Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing
R**.
Must read
My 8 yrnold daughter loved it and asked to order more ..so now I have ordered two more .. double fudge and shiela .let's see how much she likes them
A**T
Good buy
I ordered this last night, received it in the afternoon and my son finished reading it before evening. It's a super book - he could relate it, with how his younger brother behaves 😀
A**R
Best books
My kid loved these so much. She had so much fun reading these. Simple words, funny stories makes the reader hooked.
B**O
Kids favourite
My 6yr old completed the book in less than 6hours, and can't stop talking about it- super hit with kids, simple language, funny anecdotes and sibling love
M**A
Funny book for kids
Fantastic book. A must read for kids less than 10. They can totally relate to it . A classic .
S**N
Super book for kids
My 8 year kid loved the book. It is now one of her most favourite book.
T**K
Loved the book and series
My almost 8yo loved this book! He devoured it in a day and has been hounding me to order more from Judy Blume.
A**A
Good read for kids
I bought it for my 8 year old girl and she loved it .
T**Y
Awesome
Great product
J**O
perfect
9yr old loves these books
R**N
Great!
My son loved this book
A**A
Vino super rapido
Es lo que pides
A**2
My Naughty Little Brother
I've just read this aloud to my eight-year-old son. It's the first in a series (warning: "Superfudge", which is book two, reveals that Father Christmas/Santa does not exist!), and is set in early 1970s New York.Peter, the fourth grade nothing, is beyond exasperated with his three-year-old brother Fudge. Whenever Fudge acts up, he is called on to help, to cajole, or even to take the blame. My son found Fudge's antics very funny - there was a description of a birthday party filled with equally Fudge-like toddlers that he particularly enjoyed - but he also empathised with Peter, having a naughty little brother of his own.Judy Blume's streak of psychological realism runs through this, even under a lively children's story for 8+ years. Peter regularly steps in to reflect that he is being treated unjustly in comparison to Fudge, because he is the "good son", and not little and cute, and will stand on his head in the kitchen to encourage Fudge to eat, and not snap back when his mother blames him for Fudge falling off a climbing frame and knocking out his front teeth. Eventually though, Fudge's naughtiness becomes focused on Peter's pet turtle Dribble.... and that is going too far.
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