The start of the school year is not going as the Fletcher brothers hoped. Each boy finds his plans for success veering off in unexpected and sometimes diastrous directions. And at home, their miserable new neighbor complains about everything. As the year continues, the boys learn the hard and often hilarious lesson that sometimes what you least expect is what you come to care about the most.
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- The Misadventures of the Family Fletcher
The Misadventures of the Family Fletcher
Author(s)
Publisher
Genre(s)
Age Range
8+
Release Date
July 22, 2014
ISBN
9780385376549
The start of the school year is not going as the Fletcher brothers hoped. Each boy finds his plans for success veering off in unexpected and sometimes diastrous directions. And at home, their miserable new neighbor complains about everything. As the year continues, the boys learn the hard and often hilarious lesson that sometimes what you least expect is what you come to care about the most.
Editor reviews
2 reviews
Familes come in all different shapes and sizes!
(Updated: June 28, 2026)
Overall rating
5.0
Plot
5.0
Characters
N/A
Writing Style
N/A
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
N/A
The new school year is starting, and the Fletcher boys are getting ready. Frog is in kindergarten, Jax is in 4th grade, and Sam is in 6th grade. Eli is the same age as Jax but not at Grove School with the rest of them—he has chosed to go to the Pinnacle school for gifted students. He isn’t settling into the new school all that well, and starts to regret his choice, especially when his family storm the school (a chapter title!) and he has to explain not only that Frog is from India, all the boys are adopted, and they have a Dad and a Papa. Once people at the school know the family, it’s easier, but the initial explanation to school mates is hard. The book follows the family through the trials and tribulations of the year, with anecdotes about Frog’s possibly imaginary friend, Ladybug Li (who has sisters and two moms), soccer, a school play, Halloween, visits with Aunt Luce, a cupcake baker, and a variety of run ins with the crabby Mr. Nelson, a new neighbor who thinks that the boys attempts at being friendly are met to harass him. Every chapter is headed with a note from one of the fathers or boys, and humor abounds in ordinary situations.
This book is reminiscent of family novels from my childhood that go through the year and follow the exploits of the various members, but is updated in a new millennium way that showcases diversity with very little comment about it. The biggest mention is in Eli’s visit to his new school, and that certainly rings very true. This is sort of the whole point of #WeNeedDiverseBooks!
This book is reminiscent of family novels from my childhood that go through the year and follow the exploits of the various members, but is updated in a new millennium way that showcases diversity with very little comment about it. The biggest mention is in Eli’s visit to his new school, and that certainly rings very true. This is sort of the whole point of #WeNeedDiverseBooks!
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