So Totally Emily Ebers
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So Totally Emily Ebers is Lisa Yee's third novel. It tells Emily Ebers's side of the story in Stanford Wong Flunks Big-Time and Millicent Min, Girl Genius.
So Totally Emily Ebers | |
Cover of So Totally Emily Ebers |
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Author | Lisa Yee |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Contemporary Fiction/Coming of Age |
Publisher | Arthur A. Levine Books |
Publication date | April 1, 2007 |
Media type | Print (Hardcover) |
Pages | 304 |
ISBN | ISBN 0-439-83847-9 |
[edit] Plot
Moving is not a pleasant experience- especially moving to the other side of the country with a moody mother who insists on stopping at every museum along the way. The road from Allendale, New Jersey, to Rancho Rosetta, California, is not a happy story for fun-loving Emily Ebers. The only reason she had to move was because her parents divorced, and it was all Alice's, her boring journalist mother's, fault. It was she who wanted to divorce, to tear the family apart, and to sell the house that Emily loved. Alice could definitely care less about Emily. Emily only chose to live with Alice because if she lived with her father, she would get in his way- and the way of his band, Talky Boys, which is touring the East Coast.
Just when her summer couldn't get any worse, Alice registers her for volleyball. During these torture sessions, Emily must learn to hit the ball over the net, live with the awful Coach Gowin, and endure and reflect insults from popular girl, Julie, and her "back-up singers."
However, things take a turn for the better when she meets Millicent Min, a home-schooled Chinese girl who was forced to play volleyball because there definitely isn't a gym at home. Surprisingly, Millie and Emily become friends instantly, and Millie even goes to Emily's for a sleepover. But here's where the problem arises- is it possible for Alice to dematerialize so that her ugly hippie clothing and boring talk about journalism doesn't embarrass Emily? Luckily, Millie fakes interest in Alice and is safely whisked off to Emily's room before Alice can drone on about her newest articles.
After this sleepover, everything gets even better for Emily. First, she meets the other Mins- Mr. and Mrs. Min and Grandma Maddie- who are actually normal humans unlike Alice! And then, she meets the boy of her dreams, Stanford Wong, athletic, smart, and handsome prince charming. He's the only seventh grader on the A-team for basketball, Millie's tutor, and someone that would "never do anything to hurt anyone."
Emily's life is now back to normal, and even volleyball isn't so excruciating as it first was now that she has Millie. However, everything she didn't give a second thought about now comes back to her- why Millie used large words and carried a briefcase, why she was so uncomfortable talking about school, and why another girl on the volleyball team calls her a "genius". During the morning of a sleepover at Millie's, Emily uncovers everything she needs to know to fit the pieces of the puzzle together- trophies, plaques, certificates, diplomas, and newspaper articles labeled 'Millicent Min'. Of course. Millicent isn't stupid or homeschooled or tutored by Stanford Wong. She is a freak genius whereas Stanford Wong is failing language arts. "Best friends don't lie to each other." How could they have lied to her the entire time?
Disgusted with her "friends," Emily decides to start anew and find real buddies who won't lie to her. First, she decides to become closer to Wendy, the other nice girl in volleyball. Through Wendy, she learns about Julie and her back up singers- how they could either "make or break" Emily when she started school. Though she isn't the type to join the popular clique, Wendy encourages her to start school with a good reputation. Plus, being popular can't harm her, can it?
Thus, the two of them attend Julie's pedicure party (popular girls only) where Emily is encouraged to look at herself in a different way- that is, comparing themselves to ultra-thin models. Emily starts dieting (though she isn't fat) and plucking her eyebrows (though they aren't ugly). In this quest to find out who she really is, Emily is pressured to buy six identical purses $112 each for each of the six popular girls (Julie and her Triple A backup singers Alyssa, Ariel, and Ariana, plus Emily and Wendy) with her dad's credit card. That day, Emily not only spent $672 (plus tax), but also one of her final tokens of tolerance for the so-called popular clique.
Though Wendy is a nice girl, no one beats Millie's "deadpan sense of humor" and the way she always had something to talk about. The timing was always perfect for Millie and Emily. Luckily, it still is. In an awkward telephone conversation, the two former best friends decide to meet at the mall. Though it takes some time for Millie to figure out that she had not "sorely misjudged the dynamics" of their relationship, but rather misjudged Emily's ability to look beyond IQ, she does figure out that Emily was and will always be her friend despite the genius barrier that had caused Millie to be friendless in the first place.
With Millie back, Emily is able to face the fact that her father is no loving daddy. When he finally calls (second time the entire summer), it's about the credit, to "confirm the purchase of six [expensive] purses" and to tell Emily to stop using the credit card. That definitely isn't what Emily wanted to hear. She had believed that her father had been extremely busy with his band and that he still loved her very much. Fortunately, when the truth hits her, Millie is right next to her giving her tissues. But that's not all the Millie does- she even asks for the makeover that Emily's always wanted to do to cheer Millie up.
Emily never knew that Alice had turned down a prestigious assignment to Paris- just to be with her for the summer! After realizing her serious error, Emily apologizes, "I'm so sorry,...about this summer and life and everything. I've been so mean to you." Finally, after an entire summer, Emily is able to engage in an intimate relationship with her mother who she doesn't call "Alice" anymore, but "mom"- short, sweet, and daughterly.
After Millie's perfect definition of "true friend" in that noble act, Emily is able to break her bonds with Julie and the Triple A's. "I may have been slow, but I finally figured out what a true friend is, and Julie never was one." When Julie attempts to persuade Emily that what she has been doing for Emily is all for Emily's own good (e.g. the dieting), even meek Wendy sticks up for Emily. With one more true friend, Julie can't break her in school. Another problem solved and just one more to go.
Though Stanford called almost everyday, he never said anything or left a message. He never apologized, and Emily thinks it's because he never liked her. Finally, several days before summer vacation ends, the two make it up to each other, and in an ice cream shop, become boyfriend and girlfriend.
And finally, with a sweet letter to her father, Emily completes her diary. She is "home" as wise old Maddie says.