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Books published by publisher Overlook Juvenile

  • Freddy Goes Camping

    Walter R. Brooks, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Oct. 29, 2001)
    In Freddy Goes Camping, Mr. Camphor's aunts, Minerva and Elmira, were staying with him, much to his disgust. "There's two kinds of aunts," he said. "There's the regular kind, and then there's the other kind. Mine are the other kind." He enlists Freddy's aid in an attempt to rid his house of the ladies, with the result that Freddy and his chums become entangled with some extremely unfriendly ghosts in an abandoned summer hotel. Freddy camps out, goes canoeing, and tosses flapjacks like a pro when he's not mixing it up with the eerie Mr. Eha.
    R
  • Freddy The Detective

    Walter R. Brooks

    Paperback (Overlook Juvenile, Nov. 11, 2010)
    The delightful detective story about the beloved animal characters on Mr. Bean's farm, whose adventures have entertained so many children. Freddy the pig, stimulated by reading Sherlock Holmes, sets up in a business as a detective.
    V
  • Let's Have a Bite!: A Banquet of Beastly Rhymes

    Robert Forbes, Ronald Searle

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Sept. 16, 2010)
    If you haven't heard, the whole animal kingdom is roaring its approval for Let's Have A Bite!, this collection of delectable rhymes about animals naughty and nice. With thirty-three delicious poems by Robert Forbes and zany illustrations of each featured creature (look out for a secret critter peeping out from each page) by a master cartoonist Ronald Searle, these wildly playful rhymes and charmingly intricate illustrations will keep readers seven to seventy coming back again and again.
  • Jimmy Takes Vanishing Lessons

    Walter R. Brooks

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, May 10, 2007)
    None
    K
  • Well I Never!

    Heather Fyles, Tony Ross

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Feb. 13, 1990)
    Polly tells her mother that she cannot get dressed for school because a multitude of monsters, vampires, and other scary creatures are trying on her clothes
    J
  • BEASTLY FEASTS!

    Robert Forbes

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Sept. 6, 2007)
    If you haven't heard, the whole animal kingdom is roaring its approval for BEASTLY FEASTS!, this collection of delectable rhymes about animals naughty and nice. With over forty delicious poems by Robert Forbes and zany illustrations of each featured creature (and a secret critter peeping out from each page) from master cartoonist Robert Searle, these wildly playful rhymes and charmingly intricate illustrations will keep readers seven to seventy coming back to the table again and again. The Gnus are out! So are the dachshunds, squirrels, and giraffes! Open up BEASTLY FEASTS! for a menagerie of poems that are as good for a scare as they are for a laugh! "He spends a lot of time looking out the window," read one of Robert Forbes's seventh grade report cards. Even so, he managed to graduate from school and university, and joined the family business in 1975 where he now serves as Vice President as well as president of the lifestyle magazine ForbesLife. After twenty-five years in New York City and six in London, he and his wife currently reside in Florida. He enjoys his work, winemaking with his wife on their property in southern France, and writing poetry, and he still cherishes time spent looking out windows.
    O
  • Hansel and Gretel

    Tony Ross

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, May 1, 1994)
    A retelling of the well-known tale in which two children are left in the woods but find their way home despite an encounter with a wicked witch.
    K
  • The Wit and Wisdom of Freddy

    Walter R. Brooks

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Oct. 1, 1999)
    None
    V
  • Freddy the Magician

    Walter R. Brooks, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Sept. 11, 2002)
    In Freddy the Magician, Freddy, who has won so many admirers in his roles of detective, pied piper, editor, general advisor to the animals on the Bean Farm, and-always-poet, will fascinate his readers in his role of magician. With the help of Jinx, the cat, and Jinx's sister, Minx, as well as many other well-known animals on the Bean Farm, Freddy pulls some wonderful tricks, not the least of which is outwitting the fraudulent magician who comes to entertain the unsuspecting inhabitants of the nearby town of Centerboro.
    W
  • Freddy and Simon the Dictator

    Walter R. Brooks

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, June 2, 2003)
    Warnings had been printed in the Bean Home News and the Centerboro Guardian, but nobody paid much attention to them. An animal revolt? "Preposterous!" said the Beans and all the other humans. But it's true-and the outrages begin: cars are stopped and overturned all over the county, farmers starting out to do their morning chores are driven back into the house, and the cows refuse to come in at milking time. In Centerboro, cats are insolent to their mistresses and horses go out of their way to insult people on the street. Simon the rat is determined to turn the farm into a dictatorship and Mr. Camphor has been persuaded (much against his better judgment) to run for governor of New York State. Herb Garble shows up, Jinx defects to the enemy (or does he?), and Freddy-that inimitable pig!-goes to work as the political boss of Otesaraga County. Freddy and Simon the Dictator is classic Brooks, in which the master of barnyard hilarity has a lot of fun satirizing politics and-especially-politicians. Illustrated by Kurt Wiese.
    U
  • Freddy's Cousin Weedly

    Walter R. Brooks, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, Sept. 11, 2002)
    Adults, children, and reviewers have embraced the stouthearted Freddy the Pig since he and his Bean Farm chums first appeared in 1927. The Overlook reissues of this classic series-with almost 150,000 hardcover copies sold-have brought these timeless adventures to a whole new generation eager for a good time and a good laugh. As a recent USA Today feature about the Freddy phenomenon noted, the Freddy books brilliantly illustrate the cardinal virtues: "fair play and a good sense of humor." In Freddy's Cousin Weedly, the irrepressible Freddy's cousin comes to Bean Farm, and what a timid soul he turns out to be. Jinx, the cat, decides to take charge of him, so as to help him get over his shyness and poor Weedly doesn't know what exciting events are about to occur. Does Weedly change? And what happens when Mr. and Mrs. Snedeker come to visit? Do they get what they came for?
  • Freddy and the Men from Mars

    Walter R. Brooks, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (Overlook Juvenile, May 22, 2002)
    In Freddy and the Men From Mars, the trouble starts when a newspaper reports that six little creatures, believed to be the only Martians ever to have visited Earth, have been captured single-handedly by Mr. Herbert Garble. This news wouldn't have disturbed Freddy and the other barn animals had not the paper further stated that their friend Mr. Boomschmidt had invited Mr. G. and his men from Mars to join Boomschmidt's Stupendous and Unexcelled Circus. Freddy, ever ready to maintain his reputation as a detective, immediately suspects a hoax, and quickly sets out to expose it. How he manages to do so, with the help of Jinx, the Horrible Ten, and several other familiar allies-and a band of real Martians who turn up just in the nick of time-makes for one of the most hilarious of all the Freddy tales, a story that is simply out of this world! "Freddy is simply one of the greatest characters in children's literature!" (School Library Journal)
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