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When her mother's remarriage takes her family into a much wealthier neighborhood, thirteen-year-old Kristy finds herself surrounded by snobbish girls who compare clothes, make fun of the Baby-sitters Club, and insult her aging dog.Tags
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The ongoing babysitting chronicles continue. In the latest installment, Kristy finally gets to know kids that live in her new, wealthier neighborhood. Unfortunately, the first meeting does not go well. They are condescending to Kristy, but she, undaunted, shoots back an insult at them. Kristy thinks they are snobs, and with her vindictive nature, she becomes embroiled in a rivalry with Shannon Kilbourne. Shannon is apparently the leader of her little pack, and also a babysitter in the neighborhood.
While Kristy is trying to handle this personal dilemma, a more devastating complication is developing in her house. Their dog, Louie, is getting sicker and older. The veterinarian tells the family that he only has a short time left. Everyone show more is crushed. With her patience at an all time low, Kristy's battles with Shannon reach more bitter extremes, eventually to a point of ridiculousness that reduces them to laughter, and they create a tentative truce. When Louie dies, Kristy's sister Karen invites Shannon and some other neighbors to the funeral; later, Shannon brings over one of her new puppies for the Watson/Brewer family, and Kristy and Shannon turn their rivalry into friendship.
I have been enjoying my reunion with this series from my childhood, and the latest book is no exception. In fact, I think it is one of the better books I have read so far. The story builds up maturity in Kristy's character, and further develops the setting and relationships of this world by exploring the new neighborhood. Martin handles the difficulties of Louie's worsening illness with delicacy and understanding. Kristy's sparring with Shannon adds some zest and fun that balances out the sadness of losing a pet. Also, I appreciate that the author doesn't let plot threads dangle endlessly, but gradually explores the various elements she has introduced. For example, we knew that Kristy was not excited about moving to a new neighborhood, and was reluctant to meet her neighbors, but earlier books had different focuses, and so these ideas had been mentioned but not handled. Now that we are back on Kristy's perspective, we finally see some resolution to these problems. Martin does a fine job of keeping in touch with long term narrative and character developments, that take time and many books in the series to explore, while still presenting a major problem for each entry in the series that is resolved by the end of the book. I look forward to the next one, which is a compliment in long-running series like this. show less
While Kristy is trying to handle this personal dilemma, a more devastating complication is developing in her house. Their dog, Louie, is getting sicker and older. The veterinarian tells the family that he only has a short time left. Everyone show more is crushed. With her patience at an all time low, Kristy's battles with Shannon reach more bitter extremes, eventually to a point of ridiculousness that reduces them to laughter, and they create a tentative truce. When Louie dies, Kristy's sister Karen invites Shannon and some other neighbors to the funeral; later, Shannon brings over one of her new puppies for the Watson/Brewer family, and Kristy and Shannon turn their rivalry into friendship.
I have been enjoying my reunion with this series from my childhood, and the latest book is no exception. In fact, I think it is one of the better books I have read so far. The story builds up maturity in Kristy's character, and further develops the setting and relationships of this world by exploring the new neighborhood. Martin handles the difficulties of Louie's worsening illness with delicacy and understanding. Kristy's sparring with Shannon adds some zest and fun that balances out the sadness of losing a pet. Also, I appreciate that the author doesn't let plot threads dangle endlessly, but gradually explores the various elements she has introduced. For example, we knew that Kristy was not excited about moving to a new neighborhood, and was reluctant to meet her neighbors, but earlier books had different focuses, and so these ideas had been mentioned but not handled. Now that we are back on Kristy's perspective, we finally see some resolution to these problems. Martin does a fine job of keeping in touch with long term narrative and character developments, that take time and many books in the series to explore, while still presenting a major problem for each entry in the series that is resolved by the end of the book. I look forward to the next one, which is a compliment in long-running series like this. show less
My Review: A great story about adjusting to a new neighborhood and dealing with snobbish classmates. It’s real, personal, and shows the strength of friendship and standing up for what’s right.
This is one of the better BSC novels. Please be warned it does feature a dog being put down, I wasn't expecting this plot line in this book so it took me by surprise. It's very well-handled by the author and all the characters and for the first time I really felt like Watson's and Kristy's family were one family. Sadly there's a storyline that's left unfinished (Dawn's brother) which I thought was a bit careless but perhaps the author intends to address it in upcoming books. Still really enjoying the baby-sitting tips, this one had some about how to deal with children ordering you about and the strategy adopted was good and efficient. Love those girls. It's so nice to ead about them for so many books.
A cute and enjoyable series… I love that you are with a different character in each book and with them comes a glimpse into the different households.
You could see this as an sort of extension from book 6, 'Kristy's Big Day' as she adjusts to life in her new neighborhood. Stepdaddy is rich, so the neighborhood is quite different, and Kristy has a whole new set of neighbors to deal with, including the aforementioned snobs. Fortunately though, things work out in the end.
One of my all-time favorite BSC books, this one shows how Kristy deals with a move into snob-territory, and she deals with it well!
I'll be honest. Kristy was my least favorite character. Who was yours??
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Author Information
Series
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Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Kristy and the Snobs
- Original title
- Kristy and the Snobs
- Original publication date
- 1988-03
- People/Characters
- Kristy Thomas; Mary Anne Spier; Claudia Kishi; Stacey McGill; Dawn Schafer; Shannon Kilbourne (show all 12); David Michael Thomas; Sam Thomas; Charlie Thomas; Watson Brewer; Karen Brewer; Andrew Brewer
- Important places
- Stoneybrook, Connecticut, USA
- Disambiguation notice
- Not the graphic novel adaptation of the same name.
Classifications
- Genres
- Fiction and Literature, Children's Books
- DDC/MDS
- 813.54 — Literature & rhetoric American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999
- LCC
- PZ7 .M3567585 .K — Language and Literature Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Fiction and juvenile belles lettres Juvenile belles lettres
- BISAC
Statistics
- Members
- 1,189
- Popularity
- 20,867
- Reviews
- 9
- Rating
- (3.46)
- Languages
- 6 — Dutch, English, Finnish, French, Norwegian (Bokmål), Spanish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 29
- ASINs
- 4




























































