48 pages • 1 hour read
Beverly ClearyA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Ramona the Brave marks a turning point in Beverly Cleary’s career, as the third novel in the series establishes a family dynamic in the Quimby household that will follow the series until the end with Ramona’s World in 1999. Cleary’s third addition to the series drops the episodic narrative device used in the previous novels and picks up a solid plotline, creating a sense of continuity that allows for deeper character development. Henry Huggins, the beloved protagonist of Cleary’s first series who appears in the earlier Ramona novels, disappears, and a new figure takes prominence.
Beverly Cleary is known for creating realistic and lovable characters; even her non-human protagonists like Ribsy and Ralph S. Mouse hold a special place in readers’ hearts. However, out of all of Cleary’s unique and animated characters, Ramona Quimby stands alone as the most memorable resident of Klickitat Street and a character who leaves an indelible mark on every reader she touches. Ramona symbolizes not only important parts of Cleary’s personal history, but the spunky youngster also epitomizes the shifting sociopolitical landscapes in the five decades that Cleary’s work spans (Grygiel, JiaYing.
By Beverly Cleary
Beezus and Ramona
Beverly Cleary
Dear Mr. Henshaw
Beverly Cleary
Henry And Beezus
Beverly Cleary, Illustr. Jacqueline Rogers
Henry and the Paper Route
Beverly Cleary
Henry Huggins
Beverly Cleary, Illustr. Tracy Dockray
Muggie Maggie
Beverly Cleary
Ralph S. Mouse
Beverly Cleary
Ramona
Beverly Cleary
Ramona and Her Mother
Beverly Cleary
Ramona Quimby Age 8
Beverly Cleary
Ramona the Pest
Beverly Cleary
Runaway Ralph
Beverly Cleary
The Mouse and the Motorcycle
Beverly Cleary