Starting with Alice

Starting with Alice

by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
Starting with Alice

Starting with Alice

by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

eBook

$7.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

This is where it all started!

Eight-year-old Alice McKinley wants pierced ears, really long hair, a pet, and, most of all, a mother. Oh, and some friends would be nice. As the new girl in third grade, Alice doesn't know a single person in Takoma Park, Maryland, except for her next-door neighbor Donald Sheavers, who not only is a boy, but also seems to be a little bit peculiar! Desperate to meet people, Alice learns that making friends is harder than it seems when she runs into a group of girls whom she nicknames "the Terrible Triplets" after they make it very clear that they do not want to get to know Alice. On top of all this, Alice also has to keep an eye on Donald's recently divorced mom, who seems to have her eye on Alice's dad!

This is the first of three prequels to Phyllis Reynolds Naylor's beloved Alice series. Now younger girls can get to meet the girl everyone wants to be best friends with, and older girls will enjoy finding out how Alice came to be the Alice they know and love.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442446458
Publisher: Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Publication date: 09/04/2012
Series: Alice
Sold by: SIMON & SCHUSTER
Format: eBook
Pages: 224
Lexile: 730L (what's this?)
File size: 6 MB
Age Range: 7 - 12 Years

About the Author

About The Author
Phyllis Reynolds Naylor has written more than 135 books, including the Newbery Award–winning Shiloh and its sequels, the Alice series, Roxie and the Hooligans, and Roxie and the Hooligans at Buzzard’s Roost. She lives in Gaithersburg, Maryland. To hear from Phyllis and find out more about Alice, visit AliceMcKinley.com.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 5: Riding with Lester

When I got home from school on Monday, I found that Dad had taken Lester out of school over the lunch hour to get his learner's permit, and they were getting ready now for their first driving lesson.

"But here's the deal," Dad said. "And, Alice, the same goes for you when you get to be sixteen. Once you actually get your license, you can't have anyone in the car with you except family for the first six months. After that, if you don't get a ticket or have an accident during that time -- even a fender bender -- then you can have a friend or two along. But not until then."

"Daaaad!" Lester howled. But Dad was firm.

"What about you, Alice?" Dad said, looking at me. "Do you want to go over to the Sheaverses' while we're out, or do you want to come along for Lester's driving lesson?"

I was playing with Oatmeal and had to think about it a minute. If Lester was going to wreck the car, did I want to die along with my family or be left behind as an orphan?

"I guess I'll go," I said. "But be careful, Lester. I'm just a little girl with my whole life ahead of me."

"Hey, I want to live too," Lester said. "And I already know the basics. It's not like I can't steer or anything."

Dad just grunted. "Les, get the broom and mop, and Alice, bring up the two metal buckets from the basement."

Sometimes Dad doesn't make any sense at all. Lester was going to drive the car, not wash it. But we put all the stuff in the trunk, and Dad drove to the parking lot of a large restaurant that was closed on Mondays. He got out and came around on the passenger side, and Lester climbed over into the driver's seat. I sat up on my knees in the backseat so that whenLester crashed into something, I could see it coming.

"Sit down, Al. Your head's blocking the rear window," Lester said.

I sat down and fastened my seat belt.

"Okay," said Dad. "Start the engine, press the clutch pedal down, and practice shifting through all the gears."

Lester started the car. I could hear his big sneakers squeaking against each other as they took their places on the pedals.

"Dad, when are we going to get an automatic?" he grumbled.

"When we get a new car, which won't be for a while now, so stop complaining," Dad said. "Now ease the clutch out in first gear and practice going forward, then reverse."

Lester's shoes clumped and squeaked again, and the Honda shot forward.

"Wheeee!" I cried.

"Easy on the gas," said Dad.

Lester braked and this time we shot forward.

"Not so hard on the brake," said Dad.

It didn't take long for Lester to get the hang of just how hard to press the pedals, and he practiced driving around the empty lot, making turns and back-

ing up.

"Okay. Let's do some parallel parking," said Dad. "Stop the car."

He got out, opened the trunk, and put the buckets about twenty feet apart, six feet out from the curb in front of the restaurant. Then he set the broom in one, the mop in the other. This time I got out because I wanted to watch Lester try to park between the buckets.

"Okay, Les," Dad said, getting back in the car. "Pull up past the first bucket, then back into the space between them."

I watched the car jerk forward. Lester forgot to put it in reverse. Then the car stopped and slowly started to move backward. But it swung in too far and the tires bumped the curb. I waved my arms dramatically and pretended I'd been hit.

Lester rolled down his window. "Cut it out, Alice!" he said. He pulled the car forward again and tried to park between the buckets. This time he knocked over the broom. I cheered.

"Alice," said Dad, getting out to set the broom back up again, "be a helper, not a hindrance."

I didn't know what a hindrance was, but I'll bet it wasn't good. So I took off my jacket and hung it on the broom handle so Lester could see it better.

He tried again. This time he carefully maneuvered past the broom, but he hit the mop. I tried to keep a straight face as I set the mop up again.

"Shut up," Lester said to me, even though I hadn't said a word.

He tried again, and still again, but he never did a very good job of parking. "It's not like real parking, Dad," he said. "I need real cars to practice on."

"Not yet, you don't," said Dad.

"Well, at least let me drive around the neighborhood," Lester begged.

"I suppose you can handle that," said Dad.

I helped put the buckets and stuff back in the trunk and climbed in the backseat again. "Don't hit any little children, Lester." I laughed. I thought how funny it would be if I had a lipstick and wrote outside the car window, Help! I'm being kidnapped! Maybe a police car would see it and pull Lester over. Or if I had a paper sack and blew it up and popped it, and Lester would think he'd blown a tire.

Lester drove slowly up and down the streets of our neighborhood and was doing just fine until he came to a stoplight at the top of a hill. It turned red just as we reached it, and Lester put on the brake.

"Oh, boy," I heard Dad breathe out. "Now, this might be a little tricky, Les."

It was. When the light turned green and Lester took his foot off the brake, the car started rolling backward. I screamed.

"Alice, will you stop!" Lester yelled, slamming on the brakes, and we all jerked forward.

"You've got to let out the clutch about the same time you're taking your foot off the brake and giving it gas," Dad told him. "It takes practice, Les. Just go slow and easy."

But when Lester took his foot off the brake a second time, the car rolled backward again. The car behind us honked, and Lester slammed on the brakes a second time. I put my head down on the seat so he couldn't see I was laughing.

"Try it again, Lester," Dad said calmly. "Take your left foot off the clutch and your right foot off the brake and try to do it together. Give it gas before it starts to roll."

This time the car shot forward, but the light changed and we had to stop all over again, sticking out into the intersection so that cars had to swerve around us.

"Dad, why don't we get a car with power brakes and power steering?" Lester cried.

"Because it's good for you to know how to drive all kinds of cars," Dad said. "Don't get rattled, now. Everyone was a beginner once."

"Even you?" I asked. "Who taught you to drive, Dad?"

"Charlie, my favorite brother. He is a lot older than me and made a good teacher."

We waited for the light to turn green again. Now there were three other cars backed up behind us, not just one.

The light turned green, and Lester was so anxious to make it that he moved his feet too fast and killed the engine. The car behind us made a U-turn and went tearing off in the opposite direction. So did the car behind it.

"Easy does it, Lester," Dad said.

I wanted to laugh, but then I remembered how long it had taken me to learn to ride a two-wheeler. I think it was Uncle Milt who bought a bike for me after Mother died, and it was Lester who ran along beside me while I rode to help me keep my balance. It was Lester who taught me to whistle, too, and to blow bubble gum. Who made me my first pair of tin-can stilts.

I sat up very straight in the backseat so Lester could see that I wasn't laughing at him. The next time the light turned green, Lester pulled out into the intersection and made it through, a little jerkily, but at least no one honked.

"Good job, Lester," I said.

We stayed out for another half hour, and Lester did everything right. He pulled in the driveway when we got home as smoothly as a train coming into a station.

"You're going to be a great driver, Lester, and I'll go with you anywhere," I said. "Even Niagara Falls."

"Very good, indeed!" said Dad.

Lester was practically crowing when he got out and went right to the phone to call his friends.

Dad was in a good mood too, so I thought maybe it was the right time to ask for something for myself.

"Next week, can we get my ears pierced?" I asked.

Dad lowered his newspaper and stared at me over the business page. "Don't even think it," he said.

Copyright © 2002 by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

Table of Contents


Contents

One: No More Barbies

Two: Donald Sheavers

Three: The Terrible Triplets

Four: Oatmeal

Five: Riding with Lester

Six: Call from Chicago

Seven: Sweethearts

Eight: Embarrassing Moments

Nine: Hello and Good-bye

Ten: The Sad Time

Eleven: The World According to Rosalind

Twelve: Starting with Me

Thirteen: The Shampoo Party

Fourteen: K-I-S-S-I-N-G

Fifteen: Little Girl Lost

Sixteen: Pancakes and Syrup

Seventeen: What Happened at Donald's House

Eighteen: Spring Thaw

Nineteen: The Party
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews