Trouble Next Door
By Karen English and Laura Freeman
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
In the fourth book in the Carver Chronicles series, third grader Calvin is dealing with his next-door neighbors moving away—and the school bully moving in. Meanwhile, competition at the school science fair is heating up, and Calvin must decide what to do when his data doesn’t prove his theory . . .
This lively installment in a chapter book series about a diverse group of elementary schoolers by Coretta Scott King Honoree Karen English offers spot-on storytelling, relatable characters and situations, and plenty of action.
Praise for Trouble Next Door
“Chronicling the importance of empathy and openness, this fourth in the Carver Chronicles is a pleasing addition to a series in which diverse readers can recognize themselves in starring roles.” —Kirkus Reviews
Karen English
Karen English is a Coretta Scott King Honor Award-winner and the author of It All Comes Down to This, a Kirkus Prize Finalist, as well as the Nikki and Deja and The Carver Chronicles series. Her novels have been praised for their accessible writing, authentic characters, and satisfying storylines. She is a former elementary school teacher and lives in Los Angeles, California.
Read more from Karen English
It All Comes Down to This Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Book preview
Trouble Next Door - Karen English
Clarion Books
3 Park Avenue
New York, New York 10016
Copyright © 2016 by Karen English
Illustrations copyright © 2016 by Laura Freeman
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
Clarion Books is an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
www.hmhco.com
The illustrations were executed digitally.
The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:
Names: English, Karen, author. | Freeman, Laura, illustrator. Title: Trouble next door / by Karen English ; illustrated by Laura Freeman.Description: Boston ; New York : Clarion Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, [2016] | Series: The Carver chronicles ; book 4 | Summary: Third grader Calvin is dealing with his next door neighbors moving away—and the school bully moving in. Meanwhile, competition at the school science fair is heating up, and Calvin must decide what to do when his data doesn’t prove his theory
—Provided by publisher.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016001080 | ISBN 9780544801271 (hardback)
Subjects: | CYAC: Neighbors—Fiction. | Bullying—Fiction. | Science projects—Fiction. | Schools—Fiction. | African Americans—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / People & Places / United States / African American. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Bullying. | JUVENILE FICTION / Humorous Stories. | JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Orphans & Foster Homes. | JUVENILE FICTION / Boys & Men.
Classification: LCC PZ7.E7232 TR 2016 | DDC [Fic]—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016001080
eISBN 978-0-544-86819-9
v2.1117
For Gavin, Jacob, and Issac
—K.E.
For Jimmy, Griffin, and Milo
—L.F.
One
Goodbye, the Hendersons
Calvin is pacing the floor in his room. He has a problem. He has to come up with an idea for the science fair. His topic and hypothesis are due on Wednesday, and he can’t think of anything. He made the mistake of putting it off even though Ms. Shelby-Ortiz gave the stragglers an extra week. It turns out that Calvin and all his friends—Carlos, Richard, and Gavin (yes, even Gavin)—are in the group of stragglers.
As he paces, he runs stupid ideas through his head: how to make a rain cloud in a bottle (Rosario did that in second grade), how to keep a balloon from popping (Gavin did that one last year, and it seemed kind of like a baby project), how to keep an egg from breaking (That was Richard’s project, and, unfortunately, he managed to break eggs during his demonstration. So that project is out of the running. Could Calvin actually do Richard’s old project when it didn’t work?).
Maybe if he plays just one video game—just to relax and free his mind—an idea will pop into his head like magic. He pulls the controller out from under his bed, turns on the TV, sets it up, and starts a quick game of Wuju Legend.
While he’s playing, he listens for his father’s footsteps on the stairs. If he catches Calvin, then he’ll think that Calvin’s mother was probably right about not wanting Calvin to have a TV in his room.
It had been a close call. His mother had argued, No. Absolutely not.
But his father had said that they could give it a trial run, and if it became apparent that Calvin couldn’t handle it, the TV would be removed. Since then, Calvin has made sure he looks like the kind of kid who can handle having a television in his room. He tries to keep it mostly off—except when he needs to play a video game to relax.
Yes, he feels better and ready to go, ready to get started. He claps his hands together and thinks. Nothing. He claps his hands together again, and this time he means it. Still, there are no ideas popping into his head. I know, he thinks. I need a change of scenery. Let me go out to the front porch and breathe in some fresh air. Maybe that’ll help my brain.
Calvin takes the stairs two at a time, marveling at his own athletic prowess. Then he’s out the front door, sitting on the top step of the porch, and noticing an interesting hustle and bustle next door. Movers are carrying things to a huge moving van. What? The Hendersons are moving?
The movers are carrying furniture and lamps, and neatly sealed boxes labeled DISHES, BOOKS, LINENS. How could the Hendersons be moving? They’ve been there forever.
They’re an older couple—older than his parents, even. They happen to have three grandsons, all around Calvin’s age. Every year since Calvin was old enough to remember, the grandsons have come up from Florida to visit. For the whole summer. It’s been like suddenly having brothers and not being an only child anymore. How can the Hendersons be moving? How can they be doing this to him?
His father probably knew all about it. Why hasn’t he said anything? Calvin pulls himself up and heads for the kitchen, where his dad is sitting at the table reading the newspaper.
Dad!
His father is just raising a coffee cup to his lips as Calvin bursts into the kitchen.
Hmm?
The Hendersons are moving?
Oh, yeah.
He doesn’t even look up from his paper. I meant to tell you. They’re moving down to Florida to be closer to their grandkids.
That’s not fair!
Calvin cries.
Huh?
That’s not fair! That means I’m not going to see Robbie, Todd, and Evan anymore.
Oh,
his dad says. I hadn’t thought of that.
Calvin looks at him as if he’s grown horns. How could he not have thought of that? How could he have kept all this from him? It’s major! Doesn’t his father care about how he feels? Now he puts down his coffee cup and looks as if he’s trying to come up with something that will make Calvin feel better.
Well, you can always write them a letter.
No, I can’t.
Why not?
Because no one writes letters, Dad. They’d think I was crazy if I wrote them a letter.
Then how are kids pen pals?
What’s a pen pal?
Well, you can call them.
That’s not the same as them being here, right next door.
Well, I don’t know what to say, then.
They just look at each other for a few seconds. Then Calvin flops down in a chair and stares at the box of cereal in the middle of the kitchen table. He feels abandoned all over again. His mom has been gone for a month helping Grandma Kate. She fell and broke her hip, and his mother had to go off to New Mexico to take care of her. She’s going to be gone for another whole month.
If his mother were here, they’d be having pancakes right now. He’d be pouring blueberry syrup over a stack of buttermilk pancakes instead of staring at the back of a box of whole-grain cereal.
Well,
his father says, "maybe the new family will have kids. They could have three boys." He