I did not like this book.
In short, I really hated the way that the BSC behaved. In this book, they act downright toxic, and I'll go into it.
At the beginning of this book, Claudia meets the new girl. She's very intrigued by her style and gets to talk to her a little bit at the end of class. She mentions her to the BSC in a positive way and shows interest in having her as a friend, mentioning to Mimi "We only talked for a few minutes, but I think maybe we're going to be friends. Isn't that funny?"
The next day, Ashley comes to her after-school art class. Claudia is very happy to see her and they talk a little bit about art before Claudia shows Ashley her portfolio. Ashley is very impressed and compliments Claudia, saying that she was talented enough to get into a high-standard art school in Chicago, Keyes. You can see how much Ashley's praise means to her because Ashley is a very talented artist.
A sculpture contest is announced and Ashley tells Claudia that she could enter. Claudia lists her reasons that she can't go, but Ashley encourages her, saying that she could "mentor" her so she could enter. Claudia shows more enthusiasm for it and says that she would think about it.
After school, Claudia is babysitting the Rodowskys when Ashley shows up. She tells Claudia that she lives next door and expresses skepticism over her spending time babysitting and playing games with the kids instead of working on her sculpture. She tells Claudia that in her spare time, she paints or sculpts instead of babysitting. Claudia tells her that she has plenty of time for her art and wants to meet with her to discuss Claudia's sculpture. Ashley leaves and Claudia resolves to not let Ashley see her playing games in the front yard again.
During lunch the next day, Claudia agrees to sit with Ashley instead of the BSC so they can discuss her sculpture like they planned yesterday. She and Ashley go over to their table to tell them and the BSC is frustratingly cold. Claudia is angry and slams her tray down on the table, saying "What, can I not have a new friend? They have to right to make me feel like I've committed a federal crime or something."
Ashley invites her to a watercolor show after school for ideas and Claudia agrees to go. Claudia has a great time, thinking "Ashley made me look at paintings in ways I wouldn't have by myself. And she listened, really listened, to what I had to say about them!" This sentence really struck me. Claudia is always described as the "artistic one" in the group, but no one else in the group seems to support her art as much as Ashley does. Ashley is cool, talented, and loves art just as much as Claudia does, so it's no wonder that Claudia feels drawn to her.
Claudia is fifteen minutes late to the BSC meeting, and the members look unnecessarily frustrated when she walks in. Claudia says that they started without her, and Kristy reacts angrily, saying "Of course we started. The phone began ringing. What did you expect? That we'd tell everyone to call back after Claudia got here? We weren't sure you were coming at all. Where were you?" Claudia says that she was at an art exhibit with Ashley and Kristy asks why she didn't call to tell them that she was going to be late. Claudia defends that she ran the entire way home and says that they had a good time. Stacey immediately compares Ashley to her, saying "How good a time? As good a time as when you and I go to the mall?" This really frustrates me, because Claudia has known Ashley for less than a week, and hung out with her two times: once during lunch and once after school. Stacey has no need to be so hung up about who Claudia hangs out with. This paragraph is the first example of the BSC's toxic behavior. Claudia reflects that she didn't deserve to get jobs, thinking "That was fair. It was a rule. If you were going to be late and didn't tell anyone first, you lost privileges. Still, I didn't like the way it felt to be left out." The last panel is Stacey openly glaring at Claudia.
The next day, Claudia and Ashley hang out after school to pick an idea and Claudia decides that she'd rather pick an idea and skip one meeting. She calls Dawn to let her know. When she gets back to her room, there are two notes left on her bed. The first is from Kristy: "Really disappointed in you, Claudia. You're letting the BSC down again. The second is from Mary Anne telling her what her job is.
The next morning. Claudia is walking to class with Ashley when the BSC confronts her. Standing in the hallway, shoulder-to-shoulder, they glare at her when she greets them. Kristy says that she wasn't at the meeting yesterday, and when Claudia tries to explain, Dawn interrupts her with a sarcastic "We know, we know. Your sculpture." Stacey follows up with a "Nice skirt," directed at Ashley, which was completely unwarranted. Ashley looks upset. Kristy asks if she's coming to the next meeting, but adds if she has "permission" from Ashley, the second unnecessary dig at her. Ashley defends them, saying that she needs to spend time on her work. Claudia looks grateful at this, and Ashley continues, saying that if she wants to be a great artist, she needs to spend a lot of time on her work. Kristy continues to get angry at Claudia, asking if she's quitting the club. Claudia, frustrated, yells that she's not. Mary Anne and Dawn say that she could have fooled them.
Quick reminder that Claudia has missed two meetings total. They meet three times a week.
During art, Ashley tells Claudia that she's proud of the work that she's done and asks if she wants to come to her house sometime. This chapter ends with Claudia thinking, "Ashley was a talented artist, and she valued and trusted me. What else could you want in a friend?" The fact that she says that at least Ashley trusted her gives a good idea of how toxic the BSC is being.
An image from the shared BSC notebook is on the next page, beginning with one person's comment: "Some people here are traitors. And you know who you are. ...we have a little problem right now. It's a certain person who keeps missing meetings. It's a good thing we have an alternate officer because Dawn sure has had to take over the duties of our vice president a lot lately." [A lot meaning exactly two times.] It ends with a different comment saying, "Yeah, our VP used to be very nice, but now she never shows up to meetings and she hangs around with a person who wears bell-bottom blue jeans to school."
Stacey asks if Claudia wants to hang out after school but Claudia declines, saying that she has to catch up on school assignments but that she'd love to do it another time. Claudia's on her way to do that when Ashley shows up, asking if she wants to see the studio. She shows a little reluctance, remembering her lost work but agrees. She asks if she can borrow her phone to tell the club when she gets there and Ashley shows understanding, giving her a hug and saying "Sure thing."
That night, Stacey shows anger at hearing that Claudia went to Ashley's house. This is reasonable. What is not reasonable is that instead of calling Claudia and trying to work something out, she suggests revenge. The club ransacks her room, eating her food and dumping it in the wrong places. They short-sheet her bed, they wreck her things, and they decide to leave notes for her to find. They don't show all of the notes, but one says "Roses are red, violets are blue, traitors are jerks, and so are you." They put these on her mattress and other places. Let's keep in mind that Claudia lets them use her room for the BSC meetings. They are guests in her own home. This is extremely toxic behavior.
After they do this, they have the audacity to discuss whether Ashley is a good friend or not. They say that Ashley spends a lot of time by herself and doesn't speak to them, not thinking that maybe the reason that she doesn't like to talk to them is that they're extremely exclusive. If I made a new friend and her old friends acted cold to us and sought "revenge," I would stay as far away from them as possible. The page ends with Stacey, sitting on the bed that she left cruel notes on, in the room that Claudia loaned them, saying "I'm beginning to wonder just how good a friend Ashley Wyeth is."
Do you see the toxic behavior?
The next day, Ashley sees Claudia when she's babysitting the Rodowskys again. She asks why she spends time babysitting when she could be doing her sculpture instead. Claudia and Ashley argue, Ashley saying that she could be a great artist, and Claudia saying that she needs time for other things. Remember that every time they've hung out for art, it's been a consensual thing. Ashley has invited her to do something, Claudia has agreed, and they've both enjoyed it.
During this argument, Claudia says "You shouldn't make up conditions for friendship." I feel as if this would be 100% more applicable for the BSC over Ashley. Ashley has never indicated that she wouldn't want to continue being friends even if Claudia wasn't an artist, but the BSC is acting like it's the end of the world if Claudia misses a few meetings. [The count is at three total meetings now.] They're talking about her behind her back, confronting her angrily in school, and getting "revenge" for things that shouldn't need revenge.
Ashley leaves, upset, and Claudia thinks that "She was right. I haven't been a good friend. At least, not to Stacey and the other members of the BSC. I thought everyone must hate me. I'd be surprised if any of them ever spoke to me again." The next day, Claudia goes to sketch Jackie for her sculpture, and Mary Anne, who is babysitting at the time, asks if she and Ashley are best friends now, and Claudia replies that they're not even friends anymore.
Here comes the part that I recognize in a lot of books. The author(s) realize that the so-called "villain" is in the right in a situation, so they decide to add in an extra, unnecessary scene in order to put one side in the right and one in the wrong. Ashley storms into the house and tells Claudia that she's disappointed that she's sculpting Jackie. Claudia stands up to her and says that she's going to sculpt what she likes, and Ashley says that she's not going to learn it from her. With an offhand "Have fun ruining your career," she slams the door and leaves. Mary Anne makes the obligatory "she doesn't care for you like we do" conversation and Claudia says that she'll be missing another meeting because she needs to study.
When she gets home, she calls Ashley. She explains to her that her life has a lot of things in it, and that she's the happiest when she's busy. She says "I really like you, Ashley, but I can't spend all my time working on art with you. Even if you're the most talented person I know. Do you know what I mean?" Ashley (recently made the villain) says she does and hangs up the phone. Claudia says that a real friend would have tried to understand (cough, cough, like the BSC should have before they destroyed her stuff, cough, cough). Next, she calls Stacey and tells her that she's sorry she's been a flaky friend recently, and that she wanted to hang out with Ashley because she's never been able to talk about art like that before. Stacey says that they can still be friends and then Claudia calls Kristy to tell her that she's going to be at the next meeting.
Do you see how in all of these, Claudia is apologizing? Not a single time does anyone else take the blame for anything, even though throughout the entire book, Claudia rarely ever does anything wrong.
Claudia goes to the BSC meeting the next day and says this: "I'm sorry. I, um, really missed you guys and babysitting. I'm sorry I let myself get carried away with art and animated objects or whatever they're called. Please understand... hardly anybody tells me I'm really good at something when you're me. That just doesn't happen often. Then Ashley came along. She was an amazing artist who complimented me. I felt important when I was with her... and I didn't want to lose that. I know now that she wasn't a real friend, though. I just hope we can be friends again."
I'm not going to go into detail about the rest of the book, but it's your regular storybook ending. The BSC apologizes vaguely for "not handling things well," never specifying the things that they actually did. Claudia promises to be a better friend (aka, not stand up to them when they act toxic). Ashley agrees to be second best because the BSC is more important because they're the main characters, and she'll probably never show up in a book again because she's not a member of the BSC. Claudia never finds out about the notes.
This book heavily romanticizes toxic friendships and encourages a black-and-white viewpoint. I believe that Claudia and Ashley are the victims in this situation, and if you disagree I'd like to invite you to reread the book. I have a copy at my house that I certainly don't want anymore.