Blossom Culp and the Sleep of Death by Richard Peck, 1986.
This book starts shortly after the previous book in the series ends. After Blossom’s old history teacher was run out of town for his scandalous behavior, he was replaced by Miss Fairweather. Miss Fairweather is a tough, no-nonsense woman who pushes her students to study hard and take history seriously. Unexpectedly, she comes to appreciate Blossom, an outcast from a poor family, because Blossom demonstrates some knowledge of Ancient Egypt. Little does Miss Fairweather know that Blossom’s comments in class were inspired by one of the visions that Blossom occasionally gets because of her psychic gifts.
Blossom experiences a visitation from the spirit of an Ancient Egyptian princess who says that she needs Blossom’s help. Years ago, her mummy and some precious objects were stolen from her tomb. The princess doesn’t seem to know exactly where her “earthly form” is now, but she’s sure that it’s somewhere nearby. She’s very concerned because she senses that archaeologists in Egypt are digging to find her tomb and knows that when they finally reach it, they will discover that she isn’t there. Rather than being concerned about her tomb being violated by the archaeologists, the princess senses that they are searching for her remains in order to venerate them, that if they find her mummy, they will take it to a place of great beauty where it will be treated with the utmost care and respect (a museum). She wants that and fears that she will miss her chance at the kind of immortality that this form of glorification, care, and study will provide. So, she asks Blossom to find her earthly remains and inform the searchers of her true whereabouts. At first, Blossom has no idea how she can accomplish that, but the princess threatens her with a true Egyptian curse if she doesn’t try.
Then, Blossom receives a clue to the mystery in the form of a beautiful Egyptian scarab that her mother found one day while she was out scavenging. If Blossom can find the place where her mother found the jewel, she can also find the princess’s mummy. Fortunately, Miss Fairweather has assigned the class special projects about Ancient Egypt, and she is thrilled when Blossom says that she wants to study grave robbers. Blossom sees this as a good way to collect some extra information about grave robbers that she can use to find the princess’s mummy as well as get a good grade in Miss Fairweather’s class. It also proves to be an excellent way to draw Alexander Armsworth into her search for the mummy.
Alexander still denies to Blossom that he has real psychic abilities like hers, even after their previous adventures together. He insists that it was just a phase that they were going through, one that he wants to leave behind. He’s been busy flirting with Letty, the class snob, and he’s trying hard to get into a prestigious fraternity so that he can give Letty his fraternity pin. Not only does Blossom think that the boys in the fraternity are a bunch of idiots who do stupid things, but the idea of Alexander giving Letty his pin as a sign of their relationship is just sickening.
Blossom is reluctant to admit her real feelings for Alexander, but the two of them are close in ways that Letty and Alexander never will be because of their shared abilities and adventures, and Blossom has a sense that their futures will be intertwined as well. Alexander is angry that Blossom is roping her into yet another supernatural escapade, but he has to go along with her project idea because he has already gotten on Miss Fairweather’s bad side and needs to do well on the project to save his grade in class.
Along with the supernatural adventure, there is also a look into the past, the world of 1910s America as well as Ancient Egypt. First, there are the traditions of stunts associated with Alexander’s initiation into his fraternity and the tradition of giving a girl a fraternity pin as a precursor to engagement (“engaged to be engaged”). Then, they discover that Miss Fairweather is a suffragette, which is the reason why she left her previous teaching job. Her feminist ideals cause problems for her in her new, small town when they become known, but with Blossom’s help, she wins over some of the influential women in town as well as a male admirer.
The book is currently available online through Internet Archive.
The Dreadful Future of Blossom Culp by Richard Peck, 1983.












Molly and her friends, Linda and Susan, are attending Camp Gowonagin over the summer. They love summer camp because there are so many fun things to do, like nature hikes, archery, arts and crafts, and campfire sing alongs. The only thing Molly doesn’t like is swimming underwater, although she’s embarrassed to admit it. Susan has trouble with canoeing because she doesn’t know how to keep her canoe moving straight. Other than that, all three girls have fun at camp and as their time at camp is coming to an end, they think about how much they’ll miss it.
Molly and Susan end up on the Blue Team, while Linda is assigned to the Red Team. Molly and Susan aren’t really looking forward to the Color War because their team captain will be Dorinda, a bossy, competitive girl who likes to act like she’s the general of an army and this camp game is a real war. Molly is uneasy about what Dorinda will order them to do, afraid that it might involve the thing she dreads most, swimming underwater. The only comfort Molly takes is what her father told her before he went away to war, that being scared is okay because it gives a person a chance to be brave.
Of course, Dorinda’s plan doesn’t work out as she thought. The Red Team’s scout spots them right away and takes most of the Blue Team prisoner. Only Molly and Susan are left free because Susan accidentally overturned their canoe on the way to the island. After they manage to get back into their canoe and bail it out, they try to approach the beach, but Linda spots them and signals to the rest of the Red Team. Molly and Susan have no choice but to return to camp to avoid capture.
Molly and Susan (and the rest of the Blue Team, once they’re free) manage to snatch victory from the jaws of defeat, but they worry that perhaps their friendship with Linda is ruined because of the trick they play on her. Fortunately, Linda decides to take it in the spirit of the game and shows sympathy for the girls when it turns out that their victory plan ends with the entire Blue Team getting poison ivy.

In 1944, everyone is concerned with finding ways to help the war effort. In Molly’s third grade class at school, her teacher announces that their class is invited to participate in the Lend-a-Hand contest. The class will be divided in half, and each half will compete against the other to find the best way to help the war effort. The class decides to make the contest boys against girls, and Molly immediately starts trying to figure out a spectacular idea that will impress everyone. Unfortunately, one of the other girls says that the girls in class should knit socks for soldiers, and the teacher accepts that as the goal for the girls’ team, before Molly can say anything.
Molly is appalled at the idea of knitting socks. It’s partly that she had wanted to be the one to come up with the best idea, and it’s also partly because she has tried knitting before, and she knows that socks are difficult, time-consuming projects, especially for beginning knitters. Molly is sure that the other girls are going to find it too difficult and that, in the end, they’ll have nothing to show for their project. Her friend Susan doesn’t think that the project sounds so bad, but Linda also dreads the idea of knitting because she’s not very good at it. Talking it over in their secret hideout in the storage area of Molly’s garage, the three girls decide that they’ll work on a secret project by themselves, something that will save the day when the other girls’ project falls through.
The other girls are certainly a lot more comfortable, knitting inside. However, as Molly predicted, they are finding their project harder than they thought it would be. None of them has completed an entire sock yet; all they really have are the square shapes at the top of the sock, and they’re getting discouraged. That’s when Molly gets a better idea: why not take the squares they’ve made and turn them into a blanket? Simple squares are much easier to make than socks, they can make a lot of them quickly with everyone helping, and the girls who can’t knit well can sew the squares together. A blanket is still a good war effort project because Molly’s father has told her that the hospital where he works is always in need of blankets for the wounded soldiers. With this new idea, the other girls become much more excited, and they make more progress.

Molly McIntire misses her father, who is a doctor stationed in England during World War II. Things haven’t been the same in her family since he left. Treats are more rare because of the sugar rationing, and she now has to eat yucky vegetables from her family’s victory garden all the time, under the watchful eyes of the family’s housekeeper. Her mother, while generally understanding, is frequently occupied with her work with the Red Cross. Molly’s older sister, Jill, tries to act grown-up, and Molly thinks that her brothers are pests, especially Ricky, who is fond of teasing. However, when Molly and her friends tease Ricky about his crush on a friend of Jill’s, it touches off a war of practical jokes in their house.
Halloween is coming, and she wants to come up with great costume ideas for herself and her two best friends, Linda and Susan. Her first thought is that she’d like to be Cinderella, but her friends are understandably reluctant to be the “ugly” stepsisters, and Molly has to admit that she wouldn’t really like that role, either. Also, Molly doesn’t have a fancy dress, and her mother is too busy to make one and also doesn’t think that they should waste rationed cloth on costumes. Instead, she suggests that the girls make grass skirts out of paper and go as hula dancers. The girls like the idea, but Halloween doesn’t go as planned.
Because he laughed at the girls, saying that he could see their underwear after he sprayed them with water and ruined their skirts, the girls decide to play a trick that will give Ricky his just desserts. The next time that Jill’s friend comes to visit, the girls arrange to have Jill and her friend standing underneath Ricky’s bedroom window when they start throwing all of his underwear out the window, right in front of Ricky. Ricky screams at the girls that “this is war!” just as their mother arrives home.
Queen of the Sixth Grade by Ilene Cooper, 1988.