In addition to keeping track of books on Goodreads, I also write a notebook list. When I recorded this book and its sequel, I wrote heavy quotation marks around "classic." I don't care if this is an addition to the classic American Girl line and gets the same cover/title treatment as their revamp: a book is not a classic at the moment of its printing!
The way the American Girl series has gotten redone annoys me immensely. The old books are repackaged with three in one novel and three in another, which is completely unnecessary and makes it less accessible to younger readers, who are more likely to pick up a super-thin book. In addition to this, all the beautiful illustrations are discarded for mediocre covers and no pictures inside. Why is this necessary? How is this a helpful marketing move? They have retired some dolls, and one of them is Molly, my favorite since childhood. I'm torn between indignation and a sense of relief that they left my childhood favorite character out of this revamped line.
However, the author who wrote the Molly series (and others) wrote the stories for this new character, and even though whoever is behind the aesthetic changes is not in my good graces, Valerie Tripp will always have a special place in my heart for bringing Molly to life and making me want to write. Because she wrote this new series, I got the books from the library immediately, and despite my frustration over the route the American Girl company has gone in the past several years, I enjoyed them. They are very much like the actual classics.
Maryellen is one of many children in a large 1950s family. The characters were distinguishable and amusing, the historical setting was robust and full of detail and consistency, and the story concerns were suited to the time period, such as making friends with an Italian and being regarded with suspicion and anger by others who resented Italians for the country's role in World War II. Because this book was set in a peaceful, ordinary time in American history, it does not have the same oomph as other American Girl series where their daily and childish concerns are set against a backdrop of greater conflict, but the story was still compelling, historical, and well-written. I recommend this book and its sequel both to children and to people like me who are suspicious of new American Girl books but loved the ones from their childhood. This is entirely worth it.