
Ramona and her mother
Cleary, Beverly.
Series: [Ramona] ; Vol: 5
Notes
190, 19 p.ill.
Summary: How come nobody ever calls me my mother's girl? thinks Ramona. How come Willa Jean gets to tear through a box of tissues, make a dreadful mess, disrupt Mrs. Quimby's brunch, and still be the center of attention - and her grandmother's pet? When Ramona finally has her mother to herself, her plan to make slacks for her stuffed elephant goes all wrong, and Ramona is not pleased. When Ramona satisfies a lifelong urge to squeeze all the toothpaste out of a new economy-sized tube, Mother is not pleased. All Ramona really wants is to twitch her nose and be her mother's little rabbit, warm and snug and loved like the bears and bunnies in the books her mother used to read to her at bedtime. Ramona may not be as small as Willa Jean anymore, but that doesn't mean she isn't her mother's girl! (Publisher)
Ramona Quimby ;
5.
208 p.
ill.
An Avon Camelot book.
Summary: Ramona Quimby is no longer seven, but not quite eight. She's 'seven and a half right now,' if you ask her! Not allowed to stay home alone, yet old enough to watch pesky Willa Jean, Ramona wonders when her mother will treat her like her older, more mature sister, Beezus.
Ramona Quimby ;
5.
Custom 2
20200615135311.020191129144537.0
Location | edition | Bar Code | due date |
---|---|---|---|
Library | Reillustrated HarperTrophy ed. | 36861 |
Genre: | Lit Quiz Recommended Senior Fiction |
Dewey: | CLE |
ISBN: | 038070952X 9780380709526 |
pub: | 1979 |
Type: | ![]() |