Cover image for I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise: Children Surviving Cancer

Reader guide

I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise: Children Surviving Cancer

Rating Not yet rated Local rating
Year 1989 Edition year
Pages 174 Compact read
Vibe Family-friendly Quick read

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Best for readers who...

Good fit if you want...

Smart choice if you want a younger-reader tone with clear momentum. Smart choice if you want an easier entry point for younger audiences. When you want vivid sensory scenes, the chapters are concise but emotionally rich.

Maybe skip if...

Skip this if you want heavy conceptual depth for younger readers. Best to skip if you need a demanding adult pacing profile. You are specifically hunting for the newest framing rather than a backlist perspective.

Mood / Vibe Tags

Family-friendly Quick read Backlist pick

Summary

At a glance, I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise: Children Surviving Cancer by Erma Bombeck comes across as a younger-reader or shared-reading title with a lighter on-ramp. From the listing, this copy runs 1989 • Harpercollins • 174 pages, a decent clue for the kind of reading commitment it asks for.

Edition on file: 1989 • Harpercollins • 174 pages • ISBN 9780060161705.

Why this book now

More appealing if you want an older backlist book that still feels distinct instead of generic filler.

Reader guide

Quick details that help you decide faster.

Reading commitment

Quick Easy to move through

Quick commitment. Feels sized for a short session rather than a long haul read.

What stands out here

This one stands out through its reading feel more than through dry edition details: Family-friendly • Quick read.

Best way to approach it

Treat this like a focused read: enough attention to get its shape, without overcomplicating it.

45-second preview

Three quick cards, fifteen seconds each.

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1-sentence hook

I Want to Grow Hair, I Want to Grow Up, I Want to Go to Boise: Children Surviving Cancer by Erma Bombeck feels like a compact younger-reader pick with a simple entry point and clear reading payoff.

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