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Teen Fiction - Choices & Transitions, Teen Fiction - Girls & Young Women
Dangerously Alice by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor β€” book cover

Dangerously Alice

by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
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Overview

Alice has always tried to be a decent person. She gets good grades, comes home on time, and has never really given her dad and her stepmom any reason to worry. But now that junior year of high school has started, Alice is a little sick of people assuming she's a goody-goody, so she decides to start shaking things up. First there are the dates with Tony, a cute senior who's a lot more experienced than Alice. Then the fights with her stepmom about the new cat, the car, and everything else start. But when Alice sneaks off to a party that her parents don't know about and a near-tragedy follows, she starts to realize every choice has a consequence, and danger rarely leads to good ones.

Funny, realistic, and always provocative, Phyllis Reynolds Naylor does it again, proving that she understands what real girls think and feel, with this twenty-second book in the beloved Alice series.

Synopsis

Alice has always tried to be a decent person. She gets good grades, comes home on time, and has never really given her dad and her stepmom any reason to worry. But now that junior year of high school has started, Alice is a little sick of people assuming she's a goody-goody, so she decides to start shaking things up. First there are the dates with Tony, a cute senior who's a lot more experienced than Alice. Then the fights with her stepmom about the new cat, the car, and everything else start. But when Alice sneaks off to a party that her parents don't know about and a near-tragedy follows, she starts to realize every choice has a consequence, and danger rarely leads to good ones.

Funny, realistic, and always provocative, Phyllis Reynolds Naylor does it again, proving that she understands what real girls think and feel, with this twenty-second book in the beloved Alice series.

Children's Literature

Alice doesn't like being called Miss Goody Two-shoes—MGT for short—by the girls at school and so she strikes out to do some things that she knows not everyone would approve of, like dating high school senior, Tony, who is definitely more interested in Alice's body than her mind. At the same time that she's navigating her nascent sexuality, she's in the throes of an unrequited crush on the editor of the school newspaper, is having running battles with her former teacher, her stepmother, Sylvia, is negotiating driving privileges with her dad, and now she is trying to keep up the spirits of her friend Molly, who is being treated for leukemia. Although all comes out right in the end, Alice definitely gives her parents some painfully worried hours when she goes to a party without phoning and ends up at the police station. Alice's strong sense of values and family ties sustain her eventually, but it is enough to remind you why you wouldn't want to be a teenager again. This is the latest in a very popular series and so won't require much enticement of already converted fans; however, recommenders should take into account the fairly explicit descriptions of sexual foreplay in this book.

About the Author, Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

Phyllis Reynolds Naylor includes many of her own growing-up experiences in the Alice books. She writes for both children and adults and is the author of more than one hundred and twenty-five books, including the Alice series, which Entertainment Weekly has called "tender" and "wonderful." In 1992 her novel Shiloh won the Newbery Medal. She lives with her husband, Rex, in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and is the mother of two sons, both grown and married.

Reviews

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Editorials

KLIATT - Claire Rosser

To quote the review of the hardcover in KLIATT, May 2007: Naylor continues Alice's story in this 21st book in the series. Alice is now a junior in high school, sometimes at odds with her stepmother, and eager to try new experiences, even sexual ones. She goes out with a guy she is attracted to, even though she doesn't know him very well, and their make-out session leaves her intrigued. She causes her father great anxiety when she doesn't come home on time and doesn't answer her cell phone. Yes, she is in a difficult position, but all's well that ends well. At the end of the story, Patrick, her one-time boyfriend, reappears on the scene, sure to be a main character in the next book. For Alice fans who want to continue growing up with her. Reviewer: Claire Rosser

Children's Literature - Paula McMillen

Alice doesn't like being called Miss Goody Two-shoesβ€”MGT for shortβ€”by the girls at school and so she strikes out to do some things that she knows not everyone would approve of, like dating high school senior, Tony, who is definitely more interested in Alice's body than her mind. At the same time that she's navigating her nascent sexuality, she's in the throes of an unrequited crush on the editor of the school newspaper, is having running battles with her former teacher, her stepmother, Sylvia, is negotiating driving privileges with her dad, and now she is trying to keep up the spirits of her friend Molly, who is being treated for leukemia. Although all comes out right in the end, Alice definitely gives her parents some painfully worried hours when she goes to a party without phoning and ends up at the police station. Alice's strong sense of values and family ties sustain her eventually, but it is enough to remind you why you wouldn't want to be a teenager again. This is the latest in a very popular series and so won't require much enticement of already converted fans; however, recommenders should take into account the fairly explicit descriptions of sexual foreplay in this book.

VOYA - Ria Newhouse

Alice McKinley is determined to shed the old Alice stereotypes during her eleventh-grade year-no more "DD" (Dry as Dust) and no more "inhibited Sunday-school girl, the unexciting Alice McKinley." Alice is ready for a change, including parties with beer, SPs (Silent Parties-where everyone is naked in the pool), and motorcycle rides at lunchtime. Alice McKinley is growing up, and the once-innocent Alice has become a force with which to be reckoned as she continues to come-of-age in Naylor's classic series. Sometimes Alice's behavior is slightly too stereotypical, even for a typical teen. Alice is "wildly excited" at the prospect of having sex with senior Tony, but then she immediately wonders, "Was I just one of his 'babies' in a long succession of girls?" Naylor delivers her somewhat preachy message as readers see Alice cycle through life transitions. Alice learns her lessons and learns them well; in the end, it is okay to be DD sometimes-so long as one has a loving family, great friends, and . . . Patrick. Repeat readers will return to Alice for additional doses of love and fun and they will not be disappointed. Alice delivers, even if she is a little dangerous-and predictable-this time around.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2007
Publisher
Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
Pages
304
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780689870941

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