Caramel reviews Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger by Louis Sachar

Caramel has already reviewed Sideways Stories from Wayside School and Wayside School Is Falling Down, both by Louis Sachar. Today he reviews the third book in the series, Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger, first published in 1996. As usual, Sprinkles is taking notes and asking followup questions.

Caramel reviews Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger by Louis Sachar.
Caramel reviews Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger by Louis Sachar.

Sprinkles: Caramel, you have already introduced us to Wayside School in your review of Sideways Stories from Wayside School. And then you told us that the second book, Wayside School Is Falling Down, kind of ended on a cliffhanger.

Caramel: Well, the school was overrun by cows and so everyone had to leave the building.

S: Yes, I remember. So does this book pick up where the last one left us?

C: Yes, the first chapter is about how Louis cleaned up the mess and made it safe for students and teachers to come back. And then all kinds of weird stuff happen again.

S: Tell us about some of them.

C: Miss Zarves from the nineteenth story finds out that there is still a cow in her classroom.

S: Wait, I am still not sure I understand this nineteenth story because it does not exist and yet it does?

C: You think I understand it? I don’t either. but in the second book there was a girl named Alison who found her way to Miss Zarves’ classroom and in this book, too, there is a chapter for the same classroom.

S: An d I bet it is the nineteenth chapter, right?

C: Yes, of course!

S: Of course. So what else happens?

C: So Mrs. Jewls is pregnant, and so she goes on maternity leave, and so the kids on the thirtieth floor have substitute teachers. And all of them are evil and horrible.

S: Tell me more.

C: the first one is Mrs. Gorf’s son.

S: I remember Mrs. Gorf. That is the one who turned children into apples, right?

C: Right. So Mr. Gorf steals children’s voices. And he is pretty terrible.

S: Sounds scary.

C: I guess it makes the class quiet.

S: Well, I guess.

C: Anyways, then there is Miss Drazil and she is not too bad but Louis dislikes her, because she was his teacher, and she hated him, and she makes him miserable. But in the end it seems like she is actually not that bad and Louis was the one who made her miserable.

S: I see.

C: Then there is a third teacher, Miss Nogard. And she can hear people’s thoughts and she uses them against the children, making them all doubt themselves and be unhappy.

S: She sounds horrible.

C: She is. Until the end. At the end she listens to a baby’s thoughts, and apparently a baby’s thoughts are all full of love, so Miss Nogard also fills up with love.

S: I guess that is good.

C: Yes. And in the end Mrs. Jewls comes back, too. The baby is hers.

S: I see.

Caramel is reading Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger by Louis Sachar.
Caramel is reading Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger by Louis Sachar.

S: So did you notice that the three substitute teachers’ names were animal names spelled backwards? Gorf is frog, Drazil is lizard, and Nogard is Dragon.

C: Yes.I did not think of Gorf in the earlier books. But I began to suspect something when I read about Drazil, it sounded like Brazil but not quite. And then Nogard is DRAGON backwards. And I know that of course.

S: Of course. So tell me. Did you enjoy this book too? I did see that once you began reading it, you could not drop it until you finished.

C: It is a quick and very fun read.

S: That is great Caramel. Did you know there is a fourth book, published only a couple years ago?

C: Yep. And I want to read that next.

S: I am sure that can be arranged.

C: Great! Make it so. Please.

S: I can see you channeling your inner Jean-Luc Picard there. Okay, we will see. Let us wrap up this review then. What would you like to tell our readers?

C: Stay tuned for more book bunny reviews!

Caramel laughed his way through Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger, the third Wayside School book by Louis Sachar, and is looking forward to other new reads.
Caramel laughed his way through Wayside School Gets A Little Stranger, the third Wayside School book by Louis Sachar, and is looking forward to other new reads.

Caramel reviews Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar

A couple weeks ago, Caramel reviewed Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar. Today he is talking about the second book of the Wayside School books, Wayside School Is Falling Down, first published in 1989. As usual, Sprinkles is taking notes and asking questions.

Caramel reviews Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar.
Caramel reviews Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar.

Sprinkles: So Caramel, you told us a bit about the first book about Wayside School a couple weeks ago. What happens in this second book?

Caramel: Well, there are about thirty more stories about this weird school, which is built sideways, so is thirty stories tall and in each story there is only one classroom.

S: Yes, I remember that. And the first book had thirty chapters, too, each about a specific character, and they all were characters from the classroom on the thirtieth floor.

C: Well, the characters in this book are the same people. And there are really thirty chapters, but three of them are labeled 19 and the three Erics are all together in the chapter numbered 20, 21, and 22.

S: That’s weird. Tell me more about those three chapters labeled 19.

C: They are about this girl named Allison and she gets assigned to the nineteenth floor and Miss Zarves’ class.

S: Wait, but you told me neither of those things exist.

C: Yep.

S: So how is that supposed to happen?

C: I don’t know. But in these chapters there is a Miss Zarves, and some other students of hers. Allison somehow falls into this magical nineteenth story, and then falls back out of it.

S: Maybe it is a dream?

C: Maybe, but it is not really clear.

Caramel is reading Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar.
Caramel is reading Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar.

S: So are the stories just as wacky as they were in the first one?

C: Yes, if not more.

S: So this was funnier?

C: Yes.

S: Isn’t it nice when a sequel is even better than the original?

C: Yep.

S: Okay, so if you were to use three words to describe this book, would “wacky” be one of them?

C: Yes.

S: What about the other two words?

C: “School” because it is about a school and the students and the teachers there. And maybe “confusing” because if a building has thirty stories but the nineteenth is missing, then isn’t the building really twenty-nine stories?

S: I see what you mean. But I guess it is the same with buildings that do not have their thirteenth floors. Anyways, so we can describe this book with the three-word phrase “wacky confusing school”, right?

C: Right.

S: This edition of the book comes with some illustrations. What do you think of them?

C: I’d say they are just as wacky as the book.

S: Agreed. So apparently the author has written a couple other Wayside School books. Do you think you will read those, too?

C: Yep. I want to. Because these are really funny. But also because this book ends kind of in the air. The school is invaded by cows so everybody has to move out. So I want to know if they will get back and what other wacky things they will do next.

S: Okay, let us aim for that then. This might be a good place to wrap up this review. What do you want to tell our readers?

C: Stay tuned for more book bunny reviews!

Caramel enjoyed reading Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar and is ready to move on to the next book in the series.
Caramel enjoyed reading Wayside School Is Falling Down by Louis Sachar and is ready to move on to the next book in the series.

Caramel reviews Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar

Today Caramel reviews Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar. The first of several Wayside School books written by Sachar, this book was published originally in 1978. As usual, Sprinkles is asking questions and taking notes.

Caramel reviews Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar.
Caramel reviews Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar.

Sprinkles: So Caramel, I heard a lot about these Wayside School books, but I have not read them myself. Can you tell me a bit about what they are all about?

Caramel: Well, at this point I only read this first book. So I can only talk about that.

S: That’s okay. Tell me about this book. What is it about?

C: It’s about these kids in this place called Wayside School. It is a weird school, and all the students and teachers are also weird, and very strange and interesting things keep happening.

S: How is the school weird?

C: First of all, it is thirty stories high, like a skyscraper. Because they built it sideways. It was supposed to be one story high and with thirty classrooms, but the builder messed up and put all classrooms on their own floors. I think it is a waste of space.

S: Hmm, I think on the contrary it saves space, it takes only the area of one classroom for the whole school. No?

C: I guess. Anyways the students are weird and the teachers, too, and there are some dead rats that seem to be alive.

S: Oh yes, I think I heard about a student made up of a rat or something like that?

C: Well, it was one dead rat, but I am not going to give away too much.

S: Okay, I can see that could be a spoiler. So what do you mean by weird when you say teachers and students are weird?

C: Some of the teachers have a strange way to discipline students. There is one who turns students into an apple when she is angry with them, and then she eats them!

S: What? That sounds pretty terrible and irreversible!

C: Yeah. I told you they are weird.

S: But wait, then there is magic in this book?

C: Not sure. It is not described as magic, but just that these people behave this way. Really weird.

S: I see. So it is kind of absurd then.

C: I think you could say that.

S: But is it also funny?

C: Yes. I think the stories are pretty hilarious. Except when they are kind of scary because I would not want to be eaten as an apple by my teacher. But on the bright side, she gets eaten too.

S: Wait, don’t tell me everything!

C: But I want to!

S: Alright, why don’t you tell me something else instead? Tell me more about the book.

C: There are thirty chapters, one for each story of the Wayside School. But I think everything is happening on the 30th floor actually. And also there is no nineteenth floor. In fact that is the nineteenth story. It is about Miss Zarves who is supposed to be the teacher of the classroom on the nineteenth floor, but since there is no floor, there is no classroom, and so there is no Miss Zarves.

S: That almost sounds like a logic riddle!

C: Kind of.

S: But it is also kind of like how a lot of building in the United States don’t have a thirteenth floor.

C: Wait, I did not know that. Why is that?

S: A lot of people think 13 is an unlucky number, so they don’t like to be on a floor labeled thirteenth.

C: But after the twelfth floor comes the thirteenth, no?

S: True, if you are counting from the bottom, but it is not labeled 13, it is labeled 14.

C: That is strange.

Caramel is reading Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar.
Caramel is reading Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar.

S: Everything you are telling me reminds me of my favorite series from childhood: Le Petit Nicolas, about a little kid and his classmates and all kinds of funny things happening to them. In that world, too, sometimes really weird things happened, but nothing quite like a teacher turning children into apples.

C: Yes, I think you read a couple of those books to us when we were little. But I don’t think we understood all the jokes.

S: Yes, I think they seem to have aged quite a bit. The childhood they were talking about is very familiar to me, but it seems quite far from your experiences somehow. Okay, let us get back to the book. Did you like the book overall?

C: Yep. They are really funny. So I want to read the other books about Wayside School.

S: Maybe you will then. Did you know that Marshmallow has already reviewed a book by Louis Sachar?

C: Yep. I know she reviewed Holes.

S: Did you read that too?

C: Yep, and I also watched the movie. And it says on the cover of the book that the author is the author of Holes.

S: But of course Holes was written after this one, and you read this one after Holes.

C: True.

S: Did you also know that the author used to teach in an elementary school named Hillside and some of the ideas in the book might be related?

C: I did not know that! But it makes sense actually. There is a teacher character in the book named Louis.

S: But according to Wikipedia, his teaching days were not too exciting, so he had to make up a lot of stuff.

C: Well, that makes sense too. I’m guessing the teachers in his school did not turn students into apples and eat them.

S: I agree. So how would you describe this book in three words?

C: Short, sideways, outrageous.

S: I see what you did there! Okay, then. I think we can wrap this up now. What do you want to say to our readers?

C: Stay tuned for more book bunny reviews!

Caramel enjoyed reading Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar and is planning to move immediately on to the next book in the series.
Caramel loved reading Sideways Stories from Wayside School by Louis Sachar and is planning to move immediately on to the next book in the series.