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Things I should have known : a novel
2017
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ONE There's a sweet burnt-jelly smell in the air. When I enter the kitchen, Ivy's standing by the toaster.      "Hey, Ives. Making a snack?" I stick a mug of water in the microwave and get a tea bag out of the cabinet.      "Yeah." In her pajamas, with her round face, big eyes, and blondish ponytail, she looks like an oversize five-year-old. She doesn't say anything else. Ivy's not a big conversationalist.      The toaster clicks, and by the time my tea is ready, Ivy is installed at the table, a Pop-Tart on a plate, a glass of cold milk at its side. She's got her iPad in front of her, and she's doing something on it--​probably playing a game. I open my laptop to work on an English paper, and the two of us fall into companionable silence.      There are footsteps in the hallway and then Ron's in the doorway, filling it up with his broad shoulders. He's wearing his after-work uniform: sweatpants and a T-shirt with sleeves short enough to show his bulging biceps.      Ron's beefy without being cut. His face is heavy, especially down at the jaw and chin, but he wears his light brown hair on the longer side in front, so he can thrust the mass of it back with his fingers--​it's a ridiculously youthful gesture for someone edging toward sixty, and I'm convinced he practices it in front of the mirror.      My mother married him over a year ago. He still feels like an intruder in our house. I don't think he'll ever not feel like one.      "Hey, there!" he says with unconvincing geniality. "Look at you two girls, working away! I'm going to assume you're doing homework and not messaging boys." He crosses to the refrigerator. "Your mom's thirsty, and as usual, I'm waiting on her hand and foot." He snaps his enormous hand like he's got a whip in it. "Coosh-oo! She orders, and I obey."      Neither of us responds. He grabs a half-empty bottle of wine from the fridge and two glasses from the cabinet. He's heading back out when he notices the plate in front of Ivy.      "What's that you've got there?"      "Pop-Tart."      He sighs. "Oh, Ivy," he says in the overly gentle tone he always uses with her. "We've talked about this, haven't we? About making better choices? About eating to fuel our bodies and not just because we're bored?" Ron's always trying to micromanage Ivy's diet. He acts like it's all about her health, but I eat just as much junk as she does and he never says anything to me about it, because I'm thinner than she is. Not that Ivy's fat, exactly, just kind of solid. She'll never be a supermodel, but that's not exactly her destiny anyway, so who cares?      Other than Ron, I mean.      "I was hungry," she says.      "Were you?" Ron says. "Were you really hungry? Because you ate quite a bit at dinner tonight. Quite a bit." He leans against the side of the doorway, wineglass stems threaded through the fingers of one hand, bottle in the other. There's a scar on the side of that hand--​he claims he cut it as a teenager working in a lab one summer, but I bet it was from a broken beer bottle. He acts all cultured now, but I'm convinced he was a total bro back in the day. Probably beat up all the nerdy kids and high-fived his friends afterward. "A lot of what you ate was carbohydrates--​potatoes and bread. You didn't touch your salad."      "It had peppers in it." She appeals to me. "I don't like peppers, right, Chloe?"      "No one does."      "Chloe," Ron says. "Don't." His voice tightens when he talks to me, but I prefer that to the patronizing tone he uses with my sister. Which he now slips back into. "You don't have to finish that, Ivy. We can wrap it up, and you can have the rest for breakfast tomorrow. Or we can just throw it out--​processed food like this belongs in the trash anyway, as far as I'm concerned."      "But I'm hungry."      "No, you're not."      "Don't tell her whether or not she's hungry," I say. "It's her body."      "Can you just stop?" he snaps at me. "I'm trying to help her out here." He flashes a strained smile in her direction. "I want to keep our sweet Ivy healthy."      "Her health is fine," I say, because it is--​Ivy never gets sick. "You're the one with high cholesterol. Worry about yourself. You really need that wine? Lot of calories in wine, you know." I deliberately eye his waist--​he's always complaining to my mom that no matter how many sit-ups he does, he can't get back to a size twenty-eight, so I know he's self-conscious about it.      Ron stands up straighter, sucking in his stomach--​it's the kind of thing people do when you stare at their love handles. "When I want your advice, Chloe, I'll ask for it. But don't hold your breath." He turns back to Ivy. "You could be so pretty," he says. "I mean, you are so pretty. You don't want to go and mess that up by eating so much junk food you get fat and pimply, do you? Don't you want a boyfriend one day? And a husband? My mother got married when she was younger than you! Doesn't that blow your mind?"      "I know," Ivy says. "She was nineteen when she got married, and your father was twenty-three. You were born two years later in 1961. Mom was born in 1972. She's eleven years younger than you."      For a moment he blinks at her, overwhelmed by the sheer volume of accurate information she's just thrown at him. Then he recovers. "Yeah, well . . . good. It's good you remember. My point is you're old enough to be thinking about boys and to care about how you look. Like Chloe." He jerks his chin at me. "She always looks nice. I'll give her that."      I stifle a sarcastic retort--​I don't want to prolong this.      "Chloe's really pretty," Ivy says.      "So are you," says Ron. "But you won't be if you keep eating junk."      She considers that, and while she considers it, she absently picks up the Pop-Tart and takes another bite of it.      "Stop eating that!" he says. "You're not listening to me."      "I am listening."      It would be funny if I thought Ivy was deliberately provoking him. But Ivy doesn't do stuff like that. All she wants is to eat her stupid Pop-Tart in peace.      "What's going on in here?" It's Mom, coming up behind Ron. Her hair is styled and she's wearing makeup--​she's Ron's receptionist, and he likes her to look "put together" for the office--​but she changed when she got home and the T-shirt and sweats make her mascaraed eyes and curls look ridiculous. I don't like when she wears that much makeup, anyway--​it settles into every crease and makes her face look older than it is. Without it, she's pretty, with big, wistful blue eyes and a small nose and mouth. She and Ivy look a lot alike.      Mom says, "What's a girl got to do to get a glass of wine around here?"      "I was on my way." Ron holds up the bottle and glasses. "But the girls and I started talking."      Her eyes flicker from face to face, gauging the moods of everyone in the room. She says, a little too brightly, "I sound like the worst kind of mother, don't I? Stop talking to my kids and bring me my wine! " She forces a girly laugh, then gives me a vaguely pleading look. I glance away and notice that Ivy has taken advantage of the distraction to quickly cram the rest of the Pop-Tart into her mouth. You go, Ivy.      "It's okay," Ron says to Mom. "I've exhausted my parenting skills for the evening anyway. These girls of yours . . ." He leaves it at that and steers her back into the hallway, where she tosses out another giggle-laugh.      She never used to laugh like that. She used to have this rare deep chuckle that often ended in a sigh. Nothing girlish about it at all. But a lot's changed since she met Ron and even more since the day she told us she was going to marry him, "because you girls need a father."      I said, "No, we don't, and even to say that is an insult to lesbian parents everywhere," which at least got her to stop saying it, but did nothing to prevent her from going ahead and marrying Ron, a guy she had met through some online dating site and whose profile she had first clicked on because a) she thought he was handsome (meh) and b) he said he didn't have kids of his own and regretted it. (He'd been married once and divorced.)      Mom came back from their first date dazed and ecstatic. Things moved quickly after that. I think Ron must have liked how pliable she was, how willing to follow his lead when it came to exercise and diet--​and raising kids, even though he had no experience in that last area. And Mom definitely liked having someone around to direct her. She's never liked to be in charge of anything.      The thing about Mom is that she's the kind of needy that makes people want to do stuff for her, not the kind that repels them. Ron was basically her white knight, charging in to fix her life for her. But I'm not so crazy about being a part of her life that he thinks needs fixing. And I'm even less crazy about watching him pick apart Ivy, who doesn't have any anger or malice in her and so can't defend herself against his attacks.      I'm her younger sister, but I can't remember a time when I didn't feel like I needed to protect and take care of her. Excerpted from Things I Should Have Known by Claire Lazebnik All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Fiction/Biography Profile
Characters
Chloe Mitchell (Female), Student, Popular; decides her older sister, who has autism, should have a boyfriend and sets her up with a boy from her sister's class
Ivy Mitchell (Female), Student, Autistic, Chloe's older sister
Ethan Fields (Male), Student, Autistic, Obsessed with movies; is in Ivy's class
David Fields (Male), Student, Ethan's brother
Genre
Fiction
Young adult
Family & relationships
Romance
Topics
Autism
Sisters
First loves
Matchmaking
Brothers
Dating
Self-discovery
Teenagers
Identity
Friendship
Time Period
2000s -- 21st century
Large Cover Image
Trade Reviews
Publishers Weekly Review
High school senior Chloe is well liked, gets good grades, and has a nearly perfect boyfriend, but she worries about her older sister, Ivy, who has autism. When it dawns on Chloe that Ivy might be lonely, she arranges a date for her with Ethan, a boy in Ivy's special needs class. But Ethan's brother (and chaperone) turns out to be Chloe's despicable classmate, David, who "only talks in class to attack what someone else has said." In this insightful account of misconceptions, family conflict, and the ironies of love, LaZebnik (Wrong About the Guy) examines the evolution of several relationships, including the foundering romance between Ivy and Ethan, and the unexpected bond that forms between Chloe and David. During the weeks that follow, Chloe is happily surprised to discover a greater depth to her stepfather's devotion to Ivy but saddened to realize that her boyfriend and closest girlfriend will never truly understand her complicated home life. Writing with honesty and wit, LaZebnik offers a thought-provoking portrayal of how people can come together despite, or perhaps because of, their differences. Ages 12-up. Agent: Alexis Hurley, Inkwell Management. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
School Library Journal Review
Gr 7 Up-LaZebnik's latest novel, following Epic Fail, takes the meddling matchmaker trope and gives it a charming modern-day twist. Chloe Mitchell's life isn't perfect, but it sure looks like it is from a distance: she's popular and beautiful, and she's got a gorgeous boyfriend wrapped around her finger. At home, things are much messier. When she decides that her older sister, Ivy, who is on the autism spectrum, might be feeling romantic urges, Chloe decides to take up the challenge of finding Ivy's soul mate. If only her reviled classmate David Fields weren't inserting himself into Chloe's life. Like Jane Austen's classic character Emma Woodhouse, Chloe is inclined to act first and ask questions later, and the chain of events unleashed by her actions end up in a disaster that exposes truths about her sister and Chloe herself. Although the Los Angeles setting occasionally seems generic, the adult characters could have used some fleshing out, and some plot twists aren't as surprising as one might desire, the dialogue has a snappy, realistic quality that will keep readers engaged. Best of all, Chloe and her sister are so authentically portrayed, they nearly leap off the page. VERDICT This story about a girl who upends her own life by trying to help someone else is a winning read for young people ready for a realistic romance about life's challenges. Suggest to fans of Clueless, also inspired by Austen's Emma.-Sara Scribner, Marshall Fundamental School, Pasadena, CA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* LaZebnik hits it out of the park with her story about pretty, popular Chloe and her loving relationship with her older, autistic sister, Ivy. On the surface, Chloe has it together handsome boyfriend James; best friend Sarah; and an effortless, sunny disposition. At home, however, there's her stepfather, Ron, whose first experience at parenting is marked by micromanagement. When Chloe goes out without her sister, Ivy lets her know that she's lonely, which gives Chloe an idea: she's going to find Ivy a boyfriend. There's a young man in Ivy's class, named Ethan, whom she seems to like, so Chloe starts working on getting them on a date. Then she finds out that Ethan's brother, David, someone she knows and despises, will be coming along, too. They start to get along as they get to know each other and realize that they have more in common than they knew. With perceptiveness and ample skill, LaZebnik paints a vivid picture of what the sibling of a person with high-functioning autism might go through. Never resorting to stereotype, she depicts appealing, three-­dimensional characters who flesh out a narrative that is compassionate, tender, funny, and wise all at once. This insightful, well-­written story will entertain readers while inspiring meaningful empathy.--Scanlon, Donna Copyright 2017 Booklist
Horn Book Review
Chloe wants to find a boyfriend for her older sister, who has autism. Though their mom is "terrified," Chloe arranges for Ivy to go out with special-needs classmate Ethan--whose brother (and chaperone) turns out to be Chloe's nemesis; Ivy's sexual preference (revealed later) adds another twist. LaZebnik's frank treatment of sexuality and autism makes this a welcome addition to the growing body of literature depicting characters with disabilities. (c) Copyright 2018. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Summary
An unforgettable story about autism, sisterhood, and first love that's perfect for fans of Jenny Han, Sophie Kinsella, and Sarah Dessen. New York Times bestselling author of Tell Me Three Things Julie Buxbaum raved: "I couldn't put it down."



Meet Chloe Mitchell, a popular Los Angeles girl who's decided that her older sister, Ivy, who's on the autism spectrum, could use a boyfriend. Chloe already has someone in mind: Ethan Fields, a sweet, movie-obsessed boy from Ivy's special needs class.



Chloe would like to ignore Ethan's brother, David, but she can't--Ivy and Ethan aren't comfortable going out on their own so Chloe and David have to tag along. Soon Chloe, Ivy, David, and Ethan form a quirky and wholly lovable circle. And as the group bonds over frozen yogurt dates and movie nights, Chloe is forced to confront her own romantic choices--and the realization that it's okay to be a different kind of normal.
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