Academic financial principles make relevant chapter titles for Lawn Boy, a story that's typical of Gary Paulsen in the later years of his career. His novels very generally fit into two categories: contemplative studies of life, often set in nature (Dogsong, Hatchet, The Island) and zany comedies that test the limits of believability (Masters of Disaster, Molly McGinty Has a Really Good Day, Mudshark), and Lawn Boy belongs to the latter category. Madcap moneymaking antics are the name of the game when a twelve-year-old kid's summer job mowing lawns blooms into a small-town conglomerate with the potential to lift the boy and his family out of financial mediocrity and into affluence. It's not the sort of summer most kids seriously plan on, but who wouldn't jump at that opportunity?
The main character (as in many Gary Paulsen books, he's not assigned a name) is looking forward to a summer of freedom and fun, until his scatterbrained grandmother gives him an old riding lawn mower she had around her house. While cutting his family's small lawn to pass the time, the boy is approached by a neighbor who inquires if he'll do the same for him, for twenty dollars. He continues getting work this way, curious neighbors hiring him to mow their lawns, until he's maxed out and has no free time left to expand his startup business. He's making excellent money, though; if he keeps going at this rate, he'll earn better than seven thousand dollars by the time school starts. Then he meets an eccentric stockbroker named Arnold, who sees a bigger future for the kid's business. With Arnold onboard, the infrastructure grows like a California redwood, money and assets pouring in like the waters of Noah's flood. Is there any stopping this preteen entrepreneur from striking it rich? Perhaps. Big money attracts unsavory characters like flies to honey, and the boy will have to deal with some dangerous enemies or risk his spectacular operation going up in flames. Can he ward off the bad guys with the help of his parents, Arnold, and a beefy prizefighter? The future is his to command, but things could get tricky as organized crime enters the equation. When you're young and on the come-up, you have to prove you won't be bullied out of the legacy you've built.
Lawn Boy can't compare to Gary Paulsen's premier works, but it's humorous and unpredictable, especially in the early going. It's hard to guess how high the boy's fortunes could rise as Arnold molds his little lawn care service into a massively profitable company designed to adapt to whichever direction the fickle economic winds blow. I rate Lawn Boy one and a half stars, and it's good fun for readers who want a comedic story. As long as you're not expecting The Rifle, you'll enjoy this book.