Me and Fat Glenda by Lila Perl


Me and Fat Glenda
Title : Me and Fat Glenda
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0671605038
ISBN-10 : 9780671605032
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 160
Publication : First published September 14, 1974

Sara Mayberry is bored with life in the staid community of Havenhurst until she meets Fat Glenda


Me and Fat Glenda Reviews


  • Sarah

    This title was so familiar to me I was sure I'd read it at least once, but apparently not because it all seemed new to me. I have to say-it seemed a bit strange to me-a big mysterious buildup, not sure who to trust, and then seemed to end too quickly, leaving me to still feel distrustful of Glenda.

    http://sarahsbookjournal.wordpress.co...

  • Deana Carpenter

    i read this in the 4th grade. i still LOVE it. it's kooky, it's strange. it's funny and plain easy to read. it's been fun reading it to my little girl.

  • Tanesha

    Another one of those books from my childhood/pre-teen years that I fondly recall reading over and over...

  • Sarah

    This is a reread from childhood. My mom used to follow me around the library as I filled a huge bag with books; she picked this one out because she thought the title was funny, and because she wanted to get the hell home. I also read the second one, where Glenda loses a bunch of weight using one old weird trick (sensible diet and exercise).

    There is a lot going on here, but mostly it's a story about Sara, a girl caught between her weird Berkeley family and her new straitlaced Long Island suburb, and also between her weird friend Glenda and everyone else at school. Sara is so busy peacemaking that she doesn't have much time to develop much of a personality of her own. The plot is pretty thin, but I liked that Sara stays friends with Glenda even though it wasn't socially advantageous, and that Glenda is a good friend despite being weird and kind of annoying. 2.5 stars.

  • Katy

    I read this as a kid and it has stayed with me. Especially the follow-up book. It is kind of hard to find books like this today written about normal kids doing normal things! Lila Perl does a great job taking you into the lives of young teens and making it fun.

  • Rebecca

    I'm glad that this book was reprinted, I'd read about it on the Shelf Discovery blog & was hoping to find it one day.

    It was good, but man do I wish I had read this when I was 9 years old!

  • Ed Aycock

    Enjoyed it as a young reader. Loved it in middle age.

  • Kristen

    This was an odd one at times, but it kept my attention enough to want to read more in the series.

  • Daphne

    An old favorite, although it’s hard to say why. Some of the themes have not aged well. But now I want to make alphabet burgers, paint a black ceiling, and wear leotards. I also was hoping this was a different book, but maybe it’s the sequel I’m thinking of.

  • Abigail

    The middle school girl fatphobia is realistic but depressing. The book was an odd blend--the minimal plot about people behaving in a realistically obnoxious way felt like it might work better in a story for adults, but the writing was too cursory to pull me in at that level.

  • Kristina

    I don’t remember much except I loved it. I read it a lot when I was 9 and 10.

  • Katie Fitzgerald

    This review also appears on my blog,
    Read-at-Home Mom.

    Me and Fat Glenda is another vintage kids' book recently resurrected by Lizzie Skurnick Books. Main character Sara moves with her unconventional parents from California to a Long Island suburb, where their free-spirited ways are decidedly not welcome. The neighbors take issue with Sara's father's backyard junk sculpture, her mother's decision to paint her bedroom ceiling black, and the family's vehicle, a used garbage truck. Glenda, an overweight girl in the neighborhood, takes an instant interest in Sara, and the two form a tentative friendship, despite warnings from their classmates that Glenda is a "squealer" and not to be trusted. As the weeks go by, however, as Sara and those around her are victimized by pranks, she begins to wonder whether Glenda has a sinister side after all.

    This book is a great example of the kinds of friendship stories I loved during my upper elementary years. Sara and Glenda are both so well-developed that it is really difficult to decide the true nature of their friendship, and at times, it is easy to empathize with both girls. Perl does a nice job of creating a believable supporting cast as well, including a persnickety girl and mischievous boy who contribute their opinions to Sara's ever-changing view of Glenda. The differences between the two girls' families also nicely highlight the contrast between the conservative Long Islanders and the liberal Californians. The "there goes the neighborhood" attitude of Glenda's mother is annoyingly true to the reaction of many suburban communities to the arrival of outsiders, and adds realism to the story.

    My only disappointment with this book is that the suspenseful build-up that occurs throughout the story leads to a wholly unsatisfying ending. Halloween arrives, a few pranks are played, and then everything seems to be resolved in the minds of the characters even though it does not feel that way at all for the reader. The big "secret" about Glenda turns out to be something very minor, which doesn't match the other cruel acts that some of the characters attributed to her. It was nice to see the characters change their minds about Glenda, but I didn't see any evidence to convince the reader to suddenly trust her, which was too bad.

    Me and Fat Glenda reminds me of a few other vintage books I have read, including The Afternoon of the Elves by Janet Taylor Lisle, Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley and Me, Elizabeth by E.L. Konigsburg, and Blubber by Judy Blume. It's a must-read for nostalgic adults, and it might grab the interest of middle school girls who like realistic friendship stories that keep the focus away from boys and romance.

  • Erin

    I know I adored this book when I was younger, and I was so happy to be able to read it again (thank you again Open Library). Strangely enough, it wasn't all what I remembered, except the alphabet burgers. I really think my memory combined it with a few other books.

    Also, I'm a bit surprised that I didn't realize how similiar it was to both Blubber and Nothing's Fair in the 5th Grade.

    It was fun to read again, although I don't like the fact that the way to make everyone like Glenda in the end is to make her lose weight.

  • Kelly

    Okay but the ending is horrible. I blew through this in no time, quite enjoying it, until suddenly we can sold Fat Glenda's fatness by raw foods and eating better and counting calories.