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Mudville

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Welcome to Moundville, where it’s been raining for longer than Roy McGuire has been alive. Most people say the town is cursed—right in the middle of their big baseball game against rival town Sinister Bend, black clouds crept across the sky and it started to rain. That was 22 years ago . . . and it’s still pouring.
Baseball camp is over, and Roy knows he’s in for a dreary, soggy summer. But when he returns home, he finds a foster kid named Sturgis sprawled out on his couch. As if this isn’t weird enough, just a few days after Sturgis’s arrival, the sun comes out. No one can explain why the rain has finally stopped, but as far as Roy’s concerned, it’s time to play some baseball. It’s time to get a Moundville team together and finish what was started 22 years ago. It’s time for a rematch.
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    • School Library Journal

      March 1, 2009
      Gr 6-8-Vandals have crossed off the "o" and the "n" from the welcome sign outside the town of Moundville, and appropriately so, as it's been raining there continually for 22 years. Shortly after 12-year-old Roy discovers that he'll be sharing his bedroom with Sturgis, a scarred foster child about his age, the rain stops. What better opportunity to organize some baseball? In short order Roy finds himself captaining a ragtag team with himself as catcher, Sturgiswho has a wicked fastballon the mound, and position players of both sexes with wildly varying levels of skill. Scaletta takes nearly 80 pages to trot out his varied, well-drawn supporting cast and to fill in the town's history (a necessity: that rain interrupted an important baseball game that some adults, at least, still regard as unfinished business), but he balances perceptive explorations of personal and domestic issues perfectly with fine baseball talk and (eventually) absorbing play-by-play. Readers will cheer Roy on as he struggles to get his team in shape, clicks with a girl who is new to the game but turns out to have an unhittable natural screwball, and weathers some rough waters with moody Sturgis on the way to a rousing climax and a fitting resolution.John Peters, New York Public Library

      Copyright 2009 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2009
      Grades 4-8 Thosewho dont know an RBI from an ERA should look elsewhere, but for readers who eat and sleep sports, Scalettas debut is a gift from the baseball gods.It centers on 12-year-oldRoy McGuire, whose dreams of being a major leaguer are literally dampened by the fact that it has been raining in his hometownfor 22 years. The rain began during a contest with neighboring Sinister Bend, and it ends right after Roy returns from baseball camp to find a new foster brother, Sturgis, living at his house. Their relationship is rocky, but no one can deny Sturgis throwing power, and soon both boys are ramping up for an epic rematch between the two towns. Various asides and in-jokesmake clear that Scaletta is steeped not only in baseball lore but in such movie classics as The Natural and Field of Dreams, and that sort of larger-than-life magic realism lends his story the aura of a proper tall tale. Sports nuts, including reluctant readers, will sense they are in good hands with this one.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2009, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2009
      It's been raining in Moundville for twenty-two years. When the sun miraculously comes out, twelve-year-old baseball lover Roy assembles a scrappy team, including the surly and mysterious foster kid Roy's father invited into their home. As the "Mudville Nine" resurrect the soaked baseball field, they bring life to a whole town. Through his cast of memorable characters, Scaletta's baseball enthusiasm shines.

      (Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2009
      With references throughout to Ernest Thayer's "Casey at the Bat," this humorous and tender ode to baseball is as full of hope and suspense as Casey's famous turn at bat. It has been raining in the town of Moundville for twenty-two years; if that's not bad enough, nothing else in twelve-year-old Roy's life has given him much reason for optimism. His mother is absent save for drunken phone calls and the occasional postcard, and his father has invited a surly and mysterious foster kid, Sturgis, into their home. Roy knows that "you learn pretty young not to start planting sunflowers just because the rain lets up a little." But when the sun comes out and the rain miraculously stops, baseball-lover Roy assembles a scrappy team and coaches them to play Sinister Bend, Moundville's archrivals. Through a cast of memorable characters -- one kid is called Google because the only phrase he seems to know in English is "search me" -- Scaletta's enthusiasm for the sport shines. As the "Mudville Nine" resurrect the soaked baseball field, they bring life to a whole town. Though Roy's maturity at times seems beyond his age and experience, he is still an engaging narrator. Baseball fans or not, readers will sympathize with Sturgis for his painful past and root for Roy and his team to win the big game.

      (Copyright 2009 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:4.2
  • Lexile® Measure:680
  • Interest Level:4-8(MG)
  • Text Difficulty:2-3

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