![]() ![]() The builder of Wayside School made another little mistake when building the school too: he forgot to include the nineteenth story. On the up side, though, when a dead rat visits your classroom wearing smelly raincoats, you can totally just toss them out the window. Jewls asks him to send messages back and forth to Louis down on the ground floor. Sharie, who likes to sleep during class, falls out the thirtieth story window and has to be saved by Louis Deedee, who loves recess games, can never get a high-bouncing green ball because kids from lower floors always get there first Dameon is run ragged when Mrs. Having your classroom on the thirtieth floor provides some unusual challenges. Louis points out that this error gives the school a remarkably large yard, but as we find out over the course of the book, sometimes running up and down the stairs to the thirtieth floor can be tiring and a little bit ridiculous. ![]() "The builder said he was very sorry" (I.3) though, apparently. This book is set at Wayside School, which as narrator Louis tells us, was built sideways: thirty stories straight up in the air, instead of thirty classrooms side by side. ![]()
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