- Home
- Ann M. Martin
Claudia and the Lighthouse Ghost
Claudia and the Lighthouse Ghost Read online
Contents
Title Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Acknowledgment
About the Author
Also Available
Copyright
“Ho-o-o-neee, I’m ho-o-ome!” I called out.
It was a perfect imitation of Ricky Ricardo. Well, as perfect as a thirteen-year-old girl can make it. I even impressed myself.
I closed the front door behind me and waited for the reaction.
My friend Abby Stevenson and I had been working on a routine from an I Love Lucy rerun. We’d just been baby-sitting for the seven Barrett/DeWitt kids that afternoon, and we’d had them in hysterics.
I could hear my parents upstairs. (Lucky me. My mom is sometimes back from work at five o’clock on Fridays, but Dad only rarely makes it home early.) Their voices were muffled, so I figured they were in their bedroom.
Time for the Ricky laugh. I closed up my throat and made a sound like a seal’s bark: “HA! HA! HA! HA!” You would have thought Desi Arnaz was there in the Kishi living room.
Click. I heard my parents’ door open. “Hello, Claudia Lynn,” my mom called out.
My older sister, Janine, appeared at the top of the stairs, wearing headphones. “Did you bring a dog home?” she asked.
“Nope,” I said. “It’s just me. Can you tell who I was imitat —?”
“Then will you please stop yapping?” Janine barged on. “I’m listening to my astrophysics lecture.”
Uh-huh. Right.
How many kids do you know with high-school-age sisters who take astrophysics? I’ll bet you can count them on the fingers of one elbow.
It’s not easy living with a genius. My sister takes courses at a local college, for fun. I happen to think her idea of fun is seriously twisted.
Now, I love Janine dearly, but we do not have a lot in common. For one thing, when teachers see her IQ score, they go weak in the knees.
Actually, they go weak in the knees when they see mine, too. But for a different reason.
I wouldn’t know astrophysics from AstroTurf. And I couldn’t begin to spell either one of them. Mention history and I start to droop. I used to think algebra was a type of lingerie.
Which is why I, at age thirteen, am the oldest seventh-grader at Stoneybrook Middle School in Stoneybrook, Connecticut. Yes, I should be in eighth grade, but I was sent back.
My parents, needless to say, were not pleased about that. (I wasn’t too thrilled, either.) They’re pretty brainy themselves. Dad’s an investment banker and Mom’s a librarian. They both believe in High Achievement and Proper Education. Of course, they worship Janine.
Me they tolerate. They try very hard to see me for who I really am. But I do wish they’d stop wearing masks when we’re together in public.
Just kidding.
What am I really like? I’m Japanese-American, for starters. Actually, you could tell a lot about me from the way I looked that day: I was wearing a white high-collared dentist’s shirt and a loose-fitting Chinese silk jacket, cinched at the waist by a bright-orange scarf, over tight black flared pants. My hair was gathered on top of my head with an orange bandanna.
I know, you think I’m demented. But trust me, it looked great. Anyone can copy an outfit from a model in Seventeen, but it takes talent to make a funky cool outfit out of stuff from thrift stores and yard sales.
That’s how I look at life — creating something wild and beautiful from unexpected sources.
Maybe that’s why I don’t do well in school. In math, for instance, I love to make interesting shapes out of the numbers and symbols. I kind of lose track of the problem. I’m much happier in front of an easel or a lump of clay or a box full of beads and string. Art is my number one passion. Painting, sculpting, drawing, jewelry making — I love them all.
My other main passion is eating. Not just any food, though. It has to be absolutely horrible for your health. If sugar were flammable, my bedroom would be a major fire hazard. My parents forbid unhealthy eating, so I hide candy bars in my socks, bags of pretzels in my shoe boxes, cookies among my art supplies. (I also hide Nancy Drew books, because Mom and Dad think I should read only textbooks and Serious Literature.)
Believe it or not, I did once have a real soulmate in the Kishi family — my grandmother, Mimi. She really understood me. I’ve missed her terribly since she died, and I keep her picture on my bedroom wall for inspiration.
Mimi would have cracked up at my Ricky imitation.
Oh, well.
Snack time. I was definitely in a Yodels mood. I tromped upstairs and into my room. Flinging my backpack onto the bed, I reached into my night table drawer and took out a fresh, unopened box of Yodels.
My clock read 5:10. In twenty minutes, my friends from the Baby-sitters Club would be coming over for a meeting (more about them later). I had just enough time to relax, eat, and do some homework. (Well, think about doing some homework, anyway.)
“Can’t they take a suite in a hotel?” my mother’s voice filtered in from down the hall.
“I couldn’t very well ask them that, Rioko,” my dad said. “Maybe they can’t afford the rates. The point is, they’re our friends, and they need a place to stay. Why are you so resistant?”
“I just don’t think it’s prudent, John.”
I started giggling. I don’t know why. I guess because “prudent” reminded me of “prunes.” Anyway, I nearly choked on my Yodel.
“Prudent?” my dad repeated. “You’re worried about what the people in town will think of us?”
“No, I meant on their part, John. I wonder if it’s wise of them to come back to Stoneybrook. People still remember what happened at the lighthouse.”
“Oh, come now. You and I know Alex didn’t do anything wrong.”
I stopped coughing.
What were they talking about?
The lighthouse? The old, graffiti-covered Stoneybrook lighthouse?
How weird. If Stoneybrook had a Most Ignored Building award, it would definitely go to that lighthouse. I guess boats used it in ancient times, but it had been boarded up for as long as I could remember. Kids say it’s haunted, which I don’t believe, of course. But the place definitely looks creepy, standing at the edge of an old jetty in the Sound, surrounded by a razor-wire fence.
Knowing my dad, whatever “happened” at the lighthouse probably had something to do with real estate or the stock market.
“Alex took the whole thing badly,” Dad was saying. “His life has never been the same. Ever since the incident, his business ventures have all soured.”
Hmmm. Alex must have been some crooked businessman. Some stock embezzler.
But why would my dad, the most conservative, law-abiding man in history, be friends with someone like that?
And why would he invite him to stay with us?
“If we say yes, where will we put them?” Mom was asking. “The kids aren’t babies anymore. Little Stevie must be a teenager by now. Not to mention Caryn and Laura …”
Hold everything.
What a blast from the past. I knew who they were talking about. Caryn and Laura Hatt were these two little girls who used to live in Stoneybrook. They moved away when I was four or so, so I couldn’t remember them too well. They had an older brother named Stevie. His two front teeth were
missing and he used to call himself “Thtevie.”
I also remember their dad, Mr. Hatt. He was cool. He used to tell us his first name was Cat-in-the. Was he Alex? (Rats, I had really believed him.)
“It’ll just be for a little while,” Dad said. “We should make them feel welcome in the community. When I think of the way they were driven out of town —”
“They weren’t driven out,” Mom replied. “They moved of their own free will.”
I was standing against my half-open door, my ear pressed to the crack. Dying to hear more.
Just then the door swung open, smacking me against the wall.
“Yeow!” I cried out.
Janine barged into my room. “Have you seen my headband?”
“Have you heard of knocking?”
“The door was open.”
“Janine, do you remember the Hatt family?” I blurted out.
Janine was now snooping around the room. “Sure. Mr. Hatt was Dad’s friend.”
“Really? Did he have anything to do with that old lighthouse?’
“He owned it,” Janine replied.
“Yuck,” I said. “Who’d want to own that disgusting place?”
“He owned a big chunk of waterfront property, I think. Dad helped him with some investments. Now, I know I wore it in here yesterday …”
“Listen, Janine, I heard Mom and Dad —”
“Did I take it off when I was using your phone?” Janine began rummaging through some art supplies, which lay in a heap on the floor.
“Janine, leave those alone! Your headband isn’t here!”
“Well, if you’d keep your room neater —”
“If you wouldn’t be so absentminded! Besides, what’s the difference? You don’t need a headband to listen to astroturfics.”
“Physics. And I’m finished with that. I believe I’ve calculated the arrival time of the Veehoff Comet, which, in case you haven’t heard, will be in eleven days.”
“Congrats.” Haven’t heard? Everyone in Stoneybrook was talking about the comet. I was already tired of it.
“We still haven’t figured out if it’ll hit,” Janine continued. “Anyway, Jerry’s coming over later and we’re going to the movies.”
That’s another thing. Do you know what’s worse than having a genius sister who makes you feel dumb and whom your parents love more than you?
Having a genius sister who makes you feel dumb and whom your parents love more than you, who has a boyfriend!
Grrrrr.
Not to be conceited or anything, but I’m talented, interesting, funny, and pretty. But do I have a boyfriend? Nooooo.
“Janine, I wish I could help you, but I was in the middle of cleaning up my room for the BSC meeting, and —”
“Can you lend me one?” Janine interrupted. “A headband, I mean. Nothing too, you know …”
“Funky?” I picked up a wide red headband with pairs of dice printed on it. “This one’s pretty conservative.”
Janine gave me a Look. “No solids?”
My clock read 5:25. Yikes. My friends were going to be arriving in five minutes. “What time is he coming?”
“Ten after eight, and Jerry’s always on time.”
“Ten after eight? You have three hours!”
“Two hours and forty-five minutes. But I have to do a calculus proof and begin building my three-dimensional enantiomer models for organic chemistry —”
“But it’s Friday, Janine!”
“The best time to get a head start.” Janine was pacing back and forth now, biting her fingernails. “Boys make everything so complicated.”
“Uh-huh, I know what you mean.” My clock clicked to 5:26. I began straightening up all the supplies Janine had knocked over.
“No, you don’t. Sometimes I wish I’d never gotten involved with him.”
So break up, I didn’t say. “Yup. Uh, Janine? The BSC meeting’s about to start. So would you —”
“Maybe a hat would work,” Janine mused.
“Janiiiine! Go!”
“Okay, okay.”
As she walked out, I could hear my parents, still arguing about the Hatts.
But I couldn’t pay attention anymore. I was picking up wrappers and bottle caps and empty paint tubes.
My room was a sty. I had four minutes to make it gorgeous. Four minutes before the Friday meeting of the Baby-sitters Club.
“Is it true,” asked Stacey McGill, “that if the Veehoff Comet comes too close to Earth, people start turning into werewolves?”
“I heard it was vampires,” Mallory Pike said.
“That’s how it got its name.” Abby Stevenson rose from the carpet, baring her teeth and talking in a Dracula accent. “Veehoff comet, vee hoff fool moon, and zo tonight vee hoff to sock your blod! Nyahh hahaha!”
Jessi Ramsey pretended to cower in fright. “Eeek!”
“That reminds me.” I hopped off my bed and reached under it to pull out a box of chocolates. “Cherry creams!”
“Gross, Claudia,” said Kristy Thomas. She pulled off the lid and grabbed three chocolates.
Abby took two. “The selection around here is going downhill.”
“Yecchhh,” Jessi said. “Could you pass them this way?”
Mallory reached for them, too. “Do you have caramels?”
“I’ll check,” I muttered.
Some gratitude.
As I rummaged through my closet, Mary Anne Spier said, “Last night, when I sat for Marilyn and Carolyn Arnold, they kept running over to the window to look for the comet.”
“It’s not supposed to come until the week after next,” Kristy said.
Mary Anne laughed. “I tried to tell them, but they kept saying, ‘How do you know?’ ”
“Comet feeeeever,” Jessi sang. “Becca talks about it all the time, too.”
“So do my brothers and sisters,” Mallory said.
Stacey shrugged. “Hey, I don’t blame them. How often does a comet like this come around?”
“Every seventy-one and a half years,” Mary Anne replied. “We’ll be in rockers for the next sighting.”
“Janine’s astrofistics class is trying to predict whether it’ll hit the earth and wipe us all out,” I said, pulling a candy box from among my hats. “Caramels?”
Mallory looked dismayed. “Don’t scare me, Claudia.”
“I thought you wanted caramels,” I said.
“I meant the comet,” Mallory replied.
“Astrofistics?” Abby murmured.
“Are we really in danger?” Jessi asked.
“Nahhhh,” I said. “I just used some Comet in the bathroom. That stuff’ll probably burn up in the atmosphere.”
“Claudiaaaa,” Stacey groaned.
“I have it!” Kristy piped up. “I have a great idea! On the night the Veehoff Comet appears, we can have a comet party for all our charges.”
“Yyyyyes!” Abby exclaimed.
“Will we need a telescope?” Mary Anne asked.
“Janine has one,” I volunteered.
“Don’t even think about it!” Janine called from her room.
“First things first,” Kristy said. “All in favor?”
“Ayyyyyye!”
It was a good idea. Which wasn’t surprising, coming from Kristy. She’s full of them.
Actually, if it weren’t for one of her ideas, the Baby-sitters Club wouldn’t exist.
It’s kind of a cool story. I’ll start at the beginning.
First, there was a Big Bang. Soon the earth and comets were formed. Then, one day, Kristy’s mom was having trouble finding a sitter. So Kristy invented the Baby-sitters Club.
Okay, I left out a few details, but that’s close enough. Kristy figured Stoneybrook would benefit from having a group of baby-sitters who met regularly at one central place. Then parents could reach several eager, reliable sitters with one convenient phone call.
The BSC started with only Kristy, Mary Anne, Stacey, and me, but we quickly grew to seven (ten
, if you include our two associates and one honorary member).
Kristy set up the club like a business. Talk about organized. We pay dues, we write about each and every job in a notebook (which we all read regularly), and we have officers with special duties.
Our meetings are on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, from five-thirty to six. During those times, our clients call to request sitters.
What happens if they call during other times? They reach me, usually when I’m having a cow over my homework.
You see, my bedroom is the one-and-only official BSC headquarters, mainly because I’m the only member with her own private phone line.
Which makes me the club’s host, head custodian, junk food caterer, and off-hours switchboard operator. All these duties are combined under one title: vice-president.
Kristy, naturally, is president. She runs the meetings, plans our events, dreams up advertising schemes, and makes us all feel horrible and guilty if we’re late for anything.
As you can imagine, she’s loud, smart, and full of energy. She’s also short (barely five feet), athletic, and very casual. Super casual. Kristy is to fashion the way I am to astrophysics. Won’t go near it. We practically have to force her into a dress for school dances.
Kristy’s mind is very kid-centered. She always knows exactly what kids want. Take the comet party. No one but Kristy could have thought of that. Not long ago, when she realized that many of our younger charges wanted to play softball, Kristy organized a team for them. It’s called Kristy’s Krushers, and they play all the time during nice weather. Kristy even designed perfect antiboredom devices for us to take to jobs on rainy days. They’re called Kid-Kits — boxes filled with old toys, games, and odds and ends. They don’t sound like much, but kids adore them.
Kristy used to live across the street from me, with her parents and three brothers (Charlie’s now seventeen, Sam’s fifteen, and David Michael’s seven). But just after David Michael was born, Kristy’s life really changed. Her dad abandoned the family — walked out and never came back. Mrs. Thomas had to scramble to make a living and support four kids.
Things aren’t quite so chaotic anymore. Mrs. Thomas remarried, to a divorced guy named Watson Brewer, who just happens to be a gazillionaire. Just like that — zoom! — Kristy was living in a mansion in Stoneybrook’s chichi neighborhood.

Karen's Tea Party
Kristy and the Snobs
Best Kept Secret
Karen's Kittens
Karen's Big Job
Claudia and the Genius of Elm Street
The Fire at Mary Anne's House
Science Fair
Me and Katie (The Pest)
Karen's Plane Trip
Jessi's Wish
Dawn and Too Many Sitters
Jessi and the Jewel Thieves
Eleven Kids, One Summer
Karen's Goldfish
Snow War
Abby and the Secret Society
Keeping Secrets
Good-Bye Stacey, Good-Bye
Karen's Sleepover
Claudia and the World's Cutest Baby
Mary Anne Saves the Day
Mallory and the Dream Horse
Kristy and the Mystery Train
Dawn's Family Feud
Karen's Twin
Little Miss Stoneybrook... And Dawn
Karen's Mistake
Karen's Movie Star
Mallory and the Mystery Diary
Karen's Monsters
Kristy + Bart = ?
Karen's Dinosaur
Here Today
Karen's Carnival
How to Look for a Lost Dog
Stacey vs. Claudia
Stacey's Ex-Boyfriend
Here Come the Bridesmaids!
Graduation Day
Kristy's Big News
Karen's School Surprise
Kristy Thomas, Dog Trainer
Baby-Sitters' Christmas Chiller
Baby-Sitters' Winter Vacation
Ten Good and Bad Things About My Life
Claudia and the Bad Joke
Mary Anne's Makeover
Stacey and the Fashion Victim
Dawn Schafer, Undercover Baby-Sitter
Karen's Tuba
Dawn's Wicked Stepsister
Diary Three: Dawn, Sunny, Maggie, Amalia, and Ducky
Karen's Nanny
Jessi and the Awful Secret
Karen's New Year
Karen's Candy
Karen's President
Mary Anne and the Great Romance
Mary Anne + 2 Many Babies
Kristy and the Copycat
Jessi and the Bad Baby-Sitter
Claudia, Queen of the Seventh Grade
Claudia and the Lighthouse Ghost
Karen's New Puppy
Karen's Home Run
Karen's Chain Letter
Kristy in Charge
Karen's Angel
Mary Anne and Too Many Boys
Karen's Big Fight
Karen's Spy Mystery
Stacey's Big Crush
Karen's School
Claudia and the Terrible Truth
Karen's Cowboy
The Summer Before
Beware, Dawn!
Belle Teale
Claudia's Big Party
The Secret Life of Mary Anne Spier
Karen's Book
Teacher's Pet
Boy-Crazy Stacey
Claudia and the Disaster Date
Author Day
Claudia and the Sad Good-Bye
Kristy and the Worst Kid Ever
Yours Turly, Shirley
Class Play
Kristy and the Vampires
Kristy and the Cat Burglar
Karen's Pumpkin Patch
Stacey and the Mystery at the Empty House
Karen's Chicken Pox
Mary Anne and the Playground Fight
Stacey's Mistake
Coming Apart
Mary Anne and the Little Princess
Karen, Hannie and Nancy: The Three Musketeers
'Tis the Season
Claudia and Mean Janine
Karen's School Bus
Mary Anne's Big Breakup
Rain Reign
Claudia and the Mystery at the Museum
Claudia and the Great Search
Karen's Doll
Shannon's Story
Sea City, Here We Come!
Stacey and the Mystery of Stoneybrook
Karen's Treasure
Ten Rules for Living With My Sister
With You and Without You
Baby-Sitters' Island Adventure
Karen's Fishing Trip
Dawn and the Big Sleepover
New York, New York!
Ten Kids, No Pets
Happy Holidays, Jessi
Halloween Parade
Karen's New Holiday
Kristy Power!
Karen's Wish
Claudia and the Mystery in the Painting
Karen's Stepmother
Abby in Wonderland
Karen's Snow Day
Kristy and the Secret of Susan
Karen's Pony Camp
Karen's School Trip
Mary Anne to the Rescue
Karen's Unicorn
Abby and the Notorious Neighbor
Stacey and the Haunted Masquerade
Claudia Gets Her Guy
Missing Since Monday
Stacey's Choice
Stacey's Ex-Best Friend
Karen's New Teacher
Karen's Accident
Karen's Lucky Penny
Karen's Cartwheel
Karen's Puppet Show
Spelling Bee
Stacey's Problem
Stacey and the Stolen Hearts
Karen's Surprise
Karen's Worst Day
The Ghost at Dawn's House
Karen's Big Sister
Karen's Easter Parade
Mary Anne and the Silent Witness
Karen's Swim Meet
Mary Anne's Revenge
Karen's Mystery
Stacey and the Mystery Money
Dawn and the Disappearing Dogs
Karen's Christmas Tree
Welcome to Camden Falls
Karen's Pilgrim
Dawn and the Halloween Mystery
Mary Anne in the Middle
Karen's Toys
Kristy's Great Idea
Claudia and the Middle School Mystery
Karen's Big Weekend
Logan's Story
Karen's Yo-Yo
Kristy's Book
Mallory and the Ghost Cat
Mary Anne and the Music
Karen's Tattletale
Karen's County Fair
Karen's Mermaid
Snowbound
Karen's Movie
Jessi and the Troublemaker
Baby-Sitters at Shadow Lake
Mallory on Strike
Jessi's Baby-Sitter
Karen's Leprechaun
Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls
Karen's Good-Bye
Karen's Figure Eight
Logan Likes Mary Anne!
Mary Anne and the Zoo Mystery
Missy Piggle-Wiggle and the Whatever Cure
Dawn on the Coast
Stacey and the Cheerleaders
Claudia and the Clue in the Photograph
Karen's New Friend
Mallory and the Trouble With Twins
Karen's Roller Skates
Abby and the Best Kid Ever
Poor Mallory!
Karen's Witch
Karen's Grandmothers
Slam Book
Karen's School Picture
Karen's Reindeer
Kristy's Big Day
The Long Way Home
Karen's Sleigh Ride
On Christmas Eve
Karen's Copycat
Karen's Ice Skates
Claudia and the Little Liar
Abby the Bad Sport
The Baby-Sitters Club #5: Dawn and the Impossible Three
Abby's Book
Karen's Big Top
Main Street #8: Special Delivery
Kristy and the Kidnapper
Karen's Ski Trip
Karen's Hurricane
Stacey and the Mystery at the Mall
Jessi and the Superbrat
Kristy and the Baby Parade
Karen's New Bike
Karen's Big City Mystery
Baby-Sitters' European Vacation
Hello, Mallory
Dawn's Big Date
Karen's Christmas Carol
Jessi's Horrible Prank
Kristy and the Missing Fortune
Kristy and the Haunted Mansion
Jessi's Big Break
Karen's Pony
Welcome Home, Mary Anne
Stacey the Math Whiz
September Surprises
Bummer Summer
Karen's Secret
Abby's Twin
Main Street #4: Best Friends
Karen's Big Move
Mary Anne Misses Logan
Stacey's Book
Claudia and the Perfect Boy
Holiday Time
Stacey's Broken Heart
Karen's Field Day
Kristy's Worst Idea
Dawn and the Older Boy
Karen's Brothers
Claudia's Friend
Mary Anne and the Haunted Bookstore
Dawn and Whitney, Friends Forever
Summer School
Karen's Birthday
Karen's Black Cat
Stacey McGill... Matchmaker?
Claudia's Book
Main Street #2: Needle and Thread
Karen's Runaway Turkey
Karen's Campout
Karen's Bunny
Claudia and the New Girl
Karen's Wedding
Karen's Promise
Karen's Snow Princess
Claudia Kishi, Middle School Dropout
Starring the Baby-Sitters Club!
Kristy for President
California Girls!
Maid Mary Anne
Abby's Un-Valentine
Stacey's Secret Friend
Karen's Haunted House
Claudia and Crazy Peaches
Karen's Prize
Get Well Soon, Mallory!
Karen's Doll Hospital
Karen's Newspaper
Karen's Toothache
Mary Anne and Miss Priss
Abby's Lucky Thirteen
The Secret Book Club
The All-New Mallory Pike
Karen's Turkey Day
Karen's Magician
Mary Anne and the Library Mystery
Diary One: Dawn, Sunny, Maggie, Amalia, and Ducky
Mary Anne and the Secret in the Attic
Kristy and the Mother's Day Surprise
Karen's in Love
Welcome to the BSC, Abby
Karen's Kittycat Club
The Mystery at Claudia's House
The Truth About Stacey
Karen's Bully
Karen's Gift
BSC in the USA
Everything for a Dog
Dawn and the We Love Kids Club
Karen's Ghost
Stacey's Lie
Jessi's Secret Language
Kristy and the Missing Child
Better to Wish
Baby-Sitters on Board!
Kristy at Bat
Everything Changes
Don't Give Up, Mallory
A Dog's Life: The Autobiography of a Stray
Karen's Big Lie
Karen's Show and Share
Mallory Hates Boys (and Gym)
Diary Two: Dawn, Sunny, Maggie, Amalia, and Ducky
Karen's Pen Pal
Claudia and the Friendship Feud
Karen's Secret Valentine
Keep Out, Claudia!
Aloha, Baby-Sitters!
Welcome Back, Stacey
Jessi Ramsey, Pet-Sitter
Karen's Pizza Party
Kristy and the Dirty Diapers
Staying Together
Dawn and the Surfer Ghost
Claudia Makes Up Her Mind
Jessi's Gold Medal
Karen's Kite
Baby Animal Zoo
Dawn's Big Move
Karen's Big Joke
Karen's Lemonade Stand
Ma and Pa Dracula
Baby-Sitters' Haunted House
Abby and the Mystery Baby
Home Is the Place
Karen's Grandad
Twin Trouble
Ten Good and Bad Things About My Life (So Far)
Diary Two
Baby-Sitters Club 027
Claudia and the Mystery Painting
Diary One
Baby-Sitters Club 037
Baby-Sitters Club 028
Baby-Sitters Club 085
Dawn Schaffer Undercover Baby-Sitter
Jessi's Babysitter
The Baby-Sitters Club #110: Abby the Bad Sport (Baby-Sitters Club, The)
Karen's Little Sister
Baby-Sitters Club 058
Claudia And The Genius On Elm St.
Missy Piggle-Wiggle and the Sticky-Fingers Cure
Kristy and Kidnapper
Baby-Sitters Club 041
Karen's Bunny Trouble
Baby-Sitters Club 032
Diary Three
Christmas Chiller
Karen's Half-Birthday
Needle and Thread
Secret Life of Mary Anne Spier
Baby-Sitters Beware
Claudia Kishi, Middle School Drop-Out
Logan Likes Mary Anne !
Baby-Sitters Club 061
Best Friends
Baby-Sitters Club 031
Karen's Little Witch
Jessi Ramsey, Petsitter
Baby-Sitters Club 123
Baby-Sitters Club 059
Baby-Sitters Club 033
Baby-Sitters Club 060
Baby-Sitters Club 094
The Baby-Sitters Club #99: Stacey's Broken Heart
The Baby-Sitters Club #109: Mary Anne to the Rescue (Baby-Sitters Club, The)
Mystery At Claudia's House
Claudia And The Sad Goodbye
Mary Anne's Big Break-Up
Baby-Sitters Club 025
Baby-Sitters Club 042
Stacey and the Mystery of the Empty House
Karen's Baby-Sitter
Claudia's Friendship Feud
Baby-Sitters Club 090
Baby-Sitters Club 021
Baby-Sitters Club 056
Baby-Sitters Club 040
The Baby-Sitters Club #108: Don't Give Up, Mallory (Baby-Sitters Club, The)
Dawn and the Impossible Three
The Snow War
Special Delivery
Baby-Sitters Club 057
Mary Anne And Too Many Babies
Baby-Sitters Club 030