Squad goals

Lisa Papademetriou

Book - 2022

"Mackenzie Miler has big goals. For instance, conquering seventh grade--with projects. There's the Mom Project (finding her mom a boyfriend--even if she says she's not interested), the Friend project (win back the BFFs who dumped her and make a new friend), and the Band project (so what if she's never planned a fundraiser? How hard can it be?). But finding real-life romance is a lot more complicated than her mom's favorite movies make it look. And last year's friends still won't tell Mackenzie what she did wrong. And the fundraiser? It has to be beyond impressive, since Mackenzie accidentally promised a live band so amazing it will "make everyone poop their pants." The harder Mackenzie works to c...raft the perfect school year, the more she feels like she's failing. She can do it all, can't she? Or do her big goals require something more--like a little help from her friends?"--

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A high achiever patches up friendships and learns the value of asking for help when she overschedules herself. For new seventh grader Mackenzie Miller, anything worth doing is worth overdoing--beginning with persistent efforts to get her divorced mom to use a dating app, continuing with Operation Make a New Friend at school after being ghosted by her old bestie, Johanna, and culminating in a frenzy of preparations and planning to raise funds for new band instruments. Whipping up friendship bracelets (step-by-step instructions are appended) and leaving readers breathless in the wake of her narrative rush, this budding force of nature pinballs through a lively intergenerational supporting cast featuring an extended clan of Pakistani Americans led by promisingly unattached next-door neighbor Zane. Sheera Mirza, Zane's niece and a classmate who joins Mackenzie in an unorthodox after-school arts club, proves a loyal ally when Mackenzie finally admits that in trying to set up the looming fundraiser single-handedly, she's bitten off more than she can chew. The transformative insight that it's OK to ask for help leads not only to a spectacularly successful fundraiser, but, by the end, patched-up relations with Johanna and another alienated friend, capped by exciting hints that her mom and Zane might be turning into an item. Mackenzie reads White and has some Greek ancestry. With this flying start, a young maker makes a strong bid for attention. (Fiction. 9-13) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.