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The prank list  Cover Image E-book E-book

The prank list

Summary: Rachel Lee is enjoying a summer of baking class and flirting with her almost-boyfriend Evan until a rival cleaning business comes to town, stealing her mother's clients, and she must focus on protecting Lee Cleaners rather than Whit, her cute new classmate.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781402286407
  • ISBN: 1402286406
  • ISBN: 1306867053
  • ISBN: 9781306867054
  • ISBN: 9781402286414
  • ISBN: 1402286414
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource.
  • Publisher: Naperville, IL : Sourcebooks Jabberwocky, 2014.

Content descriptions

Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Tricks -- Fiction
Secrets -- Fiction
Tricks -- Fiction
Baking -- Fiction
House cleaning -- Fiction
Dating (Social customs) -- Fiction
Single-parent families -- Fiction
JUVENILE FICTION -- Social Issues -- Friendship
Tricks
Genre: Electronic books.
Fiction.

Electronic resources


  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2014 June #1
    Almost-a-ninth-grader Rachel sees herself as a future pastry chef, but when she takes a baking class, she just can't get it right.Even worse, Rachel's mom has a new house-cleaning business that isn't going well since Rachel was falsely accused of stealing, and now they've got competition. If their business does not succeed, Rachel and her mom may have to sell their home and move away from Rachel's friends. Romance also hovers on the edge for Rachel. She isn't sure if she's Evan's official girlfriend or not, as he's never asked her. However, Evan does appear to be jealous of Whit, a boy in Rachel's cooking class, although Rachel keeps telling Evan that she doesn't like Whit. Even with all those problems, Rachel determines to fight back against the rival Ladybug Cleaners, concocting pranks to drive them away, but everything she does seems to backfire. Staniszewski keeps the focus on comedy with the cooking-class scenes (Rachel is an overconfident baker), but she lets her story become a bit more serious with the pranks Rachel plays. Clearly, Rachel will learn a few life lessons as she stumbles through her summer, but they go down easy in this narrative peppered with such amusing catchphrases as "Oh my goldfish" and "What the Shrek?"Gentle fun laced with equally gentle wisdom. (Fiction. 10-14) Copyright Kirkus 2014 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2014 June

    Gr 7 Up—Fourteen-year-old Rachel Lee is happy that eighth grade is over and things seem to be going well with her maybe boyfriend. She would be happier if Chef Ryan, her pastry class instructor, didn't hate her. She's also worried about causing her mom to lose clients. It seems there's a rumor going around that Rachel is a thief, and a new cleaning business seems to be taking advantage of it to build their business. If her mom can't make ends meet, then a move to Connecticut may be in the future. Rachel needs to do something to help. Unfortunately, her solution, a series of "pranks" really amount to libel and malicious mischief and feel utterly contrived. Rachel seems overly naïve and apparently learned nothing from her earlier experience spreading rumors. She's also prone to odd alliteration, "paranoid panther," and cloying faux-swearing, such as "What the Shrek?" or "Oh my goldfish! Tween readers who find Rachel endearing will find a fast-paced comedy of errors. More sophisticated readers might become impatient with the cardboard secondary characters and Rachel's infuriating gaps in logic. Purchase where The Dirt Diaries (Sourcebooks, 2014), Rachel's first adventure, is popular, and hope for a bit more growth for Rachel if she returns for a third installment.—Brenda Kahn, Tenakill Middle School, Closter, NJ

    [Page 108]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates Reviews : VOYA Reviews 2014 August
    The Prank List hooks readers with snappy dialogue from the beginning, but the thoughts of protagonist Rachel Lee are rarely spoken aloud. Rachel is an angst-ridden eighth grader who loves baking and is trying desperately to help her newly separated mother pay the bills. Rachel joins her mother on weekends to clean other people's houses, and the list of pranks develops early in the summer, when a new cleaning company moves into her mom's territory and starts stealing clients Rachel is a likable character for middle school readers, who will relate to her problems: figuring out whether Evan is her boyfriend or even wants to be, why the chef of her pastry-baking class hates her so much, how to deal with the cool kid who shows up in that class, and whether her parents might get back together. While the story may be predictable to some readers, the ride will be nonetheless enjoyable, and Rachel's voice and her friends' (and enemies') actions will all ring true to middle schoolers. Readers will be less confused if they have read the first book in The Dirt Diary series, but this sequel certainly stands firmly on its own.—Rochelle Garfinkel 3Q 3P M J Copyright 2011 Voya Reviews.
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