Dini is devastated when she learns her family is moving to India for two years. She can't imagine leaving her best friend Maddie behind for all that time! There is a glimmer of happiness, however, because the girls' favorite movie star, Dolly Singh, who stars in many Bollywood films, also lives in India, and Dini's chances of meeting her just have to increase if they're in the same country. This seems like a far-fetched expectation, at first, but upon her arrival in India, Dini learns that Dolly is hiding out in her new hometown of Swampnagiri. Through a series of coincidences and convoluted connections with her new neighbors, Dini finds a way to meet her favorite star and help her recover from a broken heart.
This book was fantastic. The Indian setting was a refreshing change of pace from books set in bland, non-descript American towns, and the playful tone made the entire story stand out as something new and fresh. I love the motley cast of characters - the postal carrier who delivers Dini's fan letter to Dolly, her manager, and his daughter, who becomes Dini's new friend, and the monkeys who wreak havoc on Dini's new house. I was reminded quite a bit of the neighbors Opal encounters in Because of Winn Dixie, and thought the party scene in The Grand Plan To Fix Everything had the same heartwarming feeling as the party at the end of Winn Dixie.
Though the plot relied heavily on coincidence, and didn't feel particularly realistic, I didn't see this as a flaw. The playful tone of the writing was so unique, and the depiction of the fillum culture, and of Swampnagiri so colorful and interesting, I didn't mind having to suspend my disbelief. I also didn't mind that the adult characters were at times cartoonish - this just made them easier for kids to relate to, and made it more plausible that a child should be able to solve their problems.
A blurb on the cover of the book from author Linda Sue Park described this story as a "modern fairy-tale," and I think that's the best way to sum it up. The events of Grand Plan couldn't happen in real life, but it doesn't matter because it's such a great story. I read this book mostly because it fit so well with the summer reading program theme, One World Many Stories, but it winds up being one of my favorite books of the year so far. I definitely recommend it to girls in grades 4 to 6, and to anyone looking for an upbeat, light-hearted, and different middle grade read.