The book highlights the inner struggle between each character. For example, the three of them act in the school's talent show, Kiss Me, Kate and befriend a six-year-old deaf orphan. They realize things like true magic and that brother(or sister hood)hood is one of the most important things in life.
In his first novel for young readers, Kluger revisits themes in his adult titles: baseball, romantic sparring, and social activism. Boston teens T. C. and Augie are such close friends that their families acknowledge them as brothers. Alejandra has recently arrived from Washington, D.C., where her father served as a Mexican ambassador to the U.S. Written in multiple voices and nontraditional formats, including instant messages and school assignments, Kluger’s crowded, exuberant novel follows the three high-school freshman through an earth-shaking year in which musical-theater-obsessed Augie realizes that he is gay, Alejandra reveals her theatrical talents to disapproving parents, and T. C. tries to make a deaf child’s greatest wish come true. At the center are heart-pulling romances (even a few among adults) and a broadening sense of what family means. A few plot twists will require readers to suspend belief, and the voices tend to sound alike. Still, the appealing characters are bright, passionate, and fully engaged in their lives, and many readers will lose themselves in this original, high-spirited story. Grades 8-12. --Gillian Engbergfor a more in-depth summary: http://www.linussblanket.com/my-most-excellent-year-by-steve-kluger/
buy: http://www.amazon.com/My-Most-Excellent-Year-Poppins/dp/0803732279