DIFFERENT by Janet McLaughlin will pull tweens into the life of Isabelle, aka Izzy, a girl struggling to keep a secret. In a seemingly lighthearted story, McLaughlin tackles the serious subject of Tourette Syndrome and creates a character and story readers won’t soon forget.
Izzy’s a normal tween or thinks she would be, if not for the neurological tics and vocalizations over which she had no control. So, Izzy does her best to stay under the radar at school. Yet she can’t stop tap, tap, tapping her friend’s shoulder or letting out an occasional grunt during class. Both are embarrassing moments that could cause any tween to run and hide, but Izzy doesn’t. She’s resilient, kind and determined. She tries out for the school softball team, attends a dance and occasionally emotionally spars with her friends and parents. And when it comes to helping out a boy she kind of likes who has a darker secret, she’s all in.
While any middle grader who reads DIFFERENT will get lost in the story about a girl who thinks she is so different, they’ll also discover Izzy really isn’t. She wants what all tweens want, to have friends, to have fun and to belong.