Courtney Friendship Superhero (Courtney 1986)

by Kellen Hertz

American Girl: Courtney (Courtney 2)

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"Courtney's suited up for an epic adventure -- just like Crystal Starshooter, the video game hero she invented. Crystal is brave and bold and doesn't back down. Courtney tries to be the same in real life. When Courtney meets Isaac Wells at the arcade, they form an epic friendship. Isaac has awesome ideas to add to Crystal Starshooter's game world, and he gets along great with Sarah and Kip, Courtney's two best friends. When Isaac needs help fighting a real battle called HIV, Courtney is show more quick to support him. But doing so puts her friendship with Sarah at risk. Being brave and bold is complicated. What would a superhero do?"--Provided by publisher. show less

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2 reviews
I was pleasantly surprised to find Courtney's second book centers around the AIDS pandemic and how reactive people were (which reminds me of current disinfo around the COVID-19 pandemic). Courtney's new friend Aaron is a hemophiliac who got an infected blood transfusion, mirroring the real life case of Ryan White, and the descriptions of angry people protesting him being at school and in public places reminded me that the real people who did similar are today's grandparents, alive and well (and potentially still narrow minded). AIDS is addressed at an age-appropriate level for middle grade, and this would be a good introduction to the concept of why we should be kind to people with chronic illness instead of treating them like pariahs. show more

I kinda wish Kip had more to do here, and kind of wondered at Courtney apparently being the only friend to go visit Aaron in person when he was at home. From his surname, I'm guessing Kip is of Japanese descent, and his relatives likely experienced outward discrimination from WWII onwards (or contemporarily, given Vincent Chin's murder by racist autoworkers in 1982) so he absolutely could've been another friend empathizing with Aaron's experiences.

The product placement was cute but I thought it was funny that Courtney's dad just... gives her a Christmas present months early because her books ditched the classic school year format in favor of being from January through fall of 1986. I do agree with Sarah though- I was fascinated by Kirsten's lunch pail in the catalog! (growing up, I got the catalog to look through but like Courtney's mom, my parents thought the dolls were too expensive).

In terms of impactful education about a decade, I liked the Courtney books more than MaryEllen even if I still find it horrifying to tag 1986 as historical fiction. Courtney's books show the impacts of divorce more strongly than Julie's (again, it really was a missed opportunity to center Ivy as a main historical character but that's my forever AG soapbox).

Dreading the inevitable '90s which will be siiiiiiiiick (rise of Saturday morning cartoons? I dunno mattel, tell me what you're going to zoom in on)
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Courtney is looking forward to summer. After experiencing the high from participating in Hands Across America she decides she will do awesome things that summer that help others. Going to the arcade after Hands Across America she meets Isaac who is super good with video games. Hoping to see him again, she continues going to the arcade with her friends but Isaac does not show again. She does meet him when school reopens and they are in the same class. She learns more about him and discovers why his family moved to California. She learns what he went through and becomes an activist to teach people about others like Isaac.

I enjoyed this book very much. I could not put it down. It puts a face onto Isaac's illness and how others treated him show more without knowing much about his disease. I liked how Courtney had his back though it was hard. She learned to navigate how to choose right over easy. I also liked how Kip, another friend, also stood by her and Isaac.

I appreciated the section at the back of the book that talks about what was happening in the 1980's when this book takes place. I lived through all of it and remember it. This was a good read.
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12 Works 1,053 Members

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Genres
Kids, Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
LCC
PZ7.1 .H47Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
BISAC

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Members
31
Popularity
905,276
Reviews
2
Rating
(4.10)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
3