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Small Steps
Couverture de Small Steps
Small Steps
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SMALL STEPS is a contemporary young adult novel from Louis Sachar, the New York Times bestselling author of the Newbery Award–winning smash hit phenomenon book and movie/DVD sensation Holes, and The Cardturner.
 Two years after being released from Camp Green Lake, Armpit is home in Austin, Texas, trying to turn his life around. But it's hard when you have a record and everyone expects the worst from you. The only person who believes in Armpit is Ginny, his ten-year-old disabled neighbor. Together, they are learning to take small steps.
 Armpit seems to be on the right path until X-Ray, a buddy from Camp Green Lake, comes up with a get-rich-quick scheme. X-Ray's plan leads to a chance encounter with teen pop sensation Kaira DeLeon, the Beyoncé of her time, and suddenly Armpit's life spins out of control. Only one thing is certain: he'll never be the same again.
 Combining his signature wit with a unique blend of adventure and deeply felt characters, Sachar explores issues of race, the nature of celebrity, the invisible connections that shape a person's life, and what it takes to stay the course. Doing the right thing is never a wrong choice—but always a small step in right direction.

SMALL STEPS is a contemporary young adult novel from Louis Sachar, the New York Times bestselling author of the Newbery Award–winning smash hit phenomenon book and movie/DVD sensation Holes, and The Cardturner.
 Two years after being released from Camp Green Lake, Armpit is home in Austin, Texas, trying to turn his life around. But it's hard when you have a record and everyone expects the worst from you. The only person who believes in Armpit is Ginny, his ten-year-old disabled neighbor. Together, they are learning to take small steps.
 Armpit seems to be on the right path until X-Ray, a buddy from Camp Green Lake, comes up with a get-rich-quick scheme. X-Ray's plan leads to a chance encounter with teen pop sensation Kaira DeLeon, the Beyoncé of her time, and suddenly Armpit's life spins out of control. Only one thing is certain: he'll never be the same again.
 Combining his signature wit with a unique blend of adventure and deeply felt characters, Sachar explores issues of race, the nature of celebrity, the invisible connections that shape a person's life, and what it takes to stay the course. Doing the right thing is never a wrong choice—but always a small step in right direction.

Formats disponibles-
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB eBook
Langues:-
Copies-
  • Disponible:
    1
  • Copies de la bibliothèque:
    1
Niveaux-
  • Niveau ATOS:
    4.2
  • Lexile Measure:
    690
  • Niveau d'intérêt:
    MG
  • Difficulté du texte:
    2 - 3


 
Prix remportés-
Extraits-
  • Chapter One A rusted Honda Civic drove noisily down the street and parked across from the mayor’s house. Armpit had finished digging his trench and was attaching PVC pipe. The mayor had gone back inside.

    The driver-side door had been bashed in, and it would have cost more to fix than the car was worth. The driver had to work his way over the stick shift and then exit on the passenger side.

    The personalized license plate read: X RAY.

    “Armpit!” X-Ray shouted as he crossed the street. “Armpit!”

    The guys at work didn’t know him by that name, but if he didn’t say something X-Ray would just keep on shouting. Better to answer and shut him up.

    “Hey,” he called back.

    “Man, you’re really sweating,” X-Ray said as he came near.

    “Yeah, well, you’d sweat too if you were digging.”

    “I’ve already dug enough dirt to last one lifetime,” said X-Ray.

    They had met each other at Camp Green Lake.

    “Look, don’t call me Armpit around other people, all right?” Armpit said.

    “But that’s your name, dawg. You should never be ashamed of who you are.”

    X-Ray had the kind of smile that kept you from hating him no matter how annoying he was. He was skinny and wore glasses, which were now covered with clip-on shades.

    He picked up Armpit’s shovel. “Different shape.”

    “Yeah, it’s for digging trenches, not holes.”

    X-Ray studied it awhile. “Seems like it would be harder to dig with. No leverage.” He let it drop. “So you must be making a ton of money.”

    Armpit shrugged. “I’m doing all right.”

    “A ton of money,” X-Ray repeated.

    Armpit felt uncomfortable talking about money with X-Ray.

    “So really, how much you got saved up so far?”

    “I don’t know. Not that much.”

    He knew exactly how much he had. Eight hundred and fifty-seven dollars. He hoped to break a thousand with his next paycheck.

    “Got to be at least a thousand,” said X-Ray. “You’ve been working for three months.”

    “Just part-time.”

    Besides working, Armpit was also taking two classes in summer school. He had to make up for all the schooling he’d missed while at Green Lake.

    “And they take out for taxes and stuff, so really I don’t take home all that much.”

    “Eight hundred?”

    “I don’t know, maybe.”

    “The reason I’m asking,” X-Ray said, “the reason I’m asking is I got a business proposition for you. How would you like to double your money in less than two weeks?”

    Armpit smiled as he shook his head. “I don’t think so.”

    “I just need six hundred dollars. Double your money, guaranteed. And I won’t be taking out any taxes.”

    “Look, things are going all right for me right now, and I just want to keep it all cool.”

    “Don’t you even want to hear me out?”

    “Not really.”

    “It’s not against the law,” X-Ray assured him. “I checked.”

    “Yeah, you didn’t think selling little bags of parsley for fifty dollars an ounce was against the law either.”

    “Hey, it’s not my fault what people think they’re buying. How is that my fault? Am I supposed to be a mind reader?”

    X-Ray had been sent to Camp Green Lake for selling...
Au sujet de l’auteur-
  • Louis Sachar is the author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Holes, which won the Newbery Medal, the National Book Award, and the Christopher Award, as well as Stanley Yelnats' Survival to Camp Green Lake; Small Steps, winner of the Schneider Family Book Award; and The Cardturner, a Publishers Weekly Best Book, a Parents' Choice Gold Award recipient, and an ALA-YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults Book. His books for younger readers include There's a Boy in the Girls' Bathroom, The Boy Who Lost His Face, Dogs Don't Tell Jokes, and the Marvin Redpost series, among many others.

Critiques-
  • Publisher's Weekly

    November 14, 2005
    This companion to Holes
    follows a former detainee at Camp Green Lake Juvenile Correctional Facility (where he was sent after a spilled-popcorn-mishap-turned brawl at a cinema), in his life on the outside. Armpit now works for a landscape company while he finishes up high school. The earnest teen is back on track, in no small part due to the mutually restorative friendship he has forged with Ginny, a 10-year-old neighbor born with cerebral palsy. This bright, perceptive girl has given Armpit a great deal ("For the first time in his life, there was someone who looked up to him, who cared about him") and has "released him from his anger." X-Ray, another Camp Green Lake alum, nearly derails Armpit's new life when he convinces Armpit to buy into a ticket-scalping scheme for a concert by teen rock star Kaira—a scheme that goes horribly awry. In a rather contrived plot twist, Armpit winds up meeting Kaira who then falls for Armpit—and he for her. Even less likely is the novel's final, sensational melodrama (Kaira's evil stepfather and manager futilely tries to murder her and frame Armpit for the crime). Sachar does inject some credible intrigue here (notably surrounding the potential legal consequences of Armpit's and X-Ray's involvement in the ticket scam) and effectively emphasizes the importance of taking "small steps." Unfortunately, although Armpit's steady small steps result in some big strides, this is a disappointingly flat spin-off of Sachar's resonant Newbery winner. Ages 10-up.

  • School Library Journal

    January 1, 2006
    Gr 5-8 -This sequel to "Holes" (Farrar, 1998) focuses on Armpit, an African-American former resident of Tent D at Camp Green Lake. It's two years after his release, and the 16-year-old is still digging holes, although now getting paid for it, working for a landscaper in his hometown of Austin, TX. He's trying to turn his life around, knowing that everyone expects the worst of him and that he must take small steps to keep moving forward. When X-Ray, his friend and fellow former detainee at the juvenile detention center, comes up with a get-rich-quick scheme involving scalping tickets to a concert by teenage pop star Kaira DeLeon, Armpit fronts X-Ray the money. He takes his best friend and neighbor, Ginny, a 10-year-old with cerebral palsy, to the concert and ends up meeting Kaira, getting romantically involved, and finally becoming a hero by saving her life when her stepfather tries to kill her and frame him. "Small Steps" has a completely different tone than "Holes". It lacks the bizarre landscape, the magical realism, the tall-tale quality, and the heavy irony. Yet, there is still much humor, social commentary, and a great deal of poignancy. Armpit's relationship with Ginny, the first person to care for him, look up to him, and give his life meaning, is a compassionate one. Like "Holes", "Small Steps" is a story of redemption, of the triumph of the human spirit, of self-sacrifice, and of doing the right thing. Sachar is a master storyteller who creates memorable characters." -Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME"

    Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

  • Booklist

    Starred review from January 1, 2006
    Gr. 5-8. In rougher days, Armpit, named for an ill-placed scorpion bite, bullied a new member of his work-camp team. That kid was Stanley Yelnats, whose travails in " Holes" earned Sachar a 1998 Newbery Medal and National Book Award. Though Armpit is now 17, the tone of his experiences remains squarely middle-grade, and like Stanley, he proves an appealing, hapless character buffeted by others' schemes and shouldering the burdens of personal history--in this case, the bruisingly real challenges facing an African American teenager with a criminal history. Armpit takes his counselor's suggestions seriously ("Just take small steps and keep moving forward"), but he nonetheless becomes entangled in returning character X-Ray's concert ticket-scalping enterprise, resulting in a serendipitous meeting with a bubble-gum pop star and an awkward role in a police investigation. This is both less experimental and less streamlined than " Holes"; " "Armpit's bond with a girl with cerebral palsy, for instance, often seems too clearly intended to reveal his soft heart. Even so, " Holes "fans will be thrilled by the tightening of the plot elements to a single, suspenseful point, and they will eagerly follow the sometimes stumbling, sometimes sprinting progress of Sachar's fallible yet heroic protagonist. To learn more about the author's decision to mine " Holes "for new inspiration, see the adjacent "Story behind the Story" feature.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2006, American Library Association.)

  • Publisher's Weekly

    Starred review from February 27, 2006
    Though Sachar's companion to Holes
    isn't as intricately crafted as that Newbery winner, McClarin's multi-layered reading helps the author's words shine on this audiobook that improves upon the print reading experience. The accomplished actor brings to his characterizations a sassy energy and verisimilitude that injects Sachar's dialogue and descriptions with some memorable zing. The story picks up with 16-year-old Armpit, one of the kids who served time at juvenile detention center Camp Greenlake with Stanley Yelnats, two years after their release. Armpit has been taking the titular small steps to a respectable life—holding down a landscaping job, finishing school, being a protective best friend to a young neighbor with cerebral palsy. But when X-Ray, a fellow Camp Green Lake detainee, comes up with a risky get-rich-quick ticket-scalping scheme, Armpit temporarily gets lured into taking a few steps backward. A contrived twist of plot has him appropriately righted again, saving the day (and a teen pop star). Listeners will no doubt compare this to its quirkier, more dream-like predecessor, but will be entertained by McClarin's vibrant work on this detour from Green Lake. Ages 12-up.

  • The Horn Book

    July 1, 2006
    In this sequel, of sorts, to "Holes", Armpit and X-Ray, Stanley Yelnats's fellow Camp Green Lake inmates, attempt to make their way in the world after being sprung. Armpit has a job and wants to keep his nose clean, but perennial hustler X-Ray talks him into a ticket-scalping scheme. The characterization is stereotypical, the plotting formulaic, and the crime-doesn't-pay theme is shopworn.

    (Copyright 2006 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

  • Detroit Free-Press "Sachar's touch is as deft as ever and the book is a page-turner."
  • USA Today "Louis Sachar is magic to the toughest circle of critics: librarians, children's booksellers, teachers--and, most of all, kids."
  • Dallas Morning News "Mr. Sachar's gentle but surefire approach nails down challenging issues such as racism, teen romance and drugs."
  • BookPage "Part of what makes Small Steps so believable and appealing is that its characters do have insecurities, and they aren't ashamed to let them show."
  • School Library Journal "Sachar is a master storyteller who creates memorable characters."
  • Time Out New York Kids "Cleverly wrought...heartwarming, witty and suspenseful."
  • Los Angeles Times "Sachar has a talent for creating realistic relationships between unlikely friends. Although that's a staple device of children's literature, it often works by drawing on clichés. Sachar's characters, though, are never stereotypes, but always vividly alive."
  • New York Times "His prose is clear and relaxed, and funny in a low-key, observant way."
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    Random House Children's Books
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