35 pages 1 hour read

Beverly Cleary

Ramona the Pest

Fiction | Novel | Middle Grade | Published in 1968

A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides that feature detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, quotes, and essay topics.

Important Quotes

Quotation Mark Icon

“‘I am not a pest,’ Ramona Quimby told her big sister Beezus.” 


(Chapter 1, Page 1)

This is the first line of Ramona the Pest. It immediately signals to the reader that Ramona Quimby is going to be an unusual little girl. The fact that Ramona refutes that she’s a “pest” also gives the reader important information about Ramona’s character; namely, that she is headstrong, unafraid to make her opinions known, and perhaps not exactly a “pest,” as her sister Beezus would have us believe. 

Quotation Mark Icon

“Nobody but a genuine grown-up was going to take her to school. If she had to, she would make a great big noisy fuss, and when Ramona made a great big noisy fuss, she usually got her own way. Great big noisy fusses were often necessary when a girl was the youngest member of her family and the youngest person on her block.” 


(Chapter 1, Page 5)

Ramona refuses to let Mary Jane, a friend of Beezus, walk her to school. The reader is taken through Ramona’s logic: Only a “genuine grown-up” should be allowed to take her to school, since older kids like Mary Jane are inclined to make themselves seem more grown up by treating younger kids like Ramona like a baby—and there is nothing Ramona dislikes more than being treated like a baby. This passage highlights two features of Ramona’s psychology: Her desire to not appear like a baby and why it is occasionally necessary for her to cause a “great noisy fuss.” 

Quotation Mark Icon

“Ramona considered. Kindergarten had not turned out as she had expected. Still, even though she had not been given a present and Miss Binney did not love her, she had liked being with boys and girls her own age.” 


(Chapter 1, Page 35)

The reader is privy to Ramona’s thoughts and therefore learns the logic that Ramona uses to come to different conclusions. Here, the reader learns that, after her first day of kindergarten, Ramona seems to believe that

Related Titles

By Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Beezus and Ramona

Beverly Cleary

Beezus and Ramona

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Dear Mr. Henshaw

Beverly Cleary

Dear Mr. Henshaw

Beverly Cleary

Plot Summary

logo

Henry and the Paper Route

Beverly Cleary

Henry and the Paper Route

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Henry Huggins

Beverly Cleary, Illustr. Tracy Dockray

Henry Huggins

Beverly Cleary, Illustr. Tracy Dockray

Study Guide

logo

Muggie Maggie

Beverly Cleary

Muggie Maggie

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Ralph S. Mouse

Beverly Cleary

Ralph S. Mouse

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Ramona and Her Mother

Beverly Cleary

Ramona and Her Mother

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Ramona Quimby Age 8

Beverly Cleary

Ramona Quimby Age 8

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Ramona the Brave

Beverly Cleary

Ramona the Brave

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

Runaway Ralph

Beverly Cleary

Runaway Ralph

Beverly Cleary

Study Guide

logo

The Mouse and the Motorcycle

Beverly Cleary

The Mouse and the Motorcycle

Beverly Cleary