A Couple of April Fools (Hamlet Chronicles Series #6)

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Overview

It's springtime in Vermont, and strange happenings are afoot in the little town of Hamlet. The students at Joshua Fawcett Elementary School are busily planning their practical jokes for April Fool's Day, but their pranks fall flat when it is discovered that their beloved teacher, Miss Earth, has gone missing.
Has the mysterious creature that's lurking about town and stalking local farm animals made a meal of Miss Earth? Or is Mayor Grass, her esteemed fiancé, responsible? Miss ...

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Overview

It's springtime in Vermont, and strange happenings are afoot in the little town of Hamlet. The students at Joshua Fawcett Elementary School are busily planning their practical jokes for April Fool's Day, but their pranks fall flat when it is discovered that their beloved teacher, Miss Earth, has gone missing.
Has the mysterious creature that's lurking about town and stalking local farm animals made a meal of Miss Earth? Or is Mayor Grass, her esteemed fiancé, responsible? Miss Earth's students know that the clock is ticking and they must find the answer-and their teacher-before it is too late.
True to form, Gregory Maguire has added an uproarious installment to the Hamlet Chronicles, a tale packed with high humor and suspense that also touches on more serious themes of adolescence and family relationships.

At a Vermont elementary school, April Fools' Day takes on a sinister tone when a teacher goes missing and several suspects emerge, among them the teacher's fiance and a missing mutant chick.

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
"this archly funny sixth addition to the series...a satirical romp...relentlessly edgy and smart...a breath of fresh air." Kirkus Reviews

"The tongue-in-cheek humor, brisk pace, and snappy dialogue make for a lively and enjoyable read." SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL School Library Journal

"witty, absurd farce and spot-on portrayl of the social pecking order of middle-graders." BOOKLIST Booklist, ALA

Publishers Weekly
The sixth title in the Hamlet Chronicles series, A Couple of April Fools by Gregory Maguire, illus. by Elaine Clayton, continues where Three Rotten Eggs left off. In this installment, Thekla Mustard is unseated as Empress of the Tattletales and Miss Earth disappears; her students develop theories as to what might have happened, as they search the Vermont wilderness for her. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Children's Literature
Librarians will be kept hopping when many students want to read this book at the same time. Maguire's zany humor and ability to create pictures with words are a couple of good reasons to expect heavy library traffic. The plot centers on April Fool's Day jokes concocted by the boys in Miss Earth's class, as well as jokes brewed up by the girls. Most of the boys in the class belong to a club known as the Copycats. The girls have their own club known as the Tattletales. Real life middle readers will easily relate to this. For added interest, Thud Tweed, a new member of the class, does not always follow the lines of demarcation between boys and girls. Also, Thekla Mustard, Empress of the Tattletales for years, is ousted from her position. In an attempt to stop the pitting of boys against girls, Miss Earth does the unthinkable when she requires science fair projects to be completed by boy and girl pairings of her own. Flameburpers, creatures that are part chicken and part lizard, and an ape-like monster twist in and out of the hilarious plot. Names of characters are worth a good laugh. Maguire exhibits a gift for understanding the worries and actions of this age group. Even with the hilarity, he is able to address some of the more serious adolescent concerns. This is the sixth book in Maguire's "Hamlet Chronicles" series. A school library will do well to bring in the whole set. 2004, Clarion Books/Houghton Mifflin, Ages 8 to 12.
—Nancy Garhan Attebury
From The Critics
The children in Miss Earth's class are not having a good spring. What with mutant chickens, an escalating rivalry between the Tattletales and the Copycats (their girls' and boys' clubs), a traitor, and a couple of April Fools pranks gone wrong, they hardly notice the fine spring air or the first forsythia blooms. Their problems reach a crisis point when their beloved teacher disappears. Though Thekla Mustard, former Empress of the Tattletales, suspects a romance gone wrong between Miss Earth and her fiance, Mayor Grass, her classmates are not so sure. However, they all agree, they must use their excellent education to locate their teacher. In this, book six of the chronicles of Hamlet, Vermont, Maguire uses humor and a fastpaced plot to create a delightfully entertaining story. Despite the quirky names and bizarre events, Maguire's tale captures the essence of pre-adolescent experience: the difficulties of peer relationships and the growing understanding that parents are flawed human beings. 2004, Clarion Books, 182 pp., Ages young adult.
—Virginia Beesley
School Library Journal
Gr 3-6-In this sixth installment in the series, the rivalry between the girls' club, the Tattletales, and that of the boys, the Copycats, continues, but their leaders, Thekla Mustard and Sammy Grubb, are not quite as enthusiastic as they were earlier in the year. Before long, Thekla finds herself deposed by an upstart member. When new student and outsider Thud Tweed decides it would be fun to make trouble for Miss Earth, he helps the girls play an April Fool's Day trick on the boys during class, and the teacher puts her foot down. She bans the clubs from school and assigns everyone into girl-boy pairs for the upcoming science fair. Meanwhile, the one remaining Flameburper (a mutant chicken-lizard hatched in the previous book) is growing at a rapid rate and is clearly distressed about something. Could it be the mysterious creature rumored to be lurking around town? Then, Miss Earth disappears, and all rivalries are set aside as the Tattletales and Copycats combine forces to find her. Although the book can stand alone, readers already familiar with the characters and their history will get the most out of it. The tongue-in-cheek humor, brisk pace, and snappy dialogue make for a lively and enjoyable read.-Terrie Dorio, Santa Monica Public Library, CA Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
What has got to be the weirdest year in the history of Hamlet, Vermont, continues in this archly funny sixth addition to the series. It is the lead-up to April Fool's Day, and all is not well. Thekla Mustard has been deposed as Empress of the Tattletales, and Thud Tweed is on the outs with the Copycats. Furthermore, Beatrice the Flameburper, the mutant chicken-lizard hybrid of Three Rotten Eggs (2002), is going through an alarming transformation into . . . well, it's hard to say, with a Freak of Nature. When an April Fool's prank leads to the disappearance of the beloved Miss Earth, the kids reluctantly set aside their differences in the face of this calamity. Maguire serves up a stew of characters who frequently teeter over the edge into caricatures, but the tongue-in-cheek text never panders to a perceived lowest-common-denominator, instead fiercely pulling its audience through a satirical romp most writers for middle-graders wouldn't dream of attempting. Is the formula getting a little old? Perhaps, but it's a relentlessly edgy and smart one, and as such, a breath of fresh air. (Fiction. 8-12)
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780618274741
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
  • Publication date: 5/24/2004
  • Series: Hamlet Chronicles Series , #6
  • Edition description: None
  • Pages: 192
  • Age range: 8 - 12 Years
  • Product dimensions: 6.00 (w) x 9.00 (h) x 0.50 (d)

Meet the Author

Gregory Maguire

Gregory Maguire is the popular author of many books for children, including the Hamlet Chronicles for Clarion, as well as several adult books, including WICKED (HarperCollins), upon which a Broadway musical was based, and its sequel, CONFESSIONS OF AN UGLY STEPSISTER (Regan Books). He lives in Concord, Massachusetts.

Biography

Raised in a family of writers (his father was a journalist and his stepmother a poet), Gregory Maguire grew up with a great love of books, especially fairy tales and fantasy fiction. He composed his own stories from an early age and released his first book for children, The Lightning Time, in 1978, just two years after graduating from the State University of New York at Albany.

Several other children's book followed, but major recognition eluded Maguire. Then, in 1995, he published his first adult novel. A bold, revisionist view of Frank L. Baum's classic Oz stories, Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West places one of literature's most reviled characters at the center of a dark dystopian fantasy and raises provocative questions about the very nature of good and evil. Purists criticized Maguire for tampering with a beloved juvenile classic, but the book received generally good reviews (John Updike, writing in The New Yorker, proclaimed it "an amazing novel.") and the enthusiasm of readers catapulted it to the top of the bestseller charts. (Maguire's currency increased even further when the book was turned into the Tony Award-winning Broadway musical Wicked in 2003.)

In the wake of his breakthrough novel, Maguire has made something of a specialty out of turning classic children's tales on their heads. He retold the legends of Cinderella and Snow White in Confessions of an Ugly Stepsister (1999) and Mirror, Mirror (2003); he raised the ghost of Ebenezer Scrooge in Lost (2001); and, in 2005, he returned to Oz for Son of a Witch, the long-awaited sequel to Wicked. He has reviewed fantasy fiction for the Sunday New York Times Book Review and has contributed his own articles, essays, and stories to publications like Ploughshares, The Boston Review, the Christian Science Monitor, and The Horn Book Magazine.

In addition, Maguire has never lost his interest in -- or enthusiasm for -- children's literature. He is the author of The Hamlet Chronicles, a bestselling seven-book series of high-camp mystery-adventures with silly count-down titles like Seven Spiders Spinning and Three Rotten Eggs. He has taught at the Center for the Study of Children's Literature at Simmons College and is a founding member of Children's Literature New England (CLNE), a nonprofit organization that focuses attention on the significance of literature in the lives of children.

Good To Know

In our interview, Maguire shared some fun facts with us about his life:

"While I pride myself on trying to be creative in all areas of my life, I have occasionally gone overboard, like the time I decided to bring to a party a salad that I constructed, on a huge rattan platter, to look like a miniature scale model of the Gardens of Babylon. I built terraces with chunks of Monterey jack, had a forest of broccoli florets and a lagoon of Seven Seas salad dressing spooned into a half a honeydew melon. I made reed patches out of scallion tips and walkways out of sesame seeds lined with raisin borders. Driving to the party, I had to brake to avoid a taxi, and by the time the police flagged me down for poor driving skills I was nearly weeping. ‘But Officer, I have a quickly decomposing Hanging Gardens of Babylon to deliver....' Everything had slopped and fallen over and it looked like a tray of vegetable garbage."

"My first job was scooping ice cream at Friendly's in Albany, New York. I hated the work, most of my colleagues, and the uniform, and I more or less lost my taste for ice cream permanently."

"If I hadn't been a writer, I would have tried to be one of the following: An artist (watercolors), a singer/songwriter like Paul Simon (taller but not very much more), an architect (domestic), a teacher. Actually, in one way or another I have done all of the above, but learned pretty quickly that my skills needed more honing for me to charge for my services, and I'd always rather write fiction than hone skills."

"I steal a bit from one of my favorite writers to say, simply, that I enjoy, most of all, old friends and new places. I love to travel. Having small children at home now impedes my efforts a great deal, but I have managed in my time to get to Asia, Africa, most of Europe, and Central America. My wish list of places not yet visited includes India, Denmark, Brazil, and New Zealand, and my wish for friends not yet made includes, in a sense, readers who are about to discover my work, either now or even when I'm no longer among the living. In a sense, in anticipation, I value those friends in a special way."

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    1. Hometown:
      Boston, Massachusetts
    1. Date of Birth:
      June 9, 1954
    2. Place of Birth:
      Albany, New York
    1. Education:
      B.A., SUNY at Albany, 1976; M.A., Simmons College, 1978; Ph.D., Tufts University, 1990
    2. Website:

Table of Contents

Happy Spring! 1
1. The Wheel of Life 4
2. Trouble in Paradise? 12
3. Dreamboat or Dump Truck? 18
4. Grownups in Their Natural Habitat 23
5. The Mustard Motto 30
6. Scheming and Not Scheming 37
7. April Fool's: Single Whammy 42
8. April Fool's: Double Whammy 50
9. The Dirty Double Cross 58
10. Sabotage to Boot 68
11. Foul Play? 77
12. The Adolescence of a Flameburper 83
13. Where Were You That Day? 94
14. Beatrice Breaks Out 104
15. Mrs. Mustard Breaks Out 115
16. Thud Tweed, Juvenile Offender 125
17. Beware What You Choose 131
18. Nobody's Business 139
19. Missing, Presumed Dead 148
20. The Eureka Moment 154
21. Triple Whammy? 160
22. April Showers Bring May Flowers 175
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