He has an affection for Dootsie, but more as a sister.
His mother is pregnant, and when his little sister is born, he shows a surprisingly caring, gentle side, and is extremely protective. He is seen to be a delinquent, telling people he went to boot camp for a year, when he was actually staying with his aunt.
Perry Delloplane is a juvenile boy about Stargirl's age. She also befriends Betty Lou Fern, an older agoraphobic neighbor of hers, mostly because of Betty Lou gifts Dootsie with yummy homemade treats and donuts. She is attention seeking, often running away, or pretending to be invisible, thinking it will attract attention, seeing as everyone pretends they can't see her. Dootsie is outgoing and chats to anyone that comes her way. Dootsie Pringle is a spunky six-year-old that is quick to befriend Stargirl after discovering her meditating on a table. Leo broke Stargirl's heart, but she still loves him, only finalizing her choice between Leo and Perry when she shares a kiss with Perry at her solstice, but says later she didn't think they were right for each other. During the time of this novel, she is writing the world's longest letter to Leo, documenting her days and adventures with her new friends and difficulties in her new town. Leo Borlock is Stargirl's former love interest from Mica, Arizona. However, throughout the book she struggles with her feelings, trying to understand how she's feeling and whether her heart belongs to Leo or Perry. Her love interest is Perry Delloplane, though he sends her mixed messages, going so far as to invite her to join his harem. Her best friend is Dootsie, a spunky six-year-old that also has no boundaries. She has many quirky acts that she not-so-subtly pulls off throughout the book, like dropping pennies on the sidewalk, starting a gardening business, meditating, befriending little girls, and going on milk runs with her father, a milkman. She would go to the ends of the earth to achieve happiness, not for herself, but others. Susan Julia "Stargirl" Caraway is a unique teenager that has no boundaries when it comes to clothing or acts of kindness. He tells her to remember who she is and do what her heart tells her. In the end, Stargirl asks Archie what she should do about missing Leo, and about Perry. Everyone is profoundly affected by the start of this new day and returns home to the start of a cold winter. The magic moment of sunrise is magnified by a special tent her parents have built, allowing the sunlight to stream in through a hole in the tent, forming a single beam that cuts through the crowd of people and pierces the back wall. On the morning of the Winter Solstice, Stargirl is overwhelmed and surprised when a huge crowd of her friends and acquaintances, and several other people she's unfamiliar with, flock to Calendar Hill, including her friend Betty Lou who hasn't left her house in nine years. In the end, Stargirl becomes worried that no one will show up for her solstice party, but is reassured by Archie, her former teacher, and friend from Arizona, who arrives to attend her celebration and comforts her with his wisdom. She learns his mother has a new baby, whom Perry has been trying to support by working several jobs and by resorting to "stealing" to avoid burdening her with feeding him. He has been very mysterious about his family and personal life. Stargirl also discovers the truth about Perry. With the arrival of autumn, Stargirl's life is affected as she meets several new characters: Alvina, a grumpy young girl who delivers donuts to Betty Lou Perry, a teen boy who Alvina is falling in love with and Perry's harem, The Honeybees.Īs winter sets in, Stargirl turns herself to planning a Winter Solstice party, inviting all of the people she has encountered in her new town to celebrate the beginning of winter by joining her at sunrise on her Enchanted Hill, which she now calls Calendar Hill. She is quite nice and Stargirl soon becomes friends with her as well. She befriends Dootsie, a noisy but lovable 6-year-old who takes a shine to Stargirl and wants to switch.ĭootsie introduces her to Betty Lou, an agoraphobic elder woman. Leo, the 16-year-old narrator of the first book who had fallen under her spell, she is lonely and sad-her "happy wagon," where she keeps stones representing her level of happiness, is almost empty. It picks up where the previous novel left off after Stargirl left Mica High and describes her bittersweet memories in the town of Mica, Arizona along with the involvements of new people in her life, in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania. This book is the sequel to the New York Times bestselling book, Stargirl and centers on "the world's longest letter" in diary form. Love, Stargirl is a 2007 young adult novel by Jerry Spinelli.