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Millionaires for the Month

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On sale Sep 01, 2020 | 7 Hours and 14 Minutes | 9780593341261
How would you spend five million dollars in 30 days? A billionaire's wallet, a bizarre challenge, and an unlikely friendship send two kids on a wild adventure. From the author of The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl.

Felix Rannells and Benji Porter were never supposed to be field-trip partners. Felix is a rule follower. Benji is a rule bender. They're not friends. And they don't have anything to talk about. Until . . .

They find a wallet. A wallet that belongs to tech billionaire Laura Friendly. They're totally going to return it-but not before Benji "borrows" twenty dollars to buy hot dogs. Because twenty dollars is like a penny to a billionaire, right?

But a penny has value. A penny doubled every day for thirty days is $5,368,709.12! So that's exactly how much money Laura Friendly challenges Felix and Benji to spend. They have thirty days. They can't tell anyone. And there are LOTS of other rules. But if they succeed, they each get ten million dollars to spend however they want.

Challenge accepted! They rent cool cars, go to Disney World, buy pizza for the whole school-and that's just the beginning! But money can't buy everything or fix every problem. And spending it isn't always as easy and fun as they thought it would be. . . .

As smart as it is entertaining, Millionaires for the Month is a thought-provoking story about friendship, privilege, and the value of a penny.
Chapter $1
Tuesday, October 26
The seventh-grade teachers of Stirling Middle School did not put any thought into the important task of assign­ing field trip partners. Their poor decision-making had tethered Felix Rannells to Benji Porter for the entire day. When Felix received his assignment at 6:00 a.m., he con­sidered faking an illness—something tough to prove, like a toothache—but his mom had already driven off. And the field trip was to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, a place he’d always wanted to go.
 
So instead, Felix climbed the bus steps and took the in­side seat next to Benji. Felix tried to pass the two hours by reading, while Benji tried to entertain everyone by offering to do stupid tricks for money.
 
“For a dollar, I’ll eat gum from the bottom of the seat.”
 
“For a quarter, you can draw on my back with a Sharpie.”
 
“For ten dollars, I’ll moon that tractor-trailer.”
 
Benji wasn’t making much. He earned a buck off Aidan Rozman and a lot of ews from everyone else.
 
Ideally, Felix should have been paired with someone who respected rules, like a teacher. Or better yet, no partner at all. He liked to be alone, or maybe he was just used to it. Was there really any difference?
 
Benji and Felix knew each other, of course. They were in Ms. Chenoweth’s homeroom, and they both played basketball—Felix, a point guard, and Benji, a center. Benji’s nickname on the court was Barney (not that Felix would ever call him that) because he was the biggest guy out there, and he was always smiling. Benji had wavy brown hair, braces, and zits and would probably grow a mustache before they were out of middle school. And like the purple dinosaur, Benji was kind of awkward.
 
“Hey, buddy.” Benji turned to Felix. “I’ll give you a dollar if you call Ms. Chenoweth ‘Mommy’ for the rest of the day.”
 
Felix shook his head, regretting again not pretending to be sick when he had the chance. Now it was too late.
 
The bus pulled up in front of the museum, and the stu­dents were reminded to stay with their partners at all times. This resulted in Felix spending the morning as an unwilling participant in a three-hour game of hide-and-seek where he was always the seeker. Benji “accidentally” joined another school’s group. He went into the bathroom—without permission. He even set off an alarm when he tried to duck be­hind a woolly mammoth. And approximately every thirty seconds, Ms. Chenoweth warned Benji (and by association, Felix) to behave.
 
By lunch, Felix needed air and a break. Ms. Chenoweth seemed to read his mind, allowing them all to eat across the street in Central Park. The Central Park—as seen in movies.
 
A chaperone handed out the bagged lunches everyone had prepacked. Felix’s contained a peanut butter sandwich and saltine crackers. His mom wouldn’t be going to the grocery store again until the end of the month, so they were out of chips and granola bars. He unwrapped the sandwich and ate the larger half in a matter of seconds.
 
But Benji didn’t have a bagged lunch in the cooler. “I forgot it on the counter.”
 
Felix offered him his crackers.
 
“Nah. I’m buying a pretzel.” Benji pulled a wrinkled dol­lar from his jeans and headed toward a food cart.
 
You’re not supposed to, Felix thought. The permission slip had clearly stated that students were forbidden to make any purchases.
 
Felix glanced back at Ms. Chenoweth, who was chatting with the math teacher and not watching Benji’s lunch rebel­lion. Felix sighed and once again followed his partner.
 
“How much for a pretzel?” Benji asked.
 
“Two dollars.” The pretzel man pointed to the sign. “I’ll give you one. It’s all I got.”
 
“Well, then you ain’t got a pretzel.” The man turned his back like he had another customer, which he didn’t.
 
“I guess I’ll starve.”
 
Felix popped the last bite of sandwich into his mouth and was going to toss the plastic wrap when something caught his eye just a foot from the trash can—a red wallet with interlocking gold Cs. Two other kids walked right by it. For a second, he thought about leaving it and letting it be someone else’s responsibility. But he picked it up. The leather was soft and smooth and somehow felt important.
 
He glanced around the park. No one appeared to be searching for it.
 
“What’s that?” Benji came up behind him.
 
“Someone’s wallet.” Felix handed it to Benji. If he’d thought about it for even two seconds, he’d have realized this was a mistake.
 
Benji immediately unzipped it and pulled out a twenty-dollar bill.
 
“Score! Now we have lunch money.”
 
Felix flinched. I’m witnessing a robbery.
 
Chapter $2
Tuesday, October 26
Until this point, Felix had not been Benji’s ideal field trip partner. He barely talked. He followed every rule. And he seemed to be against having any fun. But finding the wallet made up for all that, plus now they weren’t going to starve.
 
Benji’s stomach growled as if on cue.
 
“Put it back.” Felix pointed at the twenty.
 
“We’re just borrowing a few bucks. I’ll return it.” Benji dug around in the wallet. “I’ll mail the money to . . .” He froze, staring at the driver’s license in his hand.
 
“Whoa. Look.” Benji held the ID an inch from Felix’s face. “Laura Marie Friendly. Do you know who that is?”
 
Felix squinted at the driver’s license.
 
“She’s a freaking billionaire!” Benji shouted. Laura Friendly was the founder of Friendly Connect, a social media company that parents and grandparents loved.
 
“This lady is so loaded she’s building her own rocket ship to Mars. And once, she challenged a family to communi­cate using only Friendly Messenger for a week, and then paid them a million dollars.”
 
“That can’t be true,” Felix said.
 
“Whatever. It’s our lucky day. Pretzels on me. No, hot dogs on me.” Benji smiled and shoved the wallet into the pocket of his sweatshirt. “Actually, on Laura Friendly.”
 
He walked back to the cart. The pretzel man—who was also a hot dog man—glared at him until Benji held up the twenty.
 
“Two hot dogs, two sodas, and two bags of chips,” Benji ordered.
 
“Anything else?” the hot dog–pretzel man asked.
 
“Stop. We shouldn’t. It’s stealing.” Felix came up behind Benji. The kid made a great tail—like, FBI-level surveillance great.
 
The man folded his arms and raised his eyebrows.
 
“It’s borrowing. Not stealing,” Benji said through gritted teeth. “I’ll pay it back. And I’m starving. A boy’s gotta eat.”
 
“Well?” the guy asked, growing impatient.
 
Benji sighed. “Make it one hot dog, one bag of chips, and one soda.”
 
The man began filling the order while Felix stared at the ground like there were secret codes written on the side­walk.
 
“I know you want a hot dog,” Benji whispered. Felix gave him the slightest nod, and Benji clapped him on the back.
 
“We’re changing our order again. Two of each, and throw in some ice cream bars.”
 
The price came to eighteen dollars, and Benji handed over the bill and said (for the first time in his life), “Keep the change.”
 
They found a spot on the grass for their picnic. Close enough to the rest of the class not to be considered miss­ing, but far enough away that Ms. Chenoweth couldn’t see their upgraded lunch. Felix didn’t talk as they ate. He scarfed down his food like he was hiding evidence.
 
“I bet Laura Friendly gives us a huge reward,” Benji said as he opened his ice cream bar. “Like a million bucks.”
 
“We need to pay her back and return the wallet.” Felix chewed on his thumbnail. He was a skinny kid with red hair, freckles, and a big forehead. He always looked kind of nervous, but he appeared even shakier than usual.
 
“She doesn’t need our money.” Benji leaned back on the grassy hill. “I’m going to take the wallet home. Have my parents call her, maybe invite her—”
 
“No! We need to hand it in now.” Felix’s face was turning the color of the wallet.
 
“We will give it back, but we have to do it the right way to make sure we get a reward.”
 
Felix jumped to his feet, and for the first time, Benji was forced to be the tail. They dumped their trash, even though Benji still had a few bites of ice cream left. Felix practically ran to their teacher.
 
“Ms. Chenoweth, we found a wallet. It belongs to Laura Friendly.”
 
Benji groaned. No use denying it. Of the two of them, everyone would call Felix the smart and trustworthy one. If it was Benji’s word against Felix’s, Benji wouldn’t stand a chance.
 
“Excuse me?” Ms. Chenoweth said.
 
“Yep.” Benji took out the red wallet. “Her address is in here. Felix and I can take an Uber or a taxi to her place. We’ll be back in an hour. You won’t even miss us.”
 
“Hand it over,” Ms. Chenoweth said, not even consider­ing Benji’s suggestion. As she looked through the wallet, her mouth dropped open.
 
“Let’s give it to him.” Felix motioned to a police officer waving kids off the sidewalk and into the park.
 
Ms. Chenoweth agreed it was the best option—though Benji still thought his taxi idea was better. She escorted the boys to the cop, who wasn’t interested in the wallet until the mention of Laura Friendly’s name.
 
“I’ll make sure this gets returned,” he said.
 
“You need to tell her we found it. Benji Porter and Felix Rannells. Partners.” Benji threw an arm around Felix’s shoulder, pulling him closer.
 
“Sure thing.” “He’s not going to remember. He’s not going to tell her,” Benji complained to Ms. Chenoweth.
 
“Oh, here.” Ms. Chenoweth sighed. She jotted a mes­sage on a piece of paper and slipped it into the wallet.

Found by Felix Rannells and Benji Porter. Students in Julie Chenoweth’s class at Stirling Middle School in Stirling, NY.
 
“You promise not to take that paper out?” Benji asked.
 
“Yeah, kid.”
 
Benji had no choice but to believe him. And to dream about the inevitable reward. ­
  • SELECTION | 2020
    Kansas State Reading Circle Award
© Grant Blair
Stacy McAnulty is an award-winning, Indie-bestselling children’s book author, and former mechanical engineer, who dreams of someday being a dog therapist, a correspondent for The Daily Show, and an astronaut. She has written 40+ books (both fiction and nonfiction) for young readers, including middle-grade novels: Forever Twelve, The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl, and Millionaires for the Month, chapter book series, The Dino Files, and picture books, Excellent Ed, and Max Explains Everything. Most of her books feature STEM or an adorable dog—some include both. When not writing, Stacy can be found baking triple-chocolate cupcakes, listening to Taylor Swift, checking out the latest news from NASA, and eating triple-chocolate cupcakes. Originally from upstate NY, she now lives in Kernersville, NC with her 3 kids, 3 dogs, and 1 husband. Find her online at stacymcanulty.com. View titles by Stacy McAnulty

About

How would you spend five million dollars in 30 days? A billionaire's wallet, a bizarre challenge, and an unlikely friendship send two kids on a wild adventure. From the author of The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl.

Felix Rannells and Benji Porter were never supposed to be field-trip partners. Felix is a rule follower. Benji is a rule bender. They're not friends. And they don't have anything to talk about. Until . . .

They find a wallet. A wallet that belongs to tech billionaire Laura Friendly. They're totally going to return it-but not before Benji "borrows" twenty dollars to buy hot dogs. Because twenty dollars is like a penny to a billionaire, right?

But a penny has value. A penny doubled every day for thirty days is $5,368,709.12! So that's exactly how much money Laura Friendly challenges Felix and Benji to spend. They have thirty days. They can't tell anyone. And there are LOTS of other rules. But if they succeed, they each get ten million dollars to spend however they want.

Challenge accepted! They rent cool cars, go to Disney World, buy pizza for the whole school-and that's just the beginning! But money can't buy everything or fix every problem. And spending it isn't always as easy and fun as they thought it would be. . . .

As smart as it is entertaining, Millionaires for the Month is a thought-provoking story about friendship, privilege, and the value of a penny.

Excerpt

Chapter $1
Tuesday, October 26
The seventh-grade teachers of Stirling Middle School did not put any thought into the important task of assign­ing field trip partners. Their poor decision-making had tethered Felix Rannells to Benji Porter for the entire day. When Felix received his assignment at 6:00 a.m., he con­sidered faking an illness—something tough to prove, like a toothache—but his mom had already driven off. And the field trip was to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, a place he’d always wanted to go.
 
So instead, Felix climbed the bus steps and took the in­side seat next to Benji. Felix tried to pass the two hours by reading, while Benji tried to entertain everyone by offering to do stupid tricks for money.
 
“For a dollar, I’ll eat gum from the bottom of the seat.”
 
“For a quarter, you can draw on my back with a Sharpie.”
 
“For ten dollars, I’ll moon that tractor-trailer.”
 
Benji wasn’t making much. He earned a buck off Aidan Rozman and a lot of ews from everyone else.
 
Ideally, Felix should have been paired with someone who respected rules, like a teacher. Or better yet, no partner at all. He liked to be alone, or maybe he was just used to it. Was there really any difference?
 
Benji and Felix knew each other, of course. They were in Ms. Chenoweth’s homeroom, and they both played basketball—Felix, a point guard, and Benji, a center. Benji’s nickname on the court was Barney (not that Felix would ever call him that) because he was the biggest guy out there, and he was always smiling. Benji had wavy brown hair, braces, and zits and would probably grow a mustache before they were out of middle school. And like the purple dinosaur, Benji was kind of awkward.
 
“Hey, buddy.” Benji turned to Felix. “I’ll give you a dollar if you call Ms. Chenoweth ‘Mommy’ for the rest of the day.”
 
Felix shook his head, regretting again not pretending to be sick when he had the chance. Now it was too late.
 
The bus pulled up in front of the museum, and the stu­dents were reminded to stay with their partners at all times. This resulted in Felix spending the morning as an unwilling participant in a three-hour game of hide-and-seek where he was always the seeker. Benji “accidentally” joined another school’s group. He went into the bathroom—without permission. He even set off an alarm when he tried to duck be­hind a woolly mammoth. And approximately every thirty seconds, Ms. Chenoweth warned Benji (and by association, Felix) to behave.
 
By lunch, Felix needed air and a break. Ms. Chenoweth seemed to read his mind, allowing them all to eat across the street in Central Park. The Central Park—as seen in movies.
 
A chaperone handed out the bagged lunches everyone had prepacked. Felix’s contained a peanut butter sandwich and saltine crackers. His mom wouldn’t be going to the grocery store again until the end of the month, so they were out of chips and granola bars. He unwrapped the sandwich and ate the larger half in a matter of seconds.
 
But Benji didn’t have a bagged lunch in the cooler. “I forgot it on the counter.”
 
Felix offered him his crackers.
 
“Nah. I’m buying a pretzel.” Benji pulled a wrinkled dol­lar from his jeans and headed toward a food cart.
 
You’re not supposed to, Felix thought. The permission slip had clearly stated that students were forbidden to make any purchases.
 
Felix glanced back at Ms. Chenoweth, who was chatting with the math teacher and not watching Benji’s lunch rebel­lion. Felix sighed and once again followed his partner.
 
“How much for a pretzel?” Benji asked.
 
“Two dollars.” The pretzel man pointed to the sign. “I’ll give you one. It’s all I got.”
 
“Well, then you ain’t got a pretzel.” The man turned his back like he had another customer, which he didn’t.
 
“I guess I’ll starve.”
 
Felix popped the last bite of sandwich into his mouth and was going to toss the plastic wrap when something caught his eye just a foot from the trash can—a red wallet with interlocking gold Cs. Two other kids walked right by it. For a second, he thought about leaving it and letting it be someone else’s responsibility. But he picked it up. The leather was soft and smooth and somehow felt important.
 
He glanced around the park. No one appeared to be searching for it.
 
“What’s that?” Benji came up behind him.
 
“Someone’s wallet.” Felix handed it to Benji. If he’d thought about it for even two seconds, he’d have realized this was a mistake.
 
Benji immediately unzipped it and pulled out a twenty-dollar bill.
 
“Score! Now we have lunch money.”
 
Felix flinched. I’m witnessing a robbery.
 
Chapter $2
Tuesday, October 26
Until this point, Felix had not been Benji’s ideal field trip partner. He barely talked. He followed every rule. And he seemed to be against having any fun. But finding the wallet made up for all that, plus now they weren’t going to starve.
 
Benji’s stomach growled as if on cue.
 
“Put it back.” Felix pointed at the twenty.
 
“We’re just borrowing a few bucks. I’ll return it.” Benji dug around in the wallet. “I’ll mail the money to . . .” He froze, staring at the driver’s license in his hand.
 
“Whoa. Look.” Benji held the ID an inch from Felix’s face. “Laura Marie Friendly. Do you know who that is?”
 
Felix squinted at the driver’s license.
 
“She’s a freaking billionaire!” Benji shouted. Laura Friendly was the founder of Friendly Connect, a social media company that parents and grandparents loved.
 
“This lady is so loaded she’s building her own rocket ship to Mars. And once, she challenged a family to communi­cate using only Friendly Messenger for a week, and then paid them a million dollars.”
 
“That can’t be true,” Felix said.
 
“Whatever. It’s our lucky day. Pretzels on me. No, hot dogs on me.” Benji smiled and shoved the wallet into the pocket of his sweatshirt. “Actually, on Laura Friendly.”
 
He walked back to the cart. The pretzel man—who was also a hot dog man—glared at him until Benji held up the twenty.
 
“Two hot dogs, two sodas, and two bags of chips,” Benji ordered.
 
“Anything else?” the hot dog–pretzel man asked.
 
“Stop. We shouldn’t. It’s stealing.” Felix came up behind Benji. The kid made a great tail—like, FBI-level surveillance great.
 
The man folded his arms and raised his eyebrows.
 
“It’s borrowing. Not stealing,” Benji said through gritted teeth. “I’ll pay it back. And I’m starving. A boy’s gotta eat.”
 
“Well?” the guy asked, growing impatient.
 
Benji sighed. “Make it one hot dog, one bag of chips, and one soda.”
 
The man began filling the order while Felix stared at the ground like there were secret codes written on the side­walk.
 
“I know you want a hot dog,” Benji whispered. Felix gave him the slightest nod, and Benji clapped him on the back.
 
“We’re changing our order again. Two of each, and throw in some ice cream bars.”
 
The price came to eighteen dollars, and Benji handed over the bill and said (for the first time in his life), “Keep the change.”
 
They found a spot on the grass for their picnic. Close enough to the rest of the class not to be considered miss­ing, but far enough away that Ms. Chenoweth couldn’t see their upgraded lunch. Felix didn’t talk as they ate. He scarfed down his food like he was hiding evidence.
 
“I bet Laura Friendly gives us a huge reward,” Benji said as he opened his ice cream bar. “Like a million bucks.”
 
“We need to pay her back and return the wallet.” Felix chewed on his thumbnail. He was a skinny kid with red hair, freckles, and a big forehead. He always looked kind of nervous, but he appeared even shakier than usual.
 
“She doesn’t need our money.” Benji leaned back on the grassy hill. “I’m going to take the wallet home. Have my parents call her, maybe invite her—”
 
“No! We need to hand it in now.” Felix’s face was turning the color of the wallet.
 
“We will give it back, but we have to do it the right way to make sure we get a reward.”
 
Felix jumped to his feet, and for the first time, Benji was forced to be the tail. They dumped their trash, even though Benji still had a few bites of ice cream left. Felix practically ran to their teacher.
 
“Ms. Chenoweth, we found a wallet. It belongs to Laura Friendly.”
 
Benji groaned. No use denying it. Of the two of them, everyone would call Felix the smart and trustworthy one. If it was Benji’s word against Felix’s, Benji wouldn’t stand a chance.
 
“Excuse me?” Ms. Chenoweth said.
 
“Yep.” Benji took out the red wallet. “Her address is in here. Felix and I can take an Uber or a taxi to her place. We’ll be back in an hour. You won’t even miss us.”
 
“Hand it over,” Ms. Chenoweth said, not even consider­ing Benji’s suggestion. As she looked through the wallet, her mouth dropped open.
 
“Let’s give it to him.” Felix motioned to a police officer waving kids off the sidewalk and into the park.
 
Ms. Chenoweth agreed it was the best option—though Benji still thought his taxi idea was better. She escorted the boys to the cop, who wasn’t interested in the wallet until the mention of Laura Friendly’s name.
 
“I’ll make sure this gets returned,” he said.
 
“You need to tell her we found it. Benji Porter and Felix Rannells. Partners.” Benji threw an arm around Felix’s shoulder, pulling him closer.
 
“Sure thing.” “He’s not going to remember. He’s not going to tell her,” Benji complained to Ms. Chenoweth.
 
“Oh, here.” Ms. Chenoweth sighed. She jotted a mes­sage on a piece of paper and slipped it into the wallet.

Found by Felix Rannells and Benji Porter. Students in Julie Chenoweth’s class at Stirling Middle School in Stirling, NY.
 
“You promise not to take that paper out?” Benji asked.
 
“Yeah, kid.”
 
Benji had no choice but to believe him. And to dream about the inevitable reward. ­

Awards

  • SELECTION | 2020
    Kansas State Reading Circle Award

Author

© Grant Blair
Stacy McAnulty is an award-winning, Indie-bestselling children’s book author, and former mechanical engineer, who dreams of someday being a dog therapist, a correspondent for The Daily Show, and an astronaut. She has written 40+ books (both fiction and nonfiction) for young readers, including middle-grade novels: Forever Twelve, The Miscalculations of Lightning Girl, and Millionaires for the Month, chapter book series, The Dino Files, and picture books, Excellent Ed, and Max Explains Everything. Most of her books feature STEM or an adorable dog—some include both. When not writing, Stacy can be found baking triple-chocolate cupcakes, listening to Taylor Swift, checking out the latest news from NASA, and eating triple-chocolate cupcakes. Originally from upstate NY, she now lives in Kernersville, NC with her 3 kids, 3 dogs, and 1 husband. Find her online at stacymcanulty.com. View titles by Stacy McAnulty