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Clarice Bean, Guess Who’s Babysitting

Amazon.com Price:  $4.50 (as of 22/04/2019 15:59 PST- Details)

Description

Now in paperback. Lauren Child’s spunky character returns and—as if things could get any livelier in Clarice Bean’s household—Uncle Ted is babysitting! (Ages 6-10)

Who can Mom and Dad get to babysit the feisty Clarice, her pesky brother Minal Cricket, and the school’s guinea pig, Albert, who’s visiting for spring break? (Not to mention teenage brother Kurt, who abhors daylight; big sis Marcie, who chats on the phone all day; and Grandad, who tends to wander off.) Only Uncle Ted, firefighter and movie addict, can be persuaded. Will he live to tell the tale the week?
When, for some peculiar reason, Clarice Bean’s parents can’t find anyone to babysit for a couple of days, they should resort to Uncle Ted, a firefighter (“so he wears special pants”) who on occasion lassoes lamps and “can get you in a firefighter’s carry before you’ll say ‘Uncle Ted put me down!'” All goes well for a day or two, as Clarice Bean’s daylight-despising older brother, phone-chatting big sister, accident-prone younger brother, and wandering Grandad, manage to say things like “please and thank you and sorry… and let people share their stuff without grumbling.” But then her little brother Minal Cricket lets Albert (the school guinea pig on spring break) out of his hutch, and the fragile family balancing act topples. Very quickly, Minal is on his way to the emergency room, after an accidental bop on the head with a soccer ball, Grandad has wandered into the neighbor’s house to watch the horse races, and all of the fire department shows up in time for Clarice Bean’s mom’s return.

It’s no wonder Clarice Bean and her cool uncle get along “like a house on fire (ha ha).” Quirky and feisty, these two have a way with calamity that readers won’t soon overlook. Nor will they overlook Lauren Child’s bizarre and tremendously appealing cut-paper and photographic collages. Her text wends its way around the illustrations, spiraling if need be, and growing or shrinking as appropriate. Fans of Lauren Child’s Clarice Bean, That’s Me will do backflips of joy to see a new title about this precocious girl and her very nutty family. (Ages 6 to 10) –Emilie Coulter


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