Friday, December 13, 2024

Leaving Home (SVH #38) by Francine Pascal and some random ghostie

 **This blog contains adult language.**

Warning: Spoilers Ahead!!! This is a recap blog which means I read the book and tell you everything that happens so you don't have to read it yourself. Do NOT continue to read unless you want to know what cold-hearted-bitch move the twins made this book.


Tag Line: Can Jessica find a way to stop Elizabeth from leaving Sweet Valley?

From the Back of the Book: Separate ways...  Elizabeth Wakefield has always dreamed of visiting the beautiful mountains of Switzerland, so she's thrilled when she has a chance to attend an exclusive Swiss boarding school. As much as she loves Sweet Valley, Elizabeth is positive the romantic, snow-covered Swiss countryside would provide the perfect inspiration for writing. The thought of losing her sister has Elizabeth's identical twin, Jessica, in a panic! How would she survive without her very best friend in the world? Jessica just can't let Elizabeth go, so she devises a plan to make sure her twin won't leave Sweet Valley. Will Jessica's scheme to keep Elizabeth home work – or will it end up driving her away forever?



Meet the Cast

*Elizabeth Wakefield – identical twin of Jessica and massive fucking martyr.

*Jessica Wakefield – identical twin of Elizabeth with narcissistic and histrionic tendencies

*EvilNed Wakefield – neglectful patriarch of the clan and successful lawyer

*VileAlice Wakefield – neglectful matriarch of the clan and an interior designer

*Steven Wakefield – older brother, university student and general asshole

*Enid Rollins – Liz's best friend and generic good-girl type

*Todd Wilkins – Liz's douchebag former boyfriend currently exiled to Vermont

*Lila Fowler – Jessica's self-absorbed best friend and representative of SV new money

*Bruce Patman – school dick and representative of SV old money

*Winston Egbert – stereotypical school nerd

*Jeffrey French – Liz's new victim....I mean love interest

There are more but these are the main characters that plague us book after book.


This book was published in 1987 and this is my first time reading it. The cover looks really bad to me. Why do they always make the twins look so old?

In the last book, rumors swirled around Susan's parentage. At first everyone assumed her mother was rich and famous and had just abandoned her due to being too busy. Then Lila spread a rumor that Susan's mother was an insane criminal in hopes of breaking up Susan and Gordon. It turns out Susan's mother was the woman who was raising her (but didn't want to admit she had a child out of wedlock) but her father was a famous director who knew about her all her life but didn't contact her until his other child died and he needed a replacement. Oh, and the twins thought VileAlice was pregnant. It was dumb.

Missing, Presumed Dead: Susan joins Joanna, Patty, Eddie and Michael who only existed for one book and then were promptly forgotten, remain missing. I fear we may never see them again.

Released From the Wakefield Dungeon: Bruce and Roger are seen at Winston's so they've escaped the dungeon. Let's hope they can stay free this time. Lynne, the songwriter (who I forgot even existed) also poofs back into SV. Man, she must have some tales to tell after being underground so long.

We begin with the twins and Enid on the beach. Jess has binoculars for some reason and she's perving on some surfer. We launch right into a description of our twins – the words “model slim” and “sun-streaked” are used. Liz is called “sensible” and “deeply loyal”.


Right. Sure she is.

The only thing ghostie has to say about Jess is that she's “impetuous” and “likes to live for the moment”. Once again, we lie about Liz and nail Jess.

You know, I find this trend pretty insidious.  Book after book, they show us who Liz is but continue to try to gaslight us into thinking she's some kind of saint.  Do they think we're not paying attention?  Do they think the readers are too dumb to form their own opinions on a character based on evidence?  It's like they think we'll blindly believe what they say rather than what they show us.  Liz has never been "deeply loyal".  She's cheated on every boyfriend she's ever had.  She's betrayed her friend Enid several times.  She's left clubs in the lurch, failed to do her job for the newspaper, and even ducked out on actual paying jobs for anything she deems more important.  The only one Liz is loyal to is herself and we all know it.

We learn that Jess has been casually seeing a senior named Randy. Enid seems oddly interested in him. I hope we're not going to have a B-plot of the two of them fighting over a boy we don't even know or care about.  {{{Note from future me: that B-plot would have been WAY better than the one we got.}}}  We also learn that Liz is obsessed with looking at the brochure that Regina gave her in the last book. Ghostie gives us a review on who Regina is but I'm not going to insult your intelligence by doing the same. You've read these recaps. You know who Regina is.

Liz thinks that Switzerland is an “enchanting, romantic” utopia and she's dying to go. Of course, Jess doesn't want her to leave Sweet Valley and I'm sure we can all see this book unfolding in front of us. Jess is going to act selfishly and not care about what Liz wants. Liz is going to end up changing her mind to stay in Sweet Valley. Why are we even pretending this is a thing? We all know it's not going to happen. It seems like a waste of a good tree to me.

Liz wants to spend her senior year in Switzerland at a school that offers a special creative-writing program that welcomes American students. She's practically orgasmic as she thinks about writing with a view of the Alps outside her window. Jess and Enid are unenthused.

We skip ahead to that evening. The Wakefields drive north to meet Steven for dinner at a restaurant halfway between his college and the compound. Steven also thinks Switzerland is a terrible idea but I don't know why. Having Liz out of everyone's hair is only going to be a positive thing. She's pretty much poison.

We skip to the next day at lunch. I'm not sure what the point of that dinner was. Did we really need pages of nothingness to tell us that Steven is against Switzerland? Seriously, ghostie, stop padding out the page count. Maria, Winston, Lila and Jeffrey are eating lunch with our dynamic duo. Maria seems pro-Switzerland but Jeffrey is in the anti camp. I think Lila is pro-Switzerland as well because she jokes about starting a fund so Liz can afford to go even if she doesn't get the scholarship. It's kind of funny and I think Lila is the only one thinking clearly here. A Liz-less Sweet Valley can only be a good thing.

Winston introduces what I desperately hope isn't going to be our B-plot. He pulls a lottery ticket out of his pocket and declares that he's about to be a very rich man. He says he'll send Liz to boarding school if he wins. That's one more in the pro-Switzerland column. Man, people really want her gone.



Liz notes that the first three numbers are the card are Jeffrey's birthday. I'm sure that won't be important later. Winston invites everyone to come over to his house to watch the lottery drawing at 10:00.

After school, Liz goes to the mall with Jeffrey so he can get a birthday present for his mother. She's distracted and keeps mentioning Switzerland which depresses Jeffrey. She's too blind and self-absorbed to notice until it gets REALLY obvious. Finally she asks if anything is wrong. Is she dumb? Why wouldn't he be upset by the idea of his girlfriend leaving for an entire school year? Not only that but she's acting like she won't miss anyone which probably makes him feel like shit. Liz just pats him like he's a cranky toddler and tells him that they'll be able to maintain a long distance relationship. He snorts and says that she and Todd couldn't do it.


Jeffrey is my hero for saying what we were all thinking.

Liz says it's different because she's not going away forever like Todd did. She knows the separation will have absolutely no impact on their relationship at all.

Please, Liz. Every time you get even twenty miles away from Jeffrey you start flirting with other boys. You'll be dating some Swiss boy before the plane lands.

Liz dismisses all of Jeffrey's feelings and goes right back to dreaming about being in Switzerland because no one matters but her. She even tells herself that “deep down Jeffrey really felt the same way she did about the Interlochen School” which is just such bullshit. Liz really does live in her own little world. She invites him back to her house to show him a book about Switzerland that she checked out from the library because she's really that fucking clueless.



We land in Winston's head so I guess the lottery nonsense really IS the B-plot. They're shopping for his lottery party later. Maria asks who's coming and Winston spouts off a list: the twins, Jeffrey, Lila, Enid, Roger, Olivia, Bruce, Nicholas and Regina. Does that mean Bruce and Roger are out of the dungeon? I'll have to see proof of life before I mark them. Also, Nicholas is a blast from the past. I hadn't been marking him as a dungeon dweller because he doesn't go to Sweet Valley and I've just assumed he was at boarding school or college or whatever.

So what is he doing in Sweet Valley in the middle of the week?  I think ghostie forgot he wasn't supposed to be there.  



They see a little girl ask her grandfather for cookies but he can't afford them. Winston grows uncomfortable at the idea that people are poor for some reason. I hate Sweet Valley. The grandfather is wearing a jacket nearly identical to Winston's and somehow....kind of ridiculously....they get switched. Of course the lottery ticket is in the pocket of Winston's jacket and now the poor grandpa has it. Naturally Winston discovers that the grandpa also had a lottery ticket in his pocket. So now they have each other's tickets.

I feel a psychic vision coming on......



So the grandpa's ticket is going to be a winner, right? And then Winston will have to decide whether to return it or not. And Liz will know it's been switched because of Jeffrey's birthday. Man, these books are predictable.

Sure enough, the number is drawn and it matches the ticket currently in Winston's possession. Liz is perplexed because she knows that's not the number he had earlier. Everyone else celebrates except Maria who seems freaked out at the thought that Winston now has $25,000. 

What would be the equivalent of that win today?



According to Google, that would be a little over $69,000 today. That's a lot for a junior in high school.



Winston is freaked out. He isn't sure what to do.



Back with Liz. She finds out the school in Switzerland has a special scholarship for 15-17 year old girls from California who want to study writing.



This is so ridiculous.

Liz has to send off her transcript, three letters of recommendation and three writing samples as soon as possible. Then an alumni from the school and a member of the Sterne family that funds the scholarship will have to interview her in person to see if she's suitable. 

Liz's parents aren't too thrilled about the idea. They think she should finish school in Sweet Valley and then maybe go abroad for college. Liz is distraught and asks them to call the school to talk to the headmaster or whatever he's called. She thinks he might be able to persuade her parents that this is a great opportunity for her. They agree.

Liz can't understand why everyone is so against her leaving the country for a year. She's hurt that they can't see what this means to her.



Back to Winston and the B-plot. He's struggling with the knowledge that he is going to get thousands of dollars that really belong to someone else. He gets the grandpa's address from the store clerk (why the hell does the store clerk know where this guy lives???) and heads over to his house. The old man is happy to get his jacket back. Winston notes that the man lives in poverty and feels bad again about the lottery ticket mix up. The old man mentions that he buys a ticket every week but he hasn't been paying attention to the numbers because he never wins. This makes Winston feel better. He figures if the old man doesn't care if he wins, it's okay to keep the money.

What?

That's the dumbest thing I've heard yet.

Can we discuss for a minute how none of this is even logical. First of all, who even takes off their jacket at the grocery store and lays it on the counter next to the jacket of the person in front of you in line who has also inexplicably taken off their jacket and laid it on the counter? No one would do this. This is odd behavior. Secondly, I know it mentions that Winston's dad bought him the ticket since he's under age but then Winston is somehow going to be allowed to claim the prize? That makes no sense. He's not 18 and therefore cannot play the lottery. The ghostie tried to address this by saying that although he can't buy a ticket, he's still legally allowed to play and claim prizes. That's not how that works. Not a single bit of this plot makes any sense. It's worse than the pregnancy plot in the last book.



Back to Liz. She wants to rehearse for the in-person meeting because she doesn't trust her family not to fuck it up. Neither do I, but that's because Jess and Steven are probably going to fuck it up on purpose. Her family basically laughs at her for being concerned about it. Huffing, she goes to call Jeffrey. He wants to take her somewhere special the next night but she says that she has to work on her short story for the application. She tries to go over what he might say if anyone asks him any questions about her and he turns it into a joke. She's pissed that no one is taking this seriously.



The next day, Liz tries to coach Enid on what to say if the interviewer asks her any questions and I'm confused. I thought they were doing a home interview? Does Liz plan to have all these people over at her house when they come? Or does she think they'll interview her friends when they come to the school to talk to her principal? That seems like it would be a HUGE waste of time. Her principal and teachers might tell the truth about her but her friends and family probably won't. Under normal circumstances, they would want to make her look like the best candidate for the scholarship even if she isn't. Here in SV, they'll probably try to sabotage her. Either way, the interviewer isn't going to get an accurate description of Liz from these people.

Hell, even the author can't manage to give an accurate description of her.

Enid flat out tells Liz that she's being a little obsessive about this entire thing. Liz counters that she can't understand why no one is supporting her. Enid says no one wants her to go and Liz calls that selfish. She says her best friend should want what's best for her. Enid says she doesn't think this is what's best for Liz. She thinks Liz is making it into something life-changing when it's just going to be school in another country. Liz is furious and storms away.



We're in Enid's head now. It's the next day and she feels bad about her fight with Liz. She tries to go apologize but Liz isn't home. Somehow she ends up at the mall and runs into Jeffrey. She asks Jeffrey if there's any way to change Liz's mind and he says that he thinks they should support her because this is something she really wants. Enid decides he's right and tells him that she's going to make a scrapbook for Liz to take with her when she leaves.  She's going to include pictures of all Liz's friends and all the good memories they've had so Liz won't feel so homesick while she's away.  He thinks that's a good idea and offers to help.

If I were Jeffrey, I would still feel pretty awkward around Enid.  I mean, she tried to buy him with an entire wagon of canned peas once.



We're back with Winston and the B-plot that shouldn't even exist because IT MAKES NO SENSE. He's calling the lottery office to find out what would happen if someone won the lottery with a ticket they didn't own. He says he's asking for a school project so the person entertains his absurd question. She tells him that they can't verify ownership and whoever is holding the ticket is the winner. He thanks her and hangs up. Part of him wanted a different answer, I think, because he feels so bad about keeping the money.


After that absolutely useless page, we hop right back into Jess' head. She calls Steven to whine about Liz leaving and he says that he's come up with a plan. They'll act like a “obnoxious twin sister and a depraved older brother” to sabotage Liz's interview.

Depraved seems like an odd choice of words here.

But maybe not for Steven who is a GROWN ASS MAN DATING A 16-YEAR-OLD.

Steven figures if the interviewer thinks Liz comes from a family with “so little moral fiber” than she must not be as “wholesome” as she appears. To be fair, the Wakefields have absolutely no moral fiber that I can see so he's not far off with this but it's still dumb. Jess likes it though, and offers to get some of the people at the school to play along when the interviewer goes to talk to the principal. Steven says he'll rope his girlfriend Cara into this stupidity so I guess it's all systems go.

#someonesaveCara

We hop over to the other twin now. I think we went forward a few days too because last I knew it was Saturday and now she's in the school cafeteria. Clear timelines have never been a thing in this series so why start now? Liz is waiting for Jeffrey but Lila tells her that she saw him and Enid getting into his car a few minutes before. Liz is perplexed. Lila reminds her about how Enid was madly in love with Jeffrey when he first came to town and now Liz is troubled.

Did everyone forget about the wagon of canned peas???

We get a recap of that book now but, again, I trust you remember. 

Liz tries to convince herself that nothing is happening between the two of them but Lila fans the flames by saying she's seen them together several times lately. Now Liz is freaking out.



We land in Jeffrey's head again. Apparently he and Enid needed to run to the store to get glue for the scrapbook during lunch. He left a note in Liz's locker to explain he had to miss lunch with her because he needed to run an errand but someone pulled it out of the vents and threw it away so she never saw it. This is dumb.

These ghosties really need to learn to create tension without having to rely on 'the big misunderstanding'.



Back to Winston and the ridiculous B-plot. He's accepted the money and it was put into a trust for him to access when he turns 18. In the meantime, he can spend the interest it earns. And somehow he has some interest money already despite the fact that the money has been in the bank for about a day.



Also he tells us that he'll be earning $200 dollars in interest every single month. Where the hell did he find these rates?

Winston goes to a toy store to find a doll for the poor man's granddaughter. He asks to have it delivered anonymously and pays for it with his magical interest. Winston feels guilty for keeping the money but he doesn't want to be a “laughingstock” if he returns it.

Seriously? This is so dumb. We know Winston and we know he would NEVER keep this money. Jess might. Bruce would. Lila would. Hell, Steven would probably keep it but Winston wouldn't. This is the dumbest B-plot ever.

Also, he should have thrown some cookies in with that doll.



Back with Liz.  She's entertaining the idea that she and Jeffrey should break up if she goes to Switzerland. She decides it wouldn't be fair to ask him to sit around and wait for her and part of her wonders what it would be like to meet a “glamorous European boy at Interlochen”.  There's that deeply loyal Liz we all know and love.  She immediately backtracks on the idea and says that she wants to stay with Jeffrey and vows to tell him how much she loves him.

What the hell was the point of that?

She's waiting for Jeffrey when he comes walking in with Enid. Both of them look flustered to see her which causes her worry. She wonders if they've been doing something they don't want her to know about. To make things worse, she bumps into the two of them together two more times that day. She goes home feeling depressed.

Are you the same bitch that just said it might be nice to meet a glamorous European boy?

We skip over into Jess' head now. She's headed to an emergency cheer meeting when that guy Neil that she occasionally dates flags her down. He introduces her to a random new kid named Kirk who is trying out for the tennis team. Jess thinks he's cute but he immediately starts bragging about how he's the best tennis player in the state. He leers at her and looks her up and down a few times and says that maybe they can improve the social scene in SV. She decides he's a creep.

I don't know what the point of any of that was either.  Unless Kirk's going to be in the next book.

We slide back into Liz's head. She tells VileAlice that she thinks Jeffrey and Enid are falling in love. VileAlice asks for proof and Liz says they've been spending a lot of time together lately. Her mother makes the point that it could be perfectly innocent but Liz is convinced they're cheating on her. VileAlice tells her that she isn't being very fair to Jeffrey. Liz gets pissed and demands to know what her mother means. VileAlice reminds her that she's insisting that Jeffrey accept this whole Switzerland thing because it's what's best for her but she doesn't really seem to care how he feels about it. Liz says she assumed he was excited about the idea because she was. VileAlice says Liz is taking Jeffrey for granted and it isn't fair.

She's not wrong but I still think she's a lousy mother.

Later Steven joins them for dinner. Liz starts dictating what they can wear and what they can talk about during the home interview the next day. She's really taking insufferable to new levels in this book. She tells them that the interview will be at 4:00. Apparently she never told her dad this and EvilNed won't be home until 6:00. Liz literally shrieks that the interviewer will think they have a broken family if he isn't there.



EvilNed promises to rearrange things so he can be there but Liz remains pissed. She's also mad that Steven's home because it will look like he doesn't take college seriously. I hate her. Seriously.



Liz calls Jeffrey after dinner but his mom says he's at Enid's house. Forgetting everything her mother told her earlier, she decides that Jeffrey is in love with Enid.

I'm exhausted. This book is exhausting.

We skip to the next day. Liz goes to meet the interviewer who's name is Mr Sterne. He asks her to tell him about herself. She goes on and on about what this would mean to her and how much she wants to learn creative writing from the teacher at the school. He's impressed by her research. He tells her that they're going to be paying a lot of attention to how she behaves around her friends and family because “so few young ladies really exhibit good manners these days” and character is so important to the foundation that offers the scholarship.

Sigh.

Sterne takes her to meet Ms Crawford who is the alumni she has to meet. We don't get to go with her so I don't know how it goes. Then Sterne and Liz head for the compound. He's going on and on about how they have to “keep our standards up” and how they can't let just anyone have the scholarship since it bears their name. He's as insufferable as she is. He mentions that families reveal a lot about a person's character and I'm ready to burn the entire book down.

In case you need to hear this....YOUR FAMILY HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH YOUR CHARACTER. Yes, they can influence it, but who they are is not an accurate reflection of who YOU are. You are not them.

Liz is surprised to see a motorcycle in the driveway since none of them drive one. She reminds us about her horrible motorcycle accident way back in like book six or something. Steven meets them at the door and Liz is horrified to see that he hasn't shaved.



Seriously?

Liz asks where the parents are and Steven says that their mom had an emergency and their dad is late as usual. Liz says that their dad is never late but Steven says the entire family has no concept of time. Sterne asks Steven what he does and Steven replies he's in college but he comes home often because he can't bear to be separated from his family. He says the entire family is that way, implying that Liz won't be able to function in Switzerland.

This is dumb.

Jess shows up in a mini skirt and a bunch of makeup, horrifying Sterne. Liz vows to kill them all.

Oh, good, we've thrown some casual slut shaming into the mix.  That's what this book was missing.


We skip to later that evening. The family is having a meeting to discuss things. Liz is FURIOUS. She yells at Jess. She yells at Steven. She yells at her parents. It's a lot. EvilNed threatens to punish both Jess and Steven who is a WHOLE ASS GROWN MAN and doesn't even live there anymore.

Later Liz finally thinks about what going to Switzerland would be like. Not only would she potentially lose Jeffrey but her friendships would probably fade out as well. She wouldn't see her sister or her parents for long periods of time and, as appealing as that might be right now, she knows she'd miss them. She still wants to go, though, and hopes the scholarship opportunity isn't gone forever.

We slip into Jess' head. She and Steven are still scheming. Jess says they need to make Liz look “kind of schizophrenic” meaning “crazy and unstable, a real basket case”.


Fuck you, ghostie. And fuck you extra, Pascal.

Jess decides she'll dress like Liz and keep bumping into Sterne during the school visit the next day with a different boy each time. Because apparently talking to a lot of boys makes you “crazy”.


Steven is going to constantly call the office to ask for Liz during the interview so Sterne and Crawford will think all her boyfriends are trying to reach her.

Seriously. Not only are we slut shaming here but we're calling girls who date more than one boy “crazy and unstable”. Not cool. Not cool at all.

I'm so pissed we're going to bullet points.

*Jess puts her plan into action, making sure Sterne knows how important “men” are to her (I mean Liz)

*Jess as Liz tells Sterne that she's madly in love with the slightly pervy Mr Collins. She then insinuates that the family member who started the Sterne scholarship died of scandalous circumstances.

*Steven holds up his end of the plan.

*Liz figures out what her siblings did and there's more yelling.

*Steven and Jess apologize. Liz doesn't forgive them.

*Jess gaslights Steven into believing this was all his idea.

*Liz starts to feel like Switzerland might not be the best idea. She realizes she's been caught in a fantasy world and real life won't live up to it.

*Liz jogs over to Jeffrey's house and finds Enid's car there.

*Winston comes clean and turns the money over to the grandpa. He's called a hero.

*Jess and Steven confess to Sterne and Crawford.

*Liz is offered the scholarship.

*Jeffrey and Enid show up with the scrapbook.

*Jeffrey tells Liz he loves her and he's proud of her and he'll wait for her while she's in Switzerland.

*Liz turns down the scholarship, saying she thought Switzerland was a magical place but clearly SV is the most magical place of all.

*EVERYONE FUCKING CLAPS. I wish I was kidding.

*The newspaper prints a story about how Winston is a hero for returning money that never fucking belonged to him in the first place.

*Lynne reappears from nothingness all of a sudden. She wants the school newspaper to start a page for personal ads and they ask her to manage it. I think she was the one who won that song writing contest back in the day. I forgot she existed.

*The book ends there.

I hated this one. They just keep getting worse.

Coming Up Next: Personal ads cause chaos at Sweet Valley High.





Sunday, October 27, 2024

Rumors (SVH #37) by Francine Pascal and some random ghostie

 **This blog contains adult language.**

Warning: Spoilers Ahead!!! This is a recap blog which means I read the book and tell you everything that happens so you don't have to read it yourself. Do NOT continue to read unless you want to know what cold-hearted-bitch move the twins made this book.


Tag Line: Can Susan live with the truth?

From the Back of the Book: Painful lies... It's every girl's dream at Sweet Valley High to attend the fabulous Bridgewater Ball, and Susan Steward has the chance to go with handsome, wealthy Gordon Stoddard. Nobody knows where Susan gets her money and style – or who her real parents are – but everyone agrees she's beautiful, friendly and fun to be with. Then jealous Lila Fowler starts spreading vicious rumors about Susan's mother – who she really is and why she abandoned Susan. No one wants to talk to Susan anymore, not even Gordon. To clear her name, Susan has to find out the truth about her parents. But is she better off not knowing?



Meet the Cast

*Elizabeth Wakefield – identical twin of Jessica and massive fucking martyr.

*Jessica Wakefield – identical twin of Elizabeth with narcissistic and histrionic tendencies

*EvilNed Wakefield – neglectful patriarch of the clan and successful lawyer

*VileAlice Wakefield – neglectful matriarch of the clan and an interior designer

*Steven Wakefield – older brother, university student and general asshole

*Enid Rollins – Liz's best friend and generic good-girl type

*Todd Wilkins – Liz's douchebag former boyfriend currently exiled to Vermont

*Lila Fowler – Jessica's self-absorbed best friend and representative of SV new money

*Bruce Patman – school dick and representative of SV old money

*Winston Egbert – stereotypical school nerd

*Jeffrey French – Liz's new victim....I mean love interest

There are more but these are the main characters that plague us book after book.


This book was published in 1987 and this is my first time reading it. The cover is pretty lackluster. At least the girl doesn't look thirty.

In the last book, Johanna returned to school after dropping out for a year and got yanked around by Peter for way too long before deciding she deserved a boy who would treat her right. Jess tried to break up Cara and Steven for some reason and Liz just existed.

Missing, Presumed Dead: As expected, Johanna no longer exists. Once Pascal is done with you, you just sort of fade into nothingness. Just ask Patty, Eddie and Michael who were trotted out for one book and then were never seen again. Bruce and his cousin Roger also went missing in this book and no one seemed to notice. It's odd how people can just vanish in Sweet Valley for weeks at a time without anyone mentioning it.

Released From the Wakefield Dungeon: Unfortunately EvilNed and VileAlice made their escapes in this book. I was kind of hoping they'd stay gone for awhile. The only positive is that they brought Prince Albert topside with them. The dog was spotted several times in the house.

We begin with Liz reading an article about working mothers. She thinks that it's tragic that some women decide not to have kids because they want to focus on a career instead.

Fuck you, Liz. Already.

It's not tragic if a woman decides she doesn't want to juggle kids and a career and picks the career. Women can be fulfilled and happy without children.

VileAlice is also reading the paper and comes across the name Andrea VanAllen. Jess says she's super rich, lives in Bridgewater and does a lot of charity events. She's in charge of the upcoming Bridgewater Ball which is super exclusive and invitations are highly coveted. VileAlice murmurs that she really likes the name Andrea. Or Andrew.

(((Note from future me: I really thought Andrea was going to be a character in this book.  That's why I bothered to mention her.  She never comes up again.)))

Jess laments that they aren't rich enough and they don't live in a nice enough area to get an invite to the Ball. VileAlice tells her that they have plenty of money and Sweet Valley is perfect and superior in every way to every other place on earth.  Mostly because the Wakefields live there and they are clearly perfect and superior to every other family on earth.  After she makes that proclamation, VileAlice  grimaces and presses a hand to her stomach. Liz asks if she's alright and her mother responds that she's been feeling a little “under the weather” lately but she has a doctor's appointment that afternoon so the twins shouldn't worry. Of course that just makes them worry because telling someone not to worry has never worked in the history of ever.

The twins head to school. Jess wants to take the Fiat to the shop because it's making a weird noise but Liz thinks she's overreacting.  (((Note from future me: this never comes up again either.)))  We then get the descriptions for the twins: sun-kissed hair, blue-green eyes that rival the sea, perfect size six figures....



In this book, Liz is described as practical and Jess is described as dramatic. I think I agree with those. I mean, practical is closer to the reality of Liz than the adjectives she usually gets assigned. Jess is definitely dramatic. Pascal says it like it's a bad thing but it isn't. Dramatic people make life interesting.

We skip ahead to school. Jess asks Lila if she's going to the Ball. Lila flushes but says that the Fowlers always get invited. She's not currently seeing anyone so she doesn't have a date but she's confident that will change before the actual event. Jess says that Susan is probably going and Lila snaps that “Nobodies don't go to the Bridgewater Ball”.

Bitchy.

But on brand for status-obsessed Lila.

We learn that Susan lives with a caregiver but no one actually knows who her parents are. It's assumed that they're wealthy because Susan has one of the best wardrobes in the entire school. She even out-dresses Lila. Jess calls over to Susan to ask if she's going to the Ball. Susan says she's going with Gordon. She asks Lila who she's going with and Lila is forced to admit she doesn't have a date. Winston goofily offers to take her even though he's dating Maria and then somehow ends up dancing around the room with Ken. It's a bizarre scene.

We skip over to health class. They discuss fertility and Jess gets obsessed with the idea that her mother might be pregnant.



We finally land in Susan's head for the A-plot. She's at the country club in Bridgewater playing golf with Gordon and his parents. Mr Stoddard spends most of the time complaining about the “riff raff” they're letting in the club these days and how Sweet Valley has been going downhill. It used to be a place where “the right kind of people” lived but now it's “going to the dogs”. I can't disagree really. Susan wonders if she's the right kind of people.

Mrs Stoddard invites Susan to come to the new members meeting of the garden club. Susan pretends to be excited about it even though she considers gardening boring. She just wants to make a good impression on Gordon's parents. Gordon pulls her aside and apologizes for his parents' snobbery but Susan tells him not to worry about it. They finish up their game and go inside to eat. Lila and her dad wander over. The Stoddards talk to Mr Fowler a bit while Lila takes little jabs at Susan. Gordon doesn't defend her.



Susan goes home to the woman she calls Aunt Helen. She tells her about the golf game and then mentions the Ball. Helen often designs and sews Susan's clothes so she offers to make Susan's dress for the Ball. Susan thanks her and then goes off to her room. She wonders who Helen was to her mother. A friend? A trusted servant? She's asked many times but Helen says she won't answer any questions about Susan's family until her 18th birthday.



Helen works long hours as a waitress and moonlights as a seamstress. Susan figures it's just because she's bored because clearly she's being paid to be Susan's caretaker. I fear Susan may be a little dumb, y'all. Susan is mostly happy with her situation. She's curious about her parents but she loves Helen and often wishes that Helen was her mother. She recognizes that her social standing would be vastly different, however, if she was the daughter of a waitress. Right now everyone suspects her mother is rich and famous and they treat Susan accordingly. That would change if Helen was her mother.



Jess is sitting with her parents after dinner studying for her upcoming health quiz. Suddenly VileAlice starts demanding pistachio ice cream. She's never eaten it before and EvilNed kind of laughs at her for wanting it. VileAlice asks him to go get it but he's tired and doesn't want to leave the house. She gets pissed and slams out of the house to get it herself. Now Jess is super sure her mom is pregnant because she can't think of any other explanation for her behavior.

Jess goes upstairs to tell Liz that she thinks their mother is pregnant. Liz feels like the evidence is flimsy at best. The twins decide to spy on VileAlice to try to gather intel. I guess this is our B-plot. Why are these always so dumb? Why bother with a B-plot at all if it's going to be this stupid?

We skip to the next day at school. Liz realizes that Allen, the school photographer, has a crush on Susan. I'd completely forgotten who Allen was but he was the one who was dating Robin when she was sneaking around with George (who was dating Enid at the time). Liz encourages Allen to talk to Susan despite the fact she has a boyfriend. Her grand idea is that Allen should walk up to Susan and offer to take her picture. Liz thinks all rich people enjoy having their picture taken. It's so stupid and Allen points that out to Liz, saying that Susan would find the request odd. Liz keeps pushing him to talk to her, despite the fact he keeps saying he doesn't feel comfortable doing so. No means no, Liz.

Susan walks over and asks Allen a question about a class they share. He's nervous but manages to answer her. She thanks him and walks away. Liz thinks to herself that Allen would be a better boyfriend to Susan than Gordon.

(((Note from future me: At this point I was really confused because I didn't think Liz even knew Gordon. Based on the way his dad was talking, I assumed that the Stoddards lived in Bridgewater and not in Sweet Valley. It turns out I was wrong. I guess they're part of the riff raff after all.)))



We hop into Lila's head. She's seething about Susan for some reason and thinks she needs to be taught a lesson. We don't really learn why because that would mean Pascal gave a character some depth. Why would she start that 37 books in? Lila finds Caroline the gossip and tells her that Susan's mom is in a hospital for the criminally insane. Then she just sits back and watches the gossip train leave the station.



Back to the asinine B-plot. Jess is getting pretty excited about having a sibling. She goes to snoop in VileAlice's room and finds a bag from a baby store in the closet. The bag has a tiny baby sweater and hat in it. Jess tells Liz about her iron-clad evidence and they decide to go confront their mom. Instead, the overhear VileAlice tell EvilNed that she doesn't want to tell the kids until they're sure.

The twins think that VileAlice is afraid they'll throw a fit about her being pregnant so they decide they'll just hint around about how they'd love to have a baby in the house. Unfortunately this just makes their parents think one of them is pregnant.

We skip to the next day. VileAlice is again reading the paper and tells the twins that some famous director named Jackson is coming to Sweet Valley to make a film. There's going to be an open casting call over the weekend to find extras. Liz mentions that his movies are very socially responsible and Jess starts dreaming about being on the big screen.



People start canceling plans with Susan because no one wants to be seen with her. The kids in SV are really ridiculous. People won't talk to her in the hall and Gordon is avoiding her. Poor Susan has no idea what's going on. When she finally manages to corner Gordon, he tells her that his parents don't want him to date her anymore. When she asks why, he tells her that people are saying that her mother is a murderer and is currently locked up in an asylum. He yells at her for lying about her famous mother and takes off.

Susan starts sobbing. Allen finds her and takes her into an empty classroom where he holds her until she calms down. He says he doesn't believe the rumor, but even if it's true, it doesn't change who Susan is. (#teamAllen) He offers her a ride home so she can talk to her aunt.

Even though Susan cries and begs, Helen refuses to tell her anything about her mother.

I'm beginning to suspect that Helen is her mother.



Liz reads an article that details the death of director Jackson's 14-year-old son the year before due to a drunk driver. The article mentions that Jackson will be donating his portion of the profits from the movie to Student's Against Drunk Driving. Liz finds this commendable and decides she wants to interview him about the accident and the donation for the paper.

Um....Liz....don't you think it might be a TAD insensitive to go up to a man you've never met and ask him if you can interview him about his son's death for your high school paper? Seriously. She has no empathy at all.

Jess summons Steven home to talk about the B-plot. At first he doesn't believe them but then he gets excited about the idea of having a baby sibling. They scheme together to think of a way to get VileAlice to admit she's pregnant and, in the end, come up with nothing. They're just going to keep telling their parents how much they love babies because that's not dumb.

Lila calls Jess to tell her that Gordon and Susan have broken up. This means Gordon needs a date for the Ball. Jess asks Lila if she's planning to snag him up and Lila pretends that she doesn't care about him or the Ball. Jess decides that means she's free to try to get Gordon for herself. Cue a ton of pages of Lila and Jess fighting for Gordon's attention. It's boring and I refuse to recap it. Fire me.

Liz finds out about everything that's been going on and goes to comfort Susan. She tells Susan that the rumor will blow over and everyone will forget it as soon as the next scandal comes along. Susan does not find this comforting at all. Liz is stunned that her mere presence didn't solve all of Susan's problems.



Allen goes to talk to Susan after Liz's failed attempt. He decides distraction is the way to go and asks her what she would do if she could do anything. She says she would be a waitress.



I mean, there's nothing wrong with being a waitress but would she really choose that over riding a dragon or swimming with mermaids or curing cancer or whatever? Susan needs to learn how to dream.

Allen asks Susan if she'll go out with him on Saturday which also happens to be the night of the Ball. Susan says she is no longer busy that evening and she'd love to go out with Allen.



We're in Helen's head now. She wants to tell Susan the truth but she's afraid of the fallout. Helen is, indeed, Susan's mother. She told everyone she was Susan's guardian because she didn't want to be shunned by society for being an unwed mother and she didn't want Susan to grow up with the stigma.

Seriously?

I swear these books are written like it's the 1950's. Susan must have been born in the 70's. No one cared.

Helen wanted people to think that Susan's mother was important so Susan could be popular. I guess she's been paying for all of Susan's expensive clothes herself. No wonder she has to work two jobs.

I swear if Susan's dad turns out to be director Jackson my head is going to explode.

Helen decides not to tell Susan because she doesn't want her daughter to be ashamed that she is only a waitress. If only she knew that Susan picked being a waitress over mermaids and dragons.

The doorbell rings and it's director Jackson.



Helen offers him condolences for his son and he replies “that's life, right”. I mean, everyone grieves differently but that feels cold. He asks to see Susan so I guess he knows about her which.....means he's just ignored her all these years and hasn't sent a dime of support? Fuck you, Jackson. We learn that Helen wrote to him to tell him about the baby but he never responded and then immediately married someone else. What a dick. He says he didn't pay child support because Helen didn't ask but that's bullshit. He should have paid for his child.



Susan comes home and we jump right into her head. Helen freaks out and runs to her room. Jackson introduces himself and tells Susan that he's her father. He apologizes for ignoring her for 16 years and says he wants to be in her life now. She just joyfully agrees. She asks about her mother and he says that Helen just needs time to sort out her feelings and that's how Susan learns that Helen is her mother. Jackson is shocked she didn't know and Susan is pissed because all she's ever wanted was a mother and Helen denied her that. She sobs in her new father's arms.

Why is she forgiving him for neglecting her for 16 damn years? Why does he just get a free pass for being a deadbeat dad who only showed up when his other kid died?

Jackson tries to explain the unwed mother stigma to Susan and she doesn't understand it anymore than I do. Jackson asks Susan to come live with him in LA. You know, now that his other child is dead and he needs a replacement. She says she'll think about it. He leaves.

Susan ends up forgiving Helen. They hug and cry and Susan tells her that she always wished Helen was her mother. They talk about Jackson's offer but Susan decides that she would miss Helen too much if she left SV.

To be honest, it doesn't really matter if she stays or if she goes.  We'll probably never see her again.



Back to the B-plot where Jess has decided that VileAlice is probably having twins again.

We skip to the casting call. Most of SVH are there, including Aaron and Heather who are still together. I never expected to see Heather again but I'm glad she's still topside. Everyone is standing around gossiping. Jess finds out that Gordon asked Lila to the Ball and she's livid.

Liz trucks right up to Jackson with Jess in tow to ask him for the interview and he agrees to talk to her. She realizes that her original plan is horrifically insensitive and she can't think of any other questions so the interview doesn't happen at all. Susan rushes up to tell Jackson that she'd like to visit him in the future but she needs to stay with her mom for now. Jackson gets called away and Susan tells the twins that he's her father and Helen is her mother.

The news spreads like a common cold.

Later the Wakefield children decide they've had enough and they go to confront their parents about the pregnancy. VileAlice isn't pregnant. The big secret is that they're considering a month-long vacation alone. Meaning the twins would be left to their own devices for an entire month. I'm not sure they'd notice the difference considering how hands-off their parents are.  The baby clothes Jess found were for a baby shower VileAlice was invited to.  Thankfully the B-plot ends there.

Everyone starts being nice to Susan again and it's disgusting. Gordon even re-asks her the Ball and she says 'yes' for some unfathomable reason. Liz reminds her of her date with Allen on the same night. Susan goes to tell Allen that she can't go but then she remembers how he was the only one who was nice to her when everyone thought her mother was a murderer. She decides to tell Gordon to jump in the ocean instead. Gordon turns to Lila to re-ask her but she dumps a drink on his head.

Out of nowhere, Regina rocks up with a brochure for a boarding school in Switzerland that emphasizes creative writing. This has nothing to do with anything and is clearly just shoe-horned in here to set up the next book. Liz is super interested in the school and dreams of going.

We can't get that lucky.

The book ends there.

Up Next: Will Liz decide to go to Switzerland?

Again....we can't get that lucky.