Reviews

Jacky Ha-Ha: My Life is a Joke by James Patterson

junkyardigan's review

Go to review page

4.0

I really liked this! I read the first book sometime in my past life and had no idea that there was a second book. the second book didn't really add to the storyline as it developed the characters for me. jackie learned so much in this book and her life changed, pretty much for the better. I really liked how the story wrapped itself up at the end, it was all in one neat little package.

destdest's review against another edition

Go to review page

lighthearted medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

 Pros 
  • The artwork is super cute. I love the coloring style and the overall cartoony look. 

  • Jackie’s family has financial issues while they’re waiting to be hired as full-time police officers, so they need all the children to work to contribute income. This will be relatable to kids who have a lot of responsibility on their shoulders and/or have to help out financially already at a young age. 

  • Jackie fails a lot, but she also gets back up every time! Very resilient! 

  • A boy gains character growth and stops bullying others (tho mostly because he gets a crush on the MC) and becomes a decent person. 

  • When a character is being bigoted, they get called out rightfully so and face consequences. 

Neutral
  • A lot of preteen drama (crushes, first loves, jealousy, miscommunication, etc). 

  • Like the first book, Older Jackie is recounting this story to her daughters. It’s still set in the 90’s, so the slang is goofy-sounding by today’s standards. 

Cons
  • During play auditions, one of the actors (butthole extraordinaire) makes racial remarks to Meredith (token Black best friend) and mocks Jackie’s stuttering. I believe this is to show kids “microaggressions,” but it comes off so heavy-handed. Only the boldest racist/bigot comes out plainly with what they’re saying. 

  • The parents tell the kids if they don’t work, they can’t afford groceries, which I understand... Some families don’t have the luxury of maintaining on one salary… But it’s a doggone shame to be depended on the kiddies to help out. Y’all couldn’t downsize or take on a second job? It’s different to teach kids the value of money or responsibility, then to forcefully need it. That part was not cute. Um, y’all are supposed to provide! 

  • How did y’all arrest someone off of hearsay??? 

grayscale08's review

Go to review page

emotional funny lighthearted relaxing medium-paced

3.0

connorslibrarycorner's review

Go to review page

4.0

Wonderful book.
Such a fun and easy read that dealt with a lot of serious issues too such as crime, racism, war.

Amazing series of books with excellent humour!
More...