Sharon Creech Books In Order

Jack Books In Publication Order

  1. Love That Dog (2001)
  2. Hate That Cat (2008)

Standalone Novels In Publication Order

  1. Absolutely Normal Chaos (1990)
  2. Walk Two Moons (1994)
  3. Pleasing the Ghost / The Ghost of Uncle Arvie (1996)
  4. Chasing Redbird (1997)
  5. Bloomability (1998)
  6. The Wanderer (2000)
  7. Ruby Holler (2002)
  8. Granny Torrelli Makes Soup (2003)
  9. Heartbeat (2004)
  10. Replay (2005)
  11. The Castle Corona (2007)
  12. The Unfinished Angel (2009)
  13. The Great Unexpected (2012)
  14. The Boy on the Porch (2013)
  15. Moo (2016)
  16. Saving Winslow (2018)
  17. One Time (2020)

Picture Books In Publication Order

  1. Fishing in the Air (2000)
  2. A Fine, Fine School (2001)
  3. Who’s That Baby? (2005)

Anthologies In Publication Order

  1. Acting Out (2008)

Jack Book Covers

Standalone Novels Book Covers

Picture Book Covers

Anthologies Book Covers

Sharon Creech Books Overview

Love That Dog

Jack hates poetry. Only girls write it and every time he tries to, his brain feels empty. But his teacher, Ms. Stretchberry, won’t stop giving her class poetry assignments and Jack can’t avoid them. But then something amazing happens. The more he writes, the more he learns he does have something to say.

With a fresh and deceptively simple style, acclaimed author Sharon Creech tells a story with enormous heart. Written as a series of free verse poems from Jack’s point of view, Love That Dog shows how one boy finds his own voice with the help of a teacher, a writer, a pencil, some yellow paper, and of course…
a dog. /Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech’s Love That Dog, a funny, sweet, original short novel written in free verse, introduces us to an endearingly unassuming, straight talking boy who discovers the powers and pleasures of poetry. Against his will. After all, ‘boys don’t write poetry. Girls do.’ What does he say of the famous poem ‘Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening’? ‘I think Mr. Robert Frost / has a little / too / much / time / on his / hands.’ As his teacher, Ms. Stretchberry, introduces the canon to the class, however, he starts to see the light. Poetry is not so bad, it’s not just for girls, and it’s not even that hard to write. Take William Carlos Williams, for example: ‘If that is a poem / about the red wheelbarrow / and the white chickens / then any words / can be a poem. / You’ve just got to / make / short / lines.’ He becomes more and more discerning as the days go by, and readers’ spirits will rise with Jack’s as he begins to find his own voice through his own poetry and through that of others. His favorite poem of all is a short, rhythmic one by Walter Dean Myers called ‘Love That Boy’ included at the end of the book with all the rest of Ms. Stretchberry’s assignments. The words completely captivate him, reminding him of the loving way his dad calls him in the morning and of the way he used to call his yellow dog, Sky. Jack’s reverence for the poem ultimately leads to meeting the poet himself, an experience he will never forget.

This winning, accessible book is truly remarkable in that Creech lets us witness firsthand how words can open doors to the soul. And this from a boy who asks, ‘Why doesn’t the person just / keep going if he’s got / so many miles to go / before he sleeps?’ Ages 8 to 12 Karin Snelson

Hate That Cat

Jack

Room 204 Miss Stretchberry

February 25

Today the fat black cat
up in the tree by the bus stop
dropped a nut on my head
thunk
and when I yelled at it
that fat black cat said
Murr mee urrr
in a
nasty
spiteful
way.

I Hate That Cat.

This is the story of
Jack
words
sounds
silence
teacher
and cat.

Absolutely Normal Chaos

A prequel to the 1995 Newbery Medal winner Walk Two Moons, Absolutely Normal Chaos proves that Sharon Creech is not the kind of author you meet once and forget she writes with a memorable voice that speaks directly to the thoughts and feelings of her readers. Absolutely Normal Chaos chronicles the daily life of 13 year old Mary Lou Finney during her most chaotic and romantic summer ever.

Sharon Creech fans will recognize Mary Lou Finney and her infamous summer journal from their appearance in Walk Two Moons.

Mary Lou’s journal opens with a plea, ‘Here it is: my summer journal . . But please PLEEEASSSE DON’T READ IT!’

What begins grudgingly as a dreaded assignment for school becomes a hilarious chronicle of the circle of people and events that make her summer. There is Carl Ray, the mysterious and troublesome cousin that comes to visit; Beth Ann Bartels, the best friend who’s recently gone boy crazy; Alex Cheevy, the boy that makes Mary Lou’s brains ‘mushy’ and, of course, the Finney clan, her ‘normally strange family.’ What follows is a story of a summer filled with lessons and observations on love, death, friendship and family.

Mary Lou Finney grudgingly begins writing a journal as an assignment for school would anything interesting ever happen to her? What follows is the story of a wildly chaotic and romantic summer. How could she have known about Carl Ray and the little black car? Or what would happen on Booger Hill? Or about the permanently pink Alex Cheevy? Mary Lou’s tale is filled with hilarious observations on love, death, and the confusing mechanics of holding hands.


Sharon Creech’s new fans will be thrilled to recognize Mary Lou Finney and her infamous summer journal from their appearance in Walk Two Moons. Here is the very journal that began the inquiry into whether kisses taste like chicken!

100 Titles for Reading and Sharing 1995 NY Public Library

2001 ALA Popular Paperback for YAs

Walk Two Moons

Gramps says that I am a country girl at heart, and that is true.

Thirteen year old Salamanca Tree Hiddle, proud of her country roots and the ‘Indian ness in her blood,’ travels from Ohio to Idaho with her eccentric grandparents. Along the way, she tells them of the story of Phoebe Winterbottom, who received mysterious messages, who met a ‘potential lunatic,’ and whose mother disappeared.

Beneath Phoebe’s stories Salamanca’s own story and that of her mother, who left on April morning for Idaho, promising to return before the tulips bloomed. Sal’s mother has not, however, returned, and the trip to Idaho takes on a growing urgency as Salamanca hopes to get to Idaho in time for her mother’s birthday and bring her back, despite her father’s warning that she is fishing in the air.

This richly layered novel is in turn funny, mysterious, and touching. Sharon Creech’s original voice tells a story like no other, one that readers will not soon forget.

Winner of the 1995 Newbery Medal

A 1995 ALA Notable Children’s Book
School Library Journal Best Book of 1994
Winner of a 1994 Bulletin Blue Ribbon
A Notable Children’s Trade Book in the Language Arts NCTE
Winner of the 1997 Heartland Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature
Winner, 1995 Newbery Medal
Notable Children’s Books of 1995 ALA
1995 Notable Trade Books in the Language Arts NCTE
Children’s Book Award for Longer Novels Great Britain’s Federation of Children’s Books Groups
Outstanding Books of 1994 for Middle School Aged Teens V
Best Books 1994 SLJ
Bulletin Blue Ribbon Books 1994 C

/Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content Thirteen year old Salamanca Tree Hiddle’s mother has disappeared. While tracing her steps on a car trip from Ohio to Idaho with her grandparents, Salamanca tells a story to pass the time about a friend named Phoebe Winterbottom whose mother vanished and who received secret messages after her disappearance. One of them read, ‘Don’t judge a man until you have walked two moons in his moccasins.’ Despite her father’s warning that she is ‘fishing in the air,’ Salamanca hopes to bring her home. By drawing strength from her Native American ancestry, she is able to face the truth about her mother. Walk Two Moons won the 1995 Newbery Medal.

Pleasing the Ghost / The Ghost of Uncle Arvie

Ever since his father died, Dennis has been seeing ghosts. Lots of ghosts. They blow in on the breeze, visit for a while, and fly off again. But one night the ghost of his Uncle Arvie floats in the window. And Arvie wants to do more than chat. Together, they find a lost love letter, finish a special painting, and dig up buried treasure-all for Arvie’s widow, Julia. Dennis loves having his uncle around again, but there’s still one ghost he’s longing to see. Perhaps on the next ghost wind…
Master storyteller Sharon Creech has woven a wonderfully funny, romantic tale. Arvie’s eccentric antics and wonderful word play keep the reader laughing, but at its tender heart, the story reveals the holes left in our lives when we lose the ones we love.

Chasing Redbird

It started out as an ordinary summer. But the minute thirteen-year-old Zinny covered the old, overgrown trail that ran through the woods behind her family’s house, she realized that things were about to change.

Right from the start, Zinny knew that uncovering the trail would be more than just a summer project. It was her chance to finally make people notice her, and to have a place she could call her very own. But more than that, Zinny knew that the trail somehow held the key to all kinds of questions. And that- the only way to understand her family, her Aunt Jessie’s death, and herself, was to find out where it went.

From the author of the Newbery Medal-winning Walk Two Moons, here is an intricately woven tale of a young girl who sets out in search of her place in the world — and discovers it in her own backyard.

Bloomability

My second life began when I was kidnapped by two complete strangers…

That the kidnappers are actually Aunt Sandy and Uncle Max makes no difference to thirteen-year-old Domenica Santolina Doone, better known as Dinnie–she just doesn’t want to go. Dinnie’s accustomed to change, with her family constantly moving for ‘opportunity’–but when her aunt and uncle whisk her far away to an international school in Switzerland, she’s not sure she’s ready to face this ‘opportunity’ alone.

All at once she finds herself in a foreign country, surrounded by kids from different cultures speaking all sorts of languages and sharing various beliefs. Home and her first life seem so far away.

But new friendships and the awesome beauty of Switzerland begin to unlock thoughts and dreams within her. Her joys and struggles make up a rich tapestry of experiences she can find nowhere else. Switzerland begins to be more than a temporary home–it becomes a part of Dinnnie herself, the self she never knew she could be.

Switzerland is the picturesque backdrop of Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech’s new novel about a young girl discovering the beauty of nature, her place in the world, the value of friendship–and that life is full of wonderful ‘bloomabilites.’

01 Blue Spruce Award Masterlist YA Cat., 00-01 Young Hoosier Book Award Masterlist Grds. 6-8, Pacific NW Library Assoc. 2001 Young Reader’s Choice Award Masterlist, and 00-01 South Carolina Book Award MasterlistGrds 6-9

Young Adult’s Choices for 2000 IRA

The Wanderer

The sea, the sea, the sea. It rolled and rolled and called to me. Come in, it said, come in.

Thirteen year old Sophie is the only girl amongst the surly crew of The Wanderer made up of her three uncles and two cousins. They sail across the Atlantic toward England, the land of Bompie, her grandfather. The sea calls to Sophie promising adventure and the chance to explore and discover. But the personal journey she takes brings her deeper into a forgotten past than she ever knew she could travel to.

Sophie’s thirteen year old cousin Cody isn’t even sure why his father brought him along on this voyage. Everyone, including his dad, thinks he’s nothing but a knuckle headed doofus. But behind all the goofing off, he wonders if he has the strength to prove himself to the crew and to his father.

Through Sophie’s and Cody’s travel logs, the amazing experiences of these six wanderers and their perilous journey unfold. Stories of the past and the daily challenges to survive at sea swirl together as The Wanderer sails toward its destination, and its passengers search for their places in the world.

Newbery Award winner Sharon Creech’s newest novel is an adventure filled story of a courageous girl’s journey across the ocean and into the memories of her tragic past. Sophie’s struggle to reclaim who she is inspires similar exploration from those around her as the crew discovers the joys and trials of belonging to a family.

Bulletin Blue Ribbon Best of 2000 Award, 2001 Children’s Books of Distinction Riverbank Review Finalist, Books for Youth Editor’s Choice 2000 Booklist, Best Books 2000School Library Journal, Children’s Books 2000 NY Public Lib., 2000 Christopher Award, 2001 Children’s Books of Distinction Riverbank Review Finalist, 2001 Newbery Honor Book Award, 01 Notable Children’s Books ALA, 01 Best Books for Young Adults ALA,Books for the Teen Age 2001 NYPL, and Bulletin Blue Ribbon 2000 Bulletin of Center for Children’s Books

/Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content ‘I am not always such a dreamy girl, listening to the sea calling me. My father calls me Three sided Sophie: one side is dreamy and romantic; one is logical and down to earth; and the third side is hardheaded and impulsive.’

Thirteen year old Sophie, skipping between ‘dreamland or earthland or muleland,’ hears the sea calling her. Much to the concern of her adopted parents, she decides to join her uncles and male cousins on a sailing voyage from Connecticut across the Atlantic to England and her grandfather Bompie on a 45 foot sailboat. Not only does she want to make the trip, she feels she has to.

This perilous cross Atlantic journey will make young readers feel the wind in their hair and the salt spray on their face. Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech Walk Two Moons describes the sailing experience with astonishing precision from the smell of the sea to the intricate workings of The Wanderer itself.

Along the way, Sophie proves her bravery and competence to the rather grumpy all male crew; intrigues and captivates her cousin Cody with her beautiful, odd stories of Bompie that always somehow end in underwater disaster and apple pie; and spills her heart into a daily journal. Readers get another angle on her, too, as Cody keeps a log that alternates with hers. He grows to know, and like, and wonder about, his new cousin Sophie along with the reader, and as her mysterious past reveals itself bit by bit, we are all right there on the edge of our seats, ready for the boom to crash over to the other side.

Sophie’s adventures take her not only straight into perilous waves higher than buildings, but deep into her hidden past. This profound, suspenseful novel will pull you into its swift current and barely let you surface for breath. Ages 9 to 13 Karin Snelson

Ruby Holler

‘Trouble Twins’ Dallas and Florida have been shuffled between foster families and the orphanage all their lives. All they want is a loving place to call home, but they are mistrustful that one exists for the likes of them.

Tiller an Sairy are a sweet couple who are each restless for one more big adventure while their bodies are still spry enough to paddle a canoe or climb a mountain. Their own children have grownup and moved away, so they’re each looking for someone to help them and keep them company on their last exciting journey.

And Ruby Holler is the beautiful, mysterious place that changes all of their lives forever. When Tiller and Sairy invite Dallas and Florida to stay with them and keep them company on their adventures, the magic of the Holler takes over, and the two kids begin to think that maybe, just maybe, the old folks aren’t that bad…

Filled with humor, poignancy, cookies and treasure maps, Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech’s Ruby Holler is a delightful book about a special place where it’s never to late to love or be loved. /Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content Having suffered through a string of appalling foster homes the spitting Cranbepps; scary, toothless Mr. Dreep who locked them in his cellar; and the mean Burgerton boys, 13 year old orphan Dallas and his twin sister, Florida, have pretty much given up on ever finding a happy home. So when an eccentric older couple enters their lives, providing such adventures as a river expedition, a treasure hunt of sorts, and a whole lot of remarkable meals: ‘beat the blues broccoli,’ ‘anti cranky crumpets,’ and ‘getting used to kids again stew,’ the twins take a while to warm up. Florida’s language teems with outrageous, telling negativity everything is ‘putrid’ and even dreamy Dallas is inclined to bouts of doubt. But warm up they do, to the continual delight of readers of all ages.

Sharon Creech, author of Newbery Medal winner Walk Two Moons and Newbery Honor book The Wanderer, is in fine form with her hilarious yet poignant novel about downtrodden siblings who refuse to be squished altogether. The perfectly happy ending is somewhat predictable, but readers who have fallen in love with each quirky character won’t mind a bit. Ages 8 to 13 Emilie Coulter

Granny Torrelli Makes Soup

Bailey, who is usually so nice, Bailey, my neighbor, my friend, my buddy, my pal for my whole life, knowing me better than anybody, that Bailey, that Bailey I am so mad at right now, that Bailey, I hate him today.

Twelve year old Rosie and her best friend, Bailey, don’t always get along, that’s true. But Granny Torrelli seems to know just how to make things right again with her warm words and family recipes. She understands from experience that life’s twists and turns can’t rattle the unique bond between two lifelong pals.

Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech cooks up a delightfully tender novel, filled with homemade dishes and secret recipes. It’s easy to remember what’s important about love, life, and friendship while Granny Torrelli Makes Soup.

/Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content In this endearing story by Newberry Medal winner Sharon Creech, a wise old Italian granny skillfully imparts life advice and cooking lessons to her winning but sometimes obstinate 12 year old granddaughter.

Best known for Walk Two Moons and The Wanderer, Creech makes good use of another inventive format: Rosie’s story unfolds first, over making and eating zuppa, and then Granny Torrelli tells parallel stories from her own childhood to help Rosie with her current predicament. Granny Torrelli’s tales are laced with endearing, fun to say Italian: ‘I didn’t like it, not one piccolino bit,’ as is her attempt to help Rosie mend her rift with her best friend Bailey ‘That Bailey boy!’, for whom she’s starting to feel more than friendship feelings.

The details of both Rosie’s and Granny Torrelli’s respective stories are often quite funny from Braille jealousy to secret guide dog training for the legally blind Bailey. But, as usual, what Creech does best is slyly proffer small, nourishing morsels of wisdom not unlike the cavatelli, the ‘little dough canoes,’ that Rosie, Granny Torrelli, and that Bailey boy labor over in the book’s sweet second half. Just be warned that you might find yourself starving by the end of the story. Ages 9 to 12 Paul Hughes

Heartbeat

Bailey, who is usually so nice, Bailey, my neighbor, my friend, my buddy, my pal for my whole life, knowing me better than anybody, that Bailey, that Bailey I am so mad at right now, that Bailey, I hate him today.

Twelve year old Rosie and her best friend, Bailey, don’t always get along, that’s true. But Granny Torrelli seems to know just how to make things right again with her warm words and family recipes. She understands from experience that life’s twists and turns can’t rattle the unique bond between two lifelong pals.

Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech cooks up a delightfully tender novel, filled with homemade dishes and secret recipes. It’s easy to remember what’s important about love, life, and friendship while Granny Torrelli makes soup.

/Content /EditorialReview EditorialReview Source Amazon. com Review /Source Content In this endearing story by Newberry Medal winner Sharon Creech, a wise old Italian granny skillfully imparts life advice and cooking lessons to her winning but sometimes obstinate 12 year old granddaughter.

Best known for Walk Two Moons and The Wanderer, Creech makes good use of another inventive format: Rosie’s story unfolds first, over making and eating zuppa, and then Granny Torrelli tells parallel stories from her own childhood to help Rosie with her current predicament. Granny Torrelli’s tales are laced with endearing, fun to say Italian: ‘I didn’t like it, not one piccolino bit,’ as is her attempt to help Rosie mend her rift with her best friend Bailey ‘That Bailey boy!’, for whom she’s starting to feel more than friendship feelings.

The details of both Rosie’s and Granny Torrelli’s respective stories are often quite funny from Braille jealousy to secret guide dog training for the legally blind Bailey. But, as usual, what Creech does best is slyly proffer small, nourishing morsels of wisdom not unlike the cavatelli, the ‘little dough canoes,’ that Rosie, Granny Torrelli, and that Bailey boy labor over in the book’s sweet second half. Just be warned that you might find yourself starving by the end of the story. Ages 9 to 12 Paul Hughes

Replay

Leo’s papa stood in the doorway, gazing down at him. ‘Leo, you make gold from pebbles,’ and the way he said it, Leo could tell that this was a good thing.

He may have been given a bit part in the school play…
but Leo dreams he is the biggest star on Broadway.

Sure, his big, noisy family makes him feel like a sardine squashed in a tin…
but in his fantasy he gets all the attention he wants.

Yes, his papa seems sad and distracted…
but Leo imagines him as a boy, tap dancing and singing with delight.

That’s why they call Leo ‘fog boy.’ He’s always dreaming, always Replaying things in his brain. He fantasizes about who he is in order to discover who he will become. As an actor in the school play, he is poised and ready for the curtain to open. But in the play that is his life, Leo is eager to discover what part will be his.

The Castle Corona

Long ago and far away…
There was a castle. But not just any castle. This was a castle that glittered and sparkled and rose majestically above the banks of the winding Winono River: The Castle Corona. And in this castle lived a family. But not just any family. This was the family of King Guido: rich and royal and…
spoiled. And King Guido was so spoiled that neither jewels nor gold nor splendid finery could please him, for what he longed for most was…
a nap and a gown that didn’t itch. Far below this grand, glittering castle lived two peasants. But not just any peasants. These peasants, though poor and pitiful, were plucky and proud. And in possession of a stolen pouch. But not just any pouch. A pouch whose very contents had the power to unlock secrets and transform lives…
And oh, there is an author. But not just any author. Sharon Creech is a Newbery Medal winning author whose tantalizing tale will not only dazzle and delight but also entertain and excite.

The Unfinished Angel

Peoples are strange!

The things they are doing and saying sometimes they make no sense. Did their brains fall out of their heads? And why so much saying, so much talking all the time day and night, all those words spilling out of those mouths? Why so much? Why don’t they be quiet?

In the ancient stone tower of the Casa Rosa, in a tiny village high in the Swiss Alps, life for one angel has been the same, well, for as long as she or he? can remember. Until Zola arrives, a determined American girl who wears three skirts all at once. For neighbors who have been longtime enemies, children who have been lost, and villagers who have been sleepily living their lives: hold on. Zola and the angel are about to collide. Figs start flying, dogs start arfing, and the whole village begins to wake up. Zola is a girl with a mission. And our angel has been without one till now.

This hilarious and endearing novel by Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech reminds us that magic is found in the most ordinary acts of kindness.

One Time

Selected novels by Newbery Award winner Sharon Creech Walk Two Moons, Absolutely Normal Chaos, and Chasing Redbird now in a boxed set.

Fishing in the Air

We were going on a
journey, to a secret place.
We’d catch the air!
We’d catch the breeze!

A father and son set out early one morning in search of a cool, clear river in which to fish. With their lines and bobbers, they cast high into the air catching memories, discoveries, and

a bubble of breeze
and a sliver of sky
and a slice of yellow sun.

The first picture book by Sharon Creech, Newbery award winning author of Walk Two Moons, is a lyrical portrait of the bond between a father and son. Caldecott Honor recipient Chris Raschka’s illustrations shimmer in pools of color and light, making Fishing in the Air a beautiful reminder of the gift of imagination a parent pas*ses on to a child and a child gladly shares in return.

AWARDS:Best Children’s Books 2000 PW and Lasting Connections 2001 Book Links

A Fine, Fine School

We were going on a
journey, to a secret place.
We’d catch the air!
We’d catch the breeze!

A father and son set out early one morning in search of a cool, clear river in which to fish. With their lines and bobbers, they cast high into the air catching memories, discoveries, and

a bubble of breeze
and a sliver of sky
and a slice of yellow sun.

The first picture book by Sharon Creech, Newbery award winning author of Walk Two Moons, is a lyrical portrait of the bond between a father and son. Caldecott Honor recipient Chris Raschka’s illustrations shimmer in pools of color and light, making Fishing in the Air a beautiful reminder of the gift of imagination a parent pas*ses on to a child and a child gladly shares in return.

AWARDS:Best Children’s Books 2000 PW and Lasting Connections 2001 Book Links

Who’s That Baby?

Who are you, baby newly born who’s this little babe? Baby burritoes…
are held very tight. Banana babies…
are bundled up in the cold. Leaky babies…
leak. No matter what kind of baby they are, all new babies see, hear, think, and feel so many different things. But most of all they feel loved. Newbery Medal winner Sharon Creech and Caldecott Medal winner David Diaz give beautiful voice to that love in this celebration of family and the joy a new baby brings.

Acting Out

Six masterful children’s authors have become master playwrights in this collection of one act plays that might just make you want to ACT OUT! In The Raven, Sharon Creech spoofs a publishing office while Susan Cooper shows the environment fighting back against overdevelopment in The Dollop. Patricia MacLachlan puts a twist on detention in The Bad Room and Katherine Paterson gives us a new twist on a classic fairy tale in The Billionaire and the Bird. Richard Peck’s Effigy in the Outhouse is the story of schoolboys doing their best to trick a spooky substitute while Avi’s Not Seeing Is Believing has words playing tricks on everyone. With a star studded lineup of writers there’s a stage full of drama, comedy, and great storytelling waiting behind these curtains! Newbery Medal winning and beloved authors Avi, Susan Cooper, Sharon Creech, Patricia MacLachlan, Katherine Paterson, and Richard Peck have come together and written six original one act plays to be read, shared, and acted out by the audience they know best. The playwrights could write about anything and anyone they wanted, but one thing would need to tie the stories all together. Each author had to choose one word and share it with the group. These six words then had to be written into each of the plays. The words they chose were ‘dollop,’ ‘hoodwink,’ ‘Justin,’ ‘knuckleball,’ ‘panhandle,’ and ‘raven.’ To find out the funny, odd, and creative ways they were used…
Well, you’ll have to read for yourself.

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