The Magic School Bus

The Magic School Bus Inside the Earth by Joanna Cole, 1987.
Ms. Frizzle’s class has a new student, Phoebe, who is about to discover that Ms. Frizzle is no ordinary teacher and that her class trips are nothing like any other field trip. Ms. Frizzle’s class is studying the earth and rocks, and she assigns the students homework to find a rock and bring it to class.

However, even though it sounds like an easy assignment, only one person actually brought a real rock to class. The others either didn’t bring anything or brought in pieces of old Styrofoam, bits of broken glass, or chips of concrete from the sidewalk. With only one real rock for the class’s rock collection, Ms. Frizzle decides that the class should to on a trip to collect more.

She takes the class on a field trip to a real field, but they’re not just going to collect rocks that they find lying on the ground. The bus changes itself into a steam shovel, and Ms. Frizzle passes out shovels and jackhammers to the students. They start digging down into the earth, uncovering new layers of rock as Ms. Frizzle explains what types of rocks are in the layers and how they formed.

Before the field trip is over, the school bus, along with all the students, falls through the ground and into a massive cave. They continue traveling all the way down through the center of the earth and out the other side, ending up on a volcano, where Ms. Frizzle calmly explains about volcanic rocks.

I like the picture at the end of the book, after the kids return to school, which points out that there are things all around them that are made out of the different kinds of rocks and minerals that they learned about on their trip. Each type of rock is also shown in the class’s rock collection along with notes about the type of each rock and how it can be used.

The book ends with a mock phone conversation between a reader and the author and artist about the impossible things that happen in the book but noting the factual information contained in the story. The book was featured on Reading Rainbow. It is currently available online through Internet Archive.

Cranberry Autumn by Wende and Harry Devlin, 1993.
School is about to start, and Maggie and her grandmother realize that they’re short of money. Maggie needs new school clothes, and her grandmother needs a new coat. They know that some of their neighbors could also use some more money, so Grandmother suggests that they hold a sale. Some of them have some antiques and other interesting old items that they could sell.

The Secret Life of the Underwear Champ by Betty Miles, 1981.
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!
#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.
#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.




