
No More Nice,
No More Nasty
2-in-1 Flip Book
Ages: 7-11
Children's Choice lists in 12 states
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
ISBN (Paperback joint edition No More Nice/No More Nasty) 0-374-455112
ISBN (No More Nasty hardcover) 0-374-35529-0
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No More Nice
What's it about? Simon is a well-mannered, shy 11-year-old who is too good for his own good. But life becomes infinitely more interesting for him when he visits his Great Aunt Mattie and Great Uncle Philbert's farm. Here the rules all seem to be turned upside down - even the animals are different. The parrot is a terrible loudmouth, and the llamas are named Mr. Rude, Mr. Crude, and Mr. Ugly. Good manners now seems to mean thinking for yourself, saying what you think, interrupting — and burping when you feel like it. It makes for an interesting vacation — but what will happen when Simon returns home?
Where did the idea come from? Aunt Mattie is based on my own Great Aunt Alice, an eccentric Bostonian who impressed me as a small child with her wild white hair and off-beat ways. Her sister, another one of my great aunts, is the star of the classic children's book The Peterkin Papers (she's the model for the Wise Lady from Philadelphia). That was one of my favorite books as a child.
Simon, a polite and correct child, reminds me of my own son - and of myself at that age. We were both too good for our own good, and I wish I had had someone like Aunt Mattie who might have helped me realize that it's okay sometimes to color outside the lines.
What some of the reviewers have said: "Sharp characterizations and crack dialogue will have readers laughing out loud." – Kirkus "No More Nice, illustrated with delightful pen-and-ink drawings by Cat Bowman Smith, tells a humorous story with a warm message." - Booklist
Classroom Activities to accompany No More Nice.
No More Nasty
What's it about? In the further adventures of Simon and his eccentric relatives, Simon is dismayed when his beloved, but decidedly loopy, great aunt Matilda arrives at school one day as the new substitute teacher for his class, a group of assorted misfits skilled at one thing only: terrorizing substitute teachers. The way Matilda deals with the class, and Simon deals with his great aunt, plays out as the class struggles to put together a typically (for Aunt Matilda) unorthodox - and outrageous - Science Fair project.
Where did the idea come from? Aunt Mattie, whom we first met in No More Nice, is based on my own Great Aunt Alice, an eccentric Bostonian who impressed me as a small child with her wild white hair and offbeat ways. Her sister, another one of my great aunts, is the star of the classic children's book The Peterkin Papers (she's the model for the Wise Lady from Philadelphia). That was one of my favorite books as a child.
Simon, a polite and correct child, reminds me of my own son - and of myself at that age. We were both too good for our own good, and I wish I had had someone like Aunt Mattie who might have helped me realize that it's okay sometimes to color outside the lines.
What some reviewers have said:
"Children will simply giggle through MacDonald's hysterical novel." - Maine Sunday Telegram
"This is a fast read for children who want something funny and light." - Kirkus
"The hero and his classmates are in for a surprise as their classroom is turned upside down, and [Aunt Matilda's] cockeyed view makes learning fun." - Publishers Weekly
"...readers will enjoy it as a read-aloud or read-alone." - School Library Journal
"MacDonald's tall-tale-like story will keep kids laughing and reading right to the satisfying ending." - Booklist
Classroom Activities to accompany No More Nasty.