cover image The School for Whatnots

The School for Whatnots

Margaret Peterson Haddix. HarperCollins/Tegen, $17.99 (304p) ISBN 978-0-06-283849-0

Born into different circumstances on the same night, two middle schoolers encounter their respective upbringings’ mysteries in Haddix’s (the Greystone Secrets series) class-conscious thriller. Though Maximilian J. Sterling’s billionaire parents celebrate his birth with a lavish fireworks display, they soon fear that Max “will never know the difference between the beauty of his own soul and the appeal of all his money,” and determine to raise him alongside androids provided by the Whatnot Corporation. After Josie’s mother dies at an overwhelmed charity hospital just after childbirth, meanwhile, the girl’s bereft father takes a deal offered by a veiled woman: in exchange for greater educational opportunities than he can afford, Josie will live alone at a whatnot school, “pretending to be a robot pretending to be a child.” Eleven years later, having been fast friends with Max since kindergarten, Josie makes a comment about “whatnot rules” and leaves a handwritten note for Max: “No matter what anyone tells you, I’m real.” Though the book’s look at structural socioeconomic privilege largely skips over considerations of intersectional bias, and frequent narrative asides interrupt the action’s flow, strong interpersonal relationships and twisty plotting will draw readers into this quick-moving buddy novel that focuses on connection and generations’ opportunities to unlearn their programming. The protagonists read as white; secondary cast members read as Black. Ages 8–12. Agent: Tracey Adams, Adams Literary. (Mar.)