From the Publisher
"The story is by turns touching and laugh-out-loud funny, and readers will appreciate the time they spend with Joylin, her family, and her friends as they live, grow, and learn as individuals and together." - starred review, School Library Journal
"[Grimes'] accessible verse and clear themes of self-acceptance and open-mindedness ring true. A work that should help adolescent readers find the courage and humor to grow into the individuals they already are." - Kirkus Reviews
"[Grimes'] realistic novel has solid middle-school appeal and avoids preaching." - Horn Book Magazine
"The vocabulary is rich, the characters well-drawn, and the scenes realistic. This is a serious but not too serious look at growing up from a master poet." - Library Media Connection
"Readers will cringe, laugh, and most of all relate to [Joylin's] learning process as it is sensitively and sweetly depicted here. . . . Has broad appeal and solid curricular possibilities." - BCCB
Children's Literature - Marcie Flinchum Atkins
Joylin has always been a tomboy. She loves basketball and spends most of her time with her best guy friend, Jake, and her best girl friend, KeeLee. Then things start to change. She has to start wearing a bra, gets her period, and has zits. And something else starts to change: for the first time in her life, she starts to notice boys and is attracted to them. She trades in her sneakers for heels, and comfortable gym shorts for short skirts. She even gets her ears pierced and tries to wear makeup. They don't feel comfortable, but she wants a particular boy to notice her. Joylin spends her time coaching her artistic brother to be himself instead of trying to be a basketball player like her. Jake is shocked by the changes in her too. It isn't until the boy she likes starts dating another tomboy, and Jake is seriously injured in an accident, that she takes her own advice and learns to be happy with who she is. Grimes' beautiful novel in verse captures details in Joylin's life that will make the reader ponder and laugh out loud. Even with sparse words, Grimes fully paints her characters and makes the reader care about Joylin and her circle of friends. She distills middle school in all of its ups and downs into this stunning novel about personal acceptance. Reviewer: Marcie Flinchum Atkins
VOYA - Nancy Wallace
Twelve-year-old Joylin, enjoys hanging out in jeans and T-shirts with her friend, Jake, and playing a rough game of basketball. Then comes the embarrassment of growing up: her first bra, her first period, and Joylin feels as though she has lost her identity. Even the boys are treating her differently. She feels awkward and unsure. When Santiago catches her eye, she decides to do a make-over: makeup, a skirt, pierced ears, and a new hair style. Santiago already has a girl friend, thoughone who looks remarkably like the old Joylin. Frustrated and upset, Joylin turns to her old friend, Jake, and finds that he likes her...just the way she is. This brief verse novel provides short snapshots of Joylin's life. Reminiscent of stream of consciousness, it gives the reader the inside track on Joylin's chaotic emotions and experiences: the misery of cramps, falling in her mom's high heels right in front of Santiago, and putting makeup on all wrong. Her feelings swing from raw to poignant. A secondary plot depicts her brother as a creative, artistic student with a sports-obsessed father. Joylin's gentle orchestration of their relationship lends a subtle serious tone to the story. This giddy portrayal of a girl going through puberty may be a real turnoff to older teens, but it will find an audience among younger boy-crazy adolescent girls who can identify with Joylin's conflicting emotions, hopes and dreams. Its length and subject matter will appeal to middle schoolers going through similar experiences. Reviewer: Nancy Wallace
School Library Journal
Gr 5–8—Joylin has always been happy in blue jeans and a t-shirt playing hoops with Jake, her best guy friend. As she turns 13, all of a sudden she begins noticing boys and has to pick out training bras with her mother. Nikki Grimes uses her trademark verse poetry to tell this coming-of-age story (Wendy Lamb Books, 2011) about a young teen who begins to feel like an alien, faces the confusing world of "planet middle school," and tries to figure out exactly who she is. While many have a hard time reading novels in verse, listening to it is an entirely different experience. Poetry is at its best when read aloud, and this novel is no exception. Sisi Aisha Johnson takes Grimes's text and sculpts a very real young girl who is struggling with who she is and who she is becoming. She keeps Joylin's voice just young enough to sound convincing, and deftly handles the secondary characters, such Joylin's concerned mother, her best girlfriend, Jake, and others. Sure to resonate with middle school teens.—Shari Fesko, Southfield Public Library, MI
Kirkus Reviews
A young tomboy comes of age on and off the basketball court.
In free-flowing free-verse poems, multi–award-winning author and poet Grimes (A Girl Named Mister, 2010, etc.) here explores the riot of hormones and expected gender roles that can make negotiating the preteen years such a challenge. Twelve-year-old Joylin "Jockette" Johnson prefers jeans, T-shirts and one-on-one basketball games with her father or friend Jake to conforming to the more demure, feminine image her mother has of her. Sassy, self-assured Joy enjoys the simple math of her life—"friends / plus family / plus sports"—until she begins to notice "two weird mounds ruining / the perfect flatness / of [her] chest" and gets her first period, which she deems, "the end of life / as I know it." Beset by physical changes, Joy also finds herself witness and prey to unfamiliar behavior; Jake begins to show interest in her friend KeeLee, and Joy herself tries to adopt a more feminine persona to attract the attention of Santiago, a fellow basketballer with "sweet brown curls / bouncing above killer green eyes." Though Grimes' plot development is rather predictable—a life-threatening accident leads Joy to reassess her priorities—her accessible verse and clear themes of self-acceptance and open-mindedness ring true.
A work that should help adolescent readers find the courage and humor to grow into the individuals they already are. (Verse fiction. 9-14)