BooksForKidsBlog

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Bad Hits: The Off Season by Catherine Gilbert Murdock

In her sequel to Dairy Queen, (reviewed here August 7) Catherine Murdock takes her character D. J. Schwenk into a turn-around year that has the whole family facing fourth and long.

In The Off Season, as D. J. enters her junior year at Red Bend High School, things seem to be looking up. D.J., Red Bend's first-ever female football player, is starting at linebacker for the team, making better than decent grades in school, and even enjoying her anatomy and physiology class. Brian Nelson, rival Hawley High's good-looking quarterback, is still coming around every weekend and even invites her to spend the day with him at the Mall of America on an errand to Minneapolis for his car dealer dad.

But nothing comes easy for anyone at Schwenk Farm. D. J. overhears a painful conversation between her parents which reveals that the farm is failing financially. Her mom suffers a serious back injury and is literally lying flat on her back on the living room floor for weeks, and D. J. can't quite understand why Brian avoids her in public after kissing her meaningfully when they are alone.

When her little brother Curtis forgets to tell anyone that photographers from People magazine are going to drop by to interview the famous girl football player, D. J. and Brian assume that the two guys are there to interest her dad in organic turkey farming. In a funny case of mistaken identity, they chat openly and pose together shooting baskets and showing the guys around the farm. Although D. J. finds out their identity after Brian leaves, she hopes fervently that the potentially embarrassing story will get pushed out of publication by celebrity breakups, and doesn't tell Brian that he may appear with her in People. When the article finally comes out weeks later, Brian is embarrassed and furious with her, and D. J. is afraid that her inability to talk things out has ruined their relationship for good.

Then D. J. suffers a shoulder separation in practice and reluctantly realizes that risking more injury in football would jeopardize her basketball ability. With the family deep in debt, a college basketball scholarship is D. J.'s only way out of her family's dead end situation, and she has to face the disappointment of her friends and teammates as she quits the team.

All of these problems are shoved to the background when D. J.'s oldest brother Win suffers a potentially paralyzing neck injury in a football game. With her mom still in serious back pain and her father and brother unable to deal with their own emotions, D. J. becomes the primary support for her brother's recovery. Initially uncommunicative and despairing, Win begins to work toward full recovery after D. J. unloads her feelings on him forcefully. As D. J. watches her brother work out his own future in rehab, she begins to think about her own next steps in life. Observing the more tolerant young adults in the university around her, D. J. reluctantly concludes that although she misses Brian, she needs to find someone who won't be uncomfortable with her size and athletic ability.

As in Dairy Queen, D. J. Schwenk is a refreshing voice who sees herself, her family, and those around her with self-deprecating humor and total honesty. There are no stock characters in this book: each person is fully realized, with foibles and strengths, and D. J. herself is a joy--a fully modern yet deeply rooted individual trying to take responsibility for herself in the world in which she must live. I hope that the hints of another sequel which I detect in The Off Season are the beginnings of another novel about this remarkable character. Teen lit needs more characters like D. J. Schwenk!

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3 Comments:

  • Sounds great!

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:27 PM  

  • i hope this book is as good as the first one

    By Anonymous Anonymous, at 8:24 PM  

  • D.J. Schwenk spends Labor Day at the neighbors' picnic, eating and playing a baseball game so funny that she literally falls down laughing. But the family's cows must be milked and fed, so the Schwenks leave early to tend to their dairy farm chores. At home Brian Nelson shows up, to D.J.'s delight. Brian helps with the cows, he and D.J.

    By Anonymous cialis online, at 2:54 PM  

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