So does Shiela she's gone from a completely facetious know-it-all to a girl next door who may be slightly bossy and nerdy yet is also earnest and serious-and appears to nurse some genuine affection for Peter. He even has a generous side-he gave up his precious duck to console his poor plush-monkey-deprived little brother. Peter, for his part, is headstrong but less bitter, a vast improvement over the Peter of the books. There are enough cute moments that we get the idea that even Peter, in between bouts of annoyance, is somewhat charmed. Fudge is still an annoying little brother, but he's a witty and well-meaning kid-sure, he busted the antique table, but all he wanted was to wrestle with his brother and sure, he extorted money to buy his parents an anniversary present, but COME ON! He's a little kid. Fudge himself was a total brat Peter was a self-righteous and disrespectful pomp Shiela was, even from her own perspective, completely dishonest, pretentious and unconvincing the Hatchers were overindulgent dupes (and the mother quite possibly a tranq addict). Her "Fudge" series suffered from another unforgivable flaw: lack of sympathetic characters (except, perhaps, for Jimmy Fargo and his father). Judy Blume has been oft-derided for her extremely pessimistic and hyperrealist (sometimes) conceptions of late childhood and early adolescence.
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