Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Old School by Jeff Kinney
Reviewed by Gerti
I
always try to read my kids’ books to make sure they aren’t
sending them a bad message in some way. But you really can’t read
Jeff Kinney’s “Diary of a Wimpy Kid” series expecting to find
the same sort of inspirational, uplifting message you’d see in a
Horatio Alger novel. There is nothing here about working hard, or
saving your money. It’s not that sort of thing, nor was it ever
intended to be. If anything, the books have terrible messages, like
if you don’t want to do chores for your parents, be sure and do
them poorly so they won’t ask again!
However,
Kinney is good at writing comedy that middle-schoolers and younger
will get. He conveys that comedy both in his writing, which is
generally clever (although not instructive in a good way) and in his
art. Greg Heffley is written as a typical boy, but drawn to look more
like Homer Simpson, with his few standing hairs on top of his
cartoon-esque head. But the drawings are part of the charm of this
series, and “Old School” is a pretty typical offering.
Hapless
hero Greg has to deal with any number of bad days here. His mother is
on a kick to get the town to unplug, feeling that cell phones and
modern technololgy are bad, hence the title. She wants everybody to
go “old school”, and gets a group of people to spend their time
reviving an old playground that has fallen to seed. Greg turns it
into a comic adventure, when he and his study buddy Frew, and a
reprobate assigned to do community service (a friend of his older
brother’s, of course) escape the work detail, only to be tracked
down by his mother’s cellphone technology. Ironic, no?
Even
more fun is had thanks to the family’s pet pig (some of the
funniest drawings in the book), a new potty training plan for Manny
(Greg’s younger brother) that includes going without pants, and his
grandfather’s decision to move into the Heffley’s hectic
household due to economic conditions. Since Grandpa chooses Greg’s
room to sleep in - the pig is in the guest room - Greg is grateful to
get away to summer camp at Hardscrabble Farms. That’s where most of
the comedy ensues, as Greg and a band of hard-luck campers are forced
to endure conditions with Rowley’s father, Mr. Jefferson, as their
chaperone.
It’s
all pretty funny stuff, but none of it is edifying in any way. But
perhaps that’s the way young boys like it. No kid will ever grow up
to run a successful software startup thanks to the life lessons found
in these books, but they are funny, and hopefully you’ve already
taught your kids all the good manners and ethics they need, because
they’re not gonna find any positive role models from the peers in
this “Wimpy Kids” series. However, the blurb on the book’s back
cover does mention that these books are “a big hit with reluctant
readers”, and perhaps that’s the point. If your kids don’t like
reading “real books”, at least the adventures of dysfunctional
Greg and his friends will keep them from watching TV or playing video
games for a few hours. And for parents, that at least is a small
victory.
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