The book tells the story of a fifth-grade boy named Nick Allen. Nick is bored of calling a pen a pen, and decides to start calling it a frindle (hence the title) instead. The name catches on among his classmates, then the whole school, and finally the whole country.
Clements described the idea as having come to him in the form of the thought, "What would happen if a kid started using a new word, and other kids really liked it, but his English teacher didn’t?" The book can be seen on one level as an illustration of language change[?], but at a deeper level of the power of ordinary people to set in motion world-changing ideas.
From the back of the book:
Findle was Clements's first novel, his previous books having all been picture books. It has won many awards, including the Georgia Children's Book Award, the Sasquatch Children's Book Award, the Massachusetts Children's Book Award, and the Rhode Island Children's Book Award, and the Year 2000 Young Hoosier Book Award.
See also: etymology, historical linguistics
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