Book Read Free

Dear Dumb Diary #8: It's Not My Fault I Know Everything

Page 1

by Jim Benton




  From New York Times bestselling author Jim Benton

  free

  Diploma of

  Everything

  Inside!

  DUMB

  ARE

  YOU?

  HOW

  What’s on the other side???

  Find out in this handy,

  highly accurate

  IQ DUMBNESS SCALE

  This document

  YOUR NAM

  knows everything about

  but not dumb stuff that

  Jamie KellY, Professor

  and ToTal Genius

  certifies that

  Your name here

  knows everything about everything important

  but not dumb stuff that nobody cares about.

  1STP P

  IT’S NOT MY FAULT

  I KNOW EVERYTHING

  Think you can handle

  Jamie Kelly’s FIrst year of diaries?

  #1 Let’s pretend this never happened

  #2 My pants are haunted!

  #3 Am I the Princess or the Frog?

  #4 never do anything, ever

  #5 can adults become human?

  #6 the problem with here is that it's where i'm from

  #7 Never Underestimate your dumbness

  #8 It’s Not My Fault I Know Everything

  #9 That’s What Friends Aren't For

  #10 The worst things in life are also free

  #11 Okay, So Maybe I Do Have Superpowers

  #12 Me! (Just Like You, Only Better)

  And don’t miss year two!

  Year Two #1: School. Hasn’t This Gone On Long Enough?

  Year Two #2: The Super-nice Are Super-annoying

  Year Two #3: Nobody's Perfect. I'm as Close As It Gets.

  Year Two #4: What I Don’t Know Might Hurt Me

  De

  a

  r Dum

  b

  Diary,

  iT’s noT my FAULT

  i know EVERYTHING

  SCHOLASTIC INC.

  Jim Benton’s Tales from Mackerel Middle School

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright

  Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted,

  downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced

  into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by

  any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter

  invented, without the express written permission of the publisher. For

  information regarding permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention:

  Permissions Department, 557 Broadway, New York, NY 10012.

  e-ISBN 978-0-545-64946-9

  Copyright © 2009 by Jim Benton

  All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc.

  SCHOLASTIC and associated logos are trademarks

  and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc.

  DEAR DUMB DIARY is a registered trademark of Jim Benton.

  First printing, March 2009

  1STP P

  For all the Jamies, Angelines, and

  Isabellas of the world; I hope you

  don't mind me using your name.

  Special thanks to the team at

  Scholastic: Steve Scott, Cheryl

  Weisman, Susan Jeffers Casel,

  Anna Bloom, and most of all,

  editor Shannon Penney.

  And thanks to Mary K

  for all your help.

  1STP P

  1STP P

  1STP P

  Dear Whoever Is Reading My Dumb Diary,

  Are you sure you’re supposed to be

  reading somebody else’s diary? I mean, you

  must know about the SACRED SECRECY

  OF THE DIARY — it’s a principle that

  must never be violated. Unless you were to

  find yourself in a position where you HAD

  to read another person’s diary. Like if a

  bear or teacher or animal like that MADE

  you do it, then you wouldn’t have a choice.

  Or if you just really really really really needed

  to know something, and there were at least

  four or more “reallys” involved, then that

  might be okay. And if there were some sort

  of zombie-related issues.

  But none of these conditions apply to

  parents, so if you are my parents, then you

  are just committing unauthorized reading,

  and if you punish me for anything I may have

  written here, then I will cleverly know that

  you read my diary, which you do not have

  my permission to do. (Although I might be

  able to overlook it in exchange for a puppy.)

  Now, by the power vested in me, I do

  promise that everything in this diary is true,

  or, at least, as true as I think it needs to be.

  Signed,

  PS: Also if you are a blond girl at my school

  whose initials are Angeline the Blondwad,

  you aren’t allowed to read my diary, either.

  Even if zombies are about to eat you.

  PPS: Especially if they are.

  1

  Sunday 01

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  It’s not my fault I know everything.

  Okay, I don’t know where Timbuktu is, but I

  refuse to know that. Even if somebody told me,

  I would flush my brain like a Thought -Potty and

  wave good-bye to Timbuktu as it swirled down my

  brain hole.

  I know everything that I want to know.

  2

  Sunday is the day that many of the world’s

  great civilizations set aside to do homework.

  Isabella came over today so we could do homework

  together, which makes the time we waste not

  doing it go faster.

  To mask the scent of homework, she brought

  over a bunch of magazines with quizzes and pictures

  of celebrities. We noticed how ugly people turn

  nice- looking by being famous — like there’s this one

  boy on this one TV show, and if he wasn’t on a TV

  show he would look like a girl that had been bitten

  horribly on the face by an ape, but since he’s on TV,

  he looks like a girl that was bitten handsomely on

  the face by an angel.

  3

  Remember how I know everything? The reason

  this came up today is that these magazines feature

  lots of important quizzes and tests you can take,

  like ARE YOU A FASHION HIT OR FASHION

  TWIT? and JUST HOW MUCH NICENESS

  DO YOU HAVE? and ARE YOUR PARENTS

  ANNOYING OR SUPER -ANNOYING?

  Magazine people are Geniuses and supercool

  because they can figure out your whole life with

  multiple- choice questions. I think they should

  make it so all Life’s Questions are multiple choice.

  4

  Isabella kept getting mad at me because

  I always came out in the very top of the ratings

  in these quizzes. She kept coming out a little bit

  subhuman and said that we need better magazines

  with better tests. Then she tore them into a jillion

  pieces.

  As I tried to put some of the pictures back

  together, I realized that the fam
ous boy -girl

  actually looked better with most of his face torn

  off than he did when he was just famous.

  5

  Monday 02

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  I went back and read some of my very oldest

  diaries. There were no entries about important

  matters like Hudson Rivers — eighth cutest boy

  in my grade — or things that should happen to

  Angeline.

  The entries say things like “I eated salad

  dressing” and “I got a Barbie shoe stuck in Stinker’s

  nose again” and “The vet was mean to me about the

  Barbie shoe so I tried to bite him but vets are quick

  at not getting bit because dogs try all the time but

  dogs don’t usually kick so I did that.”

  What amazed me was just how dumb I used

  to be, considering how smart I am now. There must

  have been a day when I just woke up smart.

  6

  I wonder if there was a day when Angeline

  woke up annoying. Like one night, she goes to

  bed and she’s hardly perfect at all, and the next

  morning, she wakes up in a puddle of her own

  beauty, and she glides over to the mirror and

  radiates gorgeous glamour all over the place.

  She sees that she’s the most beautiful person that

  has ever lived, and she smiles prettily because she

  knows how much it’s going to bug me.

  7

  And maybe there was a moment when Hudson

  Rivers was only the ninth cutest boy in my grade,

  and then he cutely said some sort of cute thing and

  realized that now he was number eight????

  I sort of doubt this one, because I don’t think

  boys realize things.

  8

  Tuesday 03

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Today, Mr. Evans gave us a new assignment

  in English class. Get this: He wants us to keep

  a diary for almost three weeks. This sounds pretty

  easy except for one thing: The diaries are going to

  be read by everyone. In fact, Evans explained

  that Old Mrs. Penney, the ancient media specialist

  (or librarian, as they were called when she was hired

  and books were just being invented) is going to

  type up all of our diary entries and put them in the

  library where anybody can just walk in and check

  them out. This is a clear violation of the Sacred

  Secrecy of Diaries.

  9

  Now, I’m an expert on diaries, as you know.

  That makes me a diareer. Or maybe that makes

  me diaretic. Anyway, this expertness made me

  blurt out, “You can’t let people read our diaries.

  Diaries are private.”

  This probably would have made the point just

  fine, but my expertness made me add, “You’ve got

  to be out of your mind.”

  10

  Mr. Evans’s vein instantly swelled up and

  throbbed on his bald head like a skinny blue snake

  attacking a giant egg.

  Isabella, who is an expert on knowing when

  somebody has been Pushed Too Far, sensed

  that Mr. Evans was going to punish me. She quickly

  blurted out, “Jamie, if you know so much about

  diaries, maybe you should have to help Old Mrs.

  Penney with the project.”

  Normally, I would have been mad that she

  had offered me up that way, but she probably

  spared me from something much worse. What would

  I do without her?

  11

  Suddenly, Mr. Evans’s face looked like a big

  wad of cheese with a little curved cut in it, which

  is how his face makes a smile. He said that the

  diaries would be anonymous, and that was why

  Mrs. Penney would be typing them up — so nobody

  could recognize anyone’s handwriting. And as far as

  privacy, he wanted us to understand that anything

  we write MUST BE TRUE. But since everyone could

  read these things, we might want to use fake names

  if something is very personal.

  Then he said he thought that Isabella had a

  great idea, and even though Mrs. Penney has been

  doing this for decades (in fact, she even invented

  the assignment), she would certainly love the help

  of an expert like me.

  Note to Mr. Evans: Yes, I understand

  sarcasm when I hear it, you pleasant, not fat,

  unbald, young teacher, you.

  12

  Wednesday 04

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Okay, so here’s the deal, Dumb Diary. I have

  to write diary entries to hand in for my assignment,

  but I’m not going to stop my important regular diary

  work, such as documenting the number of times

  Hudson has sat with me and Isabella at lunch in the

  last month (eleven times), or the number of times

  he’s stopped and talked to us at our lockers (eight

  times) or the number of times he’s spit out his gum

  on the sidewalk this week (four times . . . why am I

  counting this?).

  Anyway, I’ll keep up my real diary as well as

  the fake pages, and at the end of the three weeks,

  I’ll just tear out the Fake Diary assignment pages

  and turn those in.

  Don’t get jealous, Dumb Diary. I’m not

  cheating on you with this fake diary. So don’t

  put on the saddest music you can find and write

  weepy poems about your broken heart or spine or

  whatever. It’s true that I would be worth a whole

  bunch of VERY weepy poems, but not over this.

  13

  To be sure that I don’t tear out the wrong

  pages and turn those in, my assignment pages will

  look different,and will be exactly what I’m willing

  to let people read.

  Here’s what I’m thinking my fake entries

  should look like:

  My Dearest Diary:

  Today I went to school and appreciated the crap out

  of my teachers, especially Mr. Evans, who gave us this really

  awesome assignment of diary-writing that I get to do

  instead of watching TV.

  Fondly,

  Anonymous

  14

  Perfect, right? Sometimes it amazes me how

  ingenious I am about everything.

  Oh, and I stopped by the library to ask Old

  Mrs. Penney how she wanted me to help her and she

  said, “You’re the one that likes to write, aren’t you?

  And draw? Friends with Isabella?”

  What was next? The color of my underpants?

  Evidently, Old Mrs. Penney is one of those teachers

  that knows everything about every kid in the

  school.

  She said that once she gets the diaries from

  Mr. Evans, she’ll explain what I have to do. Then she

  said something old and I didn’t understand her.

  15

  Thursday 05

  My Dearest Diary:

  Thursday, as you may have heard, is Meat Loaf

  Day in the cafeteria. It feels so good to know that our cooks

  are doing their part to make sure that the elbow meat of

  weasels —--- which is too often wastefully discarded after

  weasels are run over —--- is carefully made into lunch for

  me and my fellow innocent children. At
least I think it is

  weasel elbow meat.

  Signed,

  Anonymous but really pretty

  16

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Now for the real entry: Angeline has been

  sitting down right next to me in the cafeteria more

  often lately, and I think it’s because she thinks

  we’re family. Not because her uncle, Assistant

  Principal Devon, married my Aunt Carol (my mom’s

  sister). No —because my dog, Stinker, and her dog,

  Stickybuns, had puppies together, which makes

  them married in Dog World.

  17

  But this really doesn’t make me and Angeline

  related, exactly. What this makes us is Dog-in-

  Laws. And in-laws — any kind of in-laws — are

  only family when they’re around.

  In- laws are like a side order that you didn’t

  ask for that comes on the plate with the food you

  did order. And sometimes the side order you get is

  onion rings or grapes or something good like that,

  but you could also get a little cup of soggy coleslaw

  or deep-fried fingernails.

  It’s like the waiter brought the puppies over

  with a side order of Angeline -slaw in a giant pink

  bowl, and he accidentally gave me a diet drink with

  no ice in it. Also my fork has a hair on it and all they

  have for dessert is unflavored Jell-O.

  Wait. Why am I writing about food? Oh, yeah.

  Thursday is Meat Loaf Day so I didn’t eat lunch.

  18

  You remember that Isabella is getting one of

  the puppies right, Dumb Diary? She keeps asking

  if her puppy is done yet, which I don’t like talking

  about because even though I’ve asked my mom over

  and over, she won’t let me have one.

  Isabella is really anxious to get a puppy

  because she has had six kittens run away from

  home, plus one turtle who is currently in the process

 

‹ Prev