrous.--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Delacorte Press [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Jessica Brody (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
424 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781524769710
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Ruby Rivera, lead in the hit TV show Ruby of the Lamp, just wants out of her superstar life. Skylar Welshman, bullying victim, recent product of divorce, and Ruby's biggest fan, wants to escape her average seventh-grade existence. When the two 12-year-olds cross paths on the set of Ruby's show, they make an idle wish on a prop lamp that actually comes true: they switch bodies. Now Ruby gets to sleep in, read books, and go to middle school like a regular kid, while Skylar is getting makeovers, texting celebrities, and attending awards shows. But the girls soon realize that no one's life is perfect; maybe the only way to deal with their problems is by facing them. The breezy tone and the two likable narrators make this a fun, fast-paced read for tweens, especially those who like a little celebrity gossip. The message that the life you want might just be the one you have is certainly one readers will have heard before, but, alongside Skylar and Ruby, they'll have a blast hearing it again.--Maggie Reagan Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-7-Two 12-years-old girls, Disney-esque star Ruby Rivera and her biggest fan Skyler Welshman, meet on the set of Ruby's hit television show and improbably switch bodies by accident. At first thrilled with the situation, each tween believes the other has the better life in this Freaky Friday-like storyline. Due to various scheduling constraints, the girls plan to meet several days later to switch back. Meanwhile, each girl's assumptions about one another are put to the test as they struggle to cope with scenarios they never expected and to make the best of their new lives. Brody takes a common trope and freshens it up with realistic details. What starts out as a formulaic plot device evolves into a strong story about appreciating friends and family and making good choices. The alternating chapters from each girl's perspective give each character a distinct voice. -VERDICT A feel-good story with a few life lessons. A solid purchase for most middle school collections.-Nancy McKay, Ella Johnson -Memorial Library, Hampshire, IL © Copyright 2018. 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 Horn Book Review

After wishing on a magic lamp to trade lives, twelve-year-old television actress Ruby and her biggest fan, Skylar, switch bodies. The tweens are ecstatic to masquerade as each other, but living someone else's life with its own challenges isn't as easy as it looks. Brody's latest evades being a predictable body-swap story thanks to engaging dual narration, swift pacing, and convincing mother-daughter relationships. (c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The familiar body-swap scenario gets a further magic twist in this comedic middle school fantasy.Skylar Welshman is an outsiderthe new kid in her seventh-grade class. When she tries out for the school play, a mortifying onstage incident earns her the nickname Belchman. If only Skylar could have her idol's perfect life. Ruby Rivera is the star of the Disney-esque genie comedy series Ruby in the Lamp. Although Ruby has everything superstardom brings, however, she wants to trade in her designer wardrobe and millions of social media followers for textbooks and sleepovers. A fantastic turn of events leads to accidental body-switching courtesy of a real magic lamp. Initially, each girl thinks she's hit the jackpot. Skylar can have the life of a beloved star, and Ruby gets to be a regular kid. But then reality creeps in. Skylar has to get used to public scrutiny of her every move, and Ruby must navigate the pitfalls of middle school. Is the grass really greener on the other side? While the premise isn't exactly earthshakingly original, it's still an appealing one, though Brody misses an opportunity by not interrogating the girls' experiences as members of different races: Ruby is a brown-skinned, bicultural Latina (Mexican and Salvadoran), and Skylar is white. The narrative's on the long side for a middle-grade novel, but each girl narrates in alternating chapters, maintaining a brisk pace.Clichs and superficiality aside, a fun read for anyone who might wish they could be someone else for a little while. (Fantasy. 8-13) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Blah, Blah, Blah . . . Genie     Ruby     The magic lamp shimmers in the hot red sand. A diamond in the rough. A jewel in the desert. I wipe the sweat from my brow--evidence of walking through miles and miles of scalding-hot nothingness. With trembling fingers, I reach for the ancient relic, my breath catching in my throat as soon as I make contact.   "This is it!" I tell Miles, my travel companion and best friend. The violent desert winds have wreaked havoc on his perfect hair.   "Are you sure?" he asks.   I nod. "This is the one from my dream."   I sink to my knees, my silk caftan immediately filling with rough grains of sand. I rest one shaking hand against the side of the lamp, hold my breath, close my eyes, and rub. And then . . .   Nothing.   I fall back into the sand, hopeless, defeated. Miles sinks down next to me. "I'm sorry, Ruby."   He puts a hand on my arm and we sit in silence for a moment. Then I tilt my head back and call into the cloudless sky, "Where are you? Why can't I find you?" The words are cheesy. But I say them anyway. Because I have no choice.   Just then, the golden lamp I'm still clutching begins to shudder. Gently at first, like a shiver on a cool day, then more violently, until I have to squeeze it between my knees to keep it from shaking out of my hands.   I fight not to roll my eyes. It's a bit much.   Then, in a puff of blue smoke that looks more like glittery pixie dust than genie smoke, a man appears before me. An ancient, powerful genie with blue skin and golden eyes that sparkle in the desert sun. From my seated place in the sand, he looks gigantic. Towering above Miles and me in gold harem pants that flap in the breeze and a red jewel-encrusted turban covering his hair.   He folds his arms over his bare blue chest and glares down at me, his gilded eyes cruel and cold. "Who awakens me from my long and peaceful slumber, and for what purpose?" he says in a deep, booming voice.   I look up at him, eyes wide, mouth agape, struggling to keep a straight face. But I just can't do it. With the blue-tinted skin, and the yellow contacts, and the BeDazzled turban, it's too much. I try to speak, but instead of words coming out, I break into uncontrollable laughter.   "Cut!" says a voice from the darkness beyond the desert. "Cut! Cut! Cut!"   The lights come on and the giant warehouse-size building is illuminated around me, making this little patch of fake sand and green background look even more ridiculous than it feels. I know the background won't really be green. It's just temporary. In post-production, when the editors splice the episode together, they'll insert rolling hills of sand dunes behind me so it'll look like I'm actually outside in the Sahara Desert and not inside a soundstage in Burbank, California, at three o'clock on a Wednesday afternoon. Three hours past schedule, I might add, because Barry Berkowitz, the show's executive producer and creator, didn't like the look of the first three batches of sand.   "What was that?" Barry demands, stepping out from behind the bank of cameras and viewing monitors. "We're one line away from the end of the scene!" I secretly call him Barry Barkowitz--or some variation of that--because he seems to bark everything he says.   "Nice job, Ruby," Ryder sneers, pushing himself up from his seated place in the fake sand. The sarcasm is rich in his voice. I stick out my tongue in reply. Ryder Vance, my costar, has played Miles on the show for the past four years. He's like a brother to me. A very annoying, obnoxious, way-too-obsessed-with-his-hair brother. "Now we have to reset the whole shot." He stomps off set toward the food table, smoothing his windblown hair with one hand while he grabs a chocolate doughnut with the other and shoves half of it in his mouth. He turns to me and taunts me by chewing dramatically. He knows I can't have chocolate doughnuts because I've basically been on a flavor-free diet since I was eight, and he loves to rub it in my face.   I roll my eyes and turn away from him, my gaze landing once again on the actor playing the ancient genie. And then I lose it all over again, laughing uncontrollably. I feel bad for the guy, I really do. This--blue skin dye and harem pants--is probably his big break into Hollywood.   Barry Barkhead stalks menacingly toward me, wiping sweat from his bald head. "Do you find my writing humorous?"   No, I think. I find it ridiculous.   But I don't dare say that aloud. The whole stupid show is over-the-top. I mean, seriously, a school for genies with classes like Wish Granting and Carpet Driver's Ed and Yoga for Lamp Dwellers? It's like Barry just sat down one day, made a list of the cheesiest genie-related things, and poof! Here's a hit TV show for you.   "They have twenty more minutes," Russ reminds Barry. He's the show's production assistant, recognizable by the clipboard that's practically glued to his hand, and the way he seems to shake in his shoes whenever he's around Barry.   Barry waves Russ away with a rough hand, nearly swatting him in the face. Fortunately, Russ ducks just in time before running away. Of all the people on set who are afraid of Barry--which is pretty much everyone--Russ is probably the most terrified. And I can't blame him. If he's not getting nearly smacked by Barry's wild gestures, he's getting spit on by Barry's saliva-heavy rants.   But Russ is just doing his job, reminding Barry that Ryder and I have only twenty more minutes until they have to let us go home. It's California state law. Because we're only twelve, we can only work for five hours at a time, and can only be on set for nine and a half hours total, including makeup, hair, and meals. Thank goodness for that law, or Barkhead would make me stay here all night.   Frustrated, Barry jams his fingertips into his temples. "Do you know the line, Ruby?" he asks me through gritted teeth.   " 'I'm looking for my mother,' " I recite dutifully. Excerpted from Better You Than Me by Jessica Brody All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.