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The summer before eighth grade, Alice tries to confront her fears, not the least of which is a fear of deep water.Tags
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My favorite so far, I think. Maybe because I can empathize, because I've always been easily stymied by fears. I love that Lester gets to play hero. One thing I wonder about, though, is why Pamela isn't as close a friend as Elizabeth. She's always around when the others want to be more than just two, but she isn't the one that Al goes to with her confidences. She's not Naylor's favorite character, I think, but more of a foil....
Alice the Brave isn't the strongest in the series. The primary story line is Alice's obsession with her fear of deep water and inability to swim. (She thinks of little else during this book, but it has never been mentioned in previous books.)
In the end, it is Lester who helps her get over her fears. Subplots involve her father's relationship with Miss Summers, and the three friends slowly budding sexuality. (Slower for Elizabeth and a bit faster for Pamela, with Alice squarely in-between.)
In the end, it is Lester who helps her get over her fears. Subplots involve her father's relationship with Miss Summers, and the three friends slowly budding sexuality. (Slower for Elizabeth and a bit faster for Pamela, with Alice squarely in-between.)
Another great adventure with Alice! In this installment Alice learns to overcome her fear of swimming and has to come to terms with growing up. I love reading these books because I think there is really something in each one that everyone can relate to.
Alice and her friends are going to be eighth graders! They are no longer the bottom of the rung, and they hang out almost every day at Mark Stedmeister’s pool. Alice and Patrick are together once more, and Elizabeth is finally beginning to open up to the idea of boys more. Pamela’s debating breaking up with Mark, but besides that, life is swell.
Or is it? These daily pool hangouts cause Alice to admit to herself her one giant fear: deep water. She can’t swim, and she’s petrified of putting her head underwater. Is this going to hamper her ability to mature when everyone else around her is conquering their fears? After all, Elizabeth is going with boys, Alice’s father and Miss Summers have something going on—what, he won’t show more tell Alice—and Patrick is having a great experience in Canada with his family. Will her fear of deep water be the end of her life as she knows it?
Not if her father and brother Lester have anything to say about it.
ALICE THE BRAVE is a sweet story of a family banding together to help Alice overcome her fear. I enjoyed reading about how all of the characters we have come to care about grow up and conquer challenges of their own. Eighth grade, look out! Alice is ready for anything! show less
Or is it? These daily pool hangouts cause Alice to admit to herself her one giant fear: deep water. She can’t swim, and she’s petrified of putting her head underwater. Is this going to hamper her ability to mature when everyone else around her is conquering their fears? After all, Elizabeth is going with boys, Alice’s father and Miss Summers have something going on—what, he won’t show more tell Alice—and Patrick is having a great experience in Canada with his family. Will her fear of deep water be the end of her life as she knows it?
Not if her father and brother Lester have anything to say about it.
ALICE THE BRAVE is a sweet story of a family banding together to help Alice overcome her fear. I enjoyed reading about how all of the characters we have come to care about grow up and conquer challenges of their own. Eighth grade, look out! Alice is ready for anything! show less
i LOVED the alice books growing up! i definitely recommend them to all girls around 9-10 and up, and the good news is that she's still writing them! so the series starts out when alice is in elementary school and now she's in high school!
i like...
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Author Information

185+ Works 36,856 Members
Phyllis Reynolds Naylor was born in Anderson, Indiana on January 4, 1933. She received a bachelor's degree from American University in 1963. Her first children's book, The Galloping Goat and Other Stories, was published in 1965. She has written more than 135 children and young adult books including Witch's Sister, The Witch Returns, The Bodies in show more the Bessledorf Hotel, A String of Chances, The Keeper, Walker's Crossing, Bernie Magruder and the Bats in the Belfry, Please Do Feed the Bears, and The Agony of Alice, which was the first book in the Alice series. She has received several awards including the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Night Cry and the Newberry Award for Shiloh. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Alice the Brave
- Original publication date
- 1995-05-01
- People/Characters
- Alice Kathleen McKinley; Pamela Jones; Elizabeth Ann Price; Ben McKinley; Lester McKinley; Mark Stedmeister (show all 10); Sylvia Summers; Janice Sherman; Loretta Jenkins; Patrick H. Long
- Important places
- Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
- Dedication
- For Corie Hinton, with love
- First words
- A month before I started eighth grade, I knew I was going to have to face something I'd been afraid of for a long time.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"I'll take it a day at a time," I promised.
Classifications
- Genres
- Kids, Tween, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
- DDC/MDS
- 813.5 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999
- LCC
- PZ7 .N24 .A — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 226
- Popularity
- 143,467
- Reviews
- 10
- Rating
- (3.67)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 20
- ASINs
- 1




























































