This graphic novel is about how one 10-year-old's experience of dyslexia unfolds.
The choice of a dyslexia-friendly font is meant to be supportive, but the novel seems more useful to the readers who are friends with people with dyslexia...since the many distinct and unique characteristics of the main character have an equal possibility of distancing dyslexic readers as connecting with them.
At the start of fifth grade, Stella is slowly becoming aware that she struggles more with reading than anyone else in her class. She feels increasingly overwhelmed, but it only comes to a crisis point when her favorite television show, Witchlins, puts out an interactive online game that is nearly impossible unless a player reads the text-heavy guidebook.
At this point, her super-tight-knit friendship group of three fifth graders (each one a different personality and ethnicity, in the best traditions of tween-girl-friend-group-based novels) does not strike Stella as a source of support, but as a source of extreme pressure. Stella realizes that her inability to read dense text excludes her from joining joyful activities and therefore makes their friendship unbearable. However, she does not describe her difficulties to them or ask them to help or accommodate her; instead, she hides away from them, isolates herself, tamps down her natural effervescence, and feels miserable.
Her uncharacteristic behavior, coupled with dramatically deteriorating classroom and homework performance, finally alerts her teachers that Stella needs resources. They have her run a battery of tests, give her a diagnosis of dyslexia, and set her up with a series of remediation and accommodation strategies to participate in or choose. From that point on, there is steady improvement in her self-confidence, abilities, and academic performance.
But Stella doesn't approach her two best friends, and doesn't decide to reveal her diagnosis until the point when she has not only achieved sufficient improvement to hold her own among their shared text-based activities, but until she has "won the prize" of a writing competition. (At which point, they approach her.)
I am not sure if young readers will wonder why her discomfort with reading didn't register with Stella in previous reading exercises, tests, or any assignments, and neither her attentive, loving parents, nor any of her teachers noticed that she was struggling at all, let alone trigger an earlier dyslexia diagnosis. For an adult reading, it's a striking fact that Stella made it past all of the diagnostic tests usually given in Kindergarten, First, Second, and Third grade. Furthermore, despite the stability of her household (maintaining the same friends for 6 years straight), and despite the fact that a classmate of hers shares her diagnosis and has already been receiving support for it (indicating the school tries to be on top of it, further confirmed by their quick action and readily available, knowledgeable coaches and tactics), Stella has passed all the important milestones where early intervention for dyslexia would have had the most likelihood of avoiding the cascading problems - that Stella is going through.
This lack of intervention - based on the fact that nobody noticed - is explained by having Stella observe that there is SO much more reading suddenly, an excuse that doesn't make sense to me as an adult reader - knowing that we test reading skills at every grade level and dyslexia does not suddenly appear at age 10.
So, given how the story is intentionally teaching readers about dyslexia, I needed more of an "excuse" for it not being noticed until 5th grade. I wish the author would have come up with a plot point for this delay, perhaps based on research within the several websites in the backmatter, which surely would have suggested some possibilities.
I found it pedantic and pandering. BUT the book is not for me, and it's possible a 3rd- to 5th-grade reader will find it heartwarming, inspiring, and informative.