Authors: Wendelin Van Draanen
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SHREDDERMAN: ATTACK OF THE TAGGER,
Wendelin Van Draanen
SAMMY KEYES AND THE HOTEL THIEF,
Wendelin Van Draanen
I WAS A RAT!,
Philip Pullman
THE FLUNKING OF JOSHUA T. BATES,
Susan Shreve
THE CRICKET IN TIMES SQUARE,
George Selden
BLACK-EYED SUSAN,
Jennifer Armstrong
NIM'S ISLAND,
Wendy Orr
BABE: THE GALLANT PIG,
Dick King-Smith
MANIAC MONKEYS ON MAGNOLIA STREET,
Angela Johnson
HOW TÍA LOLA CAME TO
STAY,
Julia Alvarez
Bubba Bixby was born big and mean, full of teeth and ready to bite.
That's what my mom thinks anyway.
My dad says a boy isn't born bad—he grows into being bad.
I don't know who's right. What I
do
know is that Bubba Bixby's got rocky knuckles.
And killer breath.
Teachers are always telling him to use words instead of fists—they have no idea what they're saying! Bubba-breath can knock you out cold.
Ask Ian McCoy. It actually happened to him in the third grade. When Bubba shouted at him, Ian's eyes rolled up in his head.
His knees buckled.
Then he blacked out and bit the dirt.
We had to slap his cheeks like crazy to get him to wake up, and when he did, he sat up, then
threw
up.
My father thinks I shouldn't call Bubba “Bubba” like everyone else does. He thinks I should call him Alvin, which is his real name. I've told him that calling him Alvin will get me pounded. Mike McDermish got dared to do it once and was nothing but Mike-mush when it was over. Now it's “Sure, Bubba” and “You betcha, Bubba” whenever he talks to him.
My mom and dad used to try to get the school to do something about Bubba. They talked to teachers. They even talked to the principal, Dr. Voss, a bunch of times. Nothing changed.
Dad thinks Dr. Voss isn't assertive enough. Dr. Voss thinks
I'm
not assertive enough. She says that kids like Bubba help us get ready for life.
Now that I'm a fifth grader, my dad tells me
not to worry about Bubba. He says that I've got a lot more on the ball than Bubba does, and that one day Alvin Bixby will be working for me.
But he's wrong on two counts. First, that's forever away. And second, I wouldn't hire Bubba in a million years.
I'd fire him.
Say… what if I could fire Bubba from school? Wouldn't that be cool? Just kick him out and tell him to never come back. I could eat lunch without him flipping over my tray. Play four-square without him hogging the ball. Line up for class without him taking cuts and shoving the rest of us back. Oh, yeah. School without Bubba would be a whole new place.
I have to admit that our teacher, Mr. Green,
tries
to keep Bubba in line, but Mr. Green's already got one full-time job teaching fifth grade, and my mom says it's hard for him to take on another in the middle of it.
Plus, Bubba's sly. So no matter how hard Mr. Green tries, Bubba gets away with stuff.
Like lying.
And cheating.
And stealing.
My magic-rub eraser is in Bubba's desk right now with the initials B.B. gouged into it. So are some of my colored pencils. And probably my favorite
The Gecko and Sticky
magazine and the
Dinosaurs
library book I keep getting a reminder on.
It's not just my stuff that gets stolen. Bubba
takes things from everybody. Even his friends, Kevin and Max. Actually, I think he steals from them the most.
The only thing Bubba's ever
given
anyone is names. I used to be Nolan Byrd. Now I'm Byrd-the-Nerd.
Or just plain Nerd.
Jake is Bucktooth. Trey is Butthead. Marvin is Moron. Todd is Toad, Ian is Fizz, Jenni is Worm lips, Trinity is Pony-girl, Kayla is Freckle, Sarah is Kiss-up… everyone's got two names:
one from their parents and one from Bubba.
His names stick, too. If Bubba calls you something a few times, you'll hear it over and over again from everyone. Some people
like
their names. Like Brian Washington. Even the teachers call him Gap because he wants them to. He doesn't
have
a gap between his front teeth anymore, but Bubba called him that in second grade, and he hasn't been Brian since.
So that's Bubba. He calls you names. He steals your stuff. He breathes putrid fumes in your face.
And even though I've always wanted to
do
something about it, I could never figure out what. I'm half Bubba's size and don't exactly want to
die
in elementary school.
So I just eat lunch far away from him, make room when he's cutting in line, and let him call me Nerd.
It's not fair, but at least I'm still alive.
Mr. Green likes animals.
And plants.
And rocks and sand and
skulls.
One side of our classroom is set up like the desert. The other is like a jungle. The jungle has a waterfall that he turns on when we're taking tests. It's supposed to relax us and help us think, but all it does is make me have to use the bathroom.
Some kids—like Bubba—think Mr. Green's weird, but I think he's cool. Bubba calls him the Happy Hippie because he's got a ponytail, he likes to play guitar, and he wears jeans and sandals to school. He also drives an old van with dolphins
painted all over it that everyone calls the Green Machine.
Every month, Mr. Green gives us a project to do. A
hard
project. We've had to build all kinds of things:
Ecosystems.
Solar systems.
Igloos.
The Great Pyramids!
And since my mom and dad think it's good exercise for me to do my own work, my projects are always disasters.
My igloo looked half melted.
My pyramids crumbled on the way to school.
The trees in my ecosystem looked like pencils with hula grass.