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THE FRINDLE FILES — Review

Thought for the Day:

“Character is destiny. Change, growing from within and forced from without, is the mainspring of character development.”
~ Rita Mae Brown ~

Gifts for My Writer Friends:

When I read wish lists from editors and agents looking for middle-grade books, the word “adventure” is almost always there. HERE is a good article from Writer’s Digest by Cassidy Randall with 4 Tips for Good Adventure Writing.

If you could avoid the kind of mistakes that stop agents and editors in their tracks when reading your work, that would be a good thing. HERE Jenn Windrow has a great post on Writers in the Storm with Top 20 Mistakes Developmental Editors See in Manuscripts.

Janice Hardy’s Narrative Nuggets are always worth your time. HERE she has a great little post on names.

Like most writers, I have a love affair with words. I love to know how we acquire words in the English language, where they come from, and how they may have developed over time. I also love wordplay. I don’t know where I found this list of words with made-up definitions, but I thought they were a lot of fun, so I’m sharing them here with you. I hope you enjoy them.

Abundance – A dance in a bakery


Apex – A gorilla’s old girlfriend


Blood Brother – A vampire’s relative


Buttress – a female goat


Catastrophe – First prize in a cat show


Denial – A river in Eygpt


Fjord – A Norwegian car


Grammar – a female grandparent


Inkling – a small pen


Jubilant – a celebrating ant

Optical – itchy eyes


Polygon – a dead parrot


Syntax – a collection in church

Andrew Clements is a prolific author. His most famous book is FRINDLE. It has received a ridiculous number of well-deserved awards and is still in print after nearly 30 years. That says something in middle-grade fiction. I have never read FRINDLE. No reason. I just never got around to it, but when I saw THE FRINDLE FILES on the review list for the Los Angeles Book Review, I thought I should give it a try. I’m glad I did. It was fun. And now I think I should get around to reading the original. Here is the review I wrote for LABR.

Josh Willets is a self-described computer nerd. He loves his coding club and loves that his school makes sure every student has a laptop to use in class, but he hates that his ELA teacher, Mr. N., won’t let the kids use computers in his classroom and makes the kids write out their homework in blue or black ink on lined paper and neatness counts. Josh borrows a pen from his mom one day that has the word “frindle” written on it. When Josh does a search for that word, he discovers something pretty incredible about Mr. N. Josh tells his best friend, Vanessa, what he has found, and they come up with a plan that might free the students from Mr. N’s old-fashioned ways.

Andrew Clements

Author Andrew Clements has finally written a sequel to his very popular novel, Frindle. This fun story is completely believable and puts readers squarely in the world of fifth-graders and the issues they have to deal with. The dialogue is spot-on for the age, the story is compelling with a little mystery to drive it, and the writing is terrific. Middle-graders will be fully engaged all the way through. This is not to be missed.

Please don’t forget to check for other Marvelous Middle-Grade Monday posts at Greg Pattridge’s blog HERE.

24 thoughts on “THE FRINDLE FILES — Review”

  1. How funny! I’m in the middle of this story right now. I understand that Andrew Clements passed away in 2019 and this book was published posthumously in 2024. I remember reading the original Frindle with my 4th graders.

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  2. Ohh, I’ve never read the Frindle Files, but I’ve read some of Andrew Clements’ books! I loved them! They’re super fun! Thanks for sharing this one! I’ll have to check it out sometime!

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  3. I never read Frindle. But you’re making me want to with your review of the sequel. I’m glad you enjoyed it.

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  4. I never read Frindle. But you’re making me want to with your review of the sequel. I’m glad you enjoyed it.

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  5. Frindle is one of my favorites! I’ve used it in class with students as well. I didn’t know there was a sequel out, and this sounds like such a fun follow up. Clements is a genius at stories set in school–and humor. Thanks for featuring it!

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  6. I enjoyed reading Frindle several times. So glad a sequel is out! Loved your fun word list. Thanks for the links. They might inspire me to get back in the trenches with sharing my work.

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