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The Report Card The Report Card
Ages: 8 - 12 yrs.
Author: Andrew Clements  
Simon & Schuster/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, $15.95 (Hard Cover)   

Nora discovers that she is a genius, but she is only a baby. She hates attention, however, so she spends all her time, right up through fifth-grade, pretending to be average of course she's a genius at it. Her best friend Steven has a harder time at school, and Nora decides to make him feel better by getting a lousy report card, which she precedes to do. Steven is shocked, her parents are dismayed, and unintended consequences begin to ricochet. 

The School Story
Ages: 8 - 12 yrs.
Author: Andrew Clements   Illustrator: Brian Selznick  
Simon & Schuster/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, $16.00 (Hard Cover)   

Natalie and Zoe have been best friends since kindergarten; now they are in the sixth grade at a private school in New York City. Natalie, whose mother is a children's book editor, is the observer and writer; Zoe, whose father is a big-city lawyer, is the talker and the planner of this spunky duo. When Natalie writes an exceptional story, Zoe moves into action. She uses a pen name so she can submit the manuscript to Natalie's mother. The author makes this funny, implausible venture into the world of publishing plausible. 

Wayside School Gets a Little Stranger
Ages: 8 - 12 yrs.
Author: Louis Sachar  
HarperCollins Childrens Books, $15.95 (Hard Cover)   

Surely, Wayside School was already strange enough. The builders built a thirty-story school sideways with the rooms piled one on top of another - except for the nineteenth floor where Miss Zarves teaches class. There is no nineteenth floor, and there is no Miss Zarves. Nevertheless, there is a thirteenth floor where nice Mrs. Jewls presides over her eccentric pupils. Mrs. Jewls, however, takes a maternity leave. Before she returns with her little stranger, Wayside School gets a little stranger. While reading this ridiculously funny book, children will not only be laughing, they will be learning. 

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