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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)
The critics' votes are in--Wrestling Sturbridge is a winner! Now available in rack-sized paperback.
Stuck in a small town where no one ever leaves and relegated by his wrestling coach to sit on the bench while his best friend becomes state champion, Ben decides he can't let his last high school wrestling season slip by without challenging his friend and the future.
Anyone even remotely curious about small-town America need look no further than this exemplary first novel. Wallace's clipped, gently sardonic prose captures it all, from the red-faced former jocks in the wrestling booster club, to the teens with nothing to do but drink (a lot) and drive in an endless loop through town, to the Saturday night polka party on public TV. Narrator Ben, a high school senior, doesn't want to be like his father and so many others in Sturbridge, Pa., who after graduating get a job at the cinder block plant. Seemingly his only alternative is to become a state wrestling champion and thus win an athletic scholarship. But his way is firmly blocked by his buddy Al, who reigns supreme in their weight class, and Ben is relegated to the ignominy of being Al's practice partner and a benchwarmer during tournaments. Enter Kim, a Puerto Rican track enthusiast transplanted from New Jersey. Despite their close relationship, Kim won't put up with Ben's self-pitying, defeatist attitude. Wallace isn't writing a sports fairy story, so Ben doesn't achieve his goal; much more believably, he feels like a winner because he finally tries with all his might. The sports angle makes this a great "guy's" book, while the gripping narrative and feisty heroine will appeal to young women, too. A real winner. Ages 12-17. (June)
More Reviews and RecommendationsRich 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.
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August 29, 2008: Wrestling Sturbridge was boring, stupid, and hard to understand. I hated it and I don't reccomend it to anyone.
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May 20, 2008: Wrestling Sturbridge By: This book is about a young boy who is on a wrestling team in a High School in a place called Sturbridge. The boy goes with the team every where they have a tournament and gets to wrestle but not a lot. The boy has a friend called Al. They have been best friends for a long time. Both boys are on the JV team. One tournament the boy gets to go in and wrestle one of his rivals from the other team. So about twenty minutes later the boy gets his rival down on the ground and pins him 1-2-3. So all of his buddies and family starts running towards him and lifts him up on their shoulders celebrating.