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Steve Moore (3)

Auteur de King of the Bench: No Fear!

Pour les autres auteurs qui s'appellent Steve Moore, voyez la page de désambigüisation.

9 oeuvres 121 utilisateurs 4 critiques

Œuvres de Steve Moore

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Steve is known as the King of the Bench. He is not offended by this. It is just a fact. His friends Joey and Carlos have other ideas and drag him off the bench to play for the Spiro T. Agnew JV soccer team, even though soccer doesn’t exactly make him jump for joy. He goes to a soccer camp and wonders if he will run away kicking and screaming or actually understand why they are all kicking and screaming. I would recommend this for anyone owning the others in the series. It is a great read like for fans of the diary of a wimpy kid and the dork diaries series’.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
SWONclear | Feb 1, 2019 |
This is a notebook novel, one of the countless spawned by the mighty machine of Wimpy Kid. This one has a sports focus - the main character is also purportedly the author. Steve is your average kid - he likes sports and has pretty good hand to eye coordination, but his feet - not so coordinated. Which is bad when soccer is the THE most popular sport in the world and he hates it. A fact which he inadvertently mentions to his friends, short and psychic Joey, enigmatic and weird Carlos, and Becky with the perfect smile.

Becky who also loves soccer.

Becky who now isn't speaking to him.

So, Steve braves bullies, humiliation, and signs up for the JV soccer team, just to prove to Becky that he's willing to learn about her beloved game. Then he finds himself on a bus to a soccer tournament, sprayed by a skunk, meeting the craziest best soccer player in the world, and, just maybe, learning to actually... like soccer?

The book is illustrated throughout with scratchy black and white cartoons which reminded me a little of Gary Larson or Stephen Pastis' style (Pastis blurbed the book). It has the requisite bodily humor jokes, weird best friends, and (sort of) triumph of the underdog. At least Becky is talking to him again (or will be, after he stops smelling of skunk).

There's a fair amount of soccer talk in here - sports aren't a huge deal around here, not as much as, say, football in Texas, but I do get a lot of requests for soccer players, mostly from the Hispanic kids who are more familiar with the Brazilian and other teams. There's also the deprecatory tone of many of these notebook novels, where the kid kind of realizes he's on the outside and/or sometimes being a jerk, but just keeps going anyways. There is some diversity, but all secondary characters (Becky is a great soccer player, the celebrity player is from South America). While I personally didn't find it particularly funny, as I often tell kids humor is subjective!

Verdict: While I have a lot of Wimpy Kid, Big Nate, and Dork Diaries fans, my library kids won't necessarily pick up any book that's a notebook novel. They've largely turned up their noses at Timmy Failure, Classroom, Charlie Joe Jackson, and only some kids are Patterson fans. If you have diehard notebook novel fans or sports fiction enthusiasts, this would be a fun addition to the collection.

ISBN: 9780062203342; Published March 2018 by HarperCollins; Borrowed from another library in my consortium
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JeanLittleLibrary | Nov 3, 2018 |
I've noticed that lately I've been giving top ratings to hilarious, reluctant reader books with over-the- top sarcasm and mega loads of illustrations. The kids who gravitate to these books aren't ones you would call academic, but I've always thought quick-witted people are super smart. It takes intelligence to draw connections between two things, which humor writers do constantly. Newbery winners do this too, but in a more subtle, natural, figurative kind of way.

King of the Bench is hilarious. Steve has no athletic ability, but he wants to make his dad happy, so he tries out for his school's baseball team. The Spiro T. Agnew Middle School Plumbers. Humor books are famous for tangents and Steve frequently goes off on tangents to explain things like the fact that his school is named after a vice-president who was forced to resign or that his coach is always digging wax out of his ear, thus the nickname Coach Earwax.

Steve's problem begins when a kid gets beaned on the nose at tryouts and blood gushes everywhere. Steve makes the team, but now he's afraid of getting beaned at bat, so the coach benches him. Steve is ok with this. His dad is proud, and he doesn't have to worry about making a fool of himself. Of course, sports books always have their redemption moment, and Steve will get his chance to redeem himself whether he wants to or not.

This book will be a hit with kids who like Big Nate type books and play sports. There are more books coming out in this series and I plan to buy them all.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
valorrmac | 1 autre critique | Sep 21, 2018 |
Described in assignment
 
Signalé
Saradub | 1 autre critique | Mar 16, 2018 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Membres
121
Popularité
#164,307
Évaluation
½ 3.3
Critiques
4
ISBN
104
Langues
2

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