Jason begins a blog to share details of his new life with his old friends, but some news isn't meant for wide distribution. Fortunately, the sage-but-sarcastic Drew is always just an email away. Would it be so wrong, Jason wonders, to ask Leah, a local girl, to the Homecoming dance. "Just as a one-time date, nothing more, obviously." "Why are you asking me and not Sian?" Drew replies. "Wait, I think I know the answer." If only Jason would take his friend's advice, he might spend less time climbing out of the holes he digs for himself.
Pressed into afternoon and weekend duty at his grandpa's hardware store, Jason still finds time to join an after-school book club that specializes in controversial classics. When Leah's brother reports the book club to the school board, Jason and his fellow readers are forced underground--until they emerge again to enter a protest float in the Icicle Flats Christmas parade. The ensuing brouhaha makes for the most exciting holiday season Jason can remember. And for once, it's not his parents' arguing that takes center stage. The flames have barely smoldered out before Jason and his new buddy Dane launch their next scheme. If the local busybody brigade was upset by a few old books, pirate radio will surely blow their minds. Who ever said life in a small novelty town would be dull?
Told entirely through Jason's email exchanges and blog posts, Dispatches from a Tourist Trap picks up where The First World Problems of Jason Van Otterloo, the first book in James Bailey's light-hearted and high-spirited series, left off.
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