Summer Fun by Carolyn Haywood, 1986.
This is a cute book of short stories featuring favorite Haywood characters, including Betsy and Eddie. The children spent their summer in different ways, having fun summer adventures. None of the adventures is particularly scary. Although a couple of the kids find themselves in semi-dangerous situations, everything is resolved pretty quickly, and the rest of the stories are more slice-of-life style stories about fun and funny things that the kids do or lessons they learn.
The stories are very easy to read and great for children beginning chapter books or for some light bedtime reading for younger kids.
The book is currently available online through Internet Archive.
The stories in this book are:
Bears and Blueberries
Peter is at summer camp, and when he goes on a hike and camp-out with his camp friends, they have encounters with wildlife.
The Watermelon Party
Betsy’s father tells her that he used to have watermelon parties with his friends when he was young, and that the person who had the most watermelon seeds at the end of the party would win a prize. Betsy decides that she wants to have a party like that, but her friend Rodney learns why cheating takes all the fun out of a contest.
A Bell for Jim Dandy
Jim Dandy is a brand of ice cream that comes on a stick. When the bell on the ice cream truck is broken, Billy gets a job trying to help the driver attract customers in exchange for free ice cream. But, without a bell himself, how will he get people’s attention?
Betsy’s Property
While Betsy is visiting her aunt and uncle at their summer home by the beach, she discovers a special rock a little ways out from the shore that she likes to think of as all her own. She likes to sit out on the rock and read with her aunt’s dog, but what will she do when a sudden storm leaves her stranded?
Betsy’s Hammock Club
Betsy loves the hammock that her father bought for her, but so does every other kid in the neighborhood!
Eddie and His Hermit Crab
Anna Patricia buys a couple of hermit crabs at the beach as pets. When she gives one to Eddie, he decides that his crab will win the hermit crab race at the beach!
Eddie and His Money Sheet
Eddie sets out to make some money with sand sculptures and ends up convincing Anna Patricia to adopt a stray cat.
The Picnic
Eddie and Anna Patricia find out that her new cat actually belongs to someone else. But, they become friends with the cat’s owners, who take them out for a sailing trip and picnic. When the kids’ parents are late arriving with food for the picnic, Anna Patricia tries to let the kids into the house and discovers how different the Goldilocks story would have been if the bears had a security alarm.
An Afternoon on the Farm
Teddy and Babs visit a farm with their parents and make friends with the grandchildren of the owners, Mark and Sarah. While the children are playing at being explorers one day, they find a dead animal they’ve never seen before. When they bring it back to show their parents, they learn why you shouldn’t mess with a skunk, even a dead one. (No mention of disease, just smell, although I’d think that would be a more serious issue.)
End of Summer
It’s time for Mark and Sarah to go home after visiting their grandparents. With all of the things they have to remember to take with them and all of the things they forget, will they actually make it to the train on time?















The Case of the Wandering Werewolf by Drew Stevenson, 1987.
The monster hunt becomes more complicated when Bucky Bovine, a bully at their school, seems determined to stop them from going to Lost Woods to look for the monster. Does Bucky know something about the beast, or could he even be the monster himself?
The Case of the Visiting Vampire by Drew Stevenson, 1988.
The Case of the Horrible Swamp Monster by Drew Stevenson, 1984.
The course of their investigation takes a strange turn when friendly Mr. Walton, who works as a janitor at the same bank where Huntley and Verna’s mothers work, is arrested for stealing money. The kids refuse to believe that he’s guilty and soon learn that there is a connection between the thefts and the mysterious monster and possibly the strange fisherman who has also been lurking around the swamp.
Meg’s Uncle Hal takes her and her best friend, Kerry, with him on vacation to Merrybones, Maine. He has a cabin there, and it’s a good place to go fishing or exploring in the woods. However, Uncle Hal isn’t just there to relax this time. His friend, Emily Hawthorne, has asked for his help because she’s received some mysterious, disturbing messages.
She has returned to Merrybones to teach in the local school, but people in this town look at her as an outsider because she has spent so many years away. Now, she has received threatening messages written in rhyme and signed with a star with the number 13 inside. Her pet black cat, Melissa, has also mysteriously disappeared, and Emily is worried about her.
Meg and the Disappearing Diamonds by Holly Beth Walker, 1967.
Mrs. Partlow invites a few friends to her house for tea to show them her jewelry and thoughtfully invites Meg and Kerry to join the women. Meg and Kerry are excited at the chance to attend a grown-up tea party and to see Mrs. Partlow’s fabulous jewelry. However, the party is crashed by Mrs. Glynn, a new woman in town. Mrs. Glynn has three trained dogs that she dotes on. She dresses them up in fancy costumes, and she can’t resist the opportunity to show them off when she wanders into the gathering in Mrs. Partlow’s garden. The dogs cause a disruption, and after it’s over, everyone realizes that Mrs. Partlow’s diamond jewelry is missing!
