Ramona la peste

Couverture
Ecole des loisirs, 2002 - 216 pages
"Je ne suis pas une peste" affirma Ramona à sa grande sur Beezus. "Alors arrête de te conduire comme une peste" riposta Beezus, dont le vrai nom était Béatrice. "Je ne me conduis pas comme une peste. Je chante et je saute", précisa Ramona, qui n'avait appris que très récemment à sauter à pieds joints. Ramona ne se trouvait pas peste du tout. Les gens qui la traitaient de peste étaient toujours plus grands qu'elle, alors ils pouvaient être injustes.Ramona était la plus petite de la maison mais elle savait parfaitement ce qu'elle voulait. Et par exemple elle ne voulait pas se faire gâcher ce premier jour d'école par sa grande sur. Elle voulait entrer à l'école dignement, être présentée à sa maîtresse par une vraie grande personne, sa mère et non par Beezus et sa copine Mary Jane qui la traiteraient comme leur bébé.Ramona ne voulait plus de cela. Elle était grande maintenant, elle aussi. Et elle entendait veiller à ce qu'on la traite comme une grande.

À propos de l'auteur (2002)

Beverly Cleary was born on April 12, 1916. Her family lived on a small farm in McMinnville, Oregon, before moving to Portland. Ironically, this internationally known author of children's books struggled to learn how to read when she entered school. Before long however Cleary had learned to love books, and as a child she spent a good deal of her time in the public library. Cleary attended Chaffey Junior College in Ontario, Ca. and went on to earned her first B.A. in 1938 from the University of California at Berkeley. Her second degree, a B.A. in library science, was bestowed by the University of Washington in Seattle in 1939. She worked for a short time as Children's Librarian in Yakima, Washington, before moving to California. Cleary began her writing career in her early thirties. Her first book, Henry Huggins, was published in 1950. Her stories and especially her characters, Henry Huggins and Ramona Quimby, have proven popular with young readers. Her books have been translated into twenty languages and are available in over twenty countries. Some of her best-known titles are Ellen Tebbits (1951), Henry and the Paper Route (1957), Runaway Ralph (1970), and Dear Mr. Henshaw (1983). Several television programs have been produced from the Henry Huggins and Ramona stories. She also wrote two memoirs, A Girl from Yamhill (1988) and My Own Two Feet (1995). Cleary has won many awards for her contributions to children's literature, including the American Library Association's Laura Ingalls Wilder Award in 1975, the Catholic Library Association's Regina Medal in 1980, the John Newbery Medal in 1984 and the National Medal of Arts in 2003. Beverly Cleary died on March 25, 2021 in Carmel, California. She was 104 year old.

Informations bibliographiques