Spring Break returns to the format of having dual narrators--the same from the first book, in fact, stepsiblings Josh and Josie Maxwell. This one doesn't have the obvious filler of Let's Party, but apart from calling back to the Doom Spell and having Jennifer Fear reveal her secret from The Gift to Josie, it doesn't do anything to advance the plot, either.
Josh's story involves a trip to Tucson with a group of friends to spend spring break at rich girl/class psychic Trisha Conrad's ranch. First he gets stalked by an aggressive drunk at the airport (leading to what might be my all-time favorite chapter title: "One Angry Cowboy"), then he falls for a superstitious local girl who warns him of the legend of La Amadora, a ghost out for revenge for the desecration of the native land. This is the better of the two plots, if only because there are more characters to interact with each other. The resolution is disappointing, though.
Josie, meanwhile, laments the fact that she is stuck at home while her brother gets to go have fun. In an effort to spice up her life, she and Jennifer Fear use fake IDs to get into a bar where a bunch of college kids hang out. This little interlude is a lot of fun--probably the best part of the book, because it feels like the kind of real-life shenanigans that a couple of actual high school students might get up to out of boredom. Unfortunately it leads to them meeting Tim and Evan, a couple of college-aged dorks who are either evil or just "pranksters". Either way they're pretty lame, and the rest of Josie's narrative involves dates with these bozos. This one is the inverse of Josh's plot in that it's dumb and boring most of the time but actually has a pretty good conclusion.
Thus far in the series, three quarters of the way through, we now have seven Main Character deaths. I use the term "Main Character" loosely, of course, because some of the dead characters who rated yearbook photos were only glorified extras when they died. Also one of the deceased from several books back was Josh's girlfriend and he never so much as thinks about her here. Poor girl.