Lunch Money

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Book Information

Category
Realistic/Contemporary Fiction
Reader Personality Type
Illustrator
Publisher
Atheneum Books Simon and Schuster 2005
Careful Content?
Curriculum
Social Emotional Learning

Greg Kenton has always been interested in money..especially in making money.  Someday he's going to have so much money he can buy whatever he wants.  Maura, the girl across the street and in class with him everyday has started to copy everything he does.

It all comes to a head when Greg designs a miniature comic book, mass produces it and begins to sell copies of it at school until the day he comes to school and finds Maura selling hand drawn, color miniatures.  

Greg isn't going to take this lying down.  Somebody is going to end up with a black eye.  

224 pages  Ages 8-12  978-0689866838

Recommended by:  Barb Langridge, abookandahug.com

From Simon and Schuster:

Greg Kenton has always had a natural talent for making money -- despite the annoying rivalry of his neighbor Maura Shaw. Then, just before sixth grade, Greg makes a discovery: Almost every kid at school has an extra quarter or two to spend almost every day. 
Multiply a few quarters by a few hundred kids, and for Greg, school suddenly looks like a giant piggy bank. All he needs is the right hammer to crack it open. Candy and gum? Little toys? Sure, kids would love to buy stuff like that at school. But would teachers and the principal permit it? Not likely. 
But how about comic books? Comic books might work. Especially the chunky little ones that Greg writes and illustrates himself. Because everybody knows that school always encourages reading and writing and creativity and individual initiative, right? 
In this funny and timely novel, Andrew Clements again holds up a mirror to real life, and invites young readers to think about money, school, friendship, and what it means to be a success.

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3.0
I liked this book because I was on the
edge of my seat wanting to see what
was going to happen. I love it.
T
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