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Books in Alice series

  • All but Alice

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Aladdin, Aug. 5, 2008)
    There are, Alice decides, 272 horrible things left to happen to her in her life, based on the number of really horrible things that have happened already. She figures that out after the disaster of the talent show. And she realizes that there is no way to fend them off. But, she reasons, if you don't have a mother, maybe a sister would help. Maybe lots of sisters, a worldwide sisterhood. Be like everyone else, do what others do, and best of all, be part of the "in" group. Then you have sympathy and protection. It is with this in mind that Alice joins the All-Stars Fan Club and the earring club and becomes one of the Famous Eight. It helps, even when it's a bit boring. On the whole, Alice thinks, she is enjoying seventh grade more than she had ever expected. Yet Sisterhood, even Famous Eighthood, does not take care of all of her problems or answer all of her questions about life and love. Can she be Sisters with all three girls who want to be her brother Lester's girlfriends? How does she treat the fact that her father is dating her teacher, Miss Summers? How do you accept a box of valentine candy from a boy? In fact, how do boys fit into Universal Sisterhood -- or is there a Universal Humanhood? How far do you go when being part of the crowd means doing something you don't want to do? As in the earlier Alice books, Alice copes with life in her own way, and her answers to her endless problems are often funny and surprisingly right.
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  • Alice in Wonderland

    Lewis Carroll, John Tenniel

    Hardcover (The Franklin Library, Aug. 16, 1980)
    Alice in Wonderland
    Q
  • Alice in April

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Aladdin, Sept. 9, 2008)
    April is the cruelest month," said the poet, and Alice McKinley would agree. April is a hard month. Not that she doesn't have some fun. It does begin with a wonderful April Fool's Day joke on her brother, Lester. But it also begins with Aunt Sally reminding her that she will soon be thirteen (as if anyone could forget something so important) and then she will be Woman of the House, since her mother is long dead. It is an awesome responsibility. All her life she had assumed that her father and Lester were there to take care of her; now she is going to have to take care of them. Taking care of Lester, alone, could be a full-time job, she thinks. Being Woman of the House has all sorts of drawbacks. For example: It never occurred to her that when she suggested her father and Lester ought to have physical checkups, her father would insist that she have one too. How could you let a doctor see you naked?Of course, Alice is still in school. And there she faces another crisis. She might be Woman of the House at home, but in school she needs a different kind of name, one given by a table full of boys in the cafeteria Depending on their figures, girls are being given state names -- some states have mountains and others do not. Will flat, flat Delaware or Louisiana be her fate? Alice lives in fear that it might be, though even worse is the fear that she might not get a name at all.The month ends with a dinner party for her father's birthday (part of being Woman of the House) that has more downs than ups -- and with a totally unexpected event that makes Alice and everyone she knows grow up a little and wonder a little deeper about life and the future. April is a hard month, but reading about Alice in April is to find that most tragedies (though not all) pass and tears can turn to laughter and delight.
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  • Reluctantly Alice

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, June 1, 2000)
    Alice comes home on the first day of junior high with a list of seven things about seventh grade that stink. The one good thing she can think of (besides getting out at 2:30 instead of 3:00) is that she's friends with everybody -- and that gives her the idea of setting a goal to make it through the entire school year with everyone liking her.That turns out to be easier said than done, when Alice gets on the wrong side of the school bully, Denise "Mack-Truck" Whitlock. But Alice's problems with Denise pale before the romantic entanglements of her father and her older brother, Lester. And when Alice decides to help them out, life gets even more complicated.
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  • Outrageously Alice

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Aladdin, May 5, 2009)
    A M!X makeover for another chapter in the life of Alice McKinley, every tween’s BFF!Phyllis Reynolds Naylor’s beloved Alice series, hailed by Booklist as “a road-map for a girl growing up today,” is a perfect match for the new Aladdin M!X program.In Outrageously Alice, Alice feels as if everyone she knows is going crazy, while her own life seems so ordinary. But Alice’s efforts to spark up her life always end up more embarrassing than outrageous. Is she destined to be the same old boring Alice forever?
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  • AGONY OF ALICE

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Yearling, April 1, 1988)
    Disappointed when she's assigned to the homely Mrs. Plotkin's class, Alice McKinley slowly discovers that it's what people are made of inside that really counts.
    Y
  • Reluctantly Alice

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-08-11, Aug. 11, 2008)
    None
    Z
  • Alice, Woman of the House

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing, )
    None
    W
  • Alice in April

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Paperback (Aladdin, Sept. 1, 2002)
    While trying to survive seventh grade, Alice discovers that turning thirteen will make her the Woman of the House at home, so she starts a campaign to get more appreciated for taking care of her father and older brother. An ALA Notable Children's Book. Reader's Guide available. Reprint.
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  • Lovingly Alice

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, Paul Christensen

    Library Binding
    None
  • Alice in Lace

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor, Kam Mak

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-08-11, Aug. 11, 2008)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. With his friend as campaign manager and his former babysitter as running mate, twelve-year-old Judson Moon sets out to become president of the United States.
    V
  • Alice the Brave

    Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

    Library Binding (Paw Prints 2008-05-16, May 16, 2008)
    None
    Z