Fudge-a-Mania

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Fudge-A-Mania
Fudge-a-Mania book cover.jpg
First edition
Author Judy Blume
Country United States
Language English
Genre Children's novel
Publisher Dutton Children's Books
Publication date
1990
Media type Print (Paperback)
Pages 160 pp
ISBN 0-525-44672-9
OCLC 22115812
LC Class PZ7.B6265 Fu 1990
Preceded by Superfudge
Followed by Double Fudge

Fudge-a-Mania is a 1990 children's novel by Judy Blume and the third in the Fudge series (fourth if Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great is counted as part of the series).

Plot

Peter Hatcher is horrified to learn of his family's plans to spend their summer in a vacation home alongside the Tubmans, the family of his archrival Sheila Tubman, located in Southwest Harbor, Maine. On the other hand, his younger brother Fudge anticipates the vacation because of his plans to marry Sheila as a means of protection against the supposed "monsters" hiding beneath his bed, knowing that spouses often share a bed. Fortunately, this wish is pacified and dropped after a newfound friend in a small girl named Mitzi provides him with a bottle containing her grandmother's "monster spray" during the vacation, but Peter is stunned to learn that Mitzi is the granddaughter of an idolized baseball player known as "Big Apple." Also, along the way, he invites his closest friend Jimmy Fargo on the trip with him, a privilege gifted to compensate for having to spend a vacation alongside Sheila, but is irritated when Jimmy starts to spend more time with her than with him out of sympathy for her own good friend's inability to join her on the trip too. Along the way, Peter develops a huge infatuation on a teenage librarian named Isobel and Fudge is inspired to author a picture book after learning about Mitzi's own book, "Tell Me a Mitzi." Frank Fargo, Jimmy's father, a celebrated painter, also receives inspiration after the Hatchers' baby daughter Tootsie toddles across a canvas with blue paint smeared on her feet, commencing a series of paintings appropriately entitled "Baby Feet."

Reception

Kirkus Reviews found "The story's a bit tame (no controversies here), but often amusingly true to life and with enough comic episodes to satisfy fans."[1] while Publishers Weekly "praised the ``numerous diverting scenes of this ``fast-pitched, funny novel."[2]

Television adaptation

A television film based on the book was released on January 7, 1995, in the USA, starring Jake Richardson, Florence Henderson, Eve Plumb, Shirley Knight, Alex Karras, Luke Tarsitano, and Darren McGavin. It was directed by Bob Clark. The film also inspired a half-hour Saturday morning TV series, Fudge.

References

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