Keeping it real

Paula Chase

Book - 2021

Fourteen-year-old Marigold's family owns Flexx Unlimited, a hip-hop lifestyle company, and she attends the elite school Flowered Arms Academy, but she has never felt entirely comfortable in the mostly White school, and she prefers to hang out with Justice, relatively new to the school, but a star basketball player; so enrolling in Style High with him, a trainee program funded by Mari's family, seems like a good way to spend the summer--until she meets Kara, who obviously hates Mari and seems determined to turn Justice against her.

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Subjects
Genres
Children's stories
Published
New York : Greenwillow Books, an Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers [2021]
Language
English
Main Author
Paula Chase (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
vii, 356 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 8-12.
Grades 4-6.
ISBN
9780062965691
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Fourteen-year-old Marigold Johnson is an aspiring fashion designer, and she happens to be the daughter of the owners of fashion brand Flexx Unlimited, which is the future of hip-hop fashion. When she learns her best friend, Justice, has applied for a summer job opportunity at Flexx, she can't resist asking her parents to work there as well so she can spend her summer with her friend while gaining some fashion experience. However, working at Flexx and making new friends doesn't come as easy as she thought it would, and Marigold's summer only becomes more complicated when she uncovers a secret that turns her world completely upside down. Chase explores the strength and power of familial bonds and friendships when faced with hardships. The book also delves into the topics of conformity and identity and the weight that they hold on an adolescent's sense of belonging. This will resonate with tweens and teens who are gaining an understanding of who they are and where they fit in.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Socioeconomically, fashion design--sketching Black teen Marigold Johnson is like most of the privileged white students who attend Flowered Arms Academy--that is, her parents are "ballers." As the only Black girl in her grade, however, Mari has found solace for the past two years in her best friendship with Justice, a basketball scholarship student and one of two other Black students in their year. After Justice reveals that he got into a highly competitive summer fashion program for Black rising ninth graders "from some of DC's poorest neighborhoods" at Flexx Unlimited--the "hip-hop lifestyle and media company" run by Mari's parents--Mari decides to join. But when Mari meets the two other selected trainees, she steps into a space in which her background makes her "the same but different," especially as one teen makes her dislike known and Justice seems to ignore Mari entirely. With interspersed text messages and an accessible voice, Chase (Turning Point) delivers a contemporary narrative on the complexities of race, class privilege, and interpersonal relationships, exploring being "Black enough" through a flawed but resonant cast navigating empathy, friendship, and family. Ages 8--12. Agent: Jennifer Carlson, Carlson Dunow & Lerner Literary. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 5 Up--Fourteen-year-old Marigold is the heiress apparent to a thriving hip-hop and clothing empire, Flexx Unlimited, owned by her adoring parents. She and her best friend (and secret crush) Justice are two of the only Black students at an elite private school in DC; Marigold attends because her parents are wealthy, and Justice because he has an athletic scholarship. When Justice announces that he is planning on pursuing a summer internship with her parents' company through a special fashion program designed to help young people from some of DC's poorest backgrounds, Mari decides to join the program as well. Because she is the bosses' daughter and comes from privilege, she feels excluded from the other interns, including Justice. One of the interns in particular seems to have a mysterious grudge against her, the origin of which is revealed in the 12th hour of the novel. The book reads a bit like an after-school special. Mari's relationship with her parents seems a little too easy, even when she discovers they've lied to her, and the resolution of the story arrives abruptly and is slightly on the saccharine side. Nevertheless, the book does a refreshing job exploring friendship, socioeconomic classes, and race without being too didactic or heavy. VERDICT Although an unrealistic resolution and speedy ending hamper the novel, middle grade readers who enjoy stories about fashion and friendship, rooted in real-world issues, will enjoy.--Jennifer Knight, Coos Bay P.L., OR

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

African American teen Marigold "Mari" Johnson is used to straddling two worlds. While her parents' successful media company has afforded her a life of luxury, she constantly has to prove she's "safe enough" for her private school classmates and "down enough" for her family in District City. Classmate and basketball star Justice understands her more than anyone; but as a "scholarship kid," he still accuses Mari of being clueless when it comes to the stigma he faces as a student -- a hardship so prevalent that Justice may transfer. When Justice reveals he's been chosen as part of her parents' fashion internship program, Mari decides to join, too, in an attempt to convince him to stay at their school. Her decision is met with more tension than Mari expected, especially from fellow intern Kara. When the tension culminates in an unexpected revelation, Mari is forced to rethink what privilege truly means, and how to handle it responsibly. In a departure from her books about the crew from The Cove (Turning Point, rev. 3/21, and others), Chase turns her full attention to themes of classism within the Black community. While the first-person narrative doesn't leave much opportunity for readers to become attached to other characters, they are made intimately aware of Mari's thought processes. Eboni Njoku November/December 2021 p.98(c) Copyright 2021. 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 fish-out-of-water class divide tale in reverse. Having enrolled in their fancy private school a few years before him, Marigold has always been her best friend Justice's social interpreter. She might be the only Black girl in their grade, but Mari fits in with the moneyed students, and Justice is a scholarship kid. But this summer, things are going to flip: He's just been accepted into Style High, a summer program designed to boost Black kids who are interested in careers in fashion design and styling. It's hosted by preeminent hip-hop media company Flexx Unlimited--which is owned by Mari's parents. Justice wanted to get in on his own merit and not ask for special treatment, but then Mari does exactly that--she asks her parents to let her take part. She's genuinely interested in fashion, but even she knows her spot was not earned the same way it was by others. And they know it too. Mari's in for an awakening ruder than she expected, one that will make her question what she knows about her family and background. The socio-economic and racial dynamics of this story add a compelling dimension to a story that fits squarely into the lifestyles-of-the-rich-and-famous genre of realistic fiction that is just a touch fantastic with all its glitz and glamour. Text messages can be hard to follow, but the prose has a strong teen voice. A solid story of summer growth and exploration. (Fiction. 10-14) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.