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Betsy and her fourth-grade friends discover football.Tags
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Member Reviews
Definitely dated in some ways. Red police car, receipt for recipe, Lucy the cook....
But I do like that Betsy gets to play football. Too bad she doesn't play it longer, but I guess it was probably boring after a month.
I liked this book better than the previous two. She has more agency, more chances for things to go wrong and for her own efforts being needed to fix them. Still, Busy Summer is the best I've yet read.
But I do like that Betsy gets to play football. Too bad she doesn't play it longer, but I guess it was probably boring after a month.
I liked this book better than the previous two. She has more agency, more chances for things to go wrong and for her own efforts being needed to fix them. Still, Busy Summer is the best I've yet read.
Haywood, C. (1945). Betsy and the Boys. Orlando: Harcourt Books.
0152051023
Don’t judge a book by the cover. This cover is an update. The content of this book and the illustrations are authentic 1940s fluff. Betsy and the Boys follows the daily lives of Betsy and her best friend Billy as they cook, attend school, enjoy Valentine's Day, prepare for a play, wash dogs and play football.
With all of the ‘gees’, ‘gollies’, ‘jimminies’ and ‘you betchas,’ it’s easy to think the book is stereotypical of the time it’s describing. That is of course, until you think about the plot. Billy bakes along side Betsy. And Betsy searches for a way to play football with the boys. (Don’t get me wrong, this book doesn’t completely show more deconstruct gender stereotypes—the parents seem to embody traditional gender roles and Betsy *SPOILER* is subtly directed away from playing football)
Betsy and the Boys shares the experiences of everyday middle class (white!) suburban experience. Most of the children in the narrative are good and well-intentioned. The chapters feel episodic (which would lend itself to being read aloud) with an overarching plot that fades in and out.
This is one book in a larger Betsy series by Haywood.
Activities to do with the book:
While I wouldn’t say that Betsy and the Boys is the most tense or fast-paced book in the history of the world, it can still manage to be engrossing as a read aloud to eight or nine-year-olds or as a social studies read into life in the U.S. during the 1940s (without that pesky second World War to bring anyone down).
Older students could use this book to examine how both gender and childhood are constructed. Since Valentine's Day is celebrated in a certain way in the book, students could "write back" with their own experiences of the holiday.
Favorite Quotes:
“Betsy, Billy, and Ellen had met in the first grade. They had become fast friends as they worked and played together” (p. 1).
“After the pancake and cream puff experience, Billy began calling Betsy “Pancake” and Betsy called Billy “Cream Puff.”
At first, Billy didn’t mind. He just thought it was funny. But when the Wilson boys, who lived around the corner from Billy, heard Betsy call Billy Cream Puff, they screamed with laughter” (p. 16).
“Who ever heard of a girl on a football team?
“Girls can do anything,” said Betsy. “Girls can fly airplanes and drive taxicabs and run streetcars. Why can’t they play football?”
“Cause they can’t,” said Rudy.
“Well, I betcha I’ll be on the team,” said Betsy” (p. 20).
For more of my reviews, visit sjkessel.blogspot.com. show less
0152051023
Don’t judge a book by the cover. This cover is an update. The content of this book and the illustrations are authentic 1940s fluff. Betsy and the Boys follows the daily lives of Betsy and her best friend Billy as they cook, attend school, enjoy Valentine's Day, prepare for a play, wash dogs and play football.
With all of the ‘gees’, ‘gollies’, ‘jimminies’ and ‘you betchas,’ it’s easy to think the book is stereotypical of the time it’s describing. That is of course, until you think about the plot. Billy bakes along side Betsy. And Betsy searches for a way to play football with the boys. (Don’t get me wrong, this book doesn’t completely show more deconstruct gender stereotypes—the parents seem to embody traditional gender roles and Betsy *SPOILER* is subtly directed away from playing football)
Betsy and the Boys shares the experiences of everyday middle class (white!) suburban experience. Most of the children in the narrative are good and well-intentioned. The chapters feel episodic (which would lend itself to being read aloud) with an overarching plot that fades in and out.
This is one book in a larger Betsy series by Haywood.
Activities to do with the book:
While I wouldn’t say that Betsy and the Boys is the most tense or fast-paced book in the history of the world, it can still manage to be engrossing as a read aloud to eight or nine-year-olds or as a social studies read into life in the U.S. during the 1940s (without that pesky second World War to bring anyone down).
Older students could use this book to examine how both gender and childhood are constructed. Since Valentine's Day is celebrated in a certain way in the book, students could "write back" with their own experiences of the holiday.
Favorite Quotes:
“Betsy, Billy, and Ellen had met in the first grade. They had become fast friends as they worked and played together” (p. 1).
“After the pancake and cream puff experience, Billy began calling Betsy “Pancake” and Betsy called Billy “Cream Puff.”
At first, Billy didn’t mind. He just thought it was funny. But when the Wilson boys, who lived around the corner from Billy, heard Betsy call Billy Cream Puff, they screamed with laughter” (p. 16).
“Who ever heard of a girl on a football team?
“Girls can do anything,” said Betsy. “Girls can fly airplanes and drive taxicabs and run streetcars. Why can’t they play football?”
“Cause they can’t,” said Rudy.
“Well, I betcha I’ll be on the team,” said Betsy” (p. 20).
For more of my reviews, visit sjkessel.blogspot.com. show less
It's a new year, and Betsy has a new wish: She is going to play football on the boys' team. Of course, the boys refuse to play football with a girl. That is, until Betsy and Mr. Kilpatrick cook up a secret plan to win Betsy a spot on the team. . . .
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Children's Chapter Books from 1940s, ...
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Author Information

Author and illustrator Carolyn Haywood was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on January 3, 1898. She graduated from the Philadelphia High School for Girls and the Philadelphia Normal School in 1922. After teaching one year at the Friends Central School, she received a scholarship to the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. While there, she studied show more portrait painting for three years, spent one year studying in Europe, and came back to study illustration. Her first children's book, When I Grow Up, was published in 1931. She is best known for her books in the Betsy and Eddie series. The first book, B Is for Betsy, was published in 1939. Her other works include Snowbound with Betsy, Hello, Star, and Eddie's Friend, Boddles. Besides writing and illustrating her own books, she also painted children's portraits and painted murals in banks and schools in the Philadelphia area. She received the distinction of a Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania in 1969 and received the Pennsylvania Librarians Outstanding Pennsylvania Author Award in 1970. She stopped illustrating her own books in the 1970's, but started writing adult books including Book of Honor, a collection of biographies of famous Pennsylvanian women. She died of a stroke on January 11, 1990 at the age of 92. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Betsy and the Boys
- Original title
- Betsy and the Boys
- Original publication date
- 1945
- People/Characters
- Betsy; Billy Porter; Ellen
- Dedication
- To Elfrieda Klauder Parker
- First words
- Betsy, Billy, and Ellen had met in the first grade.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Well, I'll try never to forget again," said Betsy.
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Statistics
- Members
- 303
- Popularity
- 105,365
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.97)
- Languages
- English, Swedish
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 21
- ASINs
- 8






























































