Stick
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
“Stick” is the best wide receiver in the history of his high school—the football seems magnetically drawn to his hands, hence his nickname.
Preston is an outcast, and his pipsqueak stature and nerdy social status couldn’t be further from a star athlete’s.
Stick puts on his football costume every week to make others—his teammates, his dad, everyone but himself—happy, but he’s fallen out of love with the sport and feels that he’s lost control of his future.
Preston puts on his homemade superhero costume every night to help others, too: to avenge his father’s murder, he’s determined to right the wrongs he sees in his neighborhood and regain control of the flawed world he sees around him.
A twist of fate brings this unlikely pair together in a friendship that is as odd as it is true. Each can see the other better than he can see himself, and in these unexpected reflections lies a chance for mutual redemption.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Brett Patterson, the best wide receiver in the history of his high school, and Preston Underwood, a brilliant and bullied student, form an unlikely friendship in Harmon's (Under the Bridge) empowering story about escaping guilt, embracing second thoughts, and trusting oneself. After Brett stands by while his teammates pull a humiliating prank on Preston, Brett questions his life's direction. With the state championship approaching and a UCLA scout coming to town, Brett quits the team, making enemies of his coach, teammates, and hard-drinking father. Meanwhile Preston, whose father was killed during a mugging, has taken to donning a superhero costume at night and recklessly attempting to fight crime on the streets of Spokane. It takes time for Brett and Preston to see eye to eye, but they build a friendship based on loyalty and brutal honesty, encouraging each other to turn their lives around on their own terms. While Brett narrates, Harmon's well-crafted dialogue makes both boys' pain and turmoil deeply felt. Preston's caustic and often insightful voice ("You never do anything dangerous, do you?" he asks Brett) is especially resonant. Ages 14 up.
Customer Reviews
A true real life book for high schoolers!
This book is perfect! It shows the political sides of sports and the strains it puts on family’s. A must read