A review by fictionalkate
Suite Scarlett by Maureen Johnson

3.0

If all the world's a stage, New York City has the best scenery.

Scarlett Martin's friends are all having the summer of their lives but she is stuck in working in her family's run down and barely functioning hotel. When a slightly eccentric guest checks in and appoints Scarlett as her personal assistant, Scarlett's summer starts to look up. She gets involved with trying to save her brother's acting career and has a flirtation with a gorgeous North Carolinian named Eric. But things start to fall apart around her and Scarlett needs the help of her family to help everything from becoming a disaster.

I've not read a Maureen Johnson novel before but quickly found myself absorbed in Scarlett's story. The book begins on her fifteenth birthday but Scarlett is fairly wise and mature for her age. She's a little irritated that she doesn't have the opportunities that her friend have but she is responsibly enough to understand that her family isn't like others. Her older brother Spencer is trying to do everything he possibly can to become an actor however realistically he knows that if he doesn't make it soon he will need to find a more sensible career path. Lola, Scarlett's older sister, is facing a dilemma due to her family disliking her boyfriend and her little sister Marlene - well... Marlene is slightly spoilt and people are afraid of hurting her feelings. I really liked the family dynamic within this novel. The Martin family are tight but not without their problems. They are financially challenged and things are changing with Scarlett's older siblings after having finished high school and are now moving in different directions. I liked how they interacted with each other and that Ms. Johnson didn't give Marlene a free pass to do as she pleased just because of her past.

Scarlett is a great character. She's a writer who, despite her tender age, isn't lacking for life experience. Her encounters with Mrs Amberson are humorous with the hotel guest having a flair for the dramatic. Scarlett gets herself into some quite outlandish situations but somehow manages to handle them. I liked that Scarlett is genuinely a good person. She gets placed in situations - at times due to her own doing - that cause her to question her actions and as a reader you could feel the moral dilemmas she was facing. This is a book where I felt with 97% certainty that things were going to end up being okay for everyone involved but the fun was seeing just how everything turned out. The romance in this book wasn't quite what I was expecting but that only added to the realistic nature that love doesn't always play out how you'd like it to.

This book was highly enjoyable. It's cute and fun and shows off New York City in a delightful way. The characters are quirky and a little off centre but there's a lot of love in the Martin family. I'm delighted that Maureen Johnson has written a second novel, Scarlett Fever, that continues exploring Scarlett's adventures.