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Window Boy

par Andrea White

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Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Crazy about basketball, twelve-year-old Sam Davis longs to be a part of the team that practices outside his window. But Sam's different from the other boys: he has cerebral palsy. Confined to a wheelchair, Sam's never touched a basketball. He's never even been to school. It's 1968, and only a few enlightened educators understand that a boy like Sam might have a brain that's as good as anybody else's. When the Stirling Junior High principal finally agrees to let Sam enter sixth grade, Sam gets his chance to move into the world beyond his window. All Sam knows about school, he's learned from Miss Perkins, the English lady who cleans his apartment. Perkins spends hours reading to Sam about Winston Churchill. Sam knows so much about him that Winnie- as they call him-starts talking to Sam in his head. At first, Sam doesn't understand what a boy in a wheelchair has in common with one of the world's greatest leaders, but Winnie says, Don't you see Sam? I was just a boy once, too. A boy nobody believed in. Junior High school can be difficult, not just for boys in wheelchairs. Sam learns that if he can't make it work at Stirling, there are places for boys like him. When the challenges seem overwhelming, Winnie reminds Sam, Our lives are what we choose to make of them. If Sam can only believe in Winnie, he'll finally be part of the team-a window boy no longer.… (plus d'informations)
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This book is about a young boy named Sam who has Cerebral Palsy, who ends up going to school. He and his caretaker attend school after much pleading on the caretakers end. Sam loves basketball and watches people from his window at home play basketball at the courts across his house. He longs to talk to one of the boys that play at the courts, and is excited to learn that he is in the same class as him. After a series of events, Sam is crowned the basketball coach and has friends around him.
  arilove808 | Apr 4, 2018 |
Sam is a boy in the late sixties with cerebral palsy, which prevents him from walking and speaking most of the time, and also prevents him from entering school until the 6th grade. With his beloved nurse, Ms. Perkins, by his side, and the wise words of his favorite prime minister, Winston Churchill, Sam overcomes many challenges in school, making new friends and helping the basketball team improve their game.
  LivCerna | Mar 4, 2018 |
A young boy named Sam has a disease called Cerebral Palsy. He spends a lot of his time learning about Winston Churchill, and even has conversations with him in his mind. He also spends most of his days looking out his window and watching the basketball court outside. He finally gets to go to school and on his first day people react to him being there in ways Sam doesn't like. As time goes on he makes a friend named Ann, and watches the basketball team at recess. His mom is running out of money so she decides to put him in an institution for a while. There he struggles with other kids and his own inner thoughts, but his caregiver, Miss Perkins, goes to help him. After some time his mom comes back and sees that it is not a good place for Sam and she gets a new apartment for them to live. At school Sam wins a National essay competition about Winston Churchill and helps the basketball team to a tournament victory. ( )
  meghanhoward | Feb 1, 2018 |
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Juvenile Fiction. Juvenile Literature. Crazy about basketball, twelve-year-old Sam Davis longs to be a part of the team that practices outside his window. But Sam's different from the other boys: he has cerebral palsy. Confined to a wheelchair, Sam's never touched a basketball. He's never even been to school. It's 1968, and only a few enlightened educators understand that a boy like Sam might have a brain that's as good as anybody else's. When the Stirling Junior High principal finally agrees to let Sam enter sixth grade, Sam gets his chance to move into the world beyond his window. All Sam knows about school, he's learned from Miss Perkins, the English lady who cleans his apartment. Perkins spends hours reading to Sam about Winston Churchill. Sam knows so much about him that Winnie- as they call him-starts talking to Sam in his head. At first, Sam doesn't understand what a boy in a wheelchair has in common with one of the world's greatest leaders, but Winnie says, Don't you see Sam? I was just a boy once, too. A boy nobody believed in. Junior High school can be difficult, not just for boys in wheelchairs. Sam learns that if he can't make it work at Stirling, there are places for boys like him. When the challenges seem overwhelming, Winnie reminds Sam, Our lives are what we choose to make of them. If Sam can only believe in Winnie, he'll finally be part of the team-a window boy no longer.

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