Wacky Wednesday (book)

Wacky Wednesday is a book for young readers, written by Dr. Seuss as Theo. LeSieg and illustrated by George Booth. It has forty-eight pages,[1] and is based around a world of progressively wackier occurrences, where kids can point out that there is a picture frame upside down, a palm tree growing in the toilet, an earthworm chasing a bird, an airplane flying backward, a tiger chauffeur, and a traffic light showing that stop is green and go is red, as some examples.

Wacky Wednesday
AuthorTheo. LeSieg
SeriesI Can Read It All By Myself Beginner Books Series[1]
PublisherRandom House Children's Books[1]
Publication date
September 28, 1974[1] (renewed 2002)
Media typePrint (Hardcover and paperback)
ISBN9780394829128 [1]

Plot

The main character, a girl, wakes up to find a shoe on the wall; then he looks up to find one on the ceiling as well. With each new page, the number of "wacky" things grows, as the girl goes through his morning routine and makes it to George Washington School, trying to alert others to the wacky occurrences. The classmates ignore his warnings, and his teacher, Miss Bass, who is his mum who works in the school, thinks he is disrupting the class and throws him out.

As the world gets crazier and crazier, the girl runs around trying to escape it or find help, and eventually runs into Patrolman McGann, who declares that Wacky Wednesday will end as soon as every last wacky thing has been counted – the final page having 20 in total.

At the end, the shoe on the wall is gone as the girl goes to bed.

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gollark: Arch Linux has comprehensive documentation, which consists of a community wiki known as the ArchWiki.
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gollark: Arch Linux is a Linux distribution created for computers with x86-64 processors. Arch Linux adheres to the KISS principle ("Keep It Simple, Stupid"). The project attempts to have minimal distribution-specific changes, and therefore minimal breakage with updates, and be pragmatic over ideological design choices and focus on customizability rather than user-friendliness.
gollark: By the way, I use Arch.

See also

References

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