Kirkus Reviews QR Code
RULE OF THREES by Marcy Campbell

RULE OF THREES

by Marcy Campbell

Pub Date: May 11th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-79720-123-8
Publisher: Chronicle Books

Twelve-year-old Maggie’s contented life is disrupted.

Sure, only child Maggie’s parents insist they all eat dinner together at the table, and they are big on engaging her in dinner conversation, but though she complains a bit, she is secretly happy that they are so persistent about communicating with her. And she is glad she doesn’t have best friend Olive’s life, with a chaotic little brother, or other BFF Rachel’s situation, with family members who eat separately in front of various screens. While Maggie is nervous about being in middle school, she knows her parents are always there for her. Plus, she has her beloved grandmother, who has taught her about interior design—something Maggie adores and shares with her BFFs. But everything starts to unravel when a previously unknown 13-year-old half brother from an affair her father had shows up and, on top of that, Maggie’s grandmother shows signs of Alzheimer’s. While the storyline admirably tackles difficult issues with compassion and evenhandedness, the writing overall feels more dutiful than original. Many scenes seem contrived to lead up to a neatly wrapped message that is insistently spelled out instead of being presented for readers to discover for themselves. The overarching interior design metaphor stretches itself thin in Maggie’s first-person–narration revelations. Characters are White by default.

A competent, if somewhat belabored take on sensitive family issues.

(Fiction. 9-12)