Flat Stanley's Worldwide Adventures #11 (7 page)

One afternoon, several weeks later, Stanley and his brother, Arthur, were lying on their beds in their room, daydreaming of Paris.

Arthur groaned. “I would give anything to have one more Crêpe Stanley. I can't believe I ate all forty-six of them the night you got home.”

“Why don't you write Aunt Simone?” Stanley said. “I bet she could get Chef Lillou to send you some more.”

“Why don't you just climb in an envelope and go get me some more?” replied Arthur.

“Why don't I flatten you with a bulletin board and then
you
can climb into an envelope?” teased Stanley.

Stanley reached under his pillow, and pulled out the latest letter from Etoile. He never got tired of rereading her letters.

One of her paintings had been accepted into a special exhibition of young artists' work. It was a portrait of him called
La Terre Est Plate:
“The World Is Flat.” He glanced up at his wall. Next to his bulletin board, he'd hung the T-shirt he was wearing the day they'd met—the one that she had painted on. He thought it was a masterpiece. He tucked the letter back under his pillow.

Arthur suddenly jumped from his bed and onto Stanley's. “I know how we can make more,” said Arthur with a devilish grin, towering over Stanley.

“Arthur, don't—” Stanley said.

“S'il vous plaît
,” Arthur said. “May I please have . . .”

“Arthur!” Stanley giggled.

Arthur leaped in the air and threw himself down on Stanley, rolling over his body like a rolling pin.

“Crêpe Stanley!” he shouted.

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT PARIS

The Eiffel Tower was built for the 1889 Paris World's Fair. It was the entrance arch for the fair.

The Louvre Museum was built in 1190 as a fortress. It was rebuilt as a royal palace in the sixteenth century and became a museum in 1793.

France is the most visited country in the world, with over 80 million visitors per year.

The largest bell in the Notre Dame Cathedral weighs about 26,000 pounds!

The
Mona Lisa
was stolen from the Louvre in 1911. After two years, French authorities finally found the Italian thief and recovered the painting.

It took almost 200 years to finish building the Notre Dame Cathedral.

A replica of the Statue of Liberty stands on Île aux Cygnes, a man-made island in the middle of the Seine River, which runs through Paris.

France makes almost 400 different types of cheese!

The Tour de France started in 1903 and is the most famous bike race in the world. Competitors bike almost 2,000 miles all around France over twenty-three days.

Montmartre, a hill in the northern part of Paris, is the highest point in the city.

 

 

Excerpt from
Flat Stanley's Worldwide Adventures #12: Escape to California

There's No Place on Earth That a Flat Kid Can't Go! Don't Miss:

Turn the Page to Read a Sample!

Caught in San Francisco

The hills in San Francisco were so steep that all the parked cars looked as if they were going to roll away. Stanley Lambchop was climbing the sidewalk alongside his old friend Thomas Anthony Jeffrey, whom the Lambchops were visiting on their family vacation.

“I can't believe how much has happened since the last time I saw you,” Stanley said to Thomas as they walked with Stanley's parents and brother, Arthur, up the hill. “You had just moved to California, and it was my first time traveling by mail. I hadn't even been flat long enough to get creased!”

Thomas laughed. “I remember opening your envelope. You smelled like egg salad.”

Arthur shook his head. “I told you, Mom: Egg salad and milk in the mail is a bad idea!”

“Are
a bad idea,” corrected Stanley's mother, who was a stickler for good grammar. “I didn't want Stanley to go hungry. After all, it was his first time away from home!”

“I remember thinking,
California, wow!
” Stanley went on. “I'd never traveled so far away. And to think, now I've been all over the world.”

“You have had a lot of excitement,” said Thomas. Then he added playfully, “Though you still kind of smell like egg salad.”

“I do not!” cried Stanley, cracking up.

Since the bulletin board over Stanley's bed had fallen and flattened him, he had been to Egypt, Kenya, France, Australia, and lots of other places—but there was still something nice about exploring a city like San Francisco with his family and a good friend. Thomas had shown them Haight Ashbury, where everyone seemed to be wearing tie-dye T-shirts, and taken them on an old-fashioned-looking cable car to Union Square, where people in business suits hurried in and out of skyscrapers. Except for the moment at Fisherman's Wharf when a group of tourists had recognized Stanley and insisted on taking pictures with him, Stanley felt like a regular sightseer. Now they were heading to the Japantown district for dinner.

As they came to the top of the hill, Stanley suddenly heard a scream. He spun around to see a girl in a wheelchair barreling down the middle of the street.

“HELP!” the girl shrieked.

Stanley leaped into action. “Thomas, throw me! Quick!”

“What?” said Thomas, in shock.

But then Arthur stepped up, took Stanley's hands, and launched him into the air like a boomerang.

“Stanley, don't!” his father yelled after him. As the wheelchair zoomed past, Stanley caught the back of it with both arms. His body ballooned backward like a parachute, and the wheelchair slowed.

“I have you!” Stanley reassured the girl.

But then he felt a tug at his back. His father had caught up and grabbed Stanley's shirt.

“Stanley!” Mr. Lambchop gasped. “It's not safe!”

“Dad! Let go!” yelled Stanley. “I have this under control!”

With his father pulling on him, one of Stanley's hands came loose from the back of the wheelchair, and his body swung backward.

“Eek!” screeched Mr. Lambchop. Now they were all in trouble. It was as if Mr. Lambchop were waterskiing behind the speeding wheelchair . . . except there was no water and Stanley was the rope.

Now it was Stanley and his father's turn to scream, “HELP!”

Suddenly, the wheelchair came to a halt. Stanley shot over the girl's head, and his father went flying after him.

They landed with a thunk in the open bay of a cargo van, which was parked at the bottom of the hill. The girl rolled up a ramp into the van after them. She appeared to be in perfect control.

“Let's blow this taco stand!” she called to the driver.

Suddenly the doors swung closed, and the van peeled away.

Back Ad

About the Authors and Illustrator

JEFF BROWN
created the beloved character of Flat Stanley as a bedtime story for his sons. He has written other outrageous books about the Lambchop family, including
Flat
Stanley
,
Stanley and the Magic Lamp
,
Invisible Stanley
,
Stanley's Christmas
Adventure
,
Stanley in Space
, and
Stanley
,
Flat Again!
You can learn more about Jeff Brown and Flat Stanley at www.flatstanleybooks.com.

JOSH GREENHUT
once mailed Flat Stanley, in costume, to a Halloween party 300 miles away. He is now married to the woman who hosted the party, and they live in Toronto with their two children.

MACKY PAMINTUAN
is an accomplished illustrator. He lives in the Philippines with his wife, Aymone; their baby girl, Alison; and their pet Westie, Winter.

Visit
www.AuthorTracker.com
for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors and artists.

Books by Jeff Brown

CATCH ALL OF FLAT STANLEY'S
WORLDWIDE ADVENTURES:

The Mount Rushmore Calamity

The Great Egyptian Grave Robbery

The Japanese Ninja Surprise

The Intrepid Canadian Expedition

The Amazing Mexican Secret

The African Safari Discovery

The Flying Chinese Wonders

The Australian Boomerang Bonanza

The US Capital Commotion

Showdown at the Alamo

Framed in France

AND DON'T MISS ANY OF
THESE OUTRAGEOUS STORIES:

Flat Stanley: His Original Adventure!

Stanley and the Magic Lamp

Invisible Stanley

Stanley's Christmas Adventure

Stanley in Space

Stanley, Flat Again!

Credits

Cover art by Macky Pamintuan

Cover design by Alison Klapthor

Copyright

F
LAT STANLEY'S WORLDWIDE ADVENTURES #11: FRAMED IN FRANCE
. Text copyright © 2014 by the Trust u/w/o Richard C. Brown a/k/a Jeff Brown f/b/o Duncan Brown. Illustrations by Macky Pamintuan, copyright © 2014 by HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

Other books

A Woman Gone Mad by Kimber S. Dawn
Beekeeping for Beginners by Laurie R. King
Something You Are by Hanna Jameson
Copper by Vanessa Devereaux
Inquest by J. F. Jenkins