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Henry and the Paper Route

Beverly Cleary

Plot Summary

Henry and the Paper Route

Beverly Cleary

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 1984

Plot Summary
Henry and the Paper Route (1957), a novel for young readers by American author Beverly Cleary, follows 10-year-old Henry Huggins as he campaigns to take over a local paper route, something which only 11-year-old boys are allowed to do. Henry and the Paper Route is the fourth of Cleary’s novels to center on Henry. It also features Henry’s neighbor Ramona Quimby, the protagonist of many of Cleary’s novels, most notably National Book Award-winner Ramona and Her Mother (1981).

As the novel opens, Henry Huggins is in fifth grade, and he wants to do something important. But what, he asks himself, is a particularly important thing to do? He ponders this question as he kicks around his neighborhood in Portland, Oregon with his faithful dog, Ribsy.

One morning, Henry spots Scooter, an older boy from school, delivering newspapers around the neighborhood. Henry is impressed by Scooter’s satchel and responsibilities; it occurs to him that here is a very important thing to be doing. He resolves there and then to get a paper route of his own.



Henry tracks down Mr. Capper, who supervises local newspaper deliveries. Mr. Capper explains to 10-and-a-half-year-old Henry that delivery boys must be 11 or older. He won’t hear any more about it.

Rather than give up, Henry goes away racking his brains for a way to change Mr. Capper’s mind. While browsing a yard sale, Henry finds a box full of kittens. Inspiration strikes. He will go door-to-door offering a free kitten with every new newspaper subscription. When Mr. Capper sees how effective a salesman Henry is, he’ll be sure to give Henry a paper route.

Unfortunately, no-one wants a kitten. All Henry’s hard work results in not a single new subscription, and he still has a boxful of kittens. He takes them home, where they rapidly overrun the house and make life miserable for Ribsy. Henry’s dad takes a shine to one of the kittens, a black-and-white he names Nosy, and Henry takes the rest of the kittens to the pet store owned by Mr. Pennycuff. Ribsy and Nosy gradually reach a truce.



Henry finally decides to put the paper route on the back burner. He will be 11 soon, after all. Plus, at school, Henry’s teacher announces a paper drive. Two classes will compete to see who can collect the most old papers. The winning class will get to see a movie during school hours. Henry throws himself into the competition.

One day, Scooter wants to go swimming at the Y, so he asks Henry to cover his paper route for the day. Henry is thrilled. He soon realizes he can also use this as an opportunity to win the paper drive. He types out advertisements, asking for donations of old newspapers, and inserts one into every paper on Scooter’s route.

As soon as Henry gets home, the phone starts ringing. He borrows a handcart from his neighbor Ramona Quimby so he can collect all the old newspapers. When he gets them home, he and his parents bundle them and load them into his dad’s station wagon. They take load after load into Henry’s school.



Thanks to these heroic efforts, Henry’s class wins the paper drive competition. They are taken to see an animated movie about bears while their rivals must stay in school. In the evening, Henry’s parents take him to another movie to celebrate the success of all their hard work.

Soon Henry’s 11th birthday is upon him. His mother throws him a birthday party, and during the party, Henry and his friends watch a new family arrive in the neighborhood. They spot a boy’s bicycle as it is unloaded from the moving van, and they go over to meet their new neighbor, Murph, who is in Henry’s grade. He is into electronics and is trying to build a robot. Henry suspects him of being a genius.

Scooter comes down with a bad case of chickenpox and asks Henry to cover his route again. Now that he is 11, Henry is sure that Mr. Capper will be impressed with his performance and give him his own route. Sure enough, rumor reaches him of a vacant route, recently given up by an older boy.
Henry is disappointed, however, when he learns that Murph has taken the vacant route. There is nothing he can do except wait for another vacancy, which comes sooner than he had anticipated when Murph announces that he’s giving up his route after just a few months.



Henry doesn’t quibble about Murph’s reasons; he’s only too happy to take over the route. However, on his first day, he learns why Murph quit. Ramona Quimby follows him along his route, hurling the papers at random houses. Henry demands to know why, and Ramona explains that she wants to be a paperboy, and no-one will let her. Nothing Henry can say will persuade Ramona to leave his papers alone.

Henry has a plan, however. When he gets home, he constructs an elaborate robot head for Ramona to wear, so she can pretend to be a robot. As Henry has guessed, this new toy distracts Ramona from her dream of being a paperboy, and everyone is happy.

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