- Dairy Queen (novel)
-
Dairy Queen Author(s) Catherine Gilbert Murdock Language English, German Publisher Houghton Mifflin Publication date May 22nd, 2006 Pages 278 (hardcover) ISBN ISBN 0-618-68307-0 Followed by The Off Season Dairy Queen is a 2006 novel written by Catherine Gilbert Murdock. It received recognition as a 2007 Best Book for Young Adults from the American Library Association.[1]
The sequel is called The Off Season. And the next book is Front and Center.
Plot summary
The novel is about a 15-year-old girl named Darlene Joyce (D.J.) Schwenk, who lives on a farm in Red Bend, Wisconsin. During the summer, she is pressured into training a stubborn football player named Brian Nelson. Eventually, they become friends, and D.J. develops romantic a feeling for Brian. Part of DJ's struggle is that she has once been a star athlete in volleyball and basketball. When her father hurts his hip, she has to take over all the responsibilities of running their dairy farm. Her only hopes of college have been sports scholarships, and when she is forced to quit in order to run the farm, she starts slacking in school.
DJ's two older brothers Win and Bill are legends at her school and both play college football. DJ decides to try out for her high school football team. When pre-season is about to start, D.J.'s best friend Amber walks in on a waterfight between D.J. and Brian. Brian leaves, and D.J. and Amber argue. Later on, D.J.'s friend Kari invites her to a gravel-pit party, which Amber attends. D.J. tells the two of them about her decision and Amber expresses her disgust. After, D.J. encounters Amber away from the rest of the party. Then Amber reveals, "You're with me. You're not with him. It's the two of us. Don't you see that?" It then occurs to D.J. that Amber is in love with her (Which is how you know that Amber is a lesbian.)
DJ withholds her decision to try out for the team from Brian, and when he finally finds out their friendship is ruined because Brian feels like DJ has betrayed him.
Throughout the summer, D.J. learns a lot about the people in her life. She also discovers that there is a lot of meaning in speaking out. Brian once says to her "When you don't talk, there's a lot of stuff that ends up not getting said." DJ and her family don't communicate effectively, her father rarely speaks to any of them except for her mother, her two older brothers are in the middle of a silent fight with her father, they have no contact with the family (until DJ finds out her mother has been communicating with them the whole time), and her younger brother speaks only when he is spoken to.
References
- ^ American Library Association (2007). "2007 Best Books for Young Adults". http://www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/divs/yalsa/booklistsawards/bestbooksya/annotations/07bbya.cfm. Retrieved 2011-02-03.
External Links
Categories:- 2006 novels
- 21st-century American novels
- 2000s novel stubs
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.