Alice In-Between (Alice, #6)

by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

Paperback, 1996

Status

Available

Call number

J4D.Nay

Publication

A Yearling Book (Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers)

Pages

160

Description

When motherless Alice turns thirteen she feels in-between, no longer a child but not yet a woman, and discovers that growing up can be both frustrating and wonderful.

Series

Collection

Barcode

1022

Language

Original language

English

Physical description

160 p.; 7.5 inches

ISBN

0440410649 / 9780440410645

User reviews

LibraryThing member stephxsu
Alice and her friends are going to be eighth graders! They are no longer the bottom of the rung, and they hang out almost every day at Mark Stedmeister’s pool. Alice and Patrick are together once more, and Elizabeth is finally beginning to open up to the idea of boys more. Pamela’s debating
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breaking up with Mark, but besides that, life is swell.

Or is it? These daily pool hangouts cause Alice to admit to herself her one giant fear: deep water. She can’t swim, and she’s petrified of putting her head underwater. Is this going to hamper her ability to mature when everyone else around her is conquering their fears? After all, Elizabeth is going with boys, Alice’s father and Miss Summers have something going on—what, he won’t tell Alice—and Patrick is having a great experience in Canada with his family. Will her fear of deep water be the end of her life as she knows it?

Not if her father and brother Lester have anything to say about it.

ALICE THE BRAVE is a sweet story of a family banding together to help Alice overcome her fear. I enjoyed reading about how all of the characters we have come to care about grow up and conquer challenges of their own. Eighth grade, look out! Alice is ready for anything!
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LibraryThing member larasimmons2
I had been so enchanted with the Agony of Alice book in 5th grade. I found that Naylor as an author has an ability to speak to young teenage girls. It is nice to see that Naylor is able to continue to develop the Alice character. The main theme of the book is to show that nothing is ever as bad as
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it seems.

I find this Alice book to be an average book in the series. I find that Alice is a believable character. She is the typical awkward teenage girl that worries about how others perceive her. She wants to enjoy a summer vacation with her friends. These are all characteristics that a young teenager or pre-teen girl could relate to. It is a little bit different reading as an adult. It made me remember my middle school years, and glad that I no longer have to experience that. I find the dialogue to be believable for your average teenage girl as well.
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LibraryThing member Emma_Manolis
This has to be my favorite so far in the series. I remember that in-between feeling so well. I feel like every couple of years you can't help but feel that way, or maybe that is just me. It's just one of those books that you can relate to and that makes you love it!
LibraryThing member fingerpost
Alice finishes 7th grade. The highlight of her summer is a trip to visit Aunt Sally and Uncle Milt in Chicago, taking the trip by train with her two best friends Pamela, who is too adventurous and sexually aware for her own good, and Elizabeth, who is far too prudish for her own good.
As with other
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Alice books, there is a main story-line and several minor story-lines, a main theme, (which here is 'just how grown up do you want to be'), and a serious crisis.
(spoiler alert)
The serious crisis here is that on the train ride to Chicago, Pamela, who is 13 but could pass for 18 when she tries, decides to lead on a 37 year old man who hits on her. He later sexually assaults her (groping, not rape) and she learns a few hard lessons in life through that experience.
And Alice remains endearing to the end.
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Rating

½ (30 ratings; 3.7)

Call number

J4D.Nay
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