The Beef Princess Of Practical County (2009) - Plot & Excerpts
If you enjoy contemporary realistic fiction then The Beef Princess of Practical County is a good choice for you when choosing a Lovelace nominee. The main character is 7th-Grader Libby Ryan. The Ryan family’s livelihood is raising, showing and selling steers at market. Libby has grown up surrounded by the workings of the beef industry on property owned and run by her family for generations.When the story begins Libby is picking out the calves she for whom she will care and groom to show (and then sell) at the Practical County Fair the following year. With her older brother away at his first year in college Libby sees this as an opportunity to participate in the beef industry so loved and fostered by her parents and grandparents. It is also a prime opportunity to spend time with her father and prove to him she is worthy of his attention.When she proposes to name her newly acquired calves her father counsels against it. He knows that the end result of raising and showing a calf is selling it for beef at the Fair. Libby, however, proceeds with her own plan of action.There is a parallel plot line for Libby involving their neighbors, the Darlings, and their three daughters (Precious, Lil and Ohma). In this storyline Libby–at her mother’s and best friend’s urging–enters the Beef Princess Pageant at the Fair. The title has been held by one of the Darling sisters for the past four years.Libby is more comfortable in jeans and sweatshirts than a frou-frou dress. Because the Darling sisters are set up as the quintessential “mean girls” from middle and high school: pretty, shallow and elitist, Libby decides she needs to take a stand. The Beef Princess of Practical County needs to be a knowledgeable and passionate voice for the beef industry and the Darlings value only the tiara and the title.There are parts of the book I thoroughly enjoyed. The author succeeds in creating a realistic loss situation for Libby to navigate. I think the character of Libby’s mother explains this too much at the end when she really doesn’t need to. As readers we already get it. Libby’s voice seems to be that of a 7th Grader for most of her narration but she occasionally lapses into what seems more like the adult voice of the author.My biggest confusion came from the dual storylines. Every so often they would intersect, but never in a way that helped me understand why they were both in the same story except to manufacture some plot points. The Pageant story and the Beef Industry story don’t complement each other in a way that makes them more than what they are individually.That said, I did find it informative about the beef industry in ways that were not preachy one way or the other. I enjoyed some laugh-out-loud moments with Libby’s younger sister Frannie and her imaginary grandchildren. And I was moved (as I usually am) by the child-animal relationship between Libby and her steer in a way I had not expected.All in all I liked it more than I disliked or was confused by it. It’s a good choice for a young girl deciding which Lovelace nominees to read. I was on the Young Hoosier committee that selected this as one of our middle grades titles (after all, it IS set in Indiana!). I enjoyed reading the author's blog and background. (and my husband lived in Warsaw for awhile). I enjoyed the characters, although the Darling girls seemed a bit much at times (but perhaps not for students reading the book). Even Frannie, the four year old, had a fun personality. (I've read that truly gifted children have more than one imaginary friend at a time, although I've never heard of imaginary grandchildren!) I also liked the fact that things didn't always turn out perfectly for Libby, and she did have a wonderful friend in Carol Ann. The first-person narration was well done, and I loved some of the phrases, such as farmers, "measured rainfall on a daily basis year-round, like a supermodel measures fat grams". A few things seemed a bit far-fetched (incidents in the show ring), and the Darlings leaving Ohma by herself after her tragedy.All in all, a fun read giving some insight into cattle farming. I'd love to know how Nowhere, Indiana became the name of the town. Is this a dig from Ohio?
What do You think about The Beef Princess Of Practical County (2009)?
LOVE this book got it at herik and got into it from the first page! have to read
—Sarahly
It was great. Read it because it was a kids book club choice at the library.
—jaguda190
I loved this book I read it for summmer reading pretty awsome!!!!!!
—Yun
Recommended for 5th & 6th grade. Just a sweet book.
—Taylor