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Bibsy Cross and the Bad Apple

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Meet Bibsy Cross, the precocious eight-year-old heroine of this charming chapter book series, as she navigates a relationship with a teacher who thinks that Bibsy is just too much.
A KIRKUS REVIEWS BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR

Most things are easy-peasy, regular-pegular for Bibsy Cross. She loves her parents, her cat, her best friend, Natia. And she loves going to school. She might just love that most of all!
This year, Bibsy has Mrs. Stumper for a teacher... and Mrs. Stumper doesn't seem too keen on Bibsy. She thinks Bibsy talks too much—especially about her science fair project. 
But one day, when Bibsy talks a little too much, and goes a stone too far, Mrs. Stumper punishes her by punching a hole in her paper apple that hangs in the classroom. And Bibsy is devastated. 
How can she make the best science fair project when she feels so rotten?
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 11, 2024
      Ebullient eight-year-old Bibsy Cross loved everything about her life until she landed in Mrs. Stumper’s class. The teacher “thinks Bibsy talks too much, which isn’t true. She’s just a third grader with a whole lot to say.” Mrs. Stumper sighs whenever Bibsy speaks up in class, labels what she perceives as Bibsy’s inability to keep quiet as “a stone too far”—a phrase that becomes the book’s refrain—and ultimately punches a “worm” hole in the paper apple that represents Bibsy on the class tree, declaring Bibsy’s behavior as “rotten.” In spare, emphatic verse, Scanlon (Everyone Starts Small) writes, “It’s not a real wound, but it feels like one.” The story, punctuated by warmhearted spot cartooning by Ho (Tala Learns to Siva), highlights Bibsy’s supportive homelife and the development of a school science fair project with Bibsy’s best friend that shows the protagonist at her creative best. But the narrative’s real power comes from its poignant depiction of a child coming to terms with an uncomprehending adult, a trajectory that takes Bibsy from befuddlement to despair to speaking truth to power. Bibsy is rendered with pale skin, brown hair, and green eyes on the cover. Ages 7–10. Agent: Erin Murphy, Erin Murphy Literary.

    • Booklist

      April 1, 2024
      Grades 1-3 Third-grader Bibsy Cross loves her life: parents, bicycle, best friend Natia, and school--although she and her teacher, Mrs. Stumper, have not hit it off. Whenever Mrs. Stumper feels Bibsy's behavior is ""a stone too far,"" she moves Bibsy's corkboard apple from the tree to the dirt below, much to Bibsy's embarrassment. Luckily, Bibsy is allowed to pair with Natia for her science fair project, which gives Bibsy a much-needed break from her teacher's critiques, as the girls work in Natia's classroom, where her teacher believes in positive reinforcement. Likewise, Mrs. Stumper has an opportunity to reconsider Bibsy's positive attributes. This new early chapter-book series starter offers readers a likable protagonist, believable problems, short chapters, and frequent artwork to break up the text. Ho's grayscale cartoon illustrations vary in size and feature pops of red: Bibsy always sports a red shirt, making her easily identifiable in her classroom, and red apples also serve as chapter headings. This will be popular with fans of Sara Pennypacker's Clementine books; additional series titles to come.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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