Just Do This One Thing for Me
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
EDGAR AWARD FINALIST • A timely novel about a rule-following daughter trying to hold her family together after her scammer of a mother disappears.
“A witty, off-beat, and strangely charming look at just how far an eldest child will go to keep their younger siblings together.”—School Library Journal
“A wild ride.”—Minnesota Public Radio
Just do this one thing for me.
One thing? The division of labor in Drew’s family goes like this: Mom manages a few shady side hustles, a thriving fake review business, and an obsession with Justin Timberlake; Drew is responsible for every other thing, including herself, her younger siblings, groceries, ukulele lessons, optometry, snow blowing, and solving all the problems the rest of the family creates. Drew is a planner, a rule follower, and mere months from leaving the chaos of her mother’s world behind for the list-making, box-checking structure of college, which is why she agrees when the Momnipulator leaves her in charge while she takes a last-minute trip to a concert in Mexico City. What’s one more “just one thing”?
But when Heidi fails to return, Drew finds herself in the middle of the biggest mess of all—and in a race to figure it all out before the thaw. She can either stick with her plans, do the responsible thing, and walk away alone. Or she can take over the cons, stay a step ahead of the law, and just maybe hold her family together.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Zimmerman (My Eyes Are Up Here) delivers a suspenseful novel about three siblings struggling to stay afloat after their mother's death. With a boyfriend she only tolerates and an uninvolved father who lives two hours away, 17-year-old Drew can't wait until she can escape to college. In the meantime, while her unreliable mother is preoccupied with shady side hustles, rule-following Drew serves as the parental figure for her acerbic 15-year-old sister Carna and guileless eight-year-old half-brother Lock. Mom constantly asks Drew to "just do this one thing for me"; this time, she requests that Drew stay home with her siblings while their mother travels from Wisconsin to Mexico to attend a New Year's Eve Justin Timberlake concert. Things take a grim turn, however, when Drew and Carna discover their mother's frozen body in the family's storage shed, and Drew uncovers the depth of her illegal schemes, including receiving Social Security payments for Drew's dead grandmother. Short chapters sometimes lend to sporadic pacing, but the siblings' enduring relationship provides a strong through line, while cinematic prose and Drew's wry first-person voice convey both gruesome and darkly humorous descriptions of the trio's efforts to stay together. Characters cue as white. Ages 14–up.