Our soon-to-be-psychic heroine slurps down seven bowls of cereal one morning before finding what she seeks: "A ring! A silver ring with an oogley centre. A mood ring!" Testing out her possibly prescient ring-powers, though, requires all sorts of experimentation--and working through some "burnt-toast" black moods before transforming completely into "Madame M for Moody."
Judy remains her ebullient self throughout this third instalment, despite "a blucky old math-test," a run-in with her self-assured rival from the last book ("Jessica Finch probably ate fractions for breakfast: 1/4 glass of orange juice, 1/2 piece of toast, 3/4 jar of strawberry jelly!") and a spelling test that doesn't quite produce the grade she predicts. ("Judy didn't see why tor-tee-yah had any l's at all. And zig and zag seemed like two words to her. Who wrote this dictionary anyway? Mrs Merriam and Mr Webster were going to hear from her.")
But by far the biggest surprise that Judy Moody struggles to predict is what a visit from the mysterious crayon lady Ms Tater might really mean. And why is Mr Todd acting so weird? Could her predictions prove prophetic once again? Might there really be little Tater-Todds in her teacher's future? (Ages 6 to 10) --Paul Hughes, Amazon.com --このテキストは、 ハードカバー 版に関連付けられています。
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この「Judy Moody Predicts The Future」では、まぁ未来の予言をするなんていかにも子供(特にJudy。笑)の憧れそうなことだと思うんですが、
今回はそれ以外にも、Judyの女の子な一面を感じるストーリーでした♪
シリーズ5作目のペーパーバック化が待たれます!
This book is interesting because Judy's correct most of the time when she predicts the future, but one time she didn't predict it correctly. Do you think she can predict the future? Her prediction was about 100 percent or more on her spelling test. She went to the library and read a book about a boy who put a dictionary under his pillow and knew every word in the dictionary. So Judy did the same but it didn't turn out the way it's suppose to.
If I was Judy I wouldn't do that because that might be fake. I think it would be superstitious because that happened only once in a lifetime. I don't think it's fair that the person who wrote the book is trying to make kids believe it and it won't come true.
My favorite parts of the book are when Judy gets everybody's hopes up that she's psychic. I think Judy wants attention because she probably wants to be popular. The part I dislike is when Judy predict the future and it was wrong.
I would recommend this book for people who have lots of moods, for example from bored to happy and from mean to nice.
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