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Fuzzy Mud by Louis Sachar5/28/2023 ![]() ![]() Marc Humbard about his former employment with SunRay Farm.ĭr. The narrator includes excerpts of testimony from the inquiry. ![]() A year ago, the United States Senate Committee on Energy and the Environment held secret hearings about SunRay Farm and Biolene. Giant storage tanks are connected to an underground laboratory that makes Biolene. Unlike a typical farm, it is secured by armed guards, barbed electric fences, alarms, and cameras. Thirty-three miles northwest of the school is SunRay Farm. Meanwhile, Marshall sits across the lunchroom, eating silently and alone between two loud groups. The comment prompts her friends to tease her for being a “goody two-shoes.” Tamaya wonders when the rules changed and it became bad to be good. She reminds the boy that they aren’t really allowed to enter the woods. One shows a rip in his pant leg-supposedly proof of a wolf’s bite-but Tamaya still doesn’t believe him. The boys speak of wolves in the woods and Tamaya doesn’t know if they are making it up to impress the girls. ![]() Tamaya walks to school every morning with Marshall Walsh, a seventh-grade boy who lives on the same block. Miles of woods and rocky hills surround Woodridge Academy. Once an opulent private home, the brown and black stone building has been converted to host three hundred elementary school students. The novel’s protagonist, Tamaya Dhilwaddi, is in the fifth grade at Woodridge Academy, a private school in Health Cliff, Pennsylvania. ![]() Narrated in the third person by an omniscient narrator, Fuzzy Mudopens on Tuesday, November 2 at 11:55 a.m. ![]()
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