That's not what I heard

Stephanie Kate Strohm

Book - 2019

High-school seniors Kimberly Landis-Lilley and Teddy Lin have been together since kindergarten, but then someone starts a rumor that they have broken up, and suddenly the whole William Henry Harrison High School is taking sides, somebody is putting up posters supporting Kim and criticizing Teddy, there are incidents of artistic vandalism, people are talking about having separate proms, and even teachers and parents are getting involved--and nobody is more confused about the chaos then Kim and Teddy themselves.

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Published
New York : Scholastic Press 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Stephanie Kate Strohm (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
356 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781338281811
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Seniors Kim and Teddy, William Henry Harrison High's golden couple, are apparently done. Quitsville. Uncoupled. The source of this hot gossip, freshman Phil Spooner, finds himself in the spotlight after passing along the story with an embellishment or two. Immediately, the school splits into Team Kim and Teddy Bear. The breakup fever spreads, and by the time the prom committee must make a final decision on the theme, there are four wildly disparate ideas (and teams) dividing the school gym into quarters. Between a food fight, a rash of graffiti, and angry parents who also take sides, WHHHS spirals out of control, all because no one, including Kim and Teddy, bothers to ask questions, preferring instead to absorb misinformed gossip and other fake news. Plenty of hyperbole provides copious amounts of laughter in the month leading up to prom. While some will recognize nods to Bye-Bye Birdie, others will see the clever metaphor for the current U.S. political situation. Give this to readers who crave something light and humorous.--Jeanne Fredriksen Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

When golden couple Kim and Teddy break up in senior year, shock waves ripple through William Henry Harrison High. Rumors fly; students and teachers choose sides; and schoolwide high jinks (including a teddy-bear-ears headband craze and an epic food fight) ensue. The increasingly ridiculous plot points, combined with deadpan delivery in the third-person narration from multiple characters' perspectives, will make readers laugh out loud. (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

Chaos descends upon William Henry Harrison High when seniors Kim Landis-Lilley and Teddy Lin break up.Under-the-radar freshman Phil Spooner becomes the key eyewitness to the historic moment that is the end of Chinese-American Teddy and white Kim's six-year romance. Eager for attention from his crush, Kim's best friend, Jess Howard, Phil blurts out a fabricated reason, namely that the relationship ended because Teddy didn't like any of Kim's Instagram posts. Phil's lie spirals out of control as the entire school begins to gossip over what really transpired between the it couple. Students and teachers alike take sides, joining either the red-wearing Team Kim or the Teddy Bears, a group founded by Sophie Maeby, who just broke up with her boyfriend and now pines after Teddy. The plot depends on the development of more ridiculous miscommunication and rumors, resulting in the birth of two more groups, the HeartBeats (who want Kim and Teddy to reconcile) and the AntiKaTs (who are fed up with the whole drama), an all-out cafeteria food fight, and the division of prom into four separate themes. The constantly shifting points of view, though whiplash-inducing, allow for an assorted range of humorous insights into an already absurd situation. Although following a white default, there is ethnic diversity in the student body and school staff.For fans of Mean Girls and other high school comedies. (Fiction. 12-16) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.