Oopsy Daisy
Lauren Myracle
Flower Power book 3, 2012
Book
A middle-grade friendship novel in a series that includes a girl with two mothers.
Overview
Oopsy Daisy is book 3 in Lauren Myracle’s Flower Power middle-grade series from Amulet Books, centered on four fifth-grade friends. In the collection, the series matters because Camilla, or Milla, has two mothers, while the group also includes racial, religious, and social difference that reviews treated as part of the series world. The representation is not a picture-book explanation of same-sex parenting; it is a background family fact inside school, friendship, and social-status fiction. The first book also generated a documented Scholastic book-fair dispute, when Myracle refused to change Milla’s same-sex parents. This item therefore links ordinary series fiction, access control, diversity marketing, and the persistence of LGBTQ-family visibility debates in 2009.[2][5][6][12]
Series Fiction
Flower Power uses the grammar of middle-grade series fiction: school groups, friendship strain, shifting point of view, and continuing character arcs across books. That structure matters because Milla’s family does not need to carry the whole plot. Her two mothers are part of a recurring character world. For the collection, this marks a later stage than early picture books: LGBTQ-family context can appear inside ordinary school-series fiction for readers who already expect friendship, humor, rivalry, and social anxiety.[2][3][4]
Milla’s Two Mothers
External sources identify Milla or Camilla as a girl with two mothers, and the local catalog records that this family structure is present but not central. That balance is important. The series neither hides the family nor turns every scene into an explanation of it. Instead, same-sex parenting is one fact in a broader social field that includes school hierarchy, friendship repair, religious difference, race, and ordinary fifth-grade worries. The result is normalization through recurrence.[5][12][1]
Scholastic Book-Fair Dispute
The public conflict around Luv Ya Bunches gives the whole series a strong access frame. School Library Journal reported that Scholastic asked for mild-language edits and for Milla’s same-sex parents to become a heterosexual couple before book-fair inclusion; Myracle accepted language edits but refused the family change. Follow-up reporting described a partial reversal for middle-school fairs. The episode shows that even background LGBTQ-family representation could shape distribution to children.[6][7][8]
Creator And Editor
Lauren Myracle was already known for series fiction, and Publishers Weekly reported the Flower Power deal before the books appeared. PW also connects Susan Van Metre to Abrams and to work with Myracle. That publishing context helps explain the series as a mainstream middle-grade project rather than a small-press family-recognition book. The access dispute is therefore especially revealing: even within a trade-published school series, the two-mother detail became a gatekeeping issue.[9][10][11]
Timeline
- 2004Amulet contextAmulet Books launches in the period before the series appears.[11]
- 2007Series dealPublishers Weekly reports Myracle’s deal for the flower-named friends series.[10]
- 2009First bookLuv Ya Bunches appears.[2][5]
- 2009Book-fair disputeScholastic’s treatment of the first book becomes a public access story.[6][7][8]
- 2010Second bookViolet in Bloom appears.[4][3]
- 2012Third bookOopsy Daisy appears.[4][3]
- 2013Series finaleAwesome Blossom completes the four-book series.[14]
- 2024Digital collectionAbrams publishes a four-book digital collection.[15]
Flower Power Series
The collection includes the first three books in a four-book series.
2009
Luv Ya Bunches
First book and site of the Scholastic dispute.
2010
Violet in Bloom
Second book.
2012
Oopsy Daisy
Third book.
2013
Awesome Blossom
Fourth book, outside the local sample.
Explore Connections
Browse direct links, shared themes, and nearby publication dates.
Linked records
Luv Ya Bunches
The local collection preserves multiple volumes from the same friendship series.
Oopsy Daisy
The first three titles together show recurring representation across a series.
And Tango Makes Three
Both titles show how access disputes continued after LGBTQ-family books entered mainstream channels.
Heather Has Two Mommies
Heather explains family recognition in picture-book form; Flower Power places two mothers inside school-series fiction.
Shared themes
Luv Ya Bunches
A middle-grade friendship novel in a series that includes a girl with two mothers.
Violet in Bloom
A middle-grade friendship novel in a series that includes a girl with two mothers.
Chag Sameach! = Happy Holidays
A Jewish holiday book illustrated with photographs of diverse families and community observances.
Heather Has Two Mommies
A 1989 picture book about a child with two mothers, represented here through its In Other Words first-edition history and later public life.
Nearby dates
The Popularity Papers (Book 4)
The fourth Popularity Papers volume, with item-specific road-trip evidence involving Julie's fathers.
A Tale of Two Mommies
A VanitaBooks companion picture book using questions and everyday care to present a child with two mothers.
ABCs with Keesha. My Family!
An alphabet and activity companion to the Keesha/My Family books for children of LGBTQ parents.
Donovan's Big Day
A two-mother wedding picture book centered on a child's ritual preparation and role as ring bearer.
Citation
Oopsy Daisy. Lauren Myracle. Amulet Books / Abrams, 2012. Tarpey-Schwed LGBT Families Children's Book Special Collection, Mechanics' Institute. Collection ID: KB-200.
Showing Plain text citation format.
Sources
Cover image from Abrams.
- Local collection catalog record for Oopsy Daisy · catalog
- Abrams record for this Flower Power title · publisher
- Open Library record for this Flower Power title · library
- Kirkus review for this Flower Power title · trade
- Publishers Weekly review of Luv Ya Bunches · trade
- School Library Journal on Scholastic and Luv Ya Bunches · trade
- The Guardian on Scholastic dispute · news
- The Advocate on Scholastic relenting · news
- Lauren Myracle author biography · creator
- Publishers Weekly report on Flower Power deal · trade
- Publishers Weekly on Susan Van Metre at Abrams · trade
- HRC Welcoming Schools two-moms/two-dads list · education
- HRC Welcoming Schools bullying and bias middle-grade list · education
- Abrams record for Awesome Blossom · publisher
- Abrams Flower Power four-book collection · publisher
