![]() ![]() The ending ties all the ends together-some may say too neatly, but fans will find the wrapup utterly satisfying. McKay is an expert at twinning the point of view: she lets readers see Rose's logic, but her timing calls forth every bit of the situational humor. Then there's Rose's friend Molly, with her nutty plan to hide out overnight at the zoo in the arctic foxes' shelter, a scheme Rose will go along with only because she's certain it will fail. Writing in a diary (she cheerfully ignores the printed dates and supplies her own), she copes with her separated but still doting parents, her talented siblings and the assorted people they collect (where is Caddy, the oldest sister, when she periodically phones Rose? And what is to be done with David, her brother's lummox of a friend who has been kicked out by his mother and has no place to put his drum set?). S&S/McElderry, 15.95 (240pp) ISBN 978-1-4169-0372-7 Permanent Rose, the youngest and perhaps most beguiling of the endearing Casson clan, had a shining role. Rose, the youngest, is now 11 and occupies an as yet uncharted zone between daft and brilliant. The fifth-and, sadly, final-volume about the Casson family, Brits like the author, is the best of them all, a jewel of a domestic comedy. ![]()
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