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SUNDAY SCARIES by Debra Kempf Shumaker

SUNDAY SCARIES

by Debra Kempf Shumaker ; illustrated by Lavanya Naidu

Pub Date: Aug. 4th, 2026
ISBN: 9780593904381
Publisher: Knopf

A girl who frets every time the weekend wraps up finds ways to cope.

It’s Friday, school is out, and Josie is psyched to begin her weekend. But on Sunday afternoon, she gets a pit in her stomach that can mean only one thing: “Monday is coming.” So one Sunday afternoon, she makes some desperate attempts to get out of school the next day (for instance, clutching her belly and saying, “Mom, call 911. I think it’s my APPENDA-SOMETHING”). Finally, Josie confesses her worries about Monday to her parents: “WHAT IF MY TEACHER’S SICK? WHAT IF I FORGET MY LIBRARY BOOK AGAIN?” and so on. Not only does talking about her problem make Josie feel better, but it turns out that her parents get the Sunday Scaries too; comparing notes with them empowers Josie to face the school week. This story is all message and light on storytelling beats, but for readers who share Josie’s particular anxiety, it may be just what the mental-health professional ordered. While the text strains to inject levity, Naidu finds an inventive way to convey Josie’s jitters with her caricaturish art: A giant, hairy-looking green “MONDAY” appears on the wall of her bedroom and follows her around the house, the ends of the letters becoming vine-like arms that reach for her. Josie and Mom are brown-skinned; Dad is beige-skinned.

May very well help children who share the protagonist’s anxieties.

(more on the Sunday Scaries, note to caregivers) (Picture book. 4-8)