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Overview
Isabelle Lee has a problem, and it's not just Ape Face, her sister, or group therapy for an eating disorder, or even that her father died and her mother is depressed and in denial. It's that Ashley, the most popular girl in school, is inviting Isabelle to join her at lunch and at sleepovers at her house, and this is presenting Isabelle with a dilemma. Pretty Ashley has moved Isabelle up the social ladder, but is it worth keeping the secret they share?
Caught in the orbit of popularity and appearances, Isabelle must navigate a world with mixed messages, false hopes, and potentially harmful turns, while coping with her own flailing family and emotions. The author brings a depth of characterization, humor, and a real adolescent's voice to this multileveled story about the desire to be perfect in an imperfect world.
Following the death of her father, a thirteen-year-old uses bulimia as a way to avoid her mother's and ten-year-old sister's grief, as well as her own.
Synopsis
Isabelle Lee has a problem, and it's not just Ape Face, her sister, or group therapy for an eating disorder, or even that her father died and her mother is depressed and in denial. It's that Ashley, the most popular girl in school, is inviting Isabelle to join her at lunch and at sleepovers at her house, and this is presenting Isabelle with a dilemma. Pretty Ashley has moved Isabelle up the social ladder, but is it worth keeping the secret they share?
Caught in the orbit of popularity and appearances, Isabelle must navigate a world with mixed messages, false hopes, and potentially harmful turns, while coping with her own flailing family and emotions. The author brings a depth of characterization, humor, and a real adolescent's voice to this multileveled story about the desire to be perfect in an imperfect world.
Publishers Weekly
Ever since 13-year-old Isabelle Lee's dad died nearly two years ago, her mother refuses to talk about him or cry publicly. Isabelle has followed her example, keeping her feelings inside. On the day of his funeral, though, she began binging and purging. When she's later caught (her younger sister tells on her) her mother sends her to an eating disorder support group, where Isabelle is surprised to see "perfect" Ashley, the most popular girl in her grade. The two form a friendship that revolves around their eating disorder; they use their hands to cram down mass amounts of food, then throw up in a dumpster, side by side (Ashley even introduces Isabelle to ex-lax). The story arc here is fairly predictable: Isabelle learns that Ashley's life is not so perfect after all, and this combined with therapy puts her on the road to recovery. But graphic binging and purging scenes ("I alternated handfuls of potato chips and HoHos with swallows of Diet Coke.... It always feels better coming up than going down") and Isabelle's therapy sessions help explain the disease to readers without seeming didactic. The believable and likable heroine relates many heartwarming and heartbreaking moments (in one scene, she and her sister decide to celebrate Hanukkah, which they haven't done since her Jewish father died; they raise their glasses to his empty chair). Ultimately Isabelle's story will both touch and educate readers. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Editorials
Publishers Weekly
Ever since 13-year-old Isabelle Lee's dad died nearly two years ago, her mother refuses to talk about him or cry publicly. Isabelle has followed her example, keeping her feelings inside. On the day of his funeral, though, she began binging and purging. When she's later caught (her younger sister tells on her) her mother sends her to an eating disorder support group, where Isabelle is surprised to see "perfect" Ashley, the most popular girl in her grade. The two form a friendship that revolves around their eating disorder; they use their hands to cram down mass amounts of food, then throw up in a dumpster, side by side (Ashley even introduces Isabelle to ex-lax). The story arc here is fairly predictable: Isabelle learns that Ashley's life is not so perfect after all, and this combined with therapy puts her on the road to recovery. But graphic binging and purging scenes ("I alternated handfuls of potato chips and HoHos with swallows of Diet Coke.... It always feels better coming up than going down") and Isabelle's therapy sessions help explain the disease to readers without seeming didactic. The believable and likable heroine relates many heartwarming and heartbreaking moments (in one scene, she and her sister decide to celebrate Hanukkah, which they haven't done since her Jewish father died; they raise their glasses to his empty chair). Ultimately Isabelle's story will both touch and educate readers. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.VOYA
"Fine" defines the boundaries of thirteen-year-old Isabelle Lee's life: Everything is just fine. Never mind that her father died unexpectedly two years ago, or that her mother privately sobs herself to sleep each night. Never mind that Isabelle knows that she will never be cool enough to join perfect Ashley Barnum's in-crowd, or that Isabelle binges on junk food hidden in her closet under her father's old flannel shirt. Everything is fine-until Isabelle's ten-year-old sister catches her with her fingers down her throat, "puking her guts out." Bribes do not work with her little sister, and Isabelle finds herself in "Group"-Eating Disorder and Body Image Therapy Group-populated by five other young teens including Ashley. The friendship that develops between Isabelle and Ashley leads Isabelle into deeper danger, while at the same time providing her with a powerful mirror that ultimately moves her to make different choices. This novel is a fairly quick-paced, absorbing story of one young woman's world. Isabelle's first-person narrative is funny, realistic, and poignantly truthful. The book illustrates the critical roles that adults play in the lives of young teenagers and offers an accessible portrait of a troubled youth in the developing stages of bulimia. A potential selection for middle school health classes, the book's title might attract young teens. As with Preventing Eating Disorders Among Pre-Teen Girls (Praeger, 2004/VOYA review, this issue), this book would be best used in discussion with an adult. The detailed unhealthy ways to lose weight are presented without explicitly representing the serious risks of bulimia other than through the casual mention by Ashley that she needs toalternate between throwing up and taking laxatives because "otherwise you could really mess up your system." VOYA CODES: 4Q 2P M J (Better than most, marred only by occasional lapses; For the YA with a special interest in the subject; Middle School, defined as grades 6 to 8; Junior High, defined as grades 7 to 9). 2004, Milkweed Editions, 169p., and Trade pb. Ages 11 to 15.—Kim Carter
Children's Literature
This is a poignant story about Isabelle, a thirteen-year-old girl, who has an eating disorder. She also has other issues one of which is dealing with her father's recent death. Isabelle thinks of herself as drab, fat, uninteresting to boys, and is envious of a popular, beautiful girl named Ashley. The story starts with Isabelle's younger sister, referred to as Ape Face, seeing her throw up after eating and tells their mother even though Isabelle begs her not to. Isabelle's "punishment" is to attend Group therapy which she looks at as a fate worse than death. Imagine her surprise when she goes to group and sees Ashley there. This revelation is a pivotal part of the story and Isabelle begins to understand that she is not alone in how she feels about herself. Isabelle goes on the bumpy road of ups and downs and realizes that this is a true disease and must be dealt with one day at a time. Unfortunately, eating disorders are prevalent with today's youth, and this book is one that should be in every school, classroom, and personal library. Even if a teen doesn't have an eating disorder, it is probable they know someone who does. The author paints very believable characters and uses language and thoughts that girls the same age can identify with. There is humor, sadness, and clear descriptions though out the story. I cannot imagine any teenager not liking this book. I will also go out on a limb and say that this book will be share between girl friends and discussions will ensue. I highly recommend this book. 2004, Milkweed Editions, and Ages 12 up.—Kathie M. Josephs
KLIATT
Isabelle is just 13 years old. Her mother, her younger sister, and she are still reeling from the death of Isabelle's father. In fact, Isabelle's mother is barely coping, and her daughters are really concerned about her but don't know how to get help. The three seem to have an unspoken pact to not talk about the death, to not talk about their feelings—to pretend to be "fine." Isabelle tries to satisfy her emotional hunger by bingeing on junk food and then vomiting it up. The story begins when her little sister sees what she is doing and tells the mom: Isabelle is then put into a therapy group for young girls with food issues. She is stunned when Ashley, one of the most beautiful and popular girls in her school, joins the group; and then she catches Ashley vomiting in the girls' room at school. The two become a duo—hardly friends, really—spending a lot of time together, eating everything they can get a hold of and then vomiting. The realistic fiction tells how Isabelle begins to understand her own behavior and slowly reaches out for help. This is the first novel Natasha Friend has published, and it is a good one. She has taught adolescents and directs a summer camp, so perhaps that experience has helped her capture the minds and hearts of her adolescent characters. Bulimia is a disease that has been given a lot of attention, especially as a problem among older teenage girls. Friend addresses the fact that eating disorders are plaguing ever-younger adolescent girls, the age of Isabelle and Ashley. KLIATT Codes: J—Recommended for junior high school students. 2004, Milkweed, 169p., and (paperback: ). Ages 12 to 15.—Claire Rosser