The Secret Life of the Underwear Champ by Betty Miles, 1981.
Ten-year-old Larry lives in Connecticut, but one day, while he and his mother are visiting his dentist in New York City, he gets spotted by the Zigmunds. The Zigmunds own a modeling agency, and they think that Larry will be perfect for a series of tv ads. At first, Larry is kind of excited about the idea of being on tv and earning extra money (maybe enough to get a new ten-speed bike!) until he realizes what he’s going to be advertising: underwear.
The Zigmunds like Larry because he’s a clean-cut, athletic kid who likes to play baseball, and the advertisements are supposed to feature a family playing sports together . . . in their underwear. Larry also happens to have red hair, just like the girl already picked to play his sister in the commercials, Suzanne. Suzanne has been in advertisements many times before, and the idea of advertising underwear doesn’t bother her at all. The underwear kind of looks like athletic clothes and isn’t really revealing, but it’s still underwear. Larry goes from feeling proud of his new tv advertising career to hoping that no one at school ever finds out about it. But, how can Larry even hope for that when his underwear-clad form is going to be displayed on everyone’s tv set?
Now, Larry is wondering what he’s gotten himself into. He worries about his filming schedule conflicting with baseball practice and makes up excuses about needing to visit the dentist when he has to film a commercial. Money or no money, Larry just wishes that his life would return to normal!
After the filming is over, Larry starts to feel better about what he’s accomplished. He and Suzanne have become friends (and she may possibly be his first girlfriend), and learning about the world of advertising was kind of fun. But when the commercial actually makes it to tv, and Larry tells his best friend Robert about it, the dreaded teasing starts.
In some ways, Larry’s fears about teasing don’t turn out to be as bad as he fears, although it seems like it at first. Robert laughs at him when he sees the first commercial and realizes why Larry’s been sneaking around and making excuses, but Larry tells him off for being mean and challenges him to think how he feels about it all. Robert feels a little bad about laughing but says that he can’t help it and that other kids at school will react the same way. He’s partly right, but he does help to put a stop to it, and the other kids do calm down. Larry even enjoys some minor fame because he’s the only one of the kids to have been on tv at all.
There’s a lot of humor in the story, but it’s also surprisingly thoughtful as Larry considers why people find the idea of seeing someone in their underwear so funny. After all, everyone wears underwear of some kind, even the President of the United States. It’s a normal part of everyone’s wardrobe and a common part of everyday life. The other people in the ad don’t act self-conscious while they’re being filmed in their underwear because it’s just part of their job, another part of daily life. The book doesn’t mention sex, although the “mother” of the family in the ads gets a few whistles when she’s in her underwear, and Larry acknowledges that he and Robert sometimes giggle over advertisements with girls in their underwear. Larry’s main conclusion is that people laugh about underwear because that’s just not how people normally see each other, so it seems weird. After everyone has seen the commercial with Larry many times, people get used to the idea and it doesn’t seem so weird, so they get over the “funny” part and stop laughing. Eventually, the other kids at school stop thinking so much about the underwear and just think it’s kind of cool that Larry was in a commercial.
The book is currently available online through Internet Archive.
The Best School Year Every by Barbara Robinson, 1994.
#3 The Candy Corn Contest by Patricia Reilly Giff, 1984.
While Richard is worrying over his mistake, he’s also worrying about the sleep-over party his parents are letting him have over the Thanksgiving break. At first, he was looking forward to it, but some of the other boys in class can’t come and some of those who said they could are concerned because Matthew is coming. Matthew and Richard are friends, and people in class generally like Matthew, but everyone knows that Matthew still wets the bed. Some of the other boys are worried that they’ll have to sleep next to Matthew at the sleep-over. As much as Richard likes Matthew, it feels like his problem is going to ruin the party, and when Matthew is nice to him, it only makes Richard feel worse.
#2 Fish Face by Patricia Reilly Giff, 1984.
The title of the story comes from the fish faces that Emily was making, imitating the classroom pet fish. She shows Dawn her fish face when she’s trying to joke with her, but Dawn just thinks it’s weird. Dawn worries that she’s not making friends, but at the same time, she also seems determined not to like things and people at her new school and stealing Emily’s unicorn and lying about it was a sure way to make her angry.
#1 The Beast in Ms. Rooney’s Room by Patricia Reilly Giff, 1984.
However, even though he’s embarrassed at having to attend special reading classes with Mrs. Paris while most of the rest of his class has normal reading, these special classes really help him, not just to improve his reading skills, but to connect with other kids in his new class who have the same reading difficulties he does and who understand how he feels.
Journeyman Wizard by Mary Frances Zambreno, 1994.
A Plague of Sorcerers by Mary Frances Zambreno, 1991.
Sixteen-year-old Aaron Maguire thinks of himself as a typical teenager, even though his family is far from typical. His mother is a buyer for a fashion boutique, and his father does special effects for monster movies in Hollywood. They’re also officially “separated” and preparing for a divorce, even though they’re still living in the same house. So far, they’ve just kind of divided the house in two in order to have their own space. Aaron goes back and forth between the two halves of the same house as his parents share him. It’s a little weird (and, to Aaron, also a little depressing), but there’s weirder to come.
However, when Aaron meets the divine Penelope for pizza and she asks to borrow a mirror to check her hair, Aaron lets her borrow Anaxagoras’s mirror. He instantly regrets it because the mirror suddenly changes in Penelope’s hands. Now, it has a tortoiseshell frame and is shaped like a heart. Penelope, who has low self-esteem in spite of her prettiness, is suddenly really happy when she looks in the mirror and refuses to give it back, insisting that she wants to borrow it for a few days. Because Aaron is in love with Penelope, he finally agrees to let her keep it for awhile.
Angelo the Naughty One by Helen Garrett, pictures by Leo Politi, 1944.




