Ramona and her mother

Beverly Cleary

Book - 1979

Ramona at 7 1/2 sometimes feels discriminated against by being the youngest in the family.

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Subjects
Genres
Accelerated readers
Fiction
Published
New York : W. Morrow 1979.
Language
English
Main Author
Beverly Cleary (-)
Other Authors
Alan Tiegreen (illustrator)
Physical Description
207 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Audience
860
Awards
National Book Award, 1981: Children's Books
ISBN
9780688221959
9780688321956
9780380709526
9780440472438
9780439148016
  • A present for Willa Jean
  • Slacks for Ella Funt
  • Nobody likes Ramona
  • The quarrel
  • The great hair argument
  • Ramona's new pajamas
  • The telephone call.
Review by Booklist Review

Gr. 2-5. Ramona's antics are famous but her closeness to her mother suggests this book as a good family read-aloud for Mother's Day; also remember Eleanor Clymer's My Mother Is the Smartest Woman in the World and Lois Lowry's Anastasia books.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Horn Book Review

Five of Beverly Cleary's beloved books about irrepressible Ramona Quimby are updated with contemporary-looking black-and-white illustrations. (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Cleary's sociology lags behind her child psychology when she has Ramona's average-American family celebrating, after several months of her father's unemployment, his finding a job as supermarket cashier--in our experience, a near-minimum-wage spot usually filled by 18-year-olds and part-time housewives. Anyway, Mr. Quimby hates his job, especially on Wednesdays when new produce prices must be learned, and by the end he's decided to return to college and prepare for a better one (perhaps demanding less arithmetic?). Meanwhile, with Cleary's pipeline to childhood as faithful as ever, second-grader Ramona struggles for recognition, fuming when a guest remarks that a pesty four-year-old neighbor is ""Ramona all over again,"" bristling when her mother announces at the celebration party that she ""couldn't get along without"" older sister Beezus, and--when finally reassured by her loving family--viewing as ridiculous her own childish behavior of just the day before. Ramona's friends will be gratified to see her coming along, and even her lapses remain endearing. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Ramona and Her Mother Chapter One A Present for Willa Jean "When will they be here?" asked Ramona Quimby, who was supposed to be dusting the living room but instead was twirling around trying to make herself dizzy. She was much too excited to dust. "In half an hour," cried her mother from the kitchen, where she and Ramona's big sister Beatrice were opening and closing the refrigerator and oven doors, bumping into one another, forgetting where they had laid the pot holders, finding them and losing the measuring spoons. The Quimbys were about to entertain their neighbors at a New Year's Day brunch to celebrate Mr. Quimby's finding a job at the ShopRite Market after being out of work for several months. Ramona liked the word brunch, half breakfast and half lunch, and secretly felt the family had cheated because they had eaten their real breakfast earlier. They needed their strength to get ready for the party. "And Ramona," said Mrs. Quimby as she hastily laid out silverware on the dining-room table, "be nice to Willa jean, will you? Try to keep her out of everyone's hair." "Ramona, watch what you're doing!" said Mr. Quimby, who was laying a fire in the fireplace. "You almost knocked over the lamp." Ramona stopped twirling, staggered from dizziness, and made a face. Willa Jean, the messy little sister of her friend Howie Kemp was sticky, crumby, into everything, and always had to have her own way. "And behave yourself," said Mr. Quimby. "Willa Jean is company." Not my company, thought Ramona, who saw quite enough of Willa Jean when she played at Howie's house. "If Howie can't come to the brunch because he has a cold, why can't Willa Jean stay home with their grandmother, too?" Ramona asked. "I really don't know," said Ramona's mother. "That isn't the way things worked out. When the Kemps asked if they could bring Willa Jean, I could hardly say no." I could, thought Ramona, deciding that since Willa Jean, welcome or not, was coming to the brunch, she had better prepare to defend her possessions. She went to her room, where she swept her best crayons and drawing paper into a drawer and covered them with her pajamas. Her Christmas roller skates and favorite toys, battered stuffed animals that she rarely played with but still loved, went into the corner of her closet. There she hid them under her bathrobe and shut the door tight. But what could she find to amuse Willa Jean? If Willa Jean did not have something to play with, she would run tattling to the grown-ups. "Ramona hid her toys!" Ramona laid a stuffed snake on her bed, then doubted if even Willa Jean could love a stuffed snake. What Ramona needed was a present for Willa Jean, a present wrapped and tied with a good hard knot, a present that would take a long time to unwrap. Next to receiving presents, Ramona liked to give presents, and if she gave Willa Jean a present today, she would not only have the fun of giving, but of knowing the grown-ups would think, Isn't Ramona kind, isn't she generous to give Willa Jean a present? And so soon after Christmas, too. They would look at Ramona in her new red-and-green-plaid slacks and red turtleneck sweater and say, Ramona is one of Santa's helpers, a regular little Christmas elf. Ramona smiled at herself in the mirror and was pleased. Two of her most important teeth were only halfway in, which made her look like a jack-o-lantern, but she did not mind. If she had grown-up teeth, the rest of her face would catch up someday. Over her shoulder she saw reflected in the mirror a half-empty box of Kleenex on the floor beside her bed. Kleenex! That was the answer to a present for Willa Jean. She ran into the kitchen, where Beezus was beating muffin batter while her father fried sausages and her mother struggled to unmold a large gelatine salad onto a plate covered with lettuce. "A present is a good idea," agreed Mrs. Quimby when Ramona asked permission, "but a box of Kleenex doesn't seem like much of a present." She shook the mold. The salad refused to slide out. Her face was flushed and she glanced at the clock on the stove. Ramona was insistent. "Willa Jean would like it. I know she would." There was no time for explaining what Willa Jean was to do with the Kleenex. Mrs. Quimby was having her problems with the stubborn salad. "All right," she consented. "There's an extra box in the bathroom cupboard." The salad slid slowly from the mold and rested, green and shimmering, on the lettuce. By the time Ramona had wrapped a large box of Kleenex in leftover Christmas paper, the guests had begun to arrive. First came the Huggins and McCarthys and little Mrs. Swink in a bright-green pants suit. Umbrellas were leaned outside the front door, coats taken into the bedroom, and the usual grown-up remarks exchanged. "Happy New Year!" "Good to see you!" "We thought we would have to swim over, it's raining so hard." "Do you think this rain will ever stop?" "Who says it's raining? "This is good old Oregon sunshine!" Ramona felt she had heard that joke one million times, and she was only in the second grade. Ramona and Her Mother . Copyright © by Beverly Cleary. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Ramona and Her Mother by Beverly Cleary All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.