ALA Booklist
(Sat May 01 00:00:00 CDT 2021)
Sarah Weber is a star on her seventh-grade basketball team until puberty hits, and suddenly she feels clumsy, slow, and easily winded. She decides cutting back on eating will help, and for a while she feels energized, until the day she collapses mid-game on the court. Spurred on by BFF Ryan, Sarah confides in Coach Lemon, who arranges for the school counselor and Sarah's parents to get her professional help. Gerber's descriptions of Sarah's emotional state and obsessive thinking patterns are spot-on: she equates food with love, wants her body to go back to "normal," and is afraid to eat certain foods. Sarah's mom (who has her own eating disorder) is also particularly apt; she often "forgets" to prepare dinner and keeps only enough food in the house for the next meal. Misunderstandings with teammates, a crush on a boy in her health class, and preparations for a Chef Junior contest round out this well-developed narrative. Appended with an author's note and resources, this is both informative and entertaining, especially for younger teens.
Kirkus Reviews
Navigating adolescence isn't a piece of cake.Dorito-loving seventh grader Sarah Weber is a standout basketball player on her team even though she's had some bad practices lately. Thanks to puberty, her body keeps changing, and, on top of recent awkwardness in her relationships, she feels overwhelmed by this. Another thing she doesn't have control over is her household food situation: Sarah's mom is controlling about food, sometimes forgets to feed her dinner, and what little there is to eat in their kitchen is restricted to things she deems acceptable. Sarah's dad works long hours and doesn't seem to notice what's going on. In an effort to help her game and gain back some control, Sarah begins to obsessively monitor her food intake. Thankfully, her friends and coach advocate for healthy, intuitive ways of eating, and they help Sarah address her disordered eating. The book surrounds the protagonist with a determined support system and does not place blame in a simplistic way. Gerber constructs a straightforward structure: A health problem becomes known, a solution is proposed, and then it works. Although real life is rarely so neat and tidy, the book supplies a positive representation of constructive approaches to an often misunderstood condition. Authentic basketball scenes and Sarah's developing crush on Benny, her health class partner who later becomes her teammate in a cooking competition, round out the story. Sarah is presumed White; Benny is Persian.Pragmatic and valuable. (Fiction. 9-13)