
Reach for this book when your middle schooler is struggling with the weight of social expectations or feeling intense embarrassment about their family's quirks. Hamlet Kennedy just wants to be a normal eighth grader, but that is impossible when her parents are Shakespeare obsessed academics who dress in Renaissance garb and her seven year old genius sister is suddenly attending the same junior high. It is a lighthearted but deeply relatable look at the tension between loving your family and wanting to hide from them. While the setup is comedic, the story touches on the very real pain of feeling invisible or, conversely, feeling like you are being watched for all the wrong reasons. It handles themes of sibling dynamics, academic pressure, and the courage required to define your own identity when your family's brand is so loud. It is perfectly appropriate for the 10 to 14 age range, offering a humorous mirror to the high stakes drama of the middle school hallway.
Hamlet's feelings of being second-best to her genius sister are poignant and relatable.
The book deals with bullying and social isolation in a direct, secular manner. The resolution is realistic and hopeful, focusing on self-acceptance rather than a magical change in the parents' behavior.
A middle schooler who feels like an outsider in their own home or school, specifically a child who feels overshadowed by a 'gifted' sibling or burdened by 'weird' family traditions.
Read cold. No specific triggers, though parents might reflect on whether they are inadvertently pressuring their child to fit a specific 'intellectual' mold. A parent might see their child cringing at a family outing or overhear them lying to friends to cover up a family quirk.
Younger readers (10-11) will focus on the humor of the 'crazy' parents and the genius sister. Older readers (13-14) will resonate more with the internal social anxiety and the quest for autonomy.
Unlike many 'embarrassing parents' books, this one uses the specific lens of Shakespearean academia to create a unique, high-concept aesthetic that adds layers of wit to the standard school-story tropes.
Hamlet Kennedy is an eighth grader whose life is defined by her attempts to be 'normal' despite her eccentric, Shakespeare-scholar parents and her child-prodigy sister, Desdemona. The conflict ignites when Desdemona skips multiple grades to join Hamlet at junior high for art and music classes. Hamlet must navigate social hierarchies, bullying from 'popular' peers, and her own resentment toward her sister's shadow, all while trying to find a personal identity that isn't tied to a playwright she didn't choose to be named after.
This overview was generated by AI based on the book's content and reviews, and may not capture every nuance.
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