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    Hoops by Walter Dean Myers, Walter Dean Myers

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)

    • Age Range: Young Adult
    • Pub. Date: March 1983
    • 192pp
    • Sales Rank: 10,033
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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: March 1983
      • Publisher: Random House Children's Books
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 192pp
      • Sales Rank: 10,033
      • Age Range: Young Adult
      • Lexile: 740L 

      Synopsis

      All eyes are on seventeen-year-old Lonnie Jackson while he practices with his team for a city-wide basketball Tournament of Champions. His coach, Cal, knows Lonnie has what it takes to be a pro-basketball player, but warns him about giving in to the pressure. Cal knows because he, too, once had the chance--but sold out.



      As the Tournament nears, Lonnie learns that some heavy bettors want Cal to keep him on the bench so that the team will lose the championship. As the last seconds of the game tick away Lonnie and Cal must make a decision. Are they eilling to blow the chance of a lifetime?

      Annotation

      A teenage basketball player from Harlem is befriended by a former professional player who, after being forced to quit because of a point shaving scandal, hopes to prevent other young athletes from repeating his mistake.

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      Biography

      Born in Marinsburg, West Virginia in 1937, Walter Dean Myers is one of the premier authors of books for children. His mother died very early in his life–an event that propelled him into experiences that later influenced him to write. It was difficult for Myers' father to raise eight children alone, and eventually, a nearby couple, Herbert and Florence Dean, took in three-year old Walter and moved to Harlem, New York. "Harlem became my home and the place where my first impressions of the world were set," says Myers.
       
      As a child, Myers went to school in his neighborhood and attended bible school almost every day of the week. Myers had a speech impediment which made communicating difficult for him, and often found himself in fights, defending himself against kids who taunted him. After a while, one of this teachers suggested to his class that they could write something to read aloud. Young Myers began writing poetry to give voice to his thoughts and feelings, and at age sixteen, won a prize in an essay contest and a set of encyclopedias for a long narrative poem. Later, his father bought him a used typewriter, which he used to churn out a seemingly endless stream of stories.
       
      Along with the many things he was discovering about himself, Myers was also learning how to survive. One day he had the courage to break up a fight between three gang members and a kid who had just moved into the neighborhood. He became a marked man–and felt his life was in danger.
       
      For example, once, he was sitting in the tree in Morningside Park, across from the building he lived in, reading O'Neill's Mourning Becomes Electra, when some gang membersspotted him and surrounded the tree. Myers jumped to the ground, flashed a stiletto in order to fend them off, and made a mad dash for his building. He escaped, but he never forgot the incident. Later he enlisted in the army, got married, had a child, went through a turbulent creative struggle, got divorced, got married again–and during all of this, kept writing, whether his work pleased him or not.
       
      But Walter Dean Myers' life is not the story of a tormented, embittered artist. Rather it is the story of a gifted, complex person committed to sharing that gift with young readers. Myers' stories and novels paint a powerful picture of the pressures of growing up on big city streets. Yet, he emphasizes close relationships, trust, and personal growth.
       
      It seems that one of Myers' greatest struggles was to understand what type of writer he wanted to be. As the years passed and his books became more and more popular, Walter Dean Myers came to believe that his work filled a void for African American youths who yearned for positive reading experiences and role models. He frequently writes about children who share similar economic and ethnic situations with his own childhood. "But my situation as a parent did not mirror that of my childhood," he says. "While my parents were quite poor, my children are thoroughly entrenched in the middle class experience. To them African prints go well with designer jeans, pizzas go down easier to a reggae beat, and shopping malls are an unmistakable part of their culture."
       
      It is clear that Myers' understanding of both the world he was raised in and the world of his children allows him to bring an authority to his work that resonates with his young readers. It is one of many attributes that has made him one of the most important children's and young adult authors writing today. Among his many honors are two Newbery Honor books for Scorpions and Somewhere in the Darkness. He is also a two-time recipient of the Coretta Scott King Award for Now Is Your Time! and Fallen Angels. In addition, Myers has received the Margaret A. Edwards Award for his contribution to young adult literature.
       
      Myers' novel, Darnell Rock Reporting, is a warm and humorous story about thirteen-year-old Darnell Rock–a boy who works on his school newspaper. The book is sure to appeal to reluctant readers. Myers' recent picture book, How Mr. Monkey Saw the Whole World, is a cautionary fable about a watchful monkey who sees that a greedy buzzard gets his comeuppance.
       
      Myer’s recent work, 145th Street: Short Stories (A Boston Globe-Horn Book Honor Book) captures the heartbeat of one memorable block in Harlem, New York. These powerful, often gripping stories range from humor and celebration to terror and grief.
       
      Walter Dean Myers, the father of three grown children, lives with his wife in Jersey City, New Jersey.
       
       
       


      From the Trade Paperback edition.

      Customer Reviews

      Hoops By Walter Dean Myersby Bradley33

      Reader Rating:
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      March 26, 2009: Hoops

      Walter Dean Myers

      Lonnie Jackson is a seventeen-year old boy from Harlem, New York with basketball on his mind. The major theme of this book is "If you really wanted it, Go out and get it". When you get more into the book Lonnie grows out of his kid age and is getting ready to turn into a grown man, making his own decisions. Lonnie is a strong character that is waiting on his opportunities to make it the NBA. The only thing holding him back is the pressure between basketball and life. Cal, Lonnie's basketball coach once had a chance to be in the NBA but he got tied up in betting on the games he was playing. Cal really wants Lonnie to make further than he did in the basketball game. So he is showing him the right and wrong things to do in life and in basketball. The major conflict of the book is how Lonnie will make it to the good life of the NBA. Will he make it or not? This book has a lot of good basketball talk and does a really good job of describing the surroundings in the city of Harlem.

      Understand what's going on in this book is fairly easy. Just pay attention to the book and understand what's going on and it'll keep you on the edge of your seat. Since the book was written in first person it doesn't really change the perspective of the book. Hoops could have been written in any other point of view and still wouldn't be able to change the excitement of the book. The way that Walter Dean Myers shows intensity of the basketball games in this book is just like all his other books, exciting and it'll keep you on the edge of you seat. Walter Dean Myers likes to show all the excitement at once then slows it down and bring the excitement back up to the highest point.

      The things that Walter Dean Myers did that I liked was how he keep me wondering what's going to happen in the next chapter and wondering if the book was a little different if the ending would've been the same. Lonnie doesn't really know what he is going to get himself into and since Cal was a basketball player and threw all his skills away then Cal can be there for Lonnie so he doesn't make that mistake like he did. That shows how much of a supporting character Cal is to Lonnie.

      Hoops by Walter Dean Myers was a really good book and I would recommend it to all teens boys that like sports and also girls but not to all girls. I give this book a thumbs up but I give Walter Dean Myers two thumbs up for doing his best at writing books.

      Hoopsby Anonymous

      Reader Rating:
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      October 09, 2008: Lonnie Jackson is a young man from Harlem. Basketball is a big part of his life and he always stands up for what he believes in. During this book the main character grows up and learns to act more like a man than a kid. Along with the subplots and characters, the dialect is authentic to the mid 70s. Young adults will enjoy this book because they can relate to some of the things Lonnie goes through. Walter Dean Myers showed his background when writing this book. The vocabulary at some times can be hard to understand because of the Ebonics he uses, but overall the vocabulary is fairly good. The story stays intense it doesn?t get as dull and there are many surprises. The character s is mostly serious but they have their own personality and the blend together well. The setting is in Harlem and the people and places seem authentic. This book favors the teenage crowd but if adults need a recreation book this can certainly be that. Children that don?t have over a 7th grade reading level should not read this book because of the dialect and mild violence. All-in-all, this is a book I hope many read and enjoy.


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