Chapter 1
I Hate School
Chapter 2
Being Stubborn
Chapter 3
Granny’s Surprise
Chapter 4
Beware the Stare
Andy Shane did not want to be in school. He did not want to be at morning meeting. He did not want to sit up straight on the rug.
He flopped down on his belly and watched an ant carry a cracker crumb across the floor. The ant reminded Andy of his Granny Webb.
Granny Webb loved to catch bugs and hold them up to the sunlight. Andy wished that he were at home catching bugs with her right now.
“Ms. Janice,” said a voice like a squeaky fiddle. “Ms. Janice, someone is not sitting properly!”
Andy Shane sat up quick. He knew that voice. But Andy’s teacher didn’t seem to hear it — even though the voice was loud, even though the voice was sitting right in front of her, even though the voice belonged to Dolores Starbuckle.
“This morning,” said Ms. Janice, “we’re going to find rhyming words. Can anyone tell me two words that rhyme?”
Andy Shane thought of two words: bug and rug. He looked up. Should he raise his hand?
Other kids were raising their hands. Dolores Starbuckle jumped up and down on her knees and waved her arms like a willow tree in a windstorm. Ms. Janice motioned for Dolores to sit back down.
“Andy,” said Ms. Janice. She looked right at him. “Do you know two words that rhyme?”
Andy Shane opened his mouth to tell Ms. Janice the words, but they were stuck in his throat like fruit flies caught in maple syrup.
Ms. Janice waited. The other children waited, too.
“I know two words,” called out Dolores Starbuckle. Andy looked at Dolores. “I know two words!” she yelled. And before Ms. Janice could call on her, Dolores shouted, “Hullabaloo and Kalamazoo!”
Ms. Janice looked surprised. She smiled. “Yes, Dolores,” said Ms. Janice. “Those words do rhyme.”
I hate school, thought Andy Shane.
After morning meeting, Andy Shane looked at a chart on the wall. It was his turn to go to the math center. Andy liked the math center. He liked playing with the fraction puzzles and the pattern blocks. He liked solving the tough problems that Ms. Janice placed there each day. But this morning, Andy wished that he could go to any other center. Yumi was in the math center. Peter was in the math center. And so was Dolores Starbuckle.
Andy Shane decided to work by himself. He would solve a problem with pattern blocks. He tried to pull out the block bin, but it was stuck on the math shelf. Andy Shane pulled harder and then harder still. The container sprang free, but all the blocks went flying into the air.
“MS. JANICE,” yelled Dolores Starbuckle. “SOMEONE IS MISUSING THE MATH MATERIALS!”
“I don’t want to go to school,” said Andy Shane.
“Why not?” asked Granny Webb, catching a dragonfly on her finger and holding it close to her nose. “The Anax junius,” she said, calling the dragonfly by its fancy name.
Andy Shane ignored the dragonfly, even though he knew that the Anax junius had a bright blue tail, his favorite color. He crossed his arms and said, “I hate school.”
“That can’t be,” said Granny Webb. “Why, Andy Shane, I loved school.”
“Well, you didn’t have morning meeting when you were in school,” said Andy. “And you didn’t have math center.”
“That’s true,” said Granny Webb.
“And you didn’t have Dolores Starbuckle,” Andy added.
Granny Webb smiled. “No, Andy Shane, I can’t say I did.”
So there, thought Andy.
Andy Shane had lived with Granny Webb all his life. When he came into the world, he needed someone who could take good care of him. Granny Webb needed someone to share the fun of hilly woods, salamanders, and stories. So the two of them became a family. Just like that. Andy Shane never longed for more.
“I hear the bus down the road, Andy Shane. Go get your lunch box,” said Granny Webb.
Andy Shane didn’t move.
“Don’t be stubborn, Andy. You have to go to school. You know that.”
There was only one person in the world more stubborn than Andy Shane, and that was Granny Webb.
Granny stood up straight.
She put her shoulders back.
She stared at Andy Shane.
She didn’t move a muscle.
She didn’t blink an eyelash.
She just waited.
“Oh, fine. I’m going,” said Andy Shane.
That Granny Webb Stare worked every time.
The bus pulled up, and Andy Shane stepped on. He chose an empty seat and looked out the window at Granny Webb. She looked like she had just stepped on a pricker. Andy thought he must look the same way, too.
Andy had no sooner hung up his sweatshirt in his cubby when he heard a familiar voice. It was a voice that Andy Shane would know anywhere.
It was the voice of his Granny Webb.
“It’s a monarch caterpillar,” said Granny to the kids who had gathered around her.
Andy came closer.
“Hi, Andy Shane,” said Granny. “As I was walking back to the house, I found this caterpillar here. I thought you and Ms. Janice might like to keep it in the science center.”
Andy knew that their field was full of caterpillars, but he was truly happy that Granny Webb had found this one.
All the kids wanted to talk to Granny at once.
“When will the caterpillar turn into a butterfly?” asked Marcus.
“How long do monarch butterflies live?” asked Jordan.
“Monarchs migrate all the way to Mexico,” said Samantha.
“I like your pockets, Granny Webb,” said Polly.
“Ms. Janice, my mother told me that visitors can’t come to school until October,” said Dolores Starbuckle.
“Why don’t you join us anyway, Granny Webb,” said Ms. Janice. “We’re about to have morning meeting.”
Morning meeting? Already? Andy Shane felt like he’d swallowed a caterpillar.
Ms. Janice asked the class to think of action words — words that told about doing something.
Dolores Starbuckle raised her hand.
“Yes, Dolores,” said Ms. Janice. “Do you know an action word?”
Dolores stood up and took the pointer from the board.
“Class, today I will teach you about verbs. Verbs are action words,” said Dolores. “Write is a verb; read is a verb, and so is learn. Do any of you know an action word?”
No one raised a hand.
Dolores looked at Andy Shane.
“Andy Shane, do you know an action word?”
Andy Shane slunk down on the rug.
“Thank you, Dolores,” said Ms. Janice, but Dolores didn’t sit down.
“Dolores!” said Ms. Janice. But Dolores had forgotten all about Ms. Janice. She tapped her foot, waiting for Andy to answer.
“I like action words,” said Granny Webb. “And I recollect a song with lots of them.” Granny stood up and sang, “A mermaid splashed with the fishies in a bay.”
Everyone looked at Granny.
“She flipped her tail, and a whale said, ‘Hey!’” sang Granny.
“DOES ANYONE KNOW A VERB?” shouted Dolores.
No one was listening. They were all watching Granny Webb dance around the room.
“I SAID —”
Before Dolores could finish her sentence, everyone, even Ms. Janice, began flipping and flopping, twisting and twirling, wiggling and jiggling, and squiggling and giggling.
Everyone, that is, except
for Dolores Starbuckle. She was still holding her pointer and gritting her teeth.
“Come on, Andy,” said Granny after morning meeting. “Let’s work in the math center.”
“It’s not our turn,” whispered Andy Shane. But before he could stop her, Granny was in the math center and she had pulled out all the pizza puzzle pieces.
“You’re not supposed to mix the pizzas,” warned Dolores, coming into the math center. “You’re not supposed to put the pepperoni with the peppers.”
Granny Webb kept making mixed-up pizzas. “I like my pizzas with the works — don’t you, Andy Shane?”
Andy Shane stepped back. He knew what was coming.
“MS. JANICE!” yelled Dolores Starbuckle. “SOMEONE IN THE MATH CENTER IS MISUSING THE MATERIALS!”
Andy hoped that Ms. Janice wouldn’t hear Dolores, but she heard all right. She came over to the math center to see what was going on.
“Dolores,” said Ms. Janice, “Granny Webb isn’t misusing the materials; she’s using them in a new way.”
Dolores Starbuckle’s face turned the color of a fire ant. She swept the pizza pieces onto the floor and stomped out of the math center.
Andy and Granny Webb decided to see how the caterpillar liked his new home in the science center. Dolores Starbuckle wandered over, too.
“I’ll be the teacher,” said Dolores, pointing to a picture on the wall. “What is this, Granny Webb?”
“I believe that that is a Musca domestica, Dolores,” said Granny.
“Wrong,” said Dolores. “This is a picture of a housefly.”
“And what is this?” asked Dolores.
“That is a Photinus pyralis,” said Granny Webb.
“Wrong again!” shouted Dolores. “That is a firefly. Everyone knows that.”
“And what is this?” Dolores pointed to a dragonfly.
Granny Webb didn’t say anything.
“What is this?” repeated Dolores. “I’m waiting!”
“That is an Anax junius,” said Andy Shane. “My Granny Webb taught me all the fancy names for bugs, and she knows them better than anyone.”
“OH YEAH?” said Dolores.
“Yeah,” he said.
And then Andy Shane did something he’d never done before.
He gave Dolores Starbuckle the Granny Webb Stare.
He stood up straight.
He put his shoulders back.
He stared at Dolores Starbuckle.
He didn’t move a muscle.
He didn’t blink an eyelash.
He just waited.
Finally he asked, “What is this bug, Dolores Starbuckle?”
“Fine,” she said. “It’s an Anax junius.”
The Granny Webb Stare worked every time.
“I just remembered that my apples need picking,” said Granny Webb. “I’m sorry, Andy Shane. I have to go.”
“That’s okay,” said Andy, smiling.
“Andy Shane, will you teach me the fancy names of these bugs?” Dolores asked.
Andy Shane thought for a moment.
“Please?” asked Dolores.
“All right,” said Andy.
Andy told Dolores the fancy name for monarch caterpillar. He told her that soon the caterpillar would build a case called a chrysalis, which was a lot like a cocoon.
“A COCOON?” asked Dolores.
Andy stepped back.
“That rhymes with cartoon!” said Dolores with a laugh.
“And lagoon!” said Andy Shane. He laughed, too.
“And baboon!” said Dolores.
Maybe school isn’t so bad, Andy thought. And maybe, just maybe, Dolores and I can share our rhymes at tomorrow’s morning meeting.
Jennifer Richard Jacobson is the author of all six Andy Shane adventures and the middle-grade novels Small as an Elephant and Paper Things. “There is a little bit of Andy Shane in me,” she says. “I remember what it was like to be bullied in school. But I also remember tattling, so I guess I have a bit of Dolores Starbuckle in me, too.” Jennifer Richard Jacobson lives in Maine.
Abby Carter is the illustrator of many books for young readers, including Full House: An Invitation to Fractions by Dayle Ann Dodds. She says, “From the moment I read the manuscript for this book, I couldn’t wait to illustrate the bossy Dolores Starbuckle!” Abby Carter lives in Connecticut.
Text copyright © 2005 by Jennifer Richard Jacobson
Illustrations copyright © 2005 by Abby Carter
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in an information retrieval system in any form or by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, taping, and recording, without prior written permission from the publisher.
First electronic edition 2016
The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:
Jacobson, Jennifer, date.
Andy Shane and the very bossy Dolores Starbuckle / Jennifer Richard Jacobson ;
illustrated by Abby Carter. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
Summary: Andy Shane hates school, mainly because of a tattletale know-it-all named Dolores Starbuckle, but Granny Webb, who has taken care of him all his life, joins him in class one day and helps him solve the problem.
ISBN 978-0-7636-1940-4 (hardcover)
[1. Schools — Fiction. 2. Bossiness — Fiction. 3. Behavior — Fiction.]
I. Carter, Abby, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.J1529An 2005
[E] — dc22 2004057040
The illustrations in this book were done in black pencil and black watercolor wash.
Candlewick Press
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Somerville, Massachusetts 02144
visit us at www.candlewick.com
Jennifer Richard Jacobson, Andy Shane and the Very Bossy Dolores Starbuckle
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