The Return of the Plant That Ate Dirty Socks by Nancy McArthur, 1990.
Michael and Norman’s father has finally gotten the chance to take a vacation, but his sons’ weird, sock-eating plants complicate things. You can board pets or ask someone to come in and feed them, but how can you ask someone to leave out socks for your houseplants? The boys’ parents still kind of think that the plants are more trouble than they’re worth, but the boys love them like pets and can’t bear to get rid of them. Instead, they persuade their parents to rent an RV for the family’s vacation. That way, they can take the plants along.
It seems like a good idea, although before they leave home, the boys notice that the plants are starting to produce seed pods, something that they decide not to tell their parents. Instead, they simply remove the seed pods from the plants when they find them. So, the family sets off for Florida and Disney World in their RV with the sock-eating plants sticking out through the sun roof.
At first, it seems like things might be okay on the trip, but one night, when the boys are visiting their grandmother and sleeping in the house instead of the RV, they forget to set out socks for their plants to eat. When they wake up in the morning, the RV is gone. The boys worry that the plants somehow got control of the RV and drove it off to find more socks, but it turns out that it was stolen by car thieves. The police recover the RV but are puzzled when witnesses describe the thieves as abandoning the vehicle, screaming and running away without their shoes on, one of them only wearing one sock. The family is relieved to get their RV back, not to mention their plants, however their adventures are just beginning.
The family has a good time when they get to Disney World, but the plants start drooping because they feel neglected, all alone in the RV all day. To get the plants out in the sunshine and supervised more, the boys ask the people at the daycare center at the RV park if they can leave their plants there during the day. The plants perk up a little more, getting attention from the staff and children, especially when they sing.
But, it turns out that the mother of one of the girls who has seen the plants, Dr. Sparks, is a botanist, and she’s very curious about the origin of these unusual plants. The boys’ parents think that it might not hurt to get an expert opinion about their strange plants, but the boys worry that if the plants turn out to be very rare, scientists will want to take them away or their parents might decide to sell them. Their parents still think that the plants are too weird and too troublesome to keep, but Michael and Norman think of them as their friends and pets. They’ve been trying hard to keep their plants’ sock-eating abilities quiet. Is it finally time to tell someone? Can Dr. Sparks be trusted?
They end up asking for Dr. Sparks’ help when Fluffy accidentally eats something he shouldn’t. Dr. Sparks knows that the plants are unusual, but by the end of the book, she’s still not sure that she believes that they really eat socks. The boys give her some seeds so that she can experiment without taking their plants, knowing that she’ll eventually discover just how unusual the plants are. By the end of the book, other people are also growing more plants like Fluffy and Stanley, partly because Michael’s friend Jason stole some of the seeds they were saving and sold them to other kids while Michael and Norman were out of town. The boys can’t get back the seeds, but they force Jason to at least confess to the other kids that the plants will eventually eat socks. Jason doesn’t think that they’ll believe him, but the boys know that it’s only right that the buyers be warned because they’ll discover the truth eventually. Fluffy and Stanley are also starting to acquire the ability to move around on their own.


Summer Fun by Carolyn Haywood, 1986.
The Watermelon Party
Betsy’s Hammock Club
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!
The 123 Zoo Mystery by Susan Pearson, 1991.