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Hattie

Page 8

by Frida Nilsson


  Now he doesn’t drive like a tough guy at racing speed. Now he has to creep along like a snail while Hattie looks right and left for Snoopy’s shorts.

  Mama takes off her sunglasses. She doesn’t look at all chic any more. She just looks bored.

  Papa sighs. “Can you see them?” he asks.

  “No! Don’t drive so fast!” Hattie shrieks back.

  The whole day they putter along in the rugged rental jeep looking for Snoopy’s shorts. Except Papa calls them Snoopy’s “underpants.” Hattie feels offended. Snoopy does too. Papa suggests Snoopy could borrow Mama’s bikini bottoms instead of his lost shorts. Mama is offended.

  They never find the shorts. Night comes and the jeep has to go back to the rental company. They don’t rent another car on the holiday. They go to the beach instead and Papa sits under the umbrella and pants in the heat. The map of Rhodes’ dangerous rocky terrain is left rolled up in the hotel room.

  A NEW YEAR

  When they get back to Sweden, Papa races up to his room. He writes a funny article for the newspaper about how crazy it was when Hattie made them spend a whole day on Rhodes looking for underpants. Hattie thinks she’ll die and has to go secretly to her room and say a prayer: “Dear God, please let no one at school read the newspaper.”

  But God has more important things to think about than Hattie. When school begins the whole class thinks it’s hilarious that she’s so interested in underpants. Underpants fanatic!

  Now the apples are hanging off the tree in the school yard. There are pears too. Everyone eats them and gets a sore stomach. Hattie included.

  The teacher seems to be well again. “Welcome,” he says, “to a new year at Hardemo.”

  Then they have to write about what they’ve done in the summer. Hattie writes so much her pen is on fire. She skips over the bit about the underpants, but it still ends up being several pages long.

  The teacher smiles as she reads it aloud up at the blackboard.

  “Clever,” he says. “Rich in content.”

  Linda hasn’t been anywhere, Hattie knows. But when it’s time for her to read aloud, she scampers up to the blackboard and squints at Hattie with glittering eyes.

  Then she reads two pages about how she’s been to Africa chasing elephants this summer. Hattie laughs so hard she thinks her head will fall off. And suddenly the teacher looks a little, just a little bit, tired again.

  It’s the first day of school. Just like one year ago. Except not really. Everything is actually completely different.

  HELLO FRIDA NILSSON

  Describe yourself in three words.

  Funny, stubborn, brown-haired.

  Best animal, food, book?

  Basset hound, fresh crayfish, Pelle Holm’s Bevingade Ord (a book of classic quotes).

  Describe a really good day.

  I write half a chapter I’m really pleased with, sit for a while on the steps, cook, drink a little wine.

  What makes you happy?

  The woods.

  What makes you sad?

  Stories about people and animals in the world who are mistreated.

  Why do you write books?

  To think about something else for a while, and to find out if it has a happy ending.

  How do you get ideas for your books? Sources of inspiration?

  When my mother and father talk about how things were in the past.

  Describe a typical writing day.

  I start early before breakfast, drink five cups of coffee up to lunch, then I finish at two or three.

  What is the most fun thing about writing books?

  When you think of something that makes the story much better.

  And the hardest?

  When you write a paragraph five times without it turning out the way it should.

  Which character from one of your own books would you choose to take with you on a long journey?

  Probably Siri from The Ice Sea Pirates—she is used to travelling and can handle most things.

  Photo © Ellinor Collin

  This edition first published in 2020 by Gecko Press

  PO Box 9335, Wellington 6141, New Zealand

  info@geckopress.com

  English-language edition © Gecko Press Ltd 2020

  Translation © Julia Marshall 2020

  Original title: Hedvig!

  Text © Frida Nilsson and Natur & Kultur, Stockholm 2005

  Illustrations © Stina Wirsén and Natur & Kultur, Sotckholm 2005

  English edition published in agreement with Koja Agency

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted or utilized in any form, or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Distributed in the United States and Canada by Lerner Publishing Group

  lernerbooks.com

  Distributed in the United Kingdom by Bounce Sales and Marketing

  bouncemarketing.co.uk

  Distributed in Australia and New Zealand by Walker Books Australia

  walkerbooks.com.au

  The cost of this translation was defrayed by a subsidy from the Swedish Arts Council, gratefully acknowledged.

  Edited by Penelope Todd

  Design and typesetting by Vida & Luke Kelly

  Printed in China by Everbest Printing Co. Ltd,

  an accredited ISO 14001 & FSC-certified printer

  ISBN hardback: 978-1-776572-70-0 (USA)

  ISBN paperback: 978-1-776572-71-7

  Ebook ISBNs: 978-1-776572-72-4 (epub); 978-1-776573-03-5 (mobi); 978-1-776573-04-2 (pdf); 978-1-776573-05-9 (S & L pdf)

  For more curiously good books, visit geckopress.com

  More curiously good books from

  GECKO PRESS

  The Ice Sea Pirates

  By Frida Nilsson

  The cold bites and the ice sea lashes. No one but ten-year-old Siri dares to face treacherous sailors, hungry wolves and the arctic winter to save her sister from the dreaded Captain Whitehead and his ice sea pirates.

  An adventure of cold-blooded pirates, wolves, mermaids and the bravery of one girl determined to save her sister.

  Reviews

  “An icy adventure with a warm heart...a fantastical celebration of the precious power of love.” Kiran Millwood Hargrave, author of The Girl of Ink and Stars

  “Philosophical, breathtakingly beautiful and unwaveringly kind, The Ice Sea Pirates is a wild adventure with a huge heart.” Sarah Driver, author of The Huntress The Irish Times

  “A rollicking adventure where the unexpected makes you stop and think … a hypnotising read-alone for confident middle graders or a perfect bedtime story for any age.” Kids’ Book Review

  The Runaways

  By Ulf Stark, illustrated by Kitty Crowther

  Grandpa’s in the hospital and hating it. He swears at the nurses and makes trouble for everyone. Dad finds it too stressful to visit, but Gottfried Junior visits Grandpa as often as he’s allowed, and when he’s not allowed, he goes anyway.

  Grandpa thinks only of the place he was happiest—the island where he lived with Grandma. He wants to go back one last time, but they won’t let him out of the hospital.

  Gottfried Junior and Grandpa take things into their own hands. If running away is the only way to the island, then they’ll be runaways.

  Reviews

  “An unusual adventure story with a core of mutual grandfather-grandson affection.” Starred review, Booklist

  “Stark straightforwardly conveys family tensions, end-of-life concerns, and intergenerational adoration alongside an archipelago’s worth of vivid details.” Starred review, Publishers Weekly

  My Happy Life

  By Rose Lagercrantz, illustrated by Eva Eriksson

  Dani is probably the happiest person she knows—she’s going to start school. Then things get even better: she meets Ella by the swings. After that, Dani and Ella do everything together. But then something happens that Dani isn�
�t prepared for...

  A New York Times Notable Book, this is an illustrated chapter book about friendship, happiness and how life really is.

  Reviews

  “If only all early chapter books were this beautifully conceived.” New York Times Book Review

  “This is tender, empathic, empowering and thoughtful early story telling with deft and considered themes. The subject matter and tone are deeply respectful of younger readers, their needs, concerns and experiences” Bookwagon (UK)

  “A quietly compelling book for young readers.” starred review, Booklist (US)

 

 

 


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