Richie’s Picks: LET’S GET TOGETHER

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Richie Partington

unread,
Jan 8, 2026, 11:41:54 AM (3 days ago) Jan 8
to richie...@googlegroups.com

Richie’s Picks: LET’S GET TOGETHER by Brandy Colbert, HarperCollins/Clarion, September 2025, 304p., ISBN: 978-0-06-309248-8


“A doppelgänger is a look-alike of a living person, originating from German folklore as a ghostly, supernatural double, but now commonly used for any unrelated person who looks strikingly similar, like a ‘double-walker’.”

– Google AI overview


Let's get together, yay-yay-yay!

Two is twice as nice as one

Let's get together, right away

We'll be having twice the fun

And you can always count on me

A gruesome twosome we will be

Let's get together, yay-yay-yay!

– The Sherman Brothers, “Let’s Get Together,” from “The Parent Trap” (1961) 


Eleven-year-old Kenya has been tense and weirded out since foster child Liberty–Kenya’s  doppelgänger–arrives in town at her latest foster placement, and begins attending Kenya’s school. From Day One, Liberty is repeatedly mistaken by classmates for Kenya. 


Eventually, at a school mixer, Kenya blows her top and kicks off a fight with Liberty, necessitating Kenya’s father Wesley and grandmother (Cookie), and Liberty’s foster mom Joey, to come pick up their respective charges. It’s then that Kenya’s dad and grandmother suddenly realize that Liberty has to be Kenya’s long-missing twin, who Liberty and Kenya’s troubled mom disappeared with a decade ago when the two girls were babies.


“‘Kenya.’ Dad shook his head as he stood before her. ‘What happened?’

She worked her bottom lip beneath her teeth. ‘It’s kind of a long story.’

‘Lucky for you, I have all night for you to tell me about it.’

‘Wesley…’ said Cookie from her post at the door.

‘Hold on a second, Mama.’ He was still looking at Kenya. ‘Did you really get into a fight? That’s not like you.’

‘It wasn’t a fight. We were–’

‘Wesley–’

‘Mama, I’m trying to–’

Wesley!

They both turned then. Cookie had stepped into the room and was staring at Liberty.

Kenya watched as Dad followed Cookie’s gaze, and a moment later, his entire body wilted, as if he’d been hit by a tranquilizer dart. He looked like he was going to crumple to the floor.

‘Dad!’ Kenya reached out to steady him, and he caught himself against Trina’s desk. Kenya popped up, taking hold of his arm. ‘Dad? What’s wrong?’

Cookie was peering at Liberty now, her face so close that Liberty scooted back a little on the bench.

‘Could it be…?’ Cookie whispered. ‘Is it really you?’

Liberty looked at her, confused. ‘My name is Liberty.’

Cookie exhaled. ‘Wesley, are you seeing what I’m seeing?’”


Inspired by “The Parent Trap,” the twins in LET’S GET TOGETHER eventually surmount the interpersonal weirdness related to their sudden reconnection. Things get so comfortable between them that Kenya begins plotting to hook up the girls’ single father with Liberty’s single foster mom–the best foster parent Liberty has ever had–so that the two girls can share a family and a household. 


This is a feel-good elementary-level tale that concludes with a smile. I’d not hesitate to share it with eight- and nine-year-old readers.


Richie Partington, MLIS

Richie's Picks  http://richiespicks.pbworks.com

https://www.facebook.com/richiespicks/    

richiepa...@gmail.com  


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages