
Everybody Experiment
"Kylie is an endearing, relatable protagonist readers will root for...heartwarming and empowering." âKirkus Reviews
From the award-winning author of A Good Kind of Trouble, Lisa Moore Ramée, comes a hilarious and heartfelt young middle grade novel, in the vein of Judy Blume, about friendship, fitting in, and the ups and downs of middle school. Sure to resonate with fans of Rebecca Stead, Meg Medina, and Kelly Yang. Now in paperback!
Eleven-year-old Kylieâs friends seem so much more mature than she is. And with middle school just a summer away, sheâs worried her friends might leave her behind, especially because she keeps embarrassing them.
So Kylie applies her scientific brain to solve the problem and comes up with the Everybody Experiment:
Hypothesis:Â Kylie Stanton will be mature if she does what everybody else does.
Experiment: This summer, when all of Kylieâs friends do something, she will do it too.
Suddenly itâs a whole new grown-up world for Kylie, with parties, unsupervised excursions, and boys. But the more research Kylie puts into the Everybody Experiment, the more she begins to wonder how she can do what everybody else does . . . without letting go of herself.
Praise for The Everybody Experiment:
âA meaningful and methodological story of friendship, family, and finding oneâs own voice.â âThe Horn Book
"RamĂ©eâs middle grade novel is well paced, traversing Kylieâs summer with ease and dipping the reader into pivotal moments." âALA Booklist
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Description
"Kylie is an endearing, relatable protagonist readers will root for...heartwarming and empowering." âKirkus Reviews
From the award-winning author of A Good Kind of Trouble, Lisa Moore Ramée, comes a hilarious and heartfelt young middle grade novel, in the vein of Judy Blume, about friendship, fitting in, and the ups and downs of middle school. Sure to resonate with fans of Rebecca Stead, Meg Medina, and Kelly Yang. Now in paperback!
Eleven-year-old Kylieâs friends seem so much more mature than she is. And with middle school just a summer away, sheâs worried her friends might leave her behind, especially because she keeps embarrassing them.
So Kylie applies her scientific brain to solve the problem and comes up with the Everybody Experiment:
Hypothesis:Â Kylie Stanton will be mature if she does what everybody else does.
Experiment: This summer, when all of Kylieâs friends do something, she will do it too.
Suddenly itâs a whole new grown-up world for Kylie, with parties, unsupervised excursions, and boys. But the more research Kylie puts into the Everybody Experiment, the more she begins to wonder how she can do what everybody else does . . . without letting go of herself.
Praise for The Everybody Experiment:
âA meaningful and methodological story of friendship, family, and finding oneâs own voice.â âThe Horn Book
"RamĂ©eâs middle grade novel is well paced, traversing Kylieâs summer with ease and dipping the reader into pivotal moments." âALA Booklist



