From School Library Journal
Grade 4-8-- This third book about 11-year-old Matthew Martin and his friends is a total triumph and complete delight. Danziger's insight into adolescents is keen and compassionate, yet thoroughly humorous, as demonstrated here when Matthew discovers girls. Specifically, he discovers classmate and good-friend Jill Hudson, seeing her in a new light and finding the attraction mutual. The two are teamed on a committee as part of their class study of ecology, a project that becomes important as the students really try to make an impact on their school, homes, and town. Lots of good information on ecology and recycling is integrated into the story. Matthew and Jill's relationship develops smoothly, and neither feels any great pressure to become involved physically or sexually--these are just two surprisingly mature kids dealing with awakening feelings slowly and cautiously. The book is peopled with delightful characters, including Matthew's parents, who are two of the most sympathetic and fully drawn in current adolescent fiction. Danziger fills her easy-flowing dialogue with deliberately bad puns--Matthew's trademark--and deftly sprinkled teen slang. Hilarious situations crop up continually, and are always satisfyingly resolved. A nice touch is the inclusion of the thoughts of other classmates, many of whom are dealing with battling parents and broken homes, adding a bittersweet contrast to Matthew and Jill's stable families. --Joyce Adams Burner, formerly at Spring Hill Middle Sch . , KS
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Kirkus Reviews
Completing sixth grade, Matthew notices that ``everything is getting so complicated...everything around him is changing'': older sister Amanda is hostile and rebellious; his parents appear publicly in weird costumes for his mother's message-delivery service. Here, although Matthew's thoughts are still as funny as they were in Everyone Else's Parents Said Yes (1989), his comments and actions are more restrained. He battles with Amanda and classmate Vanessa, but he notices a change in his feelings about girls; he goes on his first date with Jil, but then, during a class trip, peer pressure causes them to quarrel as they struggle to maintain a balance between time together and with others. As sixth grade ends, Matthew ``can't wait to see where [Spaceship Earth] takes him next.'' Beneath the lighthearted surface are messages sure to strike responses from many children. Danziger explains that ``ecosystems deal with how one thing affects another''; her book dramatizes the definition in terms of relationships as well as the environment. This third Matthew story stands alone, but will have readers asking for the others. (Fiction. 8-12) --
Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.