Melonhead and the Later Gator Plan

Part of Melonhead

Author Katy Kelly
Illustrated by Gillian Johnson
Ebook (EPUB)
On sale Mar 10, 2015 | 224 Pages | 9780375986697
Age 8-12 years | Grades 3-7
Reading Level: Lexile 440L | Fountas & Pinnell S

Fun in the sun! For best pals Melonhead and Sam, it’s a winter break with grandparents, which is more fun than you’d think! A comical and heartwarming story about friendship, community, and the special connection between kids and those young at heart!
 
My best pal Sam and I are in Paradise, the community in Florida where my grandparents Nana and Jeep live. We’re staying with them while my dad works and my mom is on a trip with her lady relatives. Everything in Paradise is swank and deluxe, and lots of stuff is “For the Convenience of Our Residents.” We’re sure that means free. We especially like the All-You-Can-Eat Buffet.

Since Florida is loaded with animals, we’re going to capture a pet for Sam. We considered a wild piglet or a parrot or an armadillo or an iguana, but we’ve decided to find an alligator egg because it’s easy to carry on an airplane and it can hatch once we’re home. All we have to do is come up with a way to get that egg. Luckily, Sam and I are idea men!
 
 
Praise for the Melonhead series
 
Melonhead: “Laugh-out-loud funny, rivaling Stink and Fudge in its troublemaker quotient.” —School Library Journal
 
Melonhead and the Big Stink: “The clever dialogue sparkles. A breezy and humorous middle-grade tale.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
Melonhead and the Undercover Operation: “Melonhead’s pure, kid-centric, fun-loving perspective is hard to resist.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
Melonhead and the Vegalicious Disaster: “Melonhead returns with rapid-fire narration and adventure.” —BooklistOnline.com
 
Melonhead and the We-Fix-It Company: “Melonhead and his friends inhabit a world . . . where inventiveness and camaraderie reign supreme.” —Kirkus Reviews

1
WOW
I sat on my mom’s suitcase so she could yank the zipper closed.
“It’s five-thirty in the morning,” I said. “It’s almost time for WOW.”
She looked at me.
“WOW stands for Week of Wonders,” I said.
“But I won’t be here,” she said.
“That’s why it’s a WOW,” I said. “It’s the first time in history that I’ll be living without a lady around. And by lady, I mean you, Mom.”
“Thank you,” she said. “But I’m wondering what the Wonders are. And why you can’t have them when I’m home.”
“I can’t reveal the WOW list,” I said. “Sam and I are in a pact. You can’t break a pact with your top friend.”
“Now I’m worried,” my mom said.
“You should be thrilled,” I told her. “Believe me. I know what I’m talking about.”
That’s because I’m the one who came up with the WOW List of Manly Things for Sam and Me to Do with Dad While Mom’s in Vermont with Her Sister and Lady Cousins. Sam decided the list should count down from Important to Extremely Important to Most Important Thing in the World.
5. Burping contest.
4. Cook chili with Tabasco, cayenne, and jalapenos. Eat it.
3. Ride to both ends of every subway line in Washington, D.C.
2. Drill holes in wood.
1. Adopt a dog.
Whenever I ask my mom if I can get a dog, she says, “You’re not old enough.”
And I always say, “If I were old enough, I’d pick a huge, furry dog that has a load of energy and likes to roll in mud.” Then she makes a sound like she’s shivering.
Last week, I had a double Brainflash of Brilliance.
1. I realized who is old enough: my mom.
2. My kind of dog is not my mom’s kind of dog. Her kind is a mini dog that wears ear bows and doesn’t cause allergies.
That’s fine with me. My motto is Every Dog Is a Great Dog. As long as there’s a dog living in my house, I’m happy.
I was going hyper from wanting to tell my mom the exciting news that she was getting a pet. I made myself wait until my dad got home so he wouldn’t be the last one to know.
He walked in carrying a box from Baking Divas.
“Surprise!” he said. “I brought Plum Perfect Pudding.”
My mom hugged his neck. “The best presents are the ones I wouldn’t buy for myself,” she said. “My favorite surprises are the ones the whole family can enjoy.”
A dog is exactly that kind of surprise, I thought. Wait until she comes home from her trip and finds out we got her a dog she never expected.
So even though I could hardly stand it, I kept the secret. Except I told Sam, of course.
“I’ll carry your suitcase downstairs, Mom,” I said.
“It’s too heavy for you,” she said.
“No, it’s not,” I said. “It’s light.”
My mom gave me the look that means Don’t argue.
“It rolls,” I said. “I’ll push it like a lawn mower.”
That was a great idea, except Sam rang the doorbell when I was halfway down the steps. I tried to get in front of the suitcase. That didn’t work as well as you’d think.
My dad opened the door while I picked up myself and the suitcase.
“Hey, Mrs. Melon,” Sam yelled. “Your taxi’s here!”
“I’ll get the rest of your stuff, Betty,” my dad yelled up the stairs.
“The second your mom leaves, we have to go to the pound,” Sam told me.
“Before they’re out of dogs,” I said.
“If you and your dad don’t pick the same dog, I’ll be on your side,” Sam said. “I’m great at convincing.”
True. Sam convinced his mom to let him spend Fall Break with my Dad and me here in Washington, D.C., instead of with his toddler cousins in Philadelphia. Mrs. Alswang has to go because her niece, Sophia, had an unexpected baby. Well, she did expect it, but she thought it would get here in November instead of yesterday afternoon. Sophia’s husband is in Peru with Sam’s dad, taking pictures for National Geographic. Somebody has to help with all those children, so Mrs. Alswang and Sam’s sister, Julia, are going to Philadelphia this morning, right after rush hour. I doubt Julia will be much help. One-year-olds usually aren’t.
The taxi driver honked.
Sam and I dragged the suitcase down to the sidewalk. My dad rushed down the steps carrying more bags. The driver was shoving my mom’s rolling suitcase into the trunk when my mother came out, walking an inch a minute so the plastic cake carrier in her arms wouldn’t tip.
“Ready, Betty?” my dad asked.
“Hop into the cab, Mom,” I said.
My mother did not hop. She stood like her feet were cemented to the sidewalk.
“I’ve come to my senses,” she said.
My dad pushed a plaid tote bag across the taxi’s backseat.
“What did you say, Betty?”
“I’m not going,” she said.
“You have to go,” Sam said. “You have a ticket.”
“You’ll have fun,” my dad said.
“Vermont’s too far away,” she said.
“You can call us,” my dad said.
“From the train,” she said. “But there’s no phone reception at the cabin. What if DB needs me?”
DB is my compromise name. It’s short for Darling Boy, which is what my mom called me until this year, when I turned ten. Her second choice is Adam. My only choice is Melonhead.
My mom blames my friend Lucy Rose Reilly for inventing that nickname. I still thank her. Lucy Rose. Not my mom. Well, sometimes I thank my mom, but not for thinking Darling Boy is a good nickname.
“You can email us, honey,” my dad said.
“My sister will understand,” she said.
“No, she won’t,” I said. “Aunt Traci says the trip’s the only reason she agreed to turn forty.”
Supersonic brain-to-brain message to Sam: Keep loading.
“Here comes party food,” I yelled. “Catch!”
Sam did. But a couple things jumped out midair. The French bread landed in a puddle near the curb.
“Don’t worry, Mom!” I yelled. “Only one end is damp. The rest is mostly dry.”
“I caught the olive jar right before it hit the street,” Sam said.
“Unload the cab,” my mom ordered. “I’m staying.”
“Honey, you’ve been planning this trip since your sister’s last birthday,” my dad said.
“I can’t leave for four days,” she said. “The boys could get into a situation.”
“They get in situations when you’re here,” my dad said.
“That’s true,” I said.
“Lots of them,” Sam added.
“The meter’s running, lady,” the driver yelled out the window. “Are you coming?”
“What if the boys climb on the roof again?” my mom said.
“We’re over that,” I told her.
“Sometimes I’m tempted,” Sam said.
“Sam,” my dad said, “can we discuss your temptation after Mrs. Melon is on her way?”
“Sure,” Sam said. “If you want to.”
My dad kissed my mom’s forehead and said, “We’ll be fine, Betty. Go. Have a great time.”
She got in the taxi, but she didn’t shut the door.
“Go to bed on time,” my mom said in her boss voice. “Remember the Polite People Program.”
My mother invented 3P after she saw me licking my knife at Joshua Stern’s bar mitzvah lunch. I only did it because a clump of mayonnaise was on it.
“We love you,” my dad said. “Don’t we, Sport?”
“Yep,” I said.
He closed the car door. My mom kissed me through the open window.
She was nervous. I could tell from her breathing.
“What will you do if you need me, DB?”
I know how to relax her mind.
“I don’t need you at all,” I said.
For no reason, my dad gave me an XLG. The Xtreme Laser Glare—the worst of the glares.

2
The Sixteen-Step Secret
“Men,” my dad said. “It’s eight a.m. The train has left the station. WOW has officially begun.”
“Get the car keys, Dad!” I shouted. “And get ready for WOW number one!”
“Hold on, Sport,” he said. “The Official WOW Opening Activity is the Bachelors’ Breakfast. Tell me about WOW One while we’re cooking. OK?”
“To the kitchen!” Sam shouted.
“Don’t kick the swinging door,” my dad said.
“I’ll remember next time,” I promised.
My dad let us sit on the counter. That’s called a rare privilege. My mom thinks counter-sitting germs up the food.
“Is the Official Breakfast eggs?” Sam asked.
“Eggs are for the faint-hearted,” my dad said.
“Toast?” I guessed.
He snorted. “Toast is for the timid,” he said.
“Bacon?” I asked.
“Bacon is a preferred bachelor food,” my father said.
He opened the fridge and pulled out a white shopping bag.
“Gentlemen,” he said. “Since the beginning of time, the Sixteen Secret Steps of the Bachelor’s Breakfast have been passed from father to son. Or, in Sam’s case, from best friend’s father to best friend.”
“We enjoy Secret Steps,” I said.
“Every man assembles his own Bachelor Breakfast,” he said. “But I’ll cook the main ingredient.”
“Hot diggity dog,” I said.
“You are correct,” my dad said. “These will be the hot-diggity-est dogs ever created.”
“Hot dogs?” Sam said. “For breakfast? For real?”
My dad reached into the bag.
“Step one: dogs on the griddle,” he said.
“What’s step two?” Sam asked.
“Steps two and three: open rolls, apply butter,” my dad said. “Step four: put rolls facedown on the griddle.”
According to my mom, Sam and I aren’t allowed to griddle.
“When the rolls are golden, fill them with shredded cheese,” my father said. “That’s step five.”
“It’s getting better,” Sam said.
“Step six: put a dog in the roll,” he said.
“It’s melting the cheese,” I said.
My dad got a bowl. “Steps seven, eight, nine, ten, and eleven: mix ketchup, mustard, mayo, relish, and Tabasco to make Bachelor Sauce,” he said.
“What’s step twelve?” I asked.
“Pickles on the right bun. Step thirteen: banana peppers, on the left.”
“I thought thirteen would be sauerkraut,” Sam said.
“Sauerkraut is step fifteen,” my dad said. “Step fourteen is smother with chili.”
“What’s sixteen?” I asked.
“Bacon,” my dad said. “Of course.”
“This is the best thing I ever ate,” I said.
“I know,” my dad said.
For entertainment, I said it again in burpspeak.
Burpspeaking is one of my top skills. It’s E-Z. Just catch the burp on the way up your throat and say a word at the same time the burp’s coming out of your mouth. Some words burp better than others.
“Let’s keep that remarkable talent between us men,” my dad said.
“Is it time to hear my plan, Dad?”
“Ready and listening,” he said.
“You know how Mom goes ape over surprises?” I said.
“I do know,” my dad said.
His phone started playing “Yankee Doodle.”
“Don’t answer!” I shouted.
“It’s a phone, not a disaster,” Sam said.
“You’re wrong,” I said. “When the phone plays ‘Yankee Doodle,’ it means my dad’s boss is calling.”
“Hello, Congressman,” my dad said.
Then he asked, “How many points?”
Sam gave me a thumbs-up. “Points are good.”
“In politics, points go up and down,” I said. “Congressman Buddy Boyd doesn’t call when they’re up.”
“So Buddy Boyd’s behind?” Sam asked.
That made me hoot.
When Sam realized what he said, he fell apart laughing.
My dad gave us an XLG with daggers on top.
“Sir,” he said, “if you want to win this election, you’ve got to get on the next plane to Tallahassee. Defend yourself. . . .
“I can’t go to Florida right now, sir. Betty’s out of town. I’m taking care of our son and his best friend.”
I don’t know what Congressman Buddy Boyd said, but my dad answered, “I can’t do that, sir. They’re only ten.”
Then came the worst words.
“You fly down now, Congressman,” my dad said. “I’ll follow as soon as I can rearrange things.”
My cheeks turned red hot.
“WOW is canceled, isn’t it?” I said.
“I’m sorry, Sport,” my dad said. “I wanted to spend Fall Break with you boys.”
“That’s OK,” Sam said.
“No it’s not,” I said.
“Tell me about your surprise for Mom,” he said.
“The Congressman ruined it,” I said.
“Can we postpone it?” my dad asked.
“It has to happen while Mom’s away,” I said.
“Starting now,” Sam said. “It takes days to get a dog. They have to inspect your family.”
My dad laughed so hard his eyes crunched shut. “Mom feels you’re not old enough to have a puppy,” he reminded me.
“It’s not for me,” I said. “It’s for Mom.”
“Mrs. Melon’s old enough to get five dogs,” Sam said.
“Sport, you know Mom’s reasons for not wanting a dog.”
“They bring dirt in the house, slobber on people, chew furniture, get fleas, and jump on people,” I said. “And what if it bites me and I get a scar?”
“You like scars,” Sam said.
“Everybody does except my mom,” I said.
“What made you think Mom would like a dog?” my dad asked.
“The Melon Family Guideline for Life,” I explained. “The one that says Think of Others. I thought of Mom. I figured out that when she says no dog, she means she doesn’t want a boy dog.”
“A male dog?” my dad asked.
“A dog that likes to do what boys like to do,” Sam said. “Run free and dig holes. Mrs. Melon would love a mom dog.”
“A mom dog?” my dad asked.
“The ultra-small, calm kind of dog that gets haircuts and rides around in a dog purse,” I said. “And I’m OK with that. I’ll feed it and walk it for Mom. But I’m taking the ear bows off before I take him outside.”
“When Melonhead wants to hang around with a boy’s dog, he can visit my dog,” Sam said. “When I get it.”
“You’re getting a dog?” my dad asked Sam.
“After I show responsibility and commitment,” Sam said.
“Commitment means earning fifty dollars to help pay for it,” I said.
“Aren’t pound puppies free?” my dad asked.
“Sure, but you have to pay for dog health,” Sam said.
“You have fifty dollars, Dad,” I said. “And Mom has responsibility.”
My dad hugged me.
“I’m sorry, Sport. We cannot spring a dog on your mom. It’s not fair to her or the dog.”
“This is officially the worst Fall Break in the history of life,” I said.

3
I Might As Well Be at School
Sam ate my leftover Bachelor Breakfast.
“I’m too mad to eat,” I told my dad.
“I understand,” he said.
“How could you?” I asked. “Did your father ever cancel WOW weekend?”
It was a trick question. WOW weekend didn’t exist back then, because I hadn’t been born to invent it.
“I’m sorry, Sport,” he said.
Then he asked Sam, “When’s your dad getting home?”
“Not until he and Oliver find a yellow-tailed woolly monkey,” Sam said. “That could be weeks, because they’re endangered.”
© Matt Mendelshon
What made you want to write?
I come from a family of storytellers. My parents are both writers. Our dinner table has always been where the events of the day are reported with great hilarity or drama, sometimes both at once. That taught us about pacing, delivery, what works and what doesn't. We read a lot. Possibly because we had no TV.

So dinner was a long series of teachable moments?
We didn't know we were learning and my parents didn't know they were teaching. It was just dinner. My siblings and I were brought up to value original thinking, honorable behavior, laughter, and books. Our passions were taken seriously. They didn't dwell on our shortcomings–math, science, Latin. We were never described as aspiring. Michael was a writer, Meg an actress, Nell a scientist. I was an artist. Our titles expanded as our interests grew. Ultimately, three out of the four of us became writers. My parents became the models for Lucy Rose's grandparents, Madam and Pop.

How did you get into writing professionally?

I was working as an illustrator and walking the floors with our darling, relentlessly colicky baby when a friend called to ask if I would like a two-day-a-week job doing basic research and phone answering at People magazine. I would have done it for free.

I started covering parties for People and graduated to bigger stories. Six years and another baby later, I was hired as a feature writer for USA Today's Life section. Reporting taught me to write fast and to be frugal with words, and it let me ask questions that would be rude under any other circumstances. I spent time in Hollywood with movie stars, in Washington with the president, and in Mississippi with people who lived in houses that rented for $60 a month. No plumbing, no electricity, one good wind from toppling over. I learned to listen to what people were (and weren' t) saying, to understand what they cherished and what they feared. I can't imagine that I could write good fiction without having reported on so many real lives.

Where do you get your ideas?

In schools, on the subway, in the market. Something happens and it triggers an idea. My first book, Lucy Rose: Here's the Thing About Me, came about when, one night at family dinner, my mom said about her dog, "Poppy has been so much better since I've been telling her where I'm going and what time I'll be back." That struck me as hilarious. After they left, I typed the words: "My grandmother thinks her dog can tell time." The story took off from there. Until my mom said that I hadn't thought about writing a children's book. I tell aspiring writers to eavesdrop. It's a great way to get ideas and to get a sense of how people really talk. When you have something, write it down as soon as you can.

How do you write?
I follow the advice of that old Nike ad: Just Do It. Lots of people think about writing a book but say, "I don't have time," or "I'm waiting for inspiration," or "I want to get it worked out in my head first." If you want to write, carve out the time. If you write a page a day in a year you'll have the first draft of a novel.

What are the biggest writing mistakes people make?
Thinking bigger words are better words, becoming wedded to every word so they can't bear to throw anything out. Many writers repeat themselves. Say it once. Readers are smart. They remember.

How do you sharpen your work?
What works best for me is to write a bit, edit, make changes, write some more, and repeat from the beginning. When I finish a piece, I go through it once just to find and banish clichés. Then I run a search for the words very and really. They take up space and almost never help the writing. I read my work out loud. That is the surest, quickest way to tell if the voices ring true or the writing is lumpy.

Who are you favorite writers?
I have many. Katharine Patterson, Judy Blume, Lois Lowery, Dick King-Smith, P. G. Wodehouse, Ian Falconer, S. E. Hinton, Harper Lee, Daniel Wallace.

Your favorite book?
I can't pick a favorite. But I am in awe of Ernest Hemingway's six word short story: "For sale: Baby shoes, never worn."

Do you start with an outline?
No. But I do make a list of five or six things that are going to happen. Sometimes I change my mind, but the list gives me some direction.

Are Washington, D.C., and Capitol Hill like they are in the Lucy Rose and Melonhead books?
The neighborhood has been gentrified, but it is still full of families and dogs and shops and adventures. (Almost all of the places in the book are real.) When we were young, my brother and sisters and I spent our days roaming around the Capitol, playing pick-up soccer on the Library of Congress lawn and dropping in on the Smithsonian museums. We regularly climbed the 897 steps to the top of the Washington Monument and took so many tours of the FBI that the guides recognized us. When my dad was a young reporter, he used to meet Harry Truman at Union (train) Station and they' d do the interview while they walked. Washington is less free-wheeling now. Security is tighter, kids can't tour the FBI without an adult, you have to go through your Congressperson to get a White House ticket, and you have to take the elevator to the top of the Washington Monument.

Your family has lived on the same block of Constitution Avenue for generations.

It's been a good place to chart change. My dad was born at home in 1923. One of his earliest memories is seeing the KKK march past the house in 1925. He was two years old. In August 1963, when I was seven, thousands of people in the March on Washington walked the same route to hear Dr. King deliver his "I Have a Dream" speech. My mom was days away from having my sister Nell, and her obstetrician wouldn't allow her to walk that far. Instead she, my brother Michael, my sister Meg, and I passed out free lemonade and cookies all day. (My dad was reporting on the March for the Washington Daily News.) In January 2009 all of us, including my eight-year-old nephew watched hundreds of thousands of people walk past the house on the way to see President Obama get inaugurated.

Out of four Kelly kids, three became writers. What do they do?

My sister Meg is a screenwriter. For years she wrote for soap operas. Until recently she was the co-headwriter for Days of Our Lives.

My brother Michael reported for the New York Times, the New Yorker and the National Journal. He was a syndicated columnist, the author of Martyr's Day and the editor of the Atlantic Monthly. It is the great heartbreak of our lives that Michael was killed while reporting on the first days of the war in Iraq in 2003.

My sister Nell has the most important job in the family. She teaches kindergarten and first grade.

What do you tell kids who want to be writers?
Do it! I've met a lot of artists and singers and writers who were going to college to study business or teaching or dental hygiene. People, often parents, have convinced them that their passion is too risky for real life. Pursue the practical, they say, you can always sing in the church choir, paint on the side, write in your off-hours. Though said with love, this is lousy advice. Passions almost always stem from talent. And when you're talented and work hard, you get jobs.

How did you get your book published?
After I finished, I sent it to four agents. I have still not heard back from them. It was my great good fortune to have a friend who passed my manuscript on to his editor. That said, I do believe good books get published, just not as fast as one hopes.

What can a children's book writer do to find a publisher?
Join the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. They have groups all over the country. Go to their workshops. Make contacts. Have faith.

Fun facts about Katy Kelly:

She has two children, Emily and Marguerite.

She married her college sweetheart. His name is Steve.

She has a dog named Ellie. When Katy was a kid, she had a big, black French Poodle named Gumbo. He appears in the Lucy Rose and Melonhead books.

She lives in Washington, D.C.

She loves visiting schools.

She spends much of her money at bookstores.

She is wild for ice cream and chocolate and especially chocolate ice cream.

She is anti-cauliflower.

She draws and paints.

Her office is in her house. It is pink and green and jazzy.

If she could choose one extra talent, it would be singing.

Her mom, Marguerite Kelly, is the author of The Mother's Almanac.

Madam and Pop are now celebrities in their neighborhood.

About the author
Katy Kelly is the daughter of writers. She and her siblings grew up on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., five blocks away from the U.S. Capitol, four from the Senate buildings, and three from the U.S. Supreme Court.
She was a reporter and editor for 20 years before becoming an author. View titles by Katy Kelly
© Dan Johnson
Gillian Johnson grew up in Winnipeg. She has written/illustrated over thirty books for children and adults. She now lives in the UK with her writer husband, Nicholas Shakespeare. View titles by Gillian Johnson

About

Fun in the sun! For best pals Melonhead and Sam, it’s a winter break with grandparents, which is more fun than you’d think! A comical and heartwarming story about friendship, community, and the special connection between kids and those young at heart!
 
My best pal Sam and I are in Paradise, the community in Florida where my grandparents Nana and Jeep live. We’re staying with them while my dad works and my mom is on a trip with her lady relatives. Everything in Paradise is swank and deluxe, and lots of stuff is “For the Convenience of Our Residents.” We’re sure that means free. We especially like the All-You-Can-Eat Buffet.

Since Florida is loaded with animals, we’re going to capture a pet for Sam. We considered a wild piglet or a parrot or an armadillo or an iguana, but we’ve decided to find an alligator egg because it’s easy to carry on an airplane and it can hatch once we’re home. All we have to do is come up with a way to get that egg. Luckily, Sam and I are idea men!
 
 
Praise for the Melonhead series
 
Melonhead: “Laugh-out-loud funny, rivaling Stink and Fudge in its troublemaker quotient.” —School Library Journal
 
Melonhead and the Big Stink: “The clever dialogue sparkles. A breezy and humorous middle-grade tale.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
Melonhead and the Undercover Operation: “Melonhead’s pure, kid-centric, fun-loving perspective is hard to resist.” —Kirkus Reviews
 
Melonhead and the Vegalicious Disaster: “Melonhead returns with rapid-fire narration and adventure.” —BooklistOnline.com
 
Melonhead and the We-Fix-It Company: “Melonhead and his friends inhabit a world . . . where inventiveness and camaraderie reign supreme.” —Kirkus Reviews

Excerpt

1
WOW
I sat on my mom’s suitcase so she could yank the zipper closed.
“It’s five-thirty in the morning,” I said. “It’s almost time for WOW.”
She looked at me.
“WOW stands for Week of Wonders,” I said.
“But I won’t be here,” she said.
“That’s why it’s a WOW,” I said. “It’s the first time in history that I’ll be living without a lady around. And by lady, I mean you, Mom.”
“Thank you,” she said. “But I’m wondering what the Wonders are. And why you can’t have them when I’m home.”
“I can’t reveal the WOW list,” I said. “Sam and I are in a pact. You can’t break a pact with your top friend.”
“Now I’m worried,” my mom said.
“You should be thrilled,” I told her. “Believe me. I know what I’m talking about.”
That’s because I’m the one who came up with the WOW List of Manly Things for Sam and Me to Do with Dad While Mom’s in Vermont with Her Sister and Lady Cousins. Sam decided the list should count down from Important to Extremely Important to Most Important Thing in the World.
5. Burping contest.
4. Cook chili with Tabasco, cayenne, and jalapenos. Eat it.
3. Ride to both ends of every subway line in Washington, D.C.
2. Drill holes in wood.
1. Adopt a dog.
Whenever I ask my mom if I can get a dog, she says, “You’re not old enough.”
And I always say, “If I were old enough, I’d pick a huge, furry dog that has a load of energy and likes to roll in mud.” Then she makes a sound like she’s shivering.
Last week, I had a double Brainflash of Brilliance.
1. I realized who is old enough: my mom.
2. My kind of dog is not my mom’s kind of dog. Her kind is a mini dog that wears ear bows and doesn’t cause allergies.
That’s fine with me. My motto is Every Dog Is a Great Dog. As long as there’s a dog living in my house, I’m happy.
I was going hyper from wanting to tell my mom the exciting news that she was getting a pet. I made myself wait until my dad got home so he wouldn’t be the last one to know.
He walked in carrying a box from Baking Divas.
“Surprise!” he said. “I brought Plum Perfect Pudding.”
My mom hugged his neck. “The best presents are the ones I wouldn’t buy for myself,” she said. “My favorite surprises are the ones the whole family can enjoy.”
A dog is exactly that kind of surprise, I thought. Wait until she comes home from her trip and finds out we got her a dog she never expected.
So even though I could hardly stand it, I kept the secret. Except I told Sam, of course.
“I’ll carry your suitcase downstairs, Mom,” I said.
“It’s too heavy for you,” she said.
“No, it’s not,” I said. “It’s light.”
My mom gave me the look that means Don’t argue.
“It rolls,” I said. “I’ll push it like a lawn mower.”
That was a great idea, except Sam rang the doorbell when I was halfway down the steps. I tried to get in front of the suitcase. That didn’t work as well as you’d think.
My dad opened the door while I picked up myself and the suitcase.
“Hey, Mrs. Melon,” Sam yelled. “Your taxi’s here!”
“I’ll get the rest of your stuff, Betty,” my dad yelled up the stairs.
“The second your mom leaves, we have to go to the pound,” Sam told me.
“Before they’re out of dogs,” I said.
“If you and your dad don’t pick the same dog, I’ll be on your side,” Sam said. “I’m great at convincing.”
True. Sam convinced his mom to let him spend Fall Break with my Dad and me here in Washington, D.C., instead of with his toddler cousins in Philadelphia. Mrs. Alswang has to go because her niece, Sophia, had an unexpected baby. Well, she did expect it, but she thought it would get here in November instead of yesterday afternoon. Sophia’s husband is in Peru with Sam’s dad, taking pictures for National Geographic. Somebody has to help with all those children, so Mrs. Alswang and Sam’s sister, Julia, are going to Philadelphia this morning, right after rush hour. I doubt Julia will be much help. One-year-olds usually aren’t.
The taxi driver honked.
Sam and I dragged the suitcase down to the sidewalk. My dad rushed down the steps carrying more bags. The driver was shoving my mom’s rolling suitcase into the trunk when my mother came out, walking an inch a minute so the plastic cake carrier in her arms wouldn’t tip.
“Ready, Betty?” my dad asked.
“Hop into the cab, Mom,” I said.
My mother did not hop. She stood like her feet were cemented to the sidewalk.
“I’ve come to my senses,” she said.
My dad pushed a plaid tote bag across the taxi’s backseat.
“What did you say, Betty?”
“I’m not going,” she said.
“You have to go,” Sam said. “You have a ticket.”
“You’ll have fun,” my dad said.
“Vermont’s too far away,” she said.
“You can call us,” my dad said.
“From the train,” she said. “But there’s no phone reception at the cabin. What if DB needs me?”
DB is my compromise name. It’s short for Darling Boy, which is what my mom called me until this year, when I turned ten. Her second choice is Adam. My only choice is Melonhead.
My mom blames my friend Lucy Rose Reilly for inventing that nickname. I still thank her. Lucy Rose. Not my mom. Well, sometimes I thank my mom, but not for thinking Darling Boy is a good nickname.
“You can email us, honey,” my dad said.
“My sister will understand,” she said.
“No, she won’t,” I said. “Aunt Traci says the trip’s the only reason she agreed to turn forty.”
Supersonic brain-to-brain message to Sam: Keep loading.
“Here comes party food,” I yelled. “Catch!”
Sam did. But a couple things jumped out midair. The French bread landed in a puddle near the curb.
“Don’t worry, Mom!” I yelled. “Only one end is damp. The rest is mostly dry.”
“I caught the olive jar right before it hit the street,” Sam said.
“Unload the cab,” my mom ordered. “I’m staying.”
“Honey, you’ve been planning this trip since your sister’s last birthday,” my dad said.
“I can’t leave for four days,” she said. “The boys could get into a situation.”
“They get in situations when you’re here,” my dad said.
“That’s true,” I said.
“Lots of them,” Sam added.
“The meter’s running, lady,” the driver yelled out the window. “Are you coming?”
“What if the boys climb on the roof again?” my mom said.
“We’re over that,” I told her.
“Sometimes I’m tempted,” Sam said.
“Sam,” my dad said, “can we discuss your temptation after Mrs. Melon is on her way?”
“Sure,” Sam said. “If you want to.”
My dad kissed my mom’s forehead and said, “We’ll be fine, Betty. Go. Have a great time.”
She got in the taxi, but she didn’t shut the door.
“Go to bed on time,” my mom said in her boss voice. “Remember the Polite People Program.”
My mother invented 3P after she saw me licking my knife at Joshua Stern’s bar mitzvah lunch. I only did it because a clump of mayonnaise was on it.
“We love you,” my dad said. “Don’t we, Sport?”
“Yep,” I said.
He closed the car door. My mom kissed me through the open window.
She was nervous. I could tell from her breathing.
“What will you do if you need me, DB?”
I know how to relax her mind.
“I don’t need you at all,” I said.
For no reason, my dad gave me an XLG. The Xtreme Laser Glare—the worst of the glares.

2
The Sixteen-Step Secret
“Men,” my dad said. “It’s eight a.m. The train has left the station. WOW has officially begun.”
“Get the car keys, Dad!” I shouted. “And get ready for WOW number one!”
“Hold on, Sport,” he said. “The Official WOW Opening Activity is the Bachelors’ Breakfast. Tell me about WOW One while we’re cooking. OK?”
“To the kitchen!” Sam shouted.
“Don’t kick the swinging door,” my dad said.
“I’ll remember next time,” I promised.
My dad let us sit on the counter. That’s called a rare privilege. My mom thinks counter-sitting germs up the food.
“Is the Official Breakfast eggs?” Sam asked.
“Eggs are for the faint-hearted,” my dad said.
“Toast?” I guessed.
He snorted. “Toast is for the timid,” he said.
“Bacon?” I asked.
“Bacon is a preferred bachelor food,” my father said.
He opened the fridge and pulled out a white shopping bag.
“Gentlemen,” he said. “Since the beginning of time, the Sixteen Secret Steps of the Bachelor’s Breakfast have been passed from father to son. Or, in Sam’s case, from best friend’s father to best friend.”
“We enjoy Secret Steps,” I said.
“Every man assembles his own Bachelor Breakfast,” he said. “But I’ll cook the main ingredient.”
“Hot diggity dog,” I said.
“You are correct,” my dad said. “These will be the hot-diggity-est dogs ever created.”
“Hot dogs?” Sam said. “For breakfast? For real?”
My dad reached into the bag.
“Step one: dogs on the griddle,” he said.
“What’s step two?” Sam asked.
“Steps two and three: open rolls, apply butter,” my dad said. “Step four: put rolls facedown on the griddle.”
According to my mom, Sam and I aren’t allowed to griddle.
“When the rolls are golden, fill them with shredded cheese,” my father said. “That’s step five.”
“It’s getting better,” Sam said.
“Step six: put a dog in the roll,” he said.
“It’s melting the cheese,” I said.
My dad got a bowl. “Steps seven, eight, nine, ten, and eleven: mix ketchup, mustard, mayo, relish, and Tabasco to make Bachelor Sauce,” he said.
“What’s step twelve?” I asked.
“Pickles on the right bun. Step thirteen: banana peppers, on the left.”
“I thought thirteen would be sauerkraut,” Sam said.
“Sauerkraut is step fifteen,” my dad said. “Step fourteen is smother with chili.”
“What’s sixteen?” I asked.
“Bacon,” my dad said. “Of course.”
“This is the best thing I ever ate,” I said.
“I know,” my dad said.
For entertainment, I said it again in burpspeak.
Burpspeaking is one of my top skills. It’s E-Z. Just catch the burp on the way up your throat and say a word at the same time the burp’s coming out of your mouth. Some words burp better than others.
“Let’s keep that remarkable talent between us men,” my dad said.
“Is it time to hear my plan, Dad?”
“Ready and listening,” he said.
“You know how Mom goes ape over surprises?” I said.
“I do know,” my dad said.
His phone started playing “Yankee Doodle.”
“Don’t answer!” I shouted.
“It’s a phone, not a disaster,” Sam said.
“You’re wrong,” I said. “When the phone plays ‘Yankee Doodle,’ it means my dad’s boss is calling.”
“Hello, Congressman,” my dad said.
Then he asked, “How many points?”
Sam gave me a thumbs-up. “Points are good.”
“In politics, points go up and down,” I said. “Congressman Buddy Boyd doesn’t call when they’re up.”
“So Buddy Boyd’s behind?” Sam asked.
That made me hoot.
When Sam realized what he said, he fell apart laughing.
My dad gave us an XLG with daggers on top.
“Sir,” he said, “if you want to win this election, you’ve got to get on the next plane to Tallahassee. Defend yourself. . . .
“I can’t go to Florida right now, sir. Betty’s out of town. I’m taking care of our son and his best friend.”
I don’t know what Congressman Buddy Boyd said, but my dad answered, “I can’t do that, sir. They’re only ten.”
Then came the worst words.
“You fly down now, Congressman,” my dad said. “I’ll follow as soon as I can rearrange things.”
My cheeks turned red hot.
“WOW is canceled, isn’t it?” I said.
“I’m sorry, Sport,” my dad said. “I wanted to spend Fall Break with you boys.”
“That’s OK,” Sam said.
“No it’s not,” I said.
“Tell me about your surprise for Mom,” he said.
“The Congressman ruined it,” I said.
“Can we postpone it?” my dad asked.
“It has to happen while Mom’s away,” I said.
“Starting now,” Sam said. “It takes days to get a dog. They have to inspect your family.”
My dad laughed so hard his eyes crunched shut. “Mom feels you’re not old enough to have a puppy,” he reminded me.
“It’s not for me,” I said. “It’s for Mom.”
“Mrs. Melon’s old enough to get five dogs,” Sam said.
“Sport, you know Mom’s reasons for not wanting a dog.”
“They bring dirt in the house, slobber on people, chew furniture, get fleas, and jump on people,” I said. “And what if it bites me and I get a scar?”
“You like scars,” Sam said.
“Everybody does except my mom,” I said.
“What made you think Mom would like a dog?” my dad asked.
“The Melon Family Guideline for Life,” I explained. “The one that says Think of Others. I thought of Mom. I figured out that when she says no dog, she means she doesn’t want a boy dog.”
“A male dog?” my dad asked.
“A dog that likes to do what boys like to do,” Sam said. “Run free and dig holes. Mrs. Melon would love a mom dog.”
“A mom dog?” my dad asked.
“The ultra-small, calm kind of dog that gets haircuts and rides around in a dog purse,” I said. “And I’m OK with that. I’ll feed it and walk it for Mom. But I’m taking the ear bows off before I take him outside.”
“When Melonhead wants to hang around with a boy’s dog, he can visit my dog,” Sam said. “When I get it.”
“You’re getting a dog?” my dad asked Sam.
“After I show responsibility and commitment,” Sam said.
“Commitment means earning fifty dollars to help pay for it,” I said.
“Aren’t pound puppies free?” my dad asked.
“Sure, but you have to pay for dog health,” Sam said.
“You have fifty dollars, Dad,” I said. “And Mom has responsibility.”
My dad hugged me.
“I’m sorry, Sport. We cannot spring a dog on your mom. It’s not fair to her or the dog.”
“This is officially the worst Fall Break in the history of life,” I said.

3
I Might As Well Be at School
Sam ate my leftover Bachelor Breakfast.
“I’m too mad to eat,” I told my dad.
“I understand,” he said.
“How could you?” I asked. “Did your father ever cancel WOW weekend?”
It was a trick question. WOW weekend didn’t exist back then, because I hadn’t been born to invent it.
“I’m sorry, Sport,” he said.
Then he asked Sam, “When’s your dad getting home?”
“Not until he and Oliver find a yellow-tailed woolly monkey,” Sam said. “That could be weeks, because they’re endangered.”

Author

© Matt Mendelshon
What made you want to write?
I come from a family of storytellers. My parents are both writers. Our dinner table has always been where the events of the day are reported with great hilarity or drama, sometimes both at once. That taught us about pacing, delivery, what works and what doesn't. We read a lot. Possibly because we had no TV.

So dinner was a long series of teachable moments?
We didn't know we were learning and my parents didn't know they were teaching. It was just dinner. My siblings and I were brought up to value original thinking, honorable behavior, laughter, and books. Our passions were taken seriously. They didn't dwell on our shortcomings–math, science, Latin. We were never described as aspiring. Michael was a writer, Meg an actress, Nell a scientist. I was an artist. Our titles expanded as our interests grew. Ultimately, three out of the four of us became writers. My parents became the models for Lucy Rose's grandparents, Madam and Pop.

How did you get into writing professionally?

I was working as an illustrator and walking the floors with our darling, relentlessly colicky baby when a friend called to ask if I would like a two-day-a-week job doing basic research and phone answering at People magazine. I would have done it for free.

I started covering parties for People and graduated to bigger stories. Six years and another baby later, I was hired as a feature writer for USA Today's Life section. Reporting taught me to write fast and to be frugal with words, and it let me ask questions that would be rude under any other circumstances. I spent time in Hollywood with movie stars, in Washington with the president, and in Mississippi with people who lived in houses that rented for $60 a month. No plumbing, no electricity, one good wind from toppling over. I learned to listen to what people were (and weren' t) saying, to understand what they cherished and what they feared. I can't imagine that I could write good fiction without having reported on so many real lives.

Where do you get your ideas?

In schools, on the subway, in the market. Something happens and it triggers an idea. My first book, Lucy Rose: Here's the Thing About Me, came about when, one night at family dinner, my mom said about her dog, "Poppy has been so much better since I've been telling her where I'm going and what time I'll be back." That struck me as hilarious. After they left, I typed the words: "My grandmother thinks her dog can tell time." The story took off from there. Until my mom said that I hadn't thought about writing a children's book. I tell aspiring writers to eavesdrop. It's a great way to get ideas and to get a sense of how people really talk. When you have something, write it down as soon as you can.

How do you write?
I follow the advice of that old Nike ad: Just Do It. Lots of people think about writing a book but say, "I don't have time," or "I'm waiting for inspiration," or "I want to get it worked out in my head first." If you want to write, carve out the time. If you write a page a day in a year you'll have the first draft of a novel.

What are the biggest writing mistakes people make?
Thinking bigger words are better words, becoming wedded to every word so they can't bear to throw anything out. Many writers repeat themselves. Say it once. Readers are smart. They remember.

How do you sharpen your work?
What works best for me is to write a bit, edit, make changes, write some more, and repeat from the beginning. When I finish a piece, I go through it once just to find and banish clichés. Then I run a search for the words very and really. They take up space and almost never help the writing. I read my work out loud. That is the surest, quickest way to tell if the voices ring true or the writing is lumpy.

Who are you favorite writers?
I have many. Katharine Patterson, Judy Blume, Lois Lowery, Dick King-Smith, P. G. Wodehouse, Ian Falconer, S. E. Hinton, Harper Lee, Daniel Wallace.

Your favorite book?
I can't pick a favorite. But I am in awe of Ernest Hemingway's six word short story: "For sale: Baby shoes, never worn."

Do you start with an outline?
No. But I do make a list of five or six things that are going to happen. Sometimes I change my mind, but the list gives me some direction.

Are Washington, D.C., and Capitol Hill like they are in the Lucy Rose and Melonhead books?
The neighborhood has been gentrified, but it is still full of families and dogs and shops and adventures. (Almost all of the places in the book are real.) When we were young, my brother and sisters and I spent our days roaming around the Capitol, playing pick-up soccer on the Library of Congress lawn and dropping in on the Smithsonian museums. We regularly climbed the 897 steps to the top of the Washington Monument and took so many tours of the FBI that the guides recognized us. When my dad was a young reporter, he used to meet Harry Truman at Union (train) Station and they' d do the interview while they walked. Washington is less free-wheeling now. Security is tighter, kids can't tour the FBI without an adult, you have to go through your Congressperson to get a White House ticket, and you have to take the elevator to the top of the Washington Monument.

Your family has lived on the same block of Constitution Avenue for generations.

It's been a good place to chart change. My dad was born at home in 1923. One of his earliest memories is seeing the KKK march past the house in 1925. He was two years old. In August 1963, when I was seven, thousands of people in the March on Washington walked the same route to hear Dr. King deliver his "I Have a Dream" speech. My mom was days away from having my sister Nell, and her obstetrician wouldn't allow her to walk that far. Instead she, my brother Michael, my sister Meg, and I passed out free lemonade and cookies all day. (My dad was reporting on the March for the Washington Daily News.) In January 2009 all of us, including my eight-year-old nephew watched hundreds of thousands of people walk past the house on the way to see President Obama get inaugurated.

Out of four Kelly kids, three became writers. What do they do?

My sister Meg is a screenwriter. For years she wrote for soap operas. Until recently she was the co-headwriter for Days of Our Lives.

My brother Michael reported for the New York Times, the New Yorker and the National Journal. He was a syndicated columnist, the author of Martyr's Day and the editor of the Atlantic Monthly. It is the great heartbreak of our lives that Michael was killed while reporting on the first days of the war in Iraq in 2003.

My sister Nell has the most important job in the family. She teaches kindergarten and first grade.

What do you tell kids who want to be writers?
Do it! I've met a lot of artists and singers and writers who were going to college to study business or teaching or dental hygiene. People, often parents, have convinced them that their passion is too risky for real life. Pursue the practical, they say, you can always sing in the church choir, paint on the side, write in your off-hours. Though said with love, this is lousy advice. Passions almost always stem from talent. And when you're talented and work hard, you get jobs.

How did you get your book published?
After I finished, I sent it to four agents. I have still not heard back from them. It was my great good fortune to have a friend who passed my manuscript on to his editor. That said, I do believe good books get published, just not as fast as one hopes.

What can a children's book writer do to find a publisher?
Join the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. They have groups all over the country. Go to their workshops. Make contacts. Have faith.

Fun facts about Katy Kelly:

She has two children, Emily and Marguerite.

She married her college sweetheart. His name is Steve.

She has a dog named Ellie. When Katy was a kid, she had a big, black French Poodle named Gumbo. He appears in the Lucy Rose and Melonhead books.

She lives in Washington, D.C.

She loves visiting schools.

She spends much of her money at bookstores.

She is wild for ice cream and chocolate and especially chocolate ice cream.

She is anti-cauliflower.

She draws and paints.

Her office is in her house. It is pink and green and jazzy.

If she could choose one extra talent, it would be singing.

Her mom, Marguerite Kelly, is the author of The Mother's Almanac.

Madam and Pop are now celebrities in their neighborhood.

About the author
Katy Kelly is the daughter of writers. She and her siblings grew up on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., five blocks away from the U.S. Capitol, four from the Senate buildings, and three from the U.S. Supreme Court.
She was a reporter and editor for 20 years before becoming an author. View titles by Katy Kelly
© Dan Johnson
Gillian Johnson grew up in Winnipeg. She has written/illustrated over thirty books for children and adults. She now lives in the UK with her writer husband, Nicholas Shakespeare. View titles by Gillian Johnson