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"This funny and poignant novel celebrates the power of writing to help young people make sense of their lives and unlock and confront their problems." โ School Library Journal (starred review) When MVP Kevin Boland gets the news that he has mono and wonโt be seeing a baseball field for a while, he suddenly finds himself scrawling a poem down the middle of a page in his journal. To get some help, he cops a poetry book from his dadโs den โ and before Kevin knows it, heโs writing in verse about stuff like, Will his jock friends give up on him? Whatโs the deal with girlfriends? Surprisingly enough, after his health improves, he keeps on writing, about the smart-talking Latina girl who thinks poets are cool, and even about his mother, whose death is a still-tender loss. Written in free verse with examples of several poetic forms slipped into the mix, including a sonnet, haiku, pastoral, and even a pantoum, this funny, poignant story by a master of dialogue is an English teacherโs dream โ sure to hook poetry lovers, baseball fanatics, mono recoverers, and everyone in between. Review: Great poetry (free verse) book for Middle School! - My son read this book to fulfill the reading requirements for school (one poetry book per quater). He was not thrilled that he had to read a poetry book but ended up liking this one very much. Since it is written in free-verse, it reads like a story rather than a poem. My son ended up reading the follow-up on this book as well: Shakespeare Makes the Playoffs. I recommend both books for any Middle School student! Review: Great book. Worked well for a student I tutored ... - Great book. Worked well for a student I tutored who was a reluctant reader with a high interest in baseball. I would recommend for 6-8 grades since the main character goes on a date.

| Best Sellers Rank | #1,059,672 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #61 in Teen & Young Adult Baseball & Softball Fiction #734 in Teen & Young Adult Fiction on Dating & Sex (Books) #953 in Children's Social Skills |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 73 Reviews |
A**R
Great poetry (free verse) book for Middle School!
My son read this book to fulfill the reading requirements for school (one poetry book per quater). He was not thrilled that he had to read a poetry book but ended up liking this one very much. Since it is written in free-verse, it reads like a story rather than a poem. My son ended up reading the follow-up on this book as well: Shakespeare Makes the Playoffs. I recommend both books for any Middle School student!
I**T
Great book. Worked well for a student I tutored ...
Great book. Worked well for a student I tutored who was a reluctant reader with a high interest in baseball. I would recommend for 6-8 grades since the main character goes on a date.
J**H
Four Stars
This was a clever way of telling a coming of age story.
E**N
This was a really cute book to use at the ...
This was a really cute book to use at the end of the year with my 6/7th graders when time is limited and they are hitting check-out mode!
A**R
Thankyou 4 everything
Perfect
R**I
Five Stars
love it
D**D
Book Review: LibraryLoungeLizard.com
As a teacher and librarian it is always awesome when authors write books that can be used in the classroom. There are great examples of all different types of poetry here: * Pantoum * Blank Verse * Haiku * Couplets * Sestina * Elegy and much more! Both books have wonderful, fluid story lines and it is awesome to watch Kevin (who strictly identified himself as an athlete) discover the magic of poetry. I recommend this book for any parent, teacher or librarian who wants to have books about poetry that are great for reluctant readers because lets face it, telling a kid that you have a great book about poetry for them will probably result in a look of slight terror. At a non-imposing 115 pages, Shakespeare Bats Cleanup is an easy sell because it has sports for the guys and a little romance for the girls. For those kids who enjoy a tear-jerker there is also plenty of poetry/story line about Kevin's mom who has passed away and how he and his father are dealing with it. I've recently dedicated a whole section in my library to books written in prose. You would be surprised how many there are out there and these two books will be part of the star attraction. Get these books now, seriously....with video games, TV, iPhones and everything else, kids are being exposed to things like poetry less and less. Who knows, maybe the kid you give these books to will be our next great poet!
F**S
Suitable verse novel for boys
I teach a verse-novel unit in my eighth-grade class, and I'm always looking out for those which appeal especially to my young men, since not all of them are ready for Beowulf. Helping them understand that poetry is as much their purview as anyone's can be surprisingly difficult considering how much of literary culture has historically been dominated by men. This story of a teenage baseball player who gets momo and has to distance himself from his sport - and then return to it - does a good job of making poetry a form of not-unmanly expression and also introducing different types of poems, ranging from couplets to villanelles. Hearty on boyhood topics: sports, girls, parents, peers.
G**N
Delightful
Delightful book, aimed at the young but meaningful across all ages
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