1
The Weirdest Thing in the History of the World
My name is A.J. and I hate school.
It was Monday morning, and all the girls were playing with these fake makeup kits that they got at some birthday party over the weekend. I thought I was gonna throw up.
âPicture Day is in three weeks,â said my teacher, Miss Daisy, as she handed us each a piece of paper. âA photographer is going to come and take pictures of every student in school. So make sure your parents fill out this form if they want to order pictures.â
âI love getting my picture taken!â said this annoying girl with curly brown hair named Andrea Young. (The girlâs name is Andrea Young, that is. Not her hair. Hair doesnât have a name.)
âMe too,â said this crybaby girl named Emily, who always agrees with anything Andrea says.
âThey should take your pictures,â Isuggested, âand burn them.â
My friends Ryan and Michael laughed. Emily looked like she was going to cry.
âIt just so happens that Emily and I are very photogenic,â Andrea told us.
âWow!â I said. âYou can read minds?â
ââPhotogenicâ means you look good in pictures, dumbhead.â
âThatâs good,â I said, âbecause youâre ugly in real life.â
âOh, snap!â said Michael.
âDo you know where they should put your picture, Arlo?â asked Andrea.
âWhere?â I asked. I hate when she calls me by my real name.
âIn the post office,â she said, âwith allthose pictures of criminals and bank robbers and murderers.â
âOh, snap!â said Ryan.
âSo is your face,â I told Andrea. Any time somebody says something mean to you, always say, âSo is your face.â Even if it doesnât make any sense. Thatâs the first rule of being a kid.
âEnough chitchat,â said Miss Daisy. âWe have library now with Mrs. Roopy.â
âYay!â said all the girls.
âBoo!â said all the boys.
Bummer in the summer! Libraries are boring. Do you know why? Because theyâre filled with books! And thereâs nothing more boring than a book. Why are you even reading this one?
Library would be even more boring if we didnât have a librarian like Mrs. Roopy. Sheâs always dressed up like somebody else, whether itâs Little Bo Peep or Johnny Appleseed. Mrs. Roopy is loopy.
When we got to the library, we saw Mrs. Roopy dressed up like a giant bird, with lots of feathers and a beak.
âWhy are you dressed up like a bird, Mrs. Roopy?â asked Neil, who we call the nude kid even though he wears clothes.
âSquawk! Squawk! Squawk!â shouted Mrs. Roopy as she flapped her wings. âWhoâs Roopy? My name is Rappy. Iâm a peregrine falcon, the main character in The Fearless Falcon . * Itâs a wonderful book written and illustrated by the famous childrenâs book author Miss Suki Kabuki.â
Mrs. Roopy read us a few chapters of the book. Itâs about this falcon that sees its reflection in a window and thinks itâs an enemy. So it attacks its own reflectionby flying right into the glass. Bam!
Man, was that bird dumb. **
âThatâs the saddest story I ever heard!â Emily said, with tears in her eyes. That girl will cry over any old thing.
After library we went to the art room. Ms. Hannah, our art teacher, was waiting for us.
âToday weâre going to draw pictures of Rappy, the peregrine falcon in The Fearless Falcon ,â said Ms. Hannah. âIt was written and illustrated by the famous childrenâs book author Miss Suki Kabuki.â
Hmm, that was strange. Why were wedoing something with the same book in both library and art?
After we finished drawing our pictures and cleaning up the art room, it was time to go to music with Mr. Loring.
âToday weâre going to sing a song about a falcon named Rappy,â said Mr. Loring.
Grace Draven
Judith Tamalynn
Noreen Ayres
Katie Mac, Kathryn McNeill Crane
Donald E. Westlake
Lisa Oliver
Sharon Green
Marcia Dickson
Marcos Chicot
Elizabeth McCoy