Original Publication Date: 1996
Ghostwriter? Yes, Suzanne Weyn
Synopsis:
A new client, Mrs. Cheplin, calls the BSC looking for someone to come every day after school to watch her two children and do some housework until she returns home (really, she wants more of a nanny than a sitter). Eager to earn money to take her boyfriend to a Broadway play and to prove she's serious at the BSC, Stacey jumps at the opportunity. However, it turns out that the housework is very time-consuming and increasingly difficult to complete in Stacey's allotted time. Furthermore, Stacey is only hired on a probationary basis, and Mrs. Cheplin seems determined to catch Stacey failing. AND Stacey's finding it difficult to keep up with her other commitments. After three week of running herself ragged, Stacey wises up and calls it quits. Fortunately, she's earned enough for the Broadway play.
Meanwhile, Valentine's Day is coming up. Logan wants to buy Mary Anne a ring (not diamond!) and has Kristy help him pick it out, to make sure Mary Anne will like it. Some of the kids see Kristy with Logan and think that Logan's cheating on Mary Anne and write mean little notes for them, but it gets sorted out and the kids atone.
Established or continued in this book:
The Girls (and Logan):
Claudia candy: none mentioned
Stacey wants to live in New York City when she grows up.
During softball season, Kristy sometimes gets "hate mail" from the Bashers if the Krushers win a lot of games.
Their Families:
Nothing new.
The Club (and clients):
I have to say, I really like how Kristy dealt with the Cheplin issue. When Stacey decided to quit, Kristy came up with the plan that until Mrs. Cheplin found a permanant replacement, the BSC would send someone over every day but only to watch the kids, not clean the house. I guess she is a good person to be the BSC president!
SMS: nothing new.
PSA Time:
Your sitting charges (or whoever) won't tell you who they just called? There's a handy little function on the phone called "redial."
Misc:
If you want a nanny, trying advertising at a local college rather than seeking out middle school kids. I got a nanny job through my college and I still keep in touch with the kids, now 10 and almost 9, even though I haven't sat for the family since 2007. Which reminds me, I need to pick up a gift card for the girl's birthday in September.
Another Valentine's Day.
The numbers:
Starting 8th grade: 8
Halloweens in 8th grade: 5 (plus one in seventh)
Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 2
Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate, not just reference): Christmas-2, Hanukkah-1, Kwanzaa-1
Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 3
Summers after 8th grade: 8
BSC Fights: 10
SMS Staff and Faculty: 55
Students (other than the BSC): 179; 114 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 6 7th graders, 43 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.
Clients: 33 families
Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 117
Crushes:
Stacey-11
Claudia-9
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0
7/2/12
Mary Anne and the Memory Garden (RS#93)
Original Publication Date: 1996
Ghostwriter? Yes, Jahnna Beecham and Malcolm Hillgartner
Synopsis:
Mary Anne's English class is divided into groups to study Shakespeare. Her group includes Gordon Brown, Amelia Freeman, and Barbara Hirsch. Theirs is one of the those rare group project where the work is actually split evenly and they all get along great.
Then, while Amelia and her family are on their way to dinner, their car is hit by a drunk driver. Amelia is killed instantly.
The rest of the book shows how different people deal with their grief. Kristy is spurred into action and organizes a chapter of SADD (Students Against Drunk Driving) for SMS. Mallory and Jessi are unsure how to act around Amelia's younger brother, who's in their grade. Stacey is similarly awkward around Amelia's friends. The death brings up painful memories for Claudia, who thinks of Mimi, and especially for Abby, whose father was killed by a drunk driver. Mary Anne returns to Dr. Reese, a therapist she's visited in the past (see the Chain Letter book). She, Gordon, and Barbara decide to dedicate their Shakespeare project to Amelia. Mary Anne's visits with her therapist also give her the idea of planting a memory garden at SMS for Amelia, which helps her come to terms with the loss. It's hard to summarize the rest of the plot, but I really do think this book does a good job showing the different ways people heal.
There's also a wholly unnecessary subplot of Dawn, the We ♥ Kids Club, and the California sitting charges cleaning up an abandoned lot and making it into a community garden. Frankly, I think it takes away from the seriousness of the main plot.
Established or continued in this book:
The Girls (and Logan):
Claudia candy: pretzels, home-made cookies
Dawn doesn't like kids using toy guns, but says nothing against toy swords.
If I were Abby, with all my allergies, I would never buy school lunch. I'm not sure if she follows Kosher, but if she does that might also make school lunches tricky.
Their Families:
Before Richard and Sharon married, Mary Anne was used to putting up the Christmas tree a week before Christmas and taking it down before the New Year. Now they put it up the day after Thanksgiving and leave it up into early January. I lean toward the latter myself: I like to get a tree at the start of Advent (four Sundays before Christmas-between November 27 and December 3) and leave it up until Epiphany (January 6). But like Richard, when I do put the ornaments away it's done very neatly: each one in a specific slot in the box. Otherwise I might leave one on the tree.
The Schafer-Spier house didn't have an adequate number of smoke detectors until Richard insisted.
Dawn visited for Christmas, but not Jeff.
Claudia's Aunt Peaches is almost six months pregnant with a healthy baby.
The Club (and clients): nothing new.
SMS:
Obviously, I'll be subtracting one from my count of SMS students.
There are a lot of people mentioned from previous books, and a lot of teachers in the right classrooms. Pete Black is still eighth grade president. Good continuity.
New-to-us students: sixth-grader Josh Freeman, eighth-graders Jeff Cummings and Barbara Hirsch (no mention if she's related to Irv Hirsch)
New-to-us SMS staff: Mr. Seitz, a guidance counselor.
PSA Time:
Who hasn't had a TDaP shot in the last years? Raise your hands. Okay, GO GET THE SHOT NOW. Any doctor office or drug store will give it to you. Tetanus is all over our soil and can cause horrible life-long issues, it would be nice to keep diphtheria at bay, and there are pertussis outbreaks happening in many areas of the country because people don't vaccinate. Babies can't be fully vaccinated against pertussis (also known as whooping cough) until they're six months old at the youngest. And if they contract it, they can die from it. They, and people whose medical issues prevent them from receiving vaccines, rely on the rest of us to be vaccinated so that we don't pass it on to them. Oh, and in case you haven't heard: the study that linked autism to vaccines was faked. There is no link. Even if there were, wouldn't you rather have a child with austism than a dead one? GO GET YOUR VACCINATIONS UP-TO-DATE.
And obviously, never drive impaired. It's just selfish and stupid to not ask for a ride when you're unsafe to drive.
Misc:
Hey, there's a grammar-nut bonus on page 48: "What if the dead student were Kristy?" If the situation you're posing is hypothetical, you use "were" as in "I wish I were taller." You're not, so you use were instead of was. Since Mary Anne uses were, it's a giveaway to any grammar-nut that Kristy is fine. Had she said was, then we'd still be wondering.
This book has some good points about what to say to grieving people: I'm sorry for your loss and I'll miss [the deceased] are suggestions. Abby and Claudia acknowledge that it may be awkward to say, but the person you say it to will appreciate it. Furthermore, you don't want to not say anything and give the impression that you don't care.
A good friend of mine died suddenly and unexpectedly in her early twenties. My other friends and I had a similar dilemma to Mary Anne's: do we own anything that's appropriate to wear to a funeral? I hadn't been to one in almost ten years, and only once for someone my age.
I like the idea of the memory garden. A little girl at my school (I went to a K-12 school) died of a ruptured appendix while camping. By the time she was airlifted to a hospital, it was too late. There's a little garden of flowers on the school grounds dedicated to her memory.
The numbers:
Starting 8th grade: 8
Halloweens in 8th grade: 5 (plus one in seventh)
Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 2
Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate, not just reference): Christmas-2, Hanukkah-1, Kwanzaa-1
Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 2
Summers after 8th grade: 8
BSC Fights: 10
SMS Staff and Faculty: 55
Students (other than the BSC): 179; 114 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 6 7th graders, 43 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.
Clients: 33 families
Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 117
Crushes:
Stacey-11
Claudia-9
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0
Ghostwriter? Yes, Jahnna Beecham and Malcolm Hillgartner
Synopsis:
Mary Anne's English class is divided into groups to study Shakespeare. Her group includes Gordon Brown, Amelia Freeman, and Barbara Hirsch. Theirs is one of the those rare group project where the work is actually split evenly and they all get along great.
Then, while Amelia and her family are on their way to dinner, their car is hit by a drunk driver. Amelia is killed instantly.
The rest of the book shows how different people deal with their grief. Kristy is spurred into action and organizes a chapter of SADD (Students Against Drunk Driving) for SMS. Mallory and Jessi are unsure how to act around Amelia's younger brother, who's in their grade. Stacey is similarly awkward around Amelia's friends. The death brings up painful memories for Claudia, who thinks of Mimi, and especially for Abby, whose father was killed by a drunk driver. Mary Anne returns to Dr. Reese, a therapist she's visited in the past (see the Chain Letter book). She, Gordon, and Barbara decide to dedicate their Shakespeare project to Amelia. Mary Anne's visits with her therapist also give her the idea of planting a memory garden at SMS for Amelia, which helps her come to terms with the loss. It's hard to summarize the rest of the plot, but I really do think this book does a good job showing the different ways people heal.
There's also a wholly unnecessary subplot of Dawn, the We ♥ Kids Club, and the California sitting charges cleaning up an abandoned lot and making it into a community garden. Frankly, I think it takes away from the seriousness of the main plot.
Established or continued in this book:
The Girls (and Logan):
Claudia candy: pretzels, home-made cookies
Dawn doesn't like kids using toy guns, but says nothing against toy swords.
If I were Abby, with all my allergies, I would never buy school lunch. I'm not sure if she follows Kosher, but if she does that might also make school lunches tricky.
Their Families:
Before Richard and Sharon married, Mary Anne was used to putting up the Christmas tree a week before Christmas and taking it down before the New Year. Now they put it up the day after Thanksgiving and leave it up into early January. I lean toward the latter myself: I like to get a tree at the start of Advent (four Sundays before Christmas-between November 27 and December 3) and leave it up until Epiphany (January 6). But like Richard, when I do put the ornaments away it's done very neatly: each one in a specific slot in the box. Otherwise I might leave one on the tree.
The Schafer-Spier house didn't have an adequate number of smoke detectors until Richard insisted.
Dawn visited for Christmas, but not Jeff.
Claudia's Aunt Peaches is almost six months pregnant with a healthy baby.
The Club (and clients): nothing new.
SMS:
Obviously, I'll be subtracting one from my count of SMS students.
There are a lot of people mentioned from previous books, and a lot of teachers in the right classrooms. Pete Black is still eighth grade president. Good continuity.
New-to-us students: sixth-grader Josh Freeman, eighth-graders Jeff Cummings and Barbara Hirsch (no mention if she's related to Irv Hirsch)
New-to-us SMS staff: Mr. Seitz, a guidance counselor.
PSA Time:
Who hasn't had a TDaP shot in the last years? Raise your hands. Okay, GO GET THE SHOT NOW. Any doctor office or drug store will give it to you. Tetanus is all over our soil and can cause horrible life-long issues, it would be nice to keep diphtheria at bay, and there are pertussis outbreaks happening in many areas of the country because people don't vaccinate. Babies can't be fully vaccinated against pertussis (also known as whooping cough) until they're six months old at the youngest. And if they contract it, they can die from it. They, and people whose medical issues prevent them from receiving vaccines, rely on the rest of us to be vaccinated so that we don't pass it on to them. Oh, and in case you haven't heard: the study that linked autism to vaccines was faked. There is no link. Even if there were, wouldn't you rather have a child with austism than a dead one? GO GET YOUR VACCINATIONS UP-TO-DATE.
And obviously, never drive impaired. It's just selfish and stupid to not ask for a ride when you're unsafe to drive.
Misc:
Hey, there's a grammar-nut bonus on page 48: "What if the dead student were Kristy?" If the situation you're posing is hypothetical, you use "were" as in "I wish I were taller." You're not, so you use were instead of was. Since Mary Anne uses were, it's a giveaway to any grammar-nut that Kristy is fine. Had she said was, then we'd still be wondering.
This book has some good points about what to say to grieving people: I'm sorry for your loss and I'll miss [the deceased] are suggestions. Abby and Claudia acknowledge that it may be awkward to say, but the person you say it to will appreciate it. Furthermore, you don't want to not say anything and give the impression that you don't care.
A good friend of mine died suddenly and unexpectedly in her early twenties. My other friends and I had a similar dilemma to Mary Anne's: do we own anything that's appropriate to wear to a funeral? I hadn't been to one in almost ten years, and only once for someone my age.
I like the idea of the memory garden. A little girl at my school (I went to a K-12 school) died of a ruptured appendix while camping. By the time she was airlifted to a hospital, it was too late. There's a little garden of flowers on the school grounds dedicated to her memory.
The numbers:
Starting 8th grade: 8
Halloweens in 8th grade: 5 (plus one in seventh)
Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 2
Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate, not just reference): Christmas-2, Hanukkah-1, Kwanzaa-1
Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 2
Summers after 8th grade: 8
BSC Fights: 10
SMS Staff and Faculty: 55
Students (other than the BSC): 179; 114 8th graders (not including Amelia Freeman, who is deceased), 6 7th graders, 43 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.
Clients: 33 families
Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 117
Crushes:
Stacey-11
Claudia-9
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0
Mallory's Christmas Wish (RS#92)
Original Publication Date: 1995
Ghostwriter? Yes, Peter Lerangis
Synopsis:
In response the commercial insanity that Christmas brings, Mallory proposes that her family have a low-key Christmas with as much things homemade as possible, including the gifts. Sounds pretty nice. Nice enough that when Vanessa enters the Pikes' holiday plans in a contest, they win the privilege of having their Christmas season filmed for broadcast next year. The BSC also helps the retirement home put on a holiday boutique, selling hand-made gifts.
Unfortunately (and predictably) the camera crew gets in the way of everything Mallory and her family are doing, boutique included. They decide together that the substantial check they'd receive for sticking it out isn't worth it, and cancel. And give back the check for ten grand. What kills me though, is that they wait until Christmas Eve. They only had about 30 hours to go!
Established or continued in this book:
The Girls (and Logan):
Claudia candy: Heath bars behind an easel, chocolate coins in her pants pocket (melted, as these are the pants she's wearing), Fritos
Kristy's still trying to get the BSC on TV.
Their Families:
The Pikes' finances haven't quite recovered from the time that Mallory's dad was laid off. Apparently they had to dip into their savings more than was comfortable.
Several of the Pikes know how to knit, although from the description of the hat Mr. Pike gets for Christmas, they don't know how to knit in the round. Should you ever want to knit things in tubes, like hats, sweaters, socks, and so on, I highly recommend learning to knit in the round, either with circular needles or double-pointed needles.
The Club (and clients):
The Robert issue is still a bit of a tense one.
SMS: nothing new.
PSA Time: nothing stood out.
Misc:
Right now I have only one child. But reading about how Mallory stresses over picking gifts for all her siblings, I promise that if I end up having nearly a complete baseball team, the kids will draw names and each give to just one sibling.
Sorry for the lack of posts lately. I'm working on some big sewing and knitting projects. But I'm close to done, AND I'm getting my wisdom teeth removed later this summer, so I should able to put up a couple posts during my recovery.
The numbers:
Starting 8th grade: 8
Halloweens in 8th grade: 5 (plus one in seventh)
Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 2
Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate, not just reference): Christmas-2, Hanukkah-1, Kwanzaa-1
Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 2
Summers after 8th grade: 8
BSC Fights: 10
SMS Staff and Faculty: 54
Students (other than the BSC): 177; 113 8th graders, 6 7th graders, 42 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.
Clients: 33 families
Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 117
Crushes:
Stacey-11
Claudia-9
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0
Ghostwriter? Yes, Peter Lerangis
Synopsis:
In response the commercial insanity that Christmas brings, Mallory proposes that her family have a low-key Christmas with as much things homemade as possible, including the gifts. Sounds pretty nice. Nice enough that when Vanessa enters the Pikes' holiday plans in a contest, they win the privilege of having their Christmas season filmed for broadcast next year. The BSC also helps the retirement home put on a holiday boutique, selling hand-made gifts.
Unfortunately (and predictably) the camera crew gets in the way of everything Mallory and her family are doing, boutique included. They decide together that the substantial check they'd receive for sticking it out isn't worth it, and cancel. And give back the check for ten grand. What kills me though, is that they wait until Christmas Eve. They only had about 30 hours to go!
Established or continued in this book:
The Girls (and Logan):
Claudia candy: Heath bars behind an easel, chocolate coins in her pants pocket (melted, as these are the pants she's wearing), Fritos
Kristy's still trying to get the BSC on TV.
Their Families:
The Pikes' finances haven't quite recovered from the time that Mallory's dad was laid off. Apparently they had to dip into their savings more than was comfortable.
Several of the Pikes know how to knit, although from the description of the hat Mr. Pike gets for Christmas, they don't know how to knit in the round. Should you ever want to knit things in tubes, like hats, sweaters, socks, and so on, I highly recommend learning to knit in the round, either with circular needles or double-pointed needles.
The Club (and clients):
The Robert issue is still a bit of a tense one.
SMS: nothing new.
PSA Time: nothing stood out.
Misc:
Right now I have only one child. But reading about how Mallory stresses over picking gifts for all her siblings, I promise that if I end up having nearly a complete baseball team, the kids will draw names and each give to just one sibling.
Sorry for the lack of posts lately. I'm working on some big sewing and knitting projects. But I'm close to done, AND I'm getting my wisdom teeth removed later this summer, so I should able to put up a couple posts during my recovery.
The numbers:
Starting 8th grade: 8
Halloweens in 8th grade: 5 (plus one in seventh)
Thanksgivings in 8th grade: 2
Winter holidays in 8th grade (that BSC members celebrate, not just reference): Christmas-2, Hanukkah-1, Kwanzaa-1
Valentine's Days in 8th grade: 2
Summers after 8th grade: 8
BSC Fights: 10
SMS Staff and Faculty: 54
Students (other than the BSC): 177; 113 8th graders, 6 7th graders, 42 6th graders, 15 unspecified. Baby-sitters' Winter Vacation tells us that SMS has about 380 students.
Clients: 33 families
Types of candy in Claudia’s room: 117
Crushes:
Stacey-11
Claudia-9
Dawn-5
Jessi-3
Mallory-2
Mary Anne-2
Kristy-1
Abby-0
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