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The Cure for Cold Feet

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Junior high school girls, meet your new BFF! Izzy Kline faces all the drama of middle school with total honesty and deep heart.
Hiding out in the girls' bathroom . . .
FaceTiming one friend while group chatting two others . . .
Forced to ballroom dance with a boy for a social studies unit . . .
There is a LOT going on in middle school.
New experiences and shifting dynamics are around every turn. And it's not just her friends—Izzy's family is shifting as well. It's anxiety-inducing but also thrilling as Izzy learns to stake her claim.
For fans of Fish in a Tree and verse novels like Brown Girl Dreaming, Beth Ain's books perfectly capture the drama of adolescence with a ton of light humor and deep heart.
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  • Reviews

    • School Library Journal

      February 1, 2018

      Gr 3-6-This is Ain's (Izzy Kline Has Butterflies) second free verse novel following Izzy, now a sixth grader entering the alien world of middle school. In addition to being split from her trusted trio of friends, Izzy is paired with her archrival, Jackson, for dance in social studies (the teacher's unwelcome way of bringing the "social" into social studies). Not only does Izzy have to suffer Jackson in school, but he is the son of her mother's new best friend, Yogi. On top of that, Izzy's father is engaged and her teenage brother has found a new companion in tequila. Izzy's narrative dances over the pages in clear, engaging verse. Readers hesitant of poetry would do well try Ain's work as an introduction. Chapter headings mark days and moments ("Homework," "Trick or Treat," "Flashback") and the sections are short enough to keep even reluctant readers engaged. Izzy's family is Jewish, and Izzy observes many diverse characteristics in her classmates, developing a crush on an exchange student from Spain. In one scene, Izzy describes a black classmate's braided hair and her intense desire to touch it, though she never does and the topic is not brought up again in the book. While stories of school and family hardships abound, this is unique in its weaving of so many issues into a tight narrative. Kids need not have read Izzy's first outing to have a full and positive experience of this companion novel. VERDICT For both its unique format and content, this title deserves a home on library shelves. A recommended purchase.-Taylor Worley, Springfield Public Library, OR

      Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      March 15, 2018
      Facing sixth grade, Izzy counts on her friends and family only to find dizzying change. "The only cure for cold feet is to move your feet forward," Izzy's dad says, as she trudges through her first middle school year. The resilient fourth-grader from Izzy Kline Has Butterflies (2017) faces one challenge after another in this sequel, clearly set in the present day. Her friends move on, her father will remarry, her brother turns to tequila, her mother finds new love with the mother of her least favorite boy, and Izzy develops a crush on an exchange student from Spain. Each short chapter (or "small moment") is headed with an appropriate title: "Drama," "Long Division," "Driver's Ed," "Home Economics," "Spin the Bottle," and so forth. The first-person narrative is written in free verse, using appropriate imagery to reflect each theme, to "paint the portrait of an argument," as her English teacher suggests. This highly readable, realistic series of sixth-grade moments is punctuated by flashbacks that not only reflect Izzy's wish to return to childhood comforts, but also provide background. Her family's Jewish traditions turn up naturally in mentions of Christmas (not her holiday), Hanukkah, and the tallis used by the rabbi who married her grandfathers. Racism is not an issue for these characters (who, save one new brown-skinned character, seem to adhere to the white default), but same-sex relationships are, for some.A believable portrait of middle school challenges. (Fiction. 9-12)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2019
      In brief free-verse chapters, Izzy (Izzy Kline Has Butterflies) narrates particular moments from her first year of middle school. Changes and challenges, all handled lightly, abound: friendships shift, Izzy's ballroom dance partner is an arch-rival, her mother gets involved with a woman, and she develops a crush on a Spanish exchange student. Angsty but resilient, Izzy is an appealing character with relatable experiences.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.8
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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