![]() ![]() Keplinger’s narrative feels hollow, reiterating plot points, relying on dialogue, and implying, rather than exploring, major character motivations. But despite her father’s warnings that drawing unwanted attention will jeopardize their experiments, Pamela releases a toxic gas to stall construction and opens up to peer Alice, who helps Pamela navigate her harassment and household pressures as the two teens fall in love. The teen also cares deeply for a local park set to be deforested, resolves to stand up for herself against a boy’s repeated harassment, and excels at the sciences. While Pamela’s ill mother remains absent for most of the book, her influence on Pamela is evident. ![]() Outside of class, Pamela Isley, coded as white, spends her time at Huxley High School’s greenhouse (donated to the school by her mother) and at home involved in secret biological experiments with her obsessive scientist father. ![]()
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