The Off Season by Catherine Murdock

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    (Hardcover)

    Details from Seller

    • ISBN: 0618686959
    • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    • Pub. Date: June 2007
    • Condition:

    Comments from the Seller: New, unread, unused and in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages.

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    Synopsis

    Life is looking up for D.J. Schwenk. She’s in eleventh grade, finally. After a rocky summer, she’s reconnecting in a big way with her best friend, Amber. She’s got kind of a thing going with Brian Nelson, who’s cute and popular and smart but seems to like her anyway. And then there’s the fact she’s starting for the Red Bend High School football team—the first girl linebacker in northern Wisconsin, probably. Which just shows you can’t predict the future. As autumn progresses, D.J. struggles to understand Amber, Schwenk Farm, her relationship with Brian, and most of all her family. As a whole herd of trouble comes her way, she discovers she’s a lot stronger than she—or anyone—ever thought.

    This hilarious, heartbreaking and triumphant sequel to the critically acclaimed Dairy Queen takes D.J. and all the Schwenks from Labor Day to a Thanksgiving football game that you will never forget.

    Children's Literature

    D.J. Schwenk has a pretty good thing going. She is on the football team at her high school, has a boyfriend (sort of), and is reconnecting with her best friend. Then things start to unravel. First she has to choose between football and basketball in order to secure a scholarship. Then her boyfriend starts avoiding her. But those issues become minor when her quarterback brother is seriously injured in a college football game. Her parents are unable to travel, and she has to be the one to go to him in the hospital. There she realizes how strong she really is. D.J. is a wonderful character. She is athletic and strong, the opposite of the way young women are usually presented on the TV and in a lot of literature. Girls who liked her in the first book, Dairy Queen, will love her in this one. The author deftly combines large scale crisis, a brother who is paralyzed, with the small details that teens normally deal with, such as what to do when her boyfriend does not call. She is a realistic character in a realistic setting. Girls, especially those that are often accused of being tomboys, will love seeing themselves in D.J. Reviewer: Heather Robertson Mason

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    Biography

    Catherine Gilbert Murdock lives in Philadelphia with her husband and two children. For more information please visit www.catherinemurdock.com.

    Customer Reviews

    Pretty Goodby Awesomeness1

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    04/14/2009: This one was better than the first one. It was more realistic with less of a Cinderella feel, and DJ really proved herself to be a dynamic character. This story to me was much more interesting. However, the writing style remained poor. I could barely read some sentences because the sentence structure was absolutely horrible. I swear there are one or two sentences that could qualify as the World's Longest Run-On. It also was refreshing to read a teenage book without cussing and sex on every page.

    I Also Recommend: Peaches (Peaches Series #1), Prom, The Truth about Forever, Twisted, Lock and Key.

    Reviewed by Randstostipher "tallnlankyrn" Nguyen for TeensReadToo.comby TeensReadToo

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    11/12/2008: When we last left D.J. Schwenk in DAIRY QUEEN, she was trying to cope with her family's problems, the inclusion of Brian into her life, and surviving being on the Red Bend football team. You know, when most people thought girls shouldn't be on the team.

    At first it seemed like she had found solutions to all of those problems. But all good things must come to an end, whether D.J. likes it or not.

    With Brian being her sort of boyfriend, D.J. is pretty ecstatic, since not only is he hot and athletic, he is her first real boyfriend. But it sort of creates a problem since D.J. isn't so sure where there relationship is heading or if it is going at all. Brian isn't too sure, either, since it seems like D.J. would rather spend time with her family then hang out with him.

    Her friend, Amber, is starting to get noticed, for all the wrong reasons, though. Now known as the girl with a girlfriend, Amber is beginning to change, once again, right in front of D.J.'s eyes, all because people in their town don't approve of that kind of relationship.

    D.J.'s family is beginning to resolve their relationship problems. But when they think all is well, their financial problems come into play. Not only that, but D.J. herself and her brother, Win, suffer injuries that just might put an end to what they love the most.

    While trying to control all of her problems, D.J. must be able to find her strength, the one that got her through her summer and the one that helped her get on the football team.

    Once again, D.J. shines as a heroine who shows that everyone has the ability to get over any obstacle thrown their way.


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