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Details Appertaining To Books Superfudge (Fudge #3)

Title:Superfudge (Fudge #3)
Author:Judy Blume
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 192 pages
Published:April 5th 2007 by Puffin Books (first published January 1st 1980)
Categories:Childrens. Fiction. Young Adult
Reading Books For FreeSuperfudge (Fudge #3) Online
Superfudge (Fudge #3) Paperback | Pages: 192 pages
Rating: 3.99 | 59038 Users | 1448 Reviews

Interpretation Concering Books Superfudge (Fudge #3)

From Judy Blume, bestselling author of Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing!

Fans young and old will laugh out loud at the irrepressible wit of Peter Hatcher, the hilarious antics of mischievous Fudge, and the unbreakable confidence of know-it-all Sheila Tubman in Judy Blume’s five Fudge books. Brand-new covers adorn these perennial favorites, and will entice a whole new generation of Fudge—and Judy Blume—fans.

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Original Title: Superfudge
ISBN: 0142408808 (ISBN13: 9780142408803)
Edition Language: English
Series: Fudge #3
Characters: Fudge Hatcher, Peter Hatcher, Jimmy Fargo, Tootsie Hatcher, Alex Santo, Joanne McFadden, Daniel Manheim
Setting: Princeton, New Jersey(United States) New Jersey(United States)
Literary Awards: Young Hoosier Book Award (1983), Texas Bluebonnet Award (1982), Books I Loved Best Yearly (BILBY) Awards for Read Alone (1990), West Australian Young Readers' Book Award (WAYRBA) for Younger Readers (1982), Garden State Book Award (1983) Buckeye Children's Book Award for 4-8 (1982), Grand Canyon Reader Award (1983), Colorado Children's Book Award (1982), Land of Enchantment Book Award (1984), Nene Award (1982), Golden Sower Award for Intermediate Category (1983), North Dakota Children's Choice Award (1982), Flicker Tale Children's Book Award (1987), Beehive Book Award for Children's Fiction (1982), Soaring Eagle Book Award (1989), Sunshine State Young Readers Award (1984), Pacific Northwest Library Association Young Reader's Choice Award (1983), Iowa Children's Choice Award (1983), New Mexico Land of Enchantment Award (1984), California Young Readers Medal for Intermediate (1983), Virginia Reader's Choice for Elementary (1985)

Rating Appertaining To Books Superfudge (Fudge #3)
Ratings: 3.99 From 59038 Users | 1448 Reviews

Evaluation Appertaining To Books Superfudge (Fudge #3)
I like the part in "Superfudge" when Peter moved with his family for a year or two to Princeton. I also like the part when Peter and Jimmy Fargo made the deal before he moved to Princeton, and they both broke the promise so Peter and Jimmy Fargo both don't have to feel bad anymore for breaking their promises because now they both know that they both broke the promise. I also like the part when they go trick-or-treating and Peter took Fudge's phantom costume and then Fudge was like, "Hey, that's

This was better than tales of a fourth grade nothing. It was more funny and intertaining. I read this at school in a book club that I joined. We had to do trivia and projects on Judy blume books and dicuss them. It was fun and I know and like this book the best of all the books we read in the club!!!

The book's beginning is interesting, but then the text becomes inconsistent and the ending was disappointing and it happened all of a sudden. I'm reading some books I have at home whose audios I found in Scribd, so I'm not giving up on any book in this list, even if I don't like the development of the story, because I want soooo much to improve my English.

Originally published in 1980, this story is about the relationship between brothers Peter and Fudge. Being the younger brother and outspoken, Fudge seems to find himself in some very interesting situations making for a outrageously funny story. I especially love that Fudge will say or do whatever comes to mind. In typical six-year old form, he climbs on top of a high shelf refusing to come down when his teacher insists on calling him by his given name. Hilarious. This is a really sentimental

4th-5th grade (independent reading)Blume does such an excellent job with her books. They are an absolute joy to read. Superfudge was full of what a fourth or fifth grader wants, a fun and intresting plot, characters they can relate with, and text they can understand. The plot of Superfudge had twists and turns from the new baby's arrival to moves to and from the country. At the ages suggested above, children may relate if they have the same circumstances going on in their own lives. The



In third grade or maybe it was second, I don't remember, but I had the same teacher for both grades so it's irrelevant to the story; so anyway in whatever grade, second or third, my teacher started to read from Superfudge to the class every Friday afternoon. The class got enthralled in the book, and getting a hold of the book from the school library was a pretty impressive feat since everyone in the class wanted the one copy. I can still remember exactly where on the shelf it would have sat if

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