| A Review of: Miss Smithers by Heather KirkThis young-adult novel chronicles the further adventures of Alice
MacLeod, "world record holder in the Most Embarrassing Moments
category," protagonist of Alice, I Think. In the sequel, Miss
Smithers, 16-year-old Alice competes in the annual Miss Smithers
competition in the isolated town of Smithers, in the northern
interior of British Columbia. Often very funny, the story satirizes
beauty contests, small-town life, and the Boomer generation. It
also traces Alice's tentative growth toward greater self confidence
and better relationships with family and friends. Although the book
would have benefitted from tighter editing and a wider emotional
range, it is frequently delightful.
Alice is a "reasonably high functioning girl" who regards
herself as a "weirdo." She attends an "alternative
school." She has a girlfriend named George who has just lost
her virginity at a 4-H rally. She has a boyfriend named Goose with
whom she schemes to "do it" too. Alice's father is a
writer who rarely writes. Her mother, "an evangelical vegetarian,
peace activist feminist," supports the family by working in a
New Age bookstore and running the Crystalline Clarity Focus Candle
Co., which makes and mails candles . . . when her father can bother
to make and mail them.
Impulsively, Alice enters the Miss Smithers competition to spite
her mother and get a 400-dollar clothing allowance. To her dismay,
the competition requires her to take part in a series of scary
events such as a photo shoot, an etiquette workshop, a fashion show,
a public-speaking contest, and a talent show. Alice blows almost
her entire allowance on a pair of leather pants from a motorcycle
shop. She almost forgets to go to the photo shoot and shows up
unprepared. Some of the other girls have gone out and had their
hair and makeup professionally done. Alice spends the event
"speculating on who among [her] fellow candidates has had
sex."
Alice must leap other hurdles besides official events. For one
thing, her mother and Goose accidentally distribute her private
zine containing criticisms of her fellow candidates and townspeople.
As a result, Alice gets picked on by female bullies and gets picked
up by cool Karen. Alice admires Karen and is thrilled to be invited
to spend a Saturday evening with her, but then she discovers that
Karen is an alcoholic whose friends are irresponsible dimwits. Alice
learns self-defence techniques, but she witnesses destructive
conduct. On another occasion Alice herself gets drunk. The consequences,
although described amusingly, are nearly tragic.
I laughed aloud many times as I read Miss Smithers, and I thought
some scenes were brilliant; yet I found the book a bit too long,
slow, and superficial. The beginning and end dragged slightly, and
the middle could have been better organized with stronger character
development and greater suspense. Too many of the secondary characters
were not fully realized. For example, Alice's father has two sets
of friends. Neither set is memorable. And why create two when only
one is needed. Also, Frizz and Dirty, the representatives of the
Rotten Ryders motorcycle gang are merely silly, and evidence no
signs of miscreance, although the gang is "likely" a
"criminal organization."
Main characters like Alice's parents and Alice herself are also
somewhat shallow. The mother's change of heart about the competition
is unconvincing, and Alice comes across as unfeeling. She is too
self-involved to be grateful to the clear-sighted Mr. Polaski for
saving her from a sexual predator, or to sympathize with the
vulnerable, rejected Goose and George. When Alice herself becomes
"depressed," the reason for her depression is unimportant,
and the symptoms are ridiculous: "He found me lying on my back
in my flannel pajamas, a toque and sunglasses, and staring at my
oversize fuzzy slippers."
But then, although genuine highs and lows of emotion would have
made the book more satisfying, Miss Smithers does not succumb to
a terminal case of cuteness. The writing, when Alice gets beaten
up and yet manages to help Karen escape from a potentially lethal
situation, is gritty, and the scene in which Alice tries a "meat
restaurant" is sardonic. Susan Juby is very gifted humourist.
Alice, I Think was "a hit in the U.S. and Australia,"
according to the jacket-back blurb of the sequel, and Miss Smithers
is likely to sell well too. Still, it's hard not to think that Juby
and her editor were suffering from a mild case of over-confidence
with Miss Smithers.
|