"JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Friendship." . . "Bullies Juvenile fiction." . . "Friendship." . . "Friendship" . "Bullies." . . "Twins." . . "Spinelli, Jerry" . . "Twins Juvenile fiction." . . "JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Bullying." . . "JUVENILE FICTION / Family / Siblings." . . "Individuality." . . "Brothers and sisters Juvenile fiction." . . "Bullying Juvenile fiction." . . "Friendship Juvenile fiction." . . "Brothers and sisters." . . . . "Bullying." . . "Bullying" . "Siblings" . . "Individuality Juvenile fiction." . . "\"Jake and Lily are twins and have always felt the same--like two halves of one person--but the year they turn eleven and Jake begins hanging out with Bump Stubbins, everything changes\"--Publisher." . "\"Jake and Lily are twins and have always felt the same--like two halves of one person--but the year they turn eleven and Jake begins hanging out with Bump Stubbins, everything changes\"--Publisher."@en . . . . . "Jake and Lily"@en . . "Electronic books" . . . . . . . . . "Children's stories" . "Children's stories"@en . "\"Jake and Lily are twins and have always felt the same--like two halves of one person--but the year they turn eleven and Jake begins hanging out with Bump Stubbins, everything changes\"--" . "Jake and Lily"@en . "Jake and Lily" . . "Juvenile works"@en . "Juvenile works" . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Jake + Lily"@en . . . . "\"Jake and Lily are twins and have always felt the same--like two halves of one person--but the year they turn eleven and Jake begins hanging out with Bump Stubbins, everything changes\"--Provided by publisher."@en . "Fiction" . . . "Fiction"@en . . . . . . "'I could see it coming. I could see his goo-goo eyes every time we saw the Bumpsters riding around. I figured sooner or later Jake would join them. Just thinking about it made me mad. Mad enough to decide that when it finally happened, I would just spit, burp, and call \"Good riddance! Who needs ya? Who cares?\" What does she want? Does she want me to spend my whole life with nobody but her? Oh look, there's Jake and Lily. They're seventy-nine years old and they still play poker and ride bikes together. They still hear each other five miles away. Still sleep in the same bedroom. You can't tear them apart. Aren't they adorable. Twinny twin twins.'" . . . . . .