10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A catchy story which i read, April 19, 2005
A Kid's Review
What do I like about this story? Well when I picked this up this book it turned me away because of the colour of it is purple I thought this was a girls book until I read the back of it, it sounded good, adventures and an also easy reading book with big letters. I knew many people around my name who hate small letters this are another reason. The reason I recommend this book is, now I will go deeper into this well fudge is driving his brother mad as usual. Fudge's and Peter's parents are decided to go on holiday to Maine. Peter says "going on holiday with Fudge-baby tootsie, turtle the dog, and uncle feather the bird --------means disaster every day." Even worse for Peter, disgusting Sheila Tubman is staying in the same house" This girl im talking about hates peter also the bought hate each other. This was interesting story I liked it very much. Jimmy a friend of peters decided to stay the try and get on with her the have great crack in Maine.
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P.S. please choose me it's the first book I ever read and i'm getting to enjoy reading lately I have read "Summer sisters "
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11 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Weakest of the series, July 4, 1999
By A Customer
TALES OF A FOURTH GRADE NOTHING and SUPERFUDGE were so charming because they were over-the-top camp written mainly for laughs. Peter was the long suffering elder brother; Fudge, the terror in GrrAnimals; and Tootsie, the baby terror in the making. With FUDGE-A-MANIA, Judy Blume decided to go "realistic" and lost a lot of the fun of the first two books.
Now Peter is the whiner at the prospect of sharing a vacation house with Sheila Tubman. Sure, we know he doesn't like her but he loses a lot of the long-suffering that made his character when he just won't buck up when it's clear Sheila's coming anyway. Half the fun of Peter in the first two books was when his parents convinced him to bear with them and the situation.
Fudge is still a pest, but he has lost a lot of his over-the-top wildness. Where's the kid who smeared mashed potatoes on the wall, got lost in a movie theater, spotted a children's author's imaginary friend (much to Peter's embarrassment), and peddled off to the highway with his annoying friend? Where's the kid who so wanted to be a bird when he grew up that he tried to fly and became better known to his brother as Fang? Sure, he's maturing, but that doesn't mean he should lose the character traits that made him fun.
Finally, what happened to Tootsie? The little girl who loved Nu Yuck was lost in this story. Other than running across the painting of Jimmy's father and thereby creating "Baby Feet," Tootsie wasn't heard from. If Judy Blume was going to mature Fudge, couldn't she have had Tootsie take over his reign of terror?
FUDGE-A-MANIA is okay, but you'll have more fun with TALES OF A FOURTH GRADE NOTHING and SUPERFUDGE.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Best Book of the Year, April 13, 2005
A Kid's Review
It's about a boy named Peter who has a little brother whose name is Fudge and their new sister Toosy. They have to go on a three-week vacation with a family who will live next door to them there. They have a really, really, really annoying girl. So Peter invites his friend Jimmy to go with him. I think this book is interesting, it is exciting, entertaining. I loved it. It made me feel I am in New York and it's Saturday.
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