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Mean Margaret

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Unconditional kindness is the key in this National Book Award Finalist from the author of The Wainscott Weasel about nontraditional families, adoption, love—and a little peace and quiet.
Margaret is a mean, cranky human toddler from a family of nine. She is such a pain that her beleaguered parents chuck her out, and she's on her own, grousing and grumping until two caring woodchucks, Phoebe and Fred, take Margaret in as their own. But despite their love, Margaret continues to wreak havoc with her loud, destructive ways, ruining the burrow and shrieking nonstop. Soon the woodchucks are as beleaguered as Margaret's human parents were, but because love is more powerful than temper tantrums, they are determined to make it work. So they enlist a little unconventional help, and with the guidance of a snake, bats, and a skunk, their feral little human just might realize there's more to life than being mean.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 26, 2001
      "Seidler chronicles with sensitivity, acumen and humor the adventures of a bratty toddler who eats her two adopted woodchuck parents out of house and home," wrote PW
      in our Best Books citation. Ages 8-12.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      Fred is a woodchuck who likes life clean, orderly, and quiet. When he finally finds his mate, Phoebe, he envisions the continuation of his peaceful lifestyle. But when Phoebe adopts an abandoned human child, everything, and everybody, changes. Jeff Woodman narrates this lively tale with a steadily building pace, as the animals get more and more frustrated with Margaret. His characterizations distinguish each individual: rigid, orderly Fred; kind-hearted, loving Phoebe; easy-going and fun-loving Babette; the squirrel who is content at finally having his ready-made family; and, of course, loud, selfish, impatient, mean Margaret. Woodman expertly portrays the characters and depicts this family's life, as well as the values of love and kindness that lead to changes in everyone--human and animal. W.L.S. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 1, 1997
      This witty novel about a cranky toddler and her adoptive parents slyly reverses the people-pets dynamic as it comments on modern relationships. The tale opens with the marriage of two loving but dissimilar woodchucks: patient Phoebe wants children, while neatnik Fred prefers a tidy burrow. A mile away lives an imperfect human family with nine kids, the last four of which are called by their numerical order of delivery. The youngest, Nine, is a terror, so her siblings dispose of her "in a ditch," where her screams summon Phoebe. Phoebe names Nine "Margaret" (her mother's name) and takes her to the burrow, where she proceeds to destroy the furniture, shriek nonstop and force Fred and Phoebe to relocate to a cave shared by a skunk, two bats and a crotchety snake. Pooh Corner it ain't. Agee (Dmitri the Astronaut) contributes understated pen-and-ink sketches of the catastrophic scenes, while Seidler (The Wainscott Weasel) takes refreshing risks with well-trod territory. Fred and Phoebe fall in love convincingly ("as a rule, woodchuck courtships take less than an hour"), Phoebe's sister is a single mother of three, and the skunk gives Margaret a richly deserved dousing. Conventional expectations are dashed--Fred's about domestic bliss, Phoebe's about motherhood--but compromises are reached, and even feral Margaret returns to an improved home life. In an era of so many definitions of "family," this perceptive story zeroes in on one model formed of cooperation and friendship. Ages 5-up.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Lexile® Measure:780
  • Text Difficulty:3-4

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