“Some people spoil all the fun!”
“Can we take Jennifer with us?” Libby asked.
“No,” I said.
“I’m not asking you. Can we, Mom? I’ll bet she’s dying for a little ride in the car.”
“You promised!” I reminded my mother.
“Better leave her home, Libby,” Mom said.
“Some people spoil all the fun!” Libby snapped.
“There are people who get hives from dogs,” I told Libby. “Did you ever think of that?”
“But you don’t!”
“I think I do.”
“You’re a liar,” Libby yelled. “Isn’t she a liar, Mom?”
“What do you mean you think you get hives from dogs?” Mom asked me.
“I do. I get them inside where you can’t see them. But I know they’re there. I’m positive I’m allergic to dogs.”
“Oh, Sheila!” Mom said.
Jennifer stood up and barked then. I’m sure she was laughing at me. I hate that dumb old dog!
“Sheila’s ongoing crisis of image . . . is as easy to identify with as it is to laugh at.” —Kirkus Reviews
“A sprightly narrative that young readers will find amusing and very real.” —Booklist
BOOKS BY JUDY BLUME
The Pain and the Great One
Soupy Saturdays with the Pain and the Great One
Cool Zone with the Pain and the Great One
Going, Going, Gone! with the Pain and the Great One
Friend or Fiend? with the Pain and the Great One
The One in the Middle Is the Green Kangaroo Freckle Juice
THE FUDGE BOOKS
Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing
Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great
Superfudge
Fudge-a-Mania
Double Fudge
Blubber
Iggie’s House
Starring Sally J. Freedman as Herself
Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret
It’s Not the End of the World
Then Again, Maybe I Won’t
Deenie
Just as Long as We’re Together
Here’s to You, Rachel Robinson
Tiger Eyes
Forever
Letters to Judy
Places I Never Meant to Be: Original Stories by Censored Writers (edited by Judy Blume)
PUFFIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
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Registered Offices: Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in the United States of America by Dutton Children’s Books, 1972
Published by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2003
Reissued by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2007
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Copyright © Judy Blume, 1972
Illustration copyright © Jules Feiffer, 2007
All rights reserved
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HAS CATALOGED THE DUTTON CHILDREN’S BOOKS EDITION AS FOLLOWS:
Blume, Judy.
Otherwise known as Sheila the Great / by Judy Blume.
p. cm.
Summary: A summer in Tarrytown, N.Y., is a lot of fun for ten-year-old Sheila even though her friends make her face up to some self-truths she doesn’t want to admit.
ISBN: 0-525-36455-2 (hc)
[1. Self-acceptance—Fiction. 2. Friendship—Fiction. 3. Conduct of life—Fiction.]
I. Title.
PZ7.B6265 Ot [Fic] 72-078082 CIP
This Puffin edition ISBN 9781101564080
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.
In loving memory of my father and our special game of hide-and-seek
I’m glad there’s only one more week of school before summer vacation. Today was so hot! My clothes stuck to me and my brain felt all tired out. I didn’t even finish my math in school. So now I have to do it for homework.
I walked into the lobby of my apartment building thinking how good a big, cold drink would taste. I pushed the Up elevator button and waited. When the elevator got to the lobby Henry opened the gate and I stepped in. Just as he was about to take me upstairs Peter Hatcher and his dumb old dog came tearing down the hall.
“Wait up, Henry!” Peter called. “Here I come.”
“Please don’t wait, Henry,” I said. “The elevator’s too small for that dog.”
But Henry opened the gate and waited. “This elevator can hold ten people or the equivalent,” Henry said. “And I figure that dog is the equivalent of a person and a half. So with me and you and Peter and that dog we’ve still only got four and a half people.”
Sometimes I wish Henry didn’t spend so much time thinking.
“Hi, Henry,” Peter said. “Thanks for waiting.”
“Any time, Peter,” Henry told him.
“Excuse me, please,” I said, stepping out of the elevator. I held my nose. “I can’t ride up with that dog. He stinks!”
My heart was beating so loud I was sure Henry and Peter could hear it. And I know Turtle, the dog, was laughing at me. He stuck out his tongue and licked the corners of his mouth. I’ll bet he could taste me already! I walked down the hall with my head held high, saying, “P.U.”
Henry called, “Ten flights up is a long walk, Sheila.”
“I don’t mind,” I called back.
* * *
Henry was right. Ten flights up is a long walk. By the time I got to my floor I was huffing and puffing so hard I had to sit down on the landing and rest. Little drips of sweat ran from my face down to my neck. Still, I think it’s pretty smart of me to pretend that I hate Turtle because he smells. I always hold my nose when I see Peter coming with him. That way Peter will never know the truth!
After a few minutes I wiped my face with the back of my hand and walked down the hall to our apartment. Mrs. Reese is the only person on our floor with a dog. And I don’t worry too much about her. Because her dog is so small she carries him around in her arms. She calls him Baby and knits him little sweaters to wear in the winter.
&n
bsp; I pushed open our apartment door and went straight into the kitchen to get something to drink.
“Is that you, Sheila?” my mother called.
“Yes,” I answered.
“Did you have fun at Laurie’s?”
“Yes,” I said, gulping down a whole can of apple juice.
“Is it still hot out?” Mom asked.
“Yes.”
“Did you remember to bring home a quart of milk?”
Oh oh! I knew I forgot something.
“Sheila . . . did you bring home the milk?” Mom called again.
“No . . . I forgot.”
I went into the living room then. My mother was reading a book. The CD player was on and my sister Libby was twirling around in her pink toe slippers. She is thirteen and thinks she’s a great ballerina. I could hold my nose for the way Libby dances, but I’d get into big trouble if I did.
My mother said, “You better go back down and get the milk, Sheila.”
I flopped into the big chair that tilts back and said, “I can’t, Mom. I’m dead. I just walked up the stairs.”
“Don’t tell me the elevator is out of order!” Mom said.
“No.”
“Then why did you walk up ten flights of stairs?”
“I don’t know,” I said. “I just felt like it.”
“Sheila, that was a very foolish thing to do in this heat,” Mom told me. “Now go into your room and lie down for a while before supper.”
“Do I have to?” I asked.
“Yes, you do. Libby will go to the store and get the milk.”
Libby did three flying leaps before she said, “Can’t you see I’m in the middle of a routine?”
“Your routine can wait,” Mom said. “I need the milk for supper and Daddy will be home soon.”
“But, Mother! I’m in my leotard,” Libby said.
Libby used to say Mom, like me. But since she started junior high it’s Mother this and Mother that. She is very strange.
Mom told Libby, “You can put a skirt over your leotard and nobody will notice.” Then she looked at me. “Sheila, what are you waiting for? I said go and lie down.”
“Okay . . . okay,” I said. “I’m going.” I took off my shoes and arranged them on the floor so that the toes pointed toward my bedroom.
I line them up every day before my father comes home. It’s part of a private game Daddy and I play. I am always hiding somewhere and Daddy has to find me. His only clue is my shoes. I invented this game when I was seven and we’ve been playing it ever since.
Libby said when she was ten she acted a lot more grown-up than me. I think she missed out on some good fun. Anyway, Daddy would be disappointed if I stopped playing our game.
Libby and I share a bedroom. I stretched out on my bed while Libby turned the closet upside down looking for a skirt.
“You are a pain!” she said to me. “You know that, Sheila? You are a real live pain!”
I didn’t answer her.
“Why’d you walk up the stairs . . . huh?”
I still didn’t answer.
“Did you see a dog in the elevator? I’ll bet that’s it. I’ll bet Mrs. Reese was in the elevator with Baby.”
“Wrong!” I said.
Libby finally found a skirt and pulled it on over her leotard. “Then I’ll bet it was Peter Hatcher and Turtle.”
“Maybe it was and maybe it wasn’t,” I said.
“Chicken chicken chicken,” Libby called as she left.
I put my hands over my ears to show I wasn’t even listening.
* * *
Libby got back with the milk right before Daddy got home for supper. I jumped off my bed and crawled under it when I heard him say, “Hello, I’m home.”
I knew Daddy found my shoes when he called, “Ah ha! I’m coming to find a Sheila!”
It really isn’t very hard for him to find me. There aren’t that many places where I can hide. We only have five rooms. Still, Daddy always pretends that he doesn’t have any idea where I might be.
When he came into my room he started opening my dresser drawers. He said, “Hmmm, no Sheila in here. No Sheila in there either.”
I laughed. Daddy knows I wouldn’t fit into a dresser drawer. And as soon as I laughed he lifted my bedspread and looked under the bed.
“Ah ha! I found a Sheila!”
I crawled out and kissed Daddy hello. Libby walked in then. “I don’t think you should encourage her to be such a baby,” she told Daddy.
“I am not a baby!” I shouted.
“Then why don’t you stop playing baby games?” Libby asked.
“All right, Libby,” Daddy said. “That’s enough!”
“You see,” Libby said. “You’re always on her side!”
“I’m not on anyone’s side,” Daddy said. “Let’s forget about this and go have our supper. I’ve got some news for you.”
I was sure Daddy’s news would be about our summer plans. We’ve been waiting and waiting to find out what we’re going to do this summer. I wanted to take a trip to Disneyland but Mom and Daddy said That’s out of the question.
* * *
When we sat down at the table and started to eat Daddy said, “We got the house!”
“Oh, Buzz,” Mom said. “That’s wonderful!”
I wish people would stop calling my father Buzz and start calling him Bertram. That’s his real name. I feel so silly having a father named Buzz.
“What house?” Libby asked.
“In Tarrytown,” Daddy told her. “It belongs to a professor at Marymount who’s spending the summer in England.”
My father is a professor at Marymount College too. He teaches English. Libby says when she is old enough to go to college she is not going to Marymount because there aren’t enough boys around there. Libby thinks boys are very important. Libby is sick!
“It sounds nice,” Mom said. “Anything’s better than the city in July and August.”
“I hope there’s something to do in Tarrytown,” Libby said. “I really wanted to go to the beach this summer.”
I happen to know that is because Libby has a new bikini and she wants to show it off.
“You’ll like Tarrytown,” Daddy told Libby. “There’s a pool down the road from our house and there’s a very good day camp. . . .”
Libby interrupted. “I’m much too old for day camp, Father! You know that.”
“Not this one,” Daddy said. “It’s special. You can’t even go if you’re not at least ten. It’s a cultural arts camp.”
“I’m no good at art, Father. You know that too,” Libby said.
“Art includes theater, music, and dancing,” Daddy told her.
“Dancing?” Libby asked.
Then Mom and Daddy got these big smiles on their faces. I’m sure they knew all along that Libby would be very happy once she found out she could spend the summer on her dumb old toes!
“Oh, Father . . . oh, Mother!” Libby cried.
“I wanted to go to Disneyland,” I said.
“We told you that was out of the question,” Mom said.
“I know. But I still wanted to go.”
“In Tarrytown you can have your own bedroom,” Daddy said.
“I can?”
“Yes. There are four bedrooms in Professor Egran’s house.”
I thought that over. My own bedroom. That sounded pretty good.
“And you can learn to swim,” Mom said.
“I don’t want to learn to swim,” I told her.
“We’ll see,” she said. “We don’t have to decide now.”
“Can my bedroom be far away from Libby’s?”
“We’ll see about that too,” Mom said. ?
??Now finish your string beans.”
* * *
The next day I told Peter Hatcher, “I’m going away for the whole summer. I’m going to have my own bedroom.”
“Goody for you!” he said.
“So you don’t have to wash your dog. Because I won’t be around to tell you how bad he smells!”
“My dog said to tell you he thinks you smell too,” Peter said. Then he went off with Jimmy Fargo and they both laughed and laughed. They think they’re so funny! I don’t know why I used to waste my time playing “cooties” with them. Maybe next year I’ll get lucky. Maybe Peter Hatcher and Jimmy Fargo won’t be in my fifth-grade class.
I met Mrs. Reese in the hall. “I’m going away for the whole summer,” I said. “I’m going to have my own bedroom, with flowered wallpaper and frilly curtains and little lamps shaped like candles.”
And she said, “Aren’t you lucky! Baby would like to go away too, but he doesn’t have any place to go.”
I told Henry I’d be away for two whole months. “I’m going to sleep in my own bedroom, in my own canopy bed!”
Henry said, “I’ll really miss you, Sheila. Who’s going to remind me how many people the elevator can hold?”
Henry and I laughed together. “And did I tell you about the rug on my bedroom floor?” I asked.
“No,” Henry said. “You didn’t mention that.”
“Well, it’s very soft and fluffy and it’s all yellow except for a big red rose right in the center. It feels so good on your feet you never have to wear slippers. Not all summer long.”
“That sounds mighty nice, Sheila.”
I thought so too. The more I talked about it the better is sounded. Spending the summer in the country. Spending the summer in Tarrytown. Spending the summer in a house. Spending the summer in my own beautiful bedroom!
It started to sound almost as good as going to Disneyland. I didn’t even mind the packing and the ride to Tarrytown. I couldn’t wait to see the house. I couldn’t wait to see my bedroom.
* * *
And then I found out about Jennifer.