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Weird Stories from the Lonesome Café by Judy Cox — book cover

Weird Stories from the Lonesome Café

by Judy Cox, Deborah Halverson (Editor), Diane Kidd
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Synopsis

A funny fantasy chapter book in the spirit of Roald Dahl.

Ten-year-old Sam is spending the summer in the middle of Nevada, working at the remote Lonesome Cafe. And the help wanted sign in the window brings some very strange visitors—Bigfoot, Elvis, a jolly fat man from the North Pole, and a young girl and her dog who blow in on a tornado from Kansas. And then there's the spaceship that crashes nearby and its little green passenger...

Sam is kept busy distracting the nosy TV news team so they don't discover the identities of the odd visitors, but it's not easy. Come along for a visit to the Lonesome Cafe—it's the place to be!

Publishers Weekly

As she did in Rabbit Pirates, Cox chooses an amiable eating establishment setting as the setting for this cheerful spoof. Sam's Uncle Clem, an aspiring author, wishes something would happen at his remote Nevada caf so that he would have something to write about. Yet narrator Sam spots some mighty strange occurrences right under their noses. Just after an enormous, furry stranger whom the duo names Harry arrives for some chow, a TV news crew appears in search of Bigfoot, who has been spotted in the area. Next, a fellow with dark hair "slicked-back and waved up high" pulls up in a 1950s pink Caddy and introduces himself as "El." Mr. C, a jolly, round gent with a big white beard on vacation from his workshop up North shows up next, followed by a pigtailed girl who blows in on a small tornado and announces to her dog, "I don't think we're in Kansas anymore." Sam's oblivious uncle hires them all, still insisting that "nothing ever happens here" each time the reporters return in search of a story. Cox sprinkles her quick-moving if predictable narrative with double entendres and references that range from obvious to waggish ("Must be all shook up," says El after an alien emerges from his crashed spaceship). The Lonesome Caf doesn't set out to serve up substantial fare, but the light snack it offers will satiate kids with an appetite for shenanigans, and Kidd's black-and-white cartoon art dishes out an extra dollop of fun. Ages 7-10. (Apr.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

About the Author, Judy Cox

Judy Cox has been an elementary school educator for more than ten years. Ms. Cox teaches school and makes her home in West Linn, Oregon.

Diane Kidd works as a museum education specialist for the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. Weird Stories from the Lonesome Café is her first book for children. Ms. Kidd lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.

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Book Details

Published
April 1, 2000
Publisher
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780152021344

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