Archive for the ‘Sports’ Category

The Ring

Friday, June 18th, 2010

theringThe Ring is the debut Young Adult novel by Bobbie Pyron, part time librarian for the Salt lake County library system.  The main character Mardie is 15 and on a path to self destruction. She feels as if she is living in the shadow of her successful older brother and seeks attention in negative ways until she discovers boxing. This book is about how boxing saves her.
As the story begins, Mardie’s grades are slipping. She has the attention of one of the most popular guys in school and finding ways to party with him consumes most of her time.
Life is becoming a series of lies told to her father and stepmother. Lies that leave her stranded at parties, and grounded with lost cell phone privileges. Shoplifting is her new high but when she gets caught with $93 worth of merchandise the courts come down hard.
The punishment is 100 hours of community service and the loss of her parents trust.  She is even expected to hang out at the gym while her step-mom works out. But that is when she stumbles across a girls’ boxing workout. Encouraged to join in by the instructor, Kitty, she’s hooked. Convincing her father that it’s a good idea is a bit difficult, but with the help of her stepmother, she succeeds.
The book did a good job explaining the misunderstood sport of women’s boxing.  The characters were all well developed and the life lessons weaved into the coaching effortless.  Author Pyron also catches the emotional turmoil of the average teen girl well.

The various storylines throughout the book ask the reader to accept each of the characters for who they are; whether it be female boxer, gay brother, or handicapped horseback rider.
The Ring is a quick read that might open up new possibilities for those looking for something out of the ordinary. There is quite a bit of language peppered throughout the book but all the “scenes” handled sensitively.  Definitely not appropriate for younger readers.

Since being published, it has been nominated for the American Library Association’s Rainbow Project list and author Bobbie Pyron has written her second novel, A Dog’s Way Home.

GENRE: Realistic Fiction

Link here to read an excerpt!

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Once A Runner

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

oncearunnerQuenton Cassidy is not actually a real person, but the hero of John L. Parker novel Once a Runner, a cult object among serious distance runners. Since its publication in 1978, Once a Runner has purportedly sold more than 100,000 copies and spawned a sequel. Yet Parker sold the last of his original self-published editions in 2004 from the trunk of his car. Demand has never subsided. According to Bookfinder, the Google of dead books, the novel has been the most-searched-for out-of-print book in the past two years.

The story depicts the world of running in a way that no non-runner could possibly relate to. It is written for runners and to keep light joggers and couch potatoes out. I, resembling more the latter found fascinating moments where I think I almost “got it” to others where I couldn’t quite figure out why someone would want to do it or write about it. The overwhelming opinion is that this book nails the running life like no other novel ever has.

“He was stronger than they were; he wanted them to know it, but not to dwell on it. There is time, he would tell them; time and time and time. He wanted to impart some of the truths Bruce Denton had taught him that you don’t become a runner by winning a morning workout. The only true way is to marshal the ferocity of your ambition over the course of many days, weeks, months, and (if you could finally come to accept it) years. The Trial of Miles; Miles of Trials. How could he make them understand?”

Quenton Cassidy is an undergraduate miler at the Southeastern University in Florida. He spends most of his time training with the cross country team and with Bruce Denton, an Olympic gold-medalist distance runner who lives nearby. The free-spirited runners are depicted as a liberal movement against the football establishment and a prejudiced university president. For dubious reasons that include Quenton’s authoring of a petition protesting a dress code, he is suspended from intercollegiate competition, prompting him to leave school altogether and move, alone, to a cabin in the woods to train full time. There he trains for a race, from which he has been banned, at the university against, the world-champion miler from New Zealand.

“Running to him was real, the way he did it the realest thing he knew. It was all joy and woe, hard as diamond; it made him weary beyond comprehension. But it also made him free.”

Parker captures how it feels during a tough workout where a random word or phrase will materialize in your mind and be turned over and played with like “seals with a beach ball”; how as you wander around a track meet you feel as though your personal record is the dominant fact of your life (”This gentleman here, perhaps you’d like to meet him, is 27:42″); how after a race your spine feels as though it’s “made of bamboo.”

This being a sports novel, there is a Big Race at the end where everything is on the line. But the book’s true climax comes during one of Quenton’s workouts in preparation for the race. In this interval session, he runs 60 quarter-miles with Denton who then forces him to run the final 20 alone: “I know you can do this thing because I once did it myself,” Denton tells him. “When it was over I knew some very important things.” It is after the workout, and not the race, that Quenton achieves true growth of self-knowledge. “I know,” Quenton gasps afterward. “But it is a very hard thing to have to know.”

GENRE: Realistic Fiction

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Student Review: Dirt Bike Racer

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

dirtbikeracerImagine finding a mini dirt bike at the bottom of a lake and riding on it in a race. Would you expect to be lucky? That’s the question for 12-year old Ronald Baker when he races with a mini in Turtleback Hills of Ordell, New York. Dirt Bike Racer, is a sports book by Matt Christopher and finally answers the question is Ronald’s luck on the track about to run out?

When Ronald (also called Ron) found a mini dirt bike at the bottom of Pumpkin Head Lake, he repaired it with Tony and Mike, and then signed up to race. Ron won sixth, but vowed to beat Glen Garner, who won first place.

On the second heat, he got fourth place. Ron had improved, but Glen beat him again by winning third place.

Unfortunately for Ron, on his first cross-country race (different from the “heats”), he got a flat tire. Mr. Perkins, the old man, said,”Flats happen to the best of us.” Accordingly, Ron wasn’t discouraged.

On his final heat, not only did Ron get third place and improve, but was successful in beating Glen, who got finished fourth.

I enjoy the character Ronald. His confidence on the track really impressed me. In his own words, “Neither Mark LaVerne, nor his ‘pigeon’, Glen Garner, will ever scare me again.” But Tony and Mike’s willingness in helping Ron fix his bike also demonstrated true friendship.

I think Matt Christopher has a remarkable sports series for kids.

GENRE: Realistic Fiction

Minu Choi is a fourth grade student at the prestigious Legacy Christian Academy in Southern California. His favorite past time is playing with legos.

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