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Shots on Goal

Rich Wallace

$15.99

Paperback

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English
Alfred A. Knopf
13 October 1998
With bright, action-oriented new paperback covers, Rich Wallace's four books now have a cohesive look, and we hope to increase his share of the YA sports market. His books deliver--they're both commercial and literary--and Wallace stands poised to become a premier name in the YA world, particularly in the arena of sports writing for teenaged guys. His prose is spare and accessible--an excellent choice for reluctant readers.

It's soccer season, and sophomore Bones Austin and his team are struggling to make it to the district play-offs--against all odds. To make matters worse, Bones has a crush on the girlfriend of his best friend, Joey. Bones and Joey are forced to learn a little something about teamwork, even when hard times seem to be tearing them apart. Rich Wallace returns to Sturbridge, Pennsylvania, in his stunning follow-up to Wreslting Strubirdge, in Knopf Paperback for the first time.
By:  
Imprint:   Alfred A. Knopf
Country of Publication:   United States
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 171mm,  Width: 108mm,  Spine: 9mm
Weight:   91g
ISBN:   9780679886716
ISBN 10:   0679886710
Pages:   160
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   11-16
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Young adult ,  English as a second language ,  Preschool (0-5)
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Rich Wallace lives in Wayne County, Pennsylvania. He has worked as a sportswriter and news editor, and is now the coordinating editor of Highlights for Children magazine. He coaches his sons' youth sports teams year-round, including soccer, basketball, and track and field.

Reviews for Shots on Goal

Wallace flattens the sophomore jinx in this taut, present-tense tale of an underdog high-school soccer team battling internal dissension, set in the same Pennsylvania town as his strong debut, Wrestling Sturbridge (1996). Friends and soccer nuts since grade school, Barry and Joey bring new life to a team that was 2-11-1 last year, but their relationship is undergoing a power shift. Joey's need to dominate is getting on Barry's nerves, on the field - where his reluctance to pass the ball is costing games - and off: He cuts in on Barry's pursuit of Shannon, a luscious schoolmate. The more the buddies drift apart, though, the harder Joey plays, and through a series of exciting games he takes the team to a climactic try at the local league championship. Meanwhile, Barry arranges to be alone with Shannon at a party, and Joey retaliates by getting him fired from the inn where they both work. The friends' rift is healed by an exchange of knuckles and twin attacks of common sense. Wallace's teenage characters - all involved in athletics - are drawn from life and mostly likable; adults stay in the background, but Barry enjoys an unusually close relationship with his savvy college-age brother, Tommy, a font of good advice. Thanks in part to occasional descriptive asides, Sturbridge takes on a distinctive character, too: It's a small, ethnically diverse, sports-focused town, limited in its opportunities but not as confining as it seemed in the previous book. Engrossing fare. (Kirkus Reviews)


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