
With this funny and engaging story, your young lima-bean lovers and haters will explore what it means to be true to one’s self, and why it’s so important. Peer pressure and fitting in are common themes your students will come across in this book and in many others throughout their reading journey. And then when it’s time to stand and recite the Pledge of Allegiance, guess what happens to Camilla? She becomes completely covered in red, white, and blue stripes! To put it mildly, she’s just not herself. But her classmates can’t stand them, so she won’t eat them either. In A Bad Case of Stripes, Camilla Cream thinks lima beans are delicious. Plus, check out these 5 graphic organizers to help further deepen your students’ understanding of themes in literature.

Between ballet classes, she spends her time creating music, digital art, and perfecting her Flock of Seagulls hairstyle.Looking for the best books to help your young readers identify and understand themes in literature? These five must-have books will help your students think critically about a story’s main idea and discover all the hidden meanings inside the books they’re reading, now and in the future. Makenna Vanegas is a UBC student, originally from Lake Oswego, Oregon. Readers, the question I propose to you now is: do you want to spend your time chasing it? With this, readers can recognize normalcy for what it is: a wishful illusion at the end of an ever-shifting rainbow. From Camilla, readers can learn the value of looking beyond conformity and seeking out their own beliefs, where the fortune lies not in fitting in but finding themselves. Furthermore, the story raises several overarching questions: Is one defined by others’ perceptions or their own? How are thoughts formed, and should they all be taken seriously?Ī Bad Case of Stripes is a pot of gold for young children, providing them a rich lesson in mind over matter. Illustrations of Camilla are continuously relatable to readers, for her character is based in relatable settings as she transitions from average girl to an amoeba-like figure with spiky, furry bits. Shannon’s anti-peer pressure storyline matches that of Kevin Henkes’ Chrysanthemum with imaginative, surrealist artwork similar to Berkeley Breathed’s Flawed Dogs.
#A bad case of stripes questions free#
Shannon acknowledges that Camilla’s arrival to this new way of being may not be free of social backlash, interpersonal charades, and greater moral intricacies shaded by girlhood regardless, she now has the mentality to cope with these events. With this decision, “she never even a touch of the stripes again.” Camilla’s return to health is withheld, heavily coloured, and clouded with confusion because, without the need for external validation, no story remains. While it is a beautiful thing when others allow her to be herself, she decides it is more dependable when she allows it. Turn, her “stripes” progress into “crystals and feathers and a long furry tail.”Īfter the dehumanising experience of denying her true identity, Camilla chooses to embrace her individuality, offering an exceptional lesson in self-acceptance. Moreover, Camilla continues to let others’ opinions dictate her life, leading her further from her true self. On her front lawn, reporters band together to broadcast “The Bizarre Case of the Incredible Changing Kid.” At this point, Shannon gives way to moral debate, as news networks profit from making Camilla a public spectacle. Have you ever not eaten something, or joined in an activity because you were afraid that others would make fun of you 3. In one image, she acts as the vibrant nucleus to a circle of surrounding classmates, who watch as her “stripes” change with their collective command.Īt home, Camilla remains a headliner. This is especially true at school, where her “stripes” begin changing patterns at others’ request. Camilla’s first concern, however, is not her worsening illness but “what to wear with crazy stripes.” As a people-pleaser, Camilla is all too aware of-and shaped by-society’s opinion. Troublingly, their proposed “treatments” only work to upset her condition. Looking to others for a cure, Camilla meets with “expert” medical professionals equipped with clipboards and clunky glasses.

After a lifetime of adhering to social norms, she wakes up one day unrecognisable to herself: she is covered in rainbow stripes!

Ironically, Camilla’s conventional ways may just be the reason behind her latest atypical change. After all, given her position as a people-pleasing conformist, multicolour stripes are not exactly a preferred look. On the inside, however, she is shadowed by gloom. On the outside, Camilla is the definition of sunshine and rainbows. Camilla was always worried about what other people thought of her.”īolstered on the cover of David Shannon’s A Bad Case of Stripes is a downcast, rainbow-stricken Camilla Cream, sulking into her polka-dot pillows. All of her friends hated lima beans, and she
