Bound To Stay Bound

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School Library Journal - 11/01/2011 Gr 5–9—Hubert C. Frost Middle School is full of dogs of every type, with alphas in charge and lesser pack members doing their bidding. Or, rather, it is full of middle schoolers, all of whom have definite positions in the school's social hierarchy. Unpopular eighth-grader Olivia and her equally unpopular friends from the Bored Game Club are constantly made the butt of practical jokes by kids in the clique that rules the school. Tiring of the bullying, Olivia decides to apply the dog-training techniques she has learned from her grandmother, a professional dog behaviorist, on her classmates. At first, the training seems to work beautifully. Olivia and her friends turn the tables on the kids who have been taunting them, and they find themselves becoming social leaders of the school. Predictably, however, Olivia finds that things aren't as simple as they seem. She and her friends begin to behave just like the students who mistreated them, and Brynne, the mean popular girl, turns out to be extremely vulnerable and to have a lot in common with Olivia. As the class election approaches, Olivia feels so guilty that she confesses all to Brynne, who is outraged about having been trained like a dog and tells the whole school what has been going on. This is an entertaining, if predictable, read, and the protagonist is a sympathetic character, flaws and all. The details of the dog training are fairly accurate, and it is an amusing plot device. Give this one to tweens looking for a lighter take on mean girls and middle-school life.—Kathleen E. Gruver, Burlington County Library, Westampton, NJ - Copyright 2011 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

Booklist - 10/15/2011 Middle-school cliques are a whole lot like dog packs. And Olivia Albert knows a thing or two about dog training. Her beloved grandmother and guardian, Corny, is an expert canine behaviorist. Olivia decides, after suffering yet another orchestrated humiliation at the hands of cold-hearted Brynne and her popular friends, to apply what she knows about basic behavior modification and pack mentality to change the social structure at Hubert C. Frost Middle School. Using the seven basic breed groups to classify her classmates according to personality, she unleashes an all-out training regime on her entire school, rewarding kindness with smiles and candy and turning Brynne into a social outcast. Stewart offers a handy and easily understood metaphor to color the intricacies of middle-school relationships in a way that paints each character as multidimensional and real. The topic of dogs is a common one, but Stewart offers something fresh by suggesting that old enemies can sometimes become new friends. - Copyright 2011 Booklist.

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