What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

This topic is about
Class Pictures
SOLVED: Children's/YA
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SOLVED. YA book with girl good at science as lead character [s]
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Aghh! This is killing me!!

Her Polly O'Keefe character has red hair and the books are science-y.

Ringing a bell! Sadly, no idea what the title is . . .

I feel like I read the book you're talking about, and it reminded me of the Trixie Belden at that time, too. I'm hoping it'll come to me, or someone else. Another Lois Duncan book, Stranger With My Face, does have a girl who finds out she's adopted, but I don't think that's the one, either; nothing else matches.
About when would you have read this book (what year)?

I do believe I read Class Pictures, but I'm almost positive that the character I'm talking about truly had the biological parents as her parents with whom she lived. What I do know is that she states in the book that the lady who questioned her legitimacy did not know anything about genetics or she would know that the girl's parents could have produced a child with her coloring. Do you happen to have Class Pictures handy? Do you know if that passage was in there?
Wendy and all:
I read this book somewhere between 1979 and 1981. I went on a spate of reading Lois Duncan, Paula Danziger, Beverly Cleary, and a well-worn copy of Forever that was passed around between all the junior-high girls. ;-)

Thanks for the reminder, whether or not it's what Becca was looking for.

Becca, we still joke about Forever now! I just read Then Again Maybe I Won't because it was one of the few Judy Blume books I missed when I was younger. Nothing like teen smut!

I'll let y'all know if this one is solved once I get the book.

And for Mrs. Scheiner in the book:
Two blue-eyed parents **can** produce green or brown-eyed children.
See this article.

by Marilyn Sachs. Great author. :)
I don't think the title links worked which is why I prefer to mention both title and author.
I know it's not much to go on, but does this book sound familiar to anyone?
And, it is NOT The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds or What Janie Found.
Thanks,
Becca