

Character Name and the Noun Phrase: Stanley and the Magic Lamp follows this naming convention.Batman Can Breathe in Space: In Stanley in Space, the Lambchop family does not wear spacesuits during their space journey, but show no breathing-related problems from it.

The last channel showed a game show, men and women in chicken costumes grabbing for prizes in a pool of mud. Then came buildings burning, people begging for food, people hitting each other, people firing pistols at policemen. The first channel showed battleships firing flaming missiles the second, airplanes dropping bombs the third, cars crashing other cars. All the programs that are on TV are pretty reasonable to prove his point, demonstrating violence in the world. Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: In Stanley's Christmas Adventure, in explaining why he refuses to deliver presents on Christmas like he usually does, Santa has the television turned on.

The book inspired the Flat Stanley Project, an educational project where kids send paper cut-outs of him to different locations and have records of his adventures sent back to them.įlat Stanley and its sequel books provide examples of: Stanley, Flat Again! (2003), where Stanley is flattened again.Invisible Stanley (1995), where Stanley inexplicably turns invisible after eating some raisins and an apple during a storm the preceding night.Stanley's Christmas Adventure (1993), where Sarah Claus, Santa's daughter, calls on the Lambchop family to save Christmas when the jolly red man decides not to give out presents this year.Stanley in Space (1990), where the President of the United States chooses the Lambchop family to ride in a spaceship called the Star Scout.Stanley and the Magic Lamp (1985), where Stanley accidentally releases a genie named Prince Haraz from an old lamp.but the incident did leave him Squashed Flat! Until he can find a way to inflate himself back to normal, Stanley must get used to living life as a flat person.

His younger brother Arthur calls his parents up to Stanley's bedroom to see if Stanley's hurt from the bulletin board, which thankfully he isn't. That is, until one night, a bulletin board in his bedroom falls on him while he's sleeping. Flat Stanley is a children's chapter book written by Jeff Brown.
