by David Shannon
Camilla Cream loved lima beans. But she never ate them. All of her friends hated lima beans, and she wanted to fit in. Camilla was always worried about what other people thought of her.
Today she was fretting even more than usual. It was the first day of school, and she couldn’t decide what to wear. There were so many people to impress! She tried on forty-two outfits, but none seemed quite right.
She put on a pretty red dress and looked in the mirror. Then she screamed. Her mother ran into the room, and she screamed, too.
“Oh my heavens! She cried, “You’re completely covered with stripes!”
This was certainly true. Camilla was striped from head to toe. She looked like a rainbow. Mrs. Cream felt Camilla’s forehead.
“Do you feel alright?” she asked.
“I feel fine,” Camilla answered, “but just look at me!”
“You get back in bed this instant,” her mother ordered. “You’re not going to school today.”
Camilla was relieved. She didn’t want to miss the first day of school, but she was afraid of what the other kids would say. And she had no idea what to wear with those crazy stripes.
That afternoon, Dr. Bumble came to examine Camilla.
“Most extraordinary!” he exclaimed. “I’ve never seen anything like it. Are you having any coughing, sneezing, runny nose, aches, pains, or uncontrollable twitching?”
“No,” Camilla told him. “I feel fine.”
“Well then,” Dr. Bumble said, turning to Mrs. Cream, “I don’t see any reason why she shouldn’t go to school tomorrow. Here’s some ointment that should help clear those stripes in a few days. If it doesn’t, you know where to reach me.”
And off he went.
The next day was a disaster. Everyone at school laughed at
Camilla. They called her “Camilla Crayon” and “Night of the Living Lollipop.”
She tried her best to act as if everything were normal, but when the class said the Pledge of Allegiance, her stripes turned red, white, and blue, and broke out in stars. The other kids thought this was great.
One yelled out, “Let’s see some purple polka dots!”
Sure enough, Camilla turned all purple polka-dotty.
Someone else shouted, “Checkerboard!” and a pattern of squares covered her skin.
Soon everyone was calling out different shapes and colors, and poor Camilla was changing faster than you can change channels on T.V.
That night, Mrs. Harms, the school principal, called.
“I’m sorry, Mrs. Cream,” he said. “I’m going to have to ask you to keep Camilla home from school. She’s just too much of a distraction, and I’ve been getting calls from the other parents. They’re afraid those stripes might be contagious.”
Camilla was so embarrassed. She couldn’t believe that two days ago everyone liked her. Now, nobody wanted to be in the same room with her. Her father tried to make her feel better.
“Is there anything I can get you, sweetheart?” he asked. “No, thank you,” sighed Camilla.
What she really wanted was a nice plate of lima beans, but she had been laughed at enough for one day.
“Hmm, well, yes, I see,” Dr. Bumble mumbled when Mr. Cream phoned the next day. “I think I’d better bring in the Specialists. We’ll be right over.”
About an hour later, Dr. Bumble arrived with four people in long white coats. He introduced them to the Creams.
“This is Dr. Grop, Dr. Sponge, Dr. Cricket, and Dr. Young.”
Then the Specialists went to work on Camilla. They squeezed and jabbed, tapped and tested. It was very uncomfortable.
“Well. It’s not the mumps,” concluded Dr. Grop. “Or the measles,” said Dr. Sponge.
“Definitely not chicken pox,” put in Dr. Cricket.
“Or sunburn,” said Dr. Young. “Try these,” said the Specialists.
They each handed her a bottle filled with different colored
pills.
“Take one of each before bed,” said Dr. Grop.
They filed out the front door, followed by Dr. Bumble.
That night, Camilla took her medicine. It was awful. When she woke up the next morning, she did feel different, but when she got dressed, her clothes didn’t fit her right. She looked in the mirror, and there, staring back at her , was a giant, multi-colored pill with her face on it.
Dr. Bumble rushed over as soon as Mrs. Cream called. But this time, instead of the Specialists, he brought the Experts.
Dr. Gourd and Mr. Mellon were the finest scientific minds in the land. Once again, Camilla was poked and prodded, looked at and
listened to. The Experts wrote down lots of numbers. Then they huddled together and whispered. Dr. Gourd finally spoke.
“It might be a virus,” he announced with authority.
Suddenly, fuzzy little virus balls appeared all over Camilla.
“Or possibly some form of bacteria,” said Mr. Mellon.
Out popped squiggly little bacteria tails.
“Or it could be a fungus,” added Dr. Gourd.
Instantly, Camilla was covered with different colored fungus blotches. The Experts looked at Camilla, then at each other.
“We need to go over these numbers again back at the lab,” Dr. Gourd explained. “We’ll call you when we know something.”
But the Experts didn’t have a clue, much less a cure.
By now, the T.V. news had found out about Camilla. Reporters from every channel were outside her house, telling the story of “The Bizarre Case of the Incredible Changing Kid.”
Soon a huge crowd was camped out on the front lawn. The Creams were swamped with all kinds of remedies from psychologists, allergists, herbalists, nutritionists, psychics, an old medicine man, a guru, and even a veterinarian. Each so-called cure only added to poor
Camilla’s strange appearance until it was hard to even recognize her.
She sprouted roots and berries and crystals and feathers and a long furry tail. But nothing worked.
One day, a woman who called herself an Environmental Therapist claimed she could cure Camilla.
“Close your eyes,” she said. “Breathe deeply, and become one with your room.”
“I wish you hadn’t said that,” Camilla groaned.
Slowly, she started to melt into the walls of her room. Her bed became her mouth, her nose was a dresser, and two paintings were her eyes. The therapist screamed and ran from the house.
“What are we going to do?” cried Mrs. Cream. “It just keeps getting worse and worse!”
She began to cry. At that moment, Mr. Cream heard a quiet little knock at the front door. He opened it, and there stool an old woman who was just as plump and sweet as a strawberry.
“Excuse me,” she said brightly. “But I think I can help.” She went into Camilla’s room and looked around.
“My goodness,” she said with a shake of her head. “What we have here is a bad case of stripes. One of the worst I’ve ever seen!”
She pulled a container of small green beans from her bag.
“Here,” she said. “These might do the trick.” “Are those magic beans?” asked Mrs. Cream.
“Oh my, no,” replied the kind old woman. “There’s no such thing. These are just plain old lima beans. I’ll bet you’d like some, wouldn’t you?” she asked Camilla.
Camilla wanted a big, heaping plateful of lima beans more than just abut anything, but she was still afraid to admit it.
“Yuck!” she said. “No one likes lima beans, especially me!” “Oh, dear,” the old woman said sadly. “I guess I was wrong
about you.”
She put the beans back in her bag and started toward the door. Camilla watched the old woman walk away. Those beans would taste so good. And being laughed at for eating them was nothing, compared to what she’d been going through. She finally couldn’t stand it.
“Wait!” she cried. “The truth is…I really love lima beans.” “I thought so,” the old woman said with a smile.
She took a handful of beans and popped them into Camilla’s
mouth.
“Mmmm,” said Camilla.
Suddenly the branches, feathers, and squiggly tails began to disappear, there stood Camilla, and everything was back to normal.
“I’m cured!” she shouted. “Yes,” said the old woman. “I knew the real you was in here somewhere.”
She patted Camilla on the head. Then she went outside and vanished into the crowd. Afterward, Camilla wasn’t quite the same. Some of the kids at school said she was weird, but she didn’t care a bit.
She ate all the lima beans she wanted, and she never had even a touch of stripes again.
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This basically states the entire theme of the story. It tells us that she tries so hard to be someone she’s not.
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This is the theme because she tries so hard to be something she’s not. Her stripes come because shes letting other people choose what she is.
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She thought that if she ate lima beans that her friends would not want to be her friend any more.
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The stripes represent all of the things she is not and how easily she is manipulated by other people to “fit in”.
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Camilla is so worried about what she’s going to wear that she’s not even looking at the fact that she just needs to be herself.
(Afraid & Wear)
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The reader learns that Camilla has a disease of some sort and her body has broken out in strips.
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Embarrassed and Upset
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This show that she tries to be like other kids and is still different.
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The tone described in this paragraph is one of dread because Camilla gets humiliated in front of her whole class when she keeps changing colors.
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Because Camilla kept being told what to do by the other kids and then she would listen to them and turn into what they told her to become. If you are not trying to be yourself people can walk all over you and you will end up changing into how they want you to. Thats why it is important to be yourself.
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this supports the theme of people telling her what to be because shes turning into all the things people are saying
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This supports the theme of the importance of being yourself because the sentences after this describe how Camilla transforms into her room, which creates a narrative of why shouldn’t listen to other people because you could end up being something you are not.
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Because the women ran out of the house all scared because Camilla had turned into what she told her to become, so that shows the tone being scared.
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This supports the theme of the importance of being yourself because after Camilla ate the lima beans she becomes herself again, and this shows how if you don’t listen to others you can be yourself and not end up something your not.
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I agree because once she ate the lima beans she choose something for herself and things went back to normal
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the author explains in this line that it is okay to be yourself
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the reader learns that its easy to be yourself and once you be yourself you feel free
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I agree
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because you should always stay true to yourself and don’t let others decide who you should be
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because the author is trying to get people to be themselves and not fall to peoples judgment.
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I agree because, in the story Camilla deals with peer pressure in the beginning of the story and she listens to what her classmates are saying for her to do, and by the end of the story she fully embraces herself and realizes that she needs to be herself.
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I agree because it talks about that
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Because the author showed that everyone kept telling camilla what to do and what to be and she would listen, but you should always be yourself no matter what people tell you.
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The author write this story to get the audience to think about how hard people try to be something/someone they aren’t.In the end they should have no problem with being self conscious about who they truly are.
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The author wrote this story to get the audience to think that it is okay to do something different than your friends and be yourself because your friends will not stop talking to you.
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