Control Freaks is a story about 5 middle school students who didn’t know each other until they become pared together in a competition and they have to learn to become friends. I like how the Authors shows us how they become leaders and learn how to geta along. In the book she touches on AI, the Covid-19 pandemic, which Charlie and his friends lived through and having this book brought us back to that time and how Charlie and his friends handled it.
Charlie enjoyed the story a lot but he was surprised to find out it covered student homelessness, emotional intelligence, which if we were still #Homeschooling full time we would have been able to study in our classes. If you have a Middle School student I hope you take the time to share this book with your children.
Control Freaks should be in all Middle School libraires. Charlie is not 16 and graduated high school but he still find plenty to like about the story and was able to relate to this story and the 5 friends who have nothing in common and are misfits just like Charlie is. Charlie and I can’t wait to read other books written by Levine Querido.
About the book:
BEST OF THE BEST, BLACK CAUCUS OF THE AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION
One week. One prize. Seven really weird challenges.
The kids at Benjamin Banneker College Prep are a little… competitive. Okay. They’re a LOT competitive.
The minute Principal Yee announces an epic competition for the golden B-B trophy, seventh-grader Frederick Douglass Zezzmer knows he has to win.
But it won’t be easy. The competition doesn’t just include science, technology, engineering and math. It also has arts and sports. Not Doug’s best subjects.
Even worse, it’s a TEAM competition. Instead of being in a superstar group, Doug gets paired with four middle school misfits no one else wants.
Worst of all, Doug’s dad has a horrible backup plan. If Doug doesn’t win, he has to forget about becoming The World’s Greatest Inventor and spend the Summer in sports camp, with his scary stepbrother.
With only a week to go, Doug launches a quest to turn his team of outcasts into winners… and maybe even friends.
P R A I S E
★ “Thomas strews the increasingly suspenseful competition with teachable moments and traces learning curves not only for the students but for teachers and parents, too. Reminiscent of E. L. Konigsburg’s The View from Saturday.“
—Booklist (starred)
“Creative and hilarious…the novel’s narration shifts among many perspectives, giving a rich, panoramic view of how stressful yet ultimately rewarding these learning experiences are for the overachievers, the socially awkward, the kids with complicated home lives, and all those who just need to see each other a little differently.”
—Kirkus
“…Witty competition drama… a telling that prioritizes characters’ interiority as well as their impact on each other’s lives. While Doug’s determined voice is the primary focus, the rotating narratives showcase each of the racially diverse characters’ individual stressors, delivering a well-rounded accounting that is better for its multiplicity.”
Thank you,
Glenda, Charlie and David Cates