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* 2014 Newbery Honor ¼ö»óÀÛ
* 2014 A National Parenting Publications Award ¼ö»óÀÛ
* 2014 IRA Teachers' Choices
* 2014 A BookPage Best Children¡¯s Book
* 2014 An IRA Children¡¯s and Young Adults¡¯ Choice
* 2014 An ABC New Voices Pick
* 2014 A Junior Library Guild Selection
* 2014 ALA Notable Children's Book
* 2015 Kentucky Bluegrass Award Nominee
* 2014 Children's Book Committee at Bank Street College Children's Book of the Year
* 2015 Vermont Dorothy Canfield Fischer Book Award Nominee
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Hardcover: 240 pages
Publisher: Delacorte Books for Young Readers (May 14, 2013)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0385742444
ISBN-13: 978-0385742443
Ã¥ Å©±â: 21.7 cm x 14.5 cm
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Book Description
This Newbery Honor winner is perfect for fans of To Kill a Mockingbird, The King¡¯s Speech, and The Help. A boy who stutters comes of age in the segregated South, during the summer that changes his life.
Little Man throws the meanest fastball in town. But talking is a whole different ball game. He can barely say a word without stuttering - not even his own name. So when he takes over his best friend¡¯s paper route for the month of July, he¡¯s not exactly looking forward to interacting with the customers. But it¡¯s the neighborhood junkman, a bully and thief, who stirs up real trouble in Little Man¡¯s life.
School Library Journal
After an overthrown baseball busts his best friend's lip, 11-year-old Victor Vollmer takes over the boy's paper route. This is a particularly daunting task for the able-armed Victor, as he has a prominent stutter that embarrasses him and causes him to generally withdraw from the world. Through the paper route he meets a number of people, gains a much-needed sense of self and community, and has a life-threatening showdown with a local cart man. The story follows the boy's 1959 Memphis summer with a slow but satisfying pace that builds to a storm of violence. The first-person narrative is told in small, powerful block paragraphs without commas, which the stuttering narrator loathes. Vawter portrays a protagonist so true to a disability that one cannot help but empathize with the difficult world of a stutterer. Yet, Victor's story has much broader appeal as the boy begins to mature and redefine his relationship with his parents, think about his aspirations for the future, and explore his budding spirituality. The deliberate pacing and unique narration make Paperboy a memorable coming-of-age novel.
Booklist *Starred Review*
It¡¯s hot in Memphis during the summer of 1959 - in all kinds of ways. Things heat up for the book¡¯s 11-year-old narrator when he takes over his pal Rat¡¯s paper route; meeting new people is a horror for the boy because he stutters. He only really feels comfortable with Rat and Mam, the African American maid who takes care of him when his parents are away, which is often. But being the paperboy forces him to engage in the world and to ask for payments from customers, like pretty, hard-drinking Mrs. Worthington and Mr. Spiro, who gives the boy the confidence to voice his questions and then offers answers that - wondrously - elicit more questions. Others intrude on his life as well. In a shocking scene, Ara T, the dangerous, disturbing junk man tries to take something precious from the boy. In some ways, the story is a set piece, albeit a very good one: the well-crafted characters, hot Southern summer, and coming-of-age events are reminiscent of To Kill a Mockingbird. But this has added dimension in the way it brilliantly gets readers inside the head of a boy who stutters. First-time author Vawter has lived this story, so he is able to write movingly about what it¡¯s like to have words exploding in your head with no reasonable exit. This paperboy is a fighter, and his hope fortifies and satisfies in equal measure. |
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