Guide To Reading - Charlie Joe Jackson's

With his straight-A reputation at risk and his parents threatening to send him to a summer "Academic Enrichment Camp," Charlie has to get creative. He decides to organize a school-wide "Read-a-Thon"—not because he wants to read, but because he figures he can host the event and talk about reading so much that no one will notice he isn't actually doing it.

In the end, Charlie Joe doesn't magically turn into a bookworm. He still prefers a nap over a novel. But he learns that while you can dodge a book for a long time, you can’t dodge the consequences of being uninformed forever. He finishes his project, stays out of summer school, and adds one final tip to his guide: "Sometimes, it's actually less work to just read the book." Charlie Joe Jackson's Guide to Reading

Charlie’s secret weapon is Timmy McGibney. In exchange for ice cream sandwiches, Timmy reads Charlie’s assignments and gives him the highlights. It is a perfect system—until Timmy decides he is over the "sugar-for-synopsis" trade and goes on strike. With his straight-A reputation at risk and his

Suddenly, Charlie is faced with every non-reader’s nightmare: a massive end-of-term research paper on a book he hasn't even touched. The Desperate Play Panicked, Charlie tries every trick in his guide: Reading the back cover (too short). He still prefers a nap over a novel

Charlie Joe Jackson is the proudest non-reader you will ever meet. He has made it through middle school without ever finishing a single book from cover to cover. To Charlie, books are the enemy, and he has spent his life perfecting the art of "reading avoidance." The Scheme

The plan backfires beautifully. As Charlie spends hours researching how to talk like a book lover, he inadvertently spends more time engaged with text than he ever has before. He starts noticing things about stories that he actually likes.

Watching the movie version (the teacher chose an obscure book). Trying to bribe his sister (she laughed in his face).