Particularize Books During Sport (Harriet the Spy #3)
Original Title: | Sport |
ISBN: | 0440418186 (ISBN13: 9780440418184) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Harriet the Spy #3 |
Characters: | Simon "Sport" Rocque |
Setting: | United States of America |
Louise Fitzhugh
Paperback | Pages: 224 pages Rating: 3.73 | 850 Users | 63 Reviews
Ilustration Conducive To Books Sport (Harriet the Spy #3)
Eleven-year-old Sport Rocque is living a happy life, keeping his father's absentmindedness under control and managing the family budget. When Kate, Sport's new and nice stepmother, enters the picture, things couldn't be better. Then comes the news: Sport's wealthy grandfather has just died and Sport is a multimillionaire. But millions of dollars equals millions of problems, as Sport soon discovers when his mother returns and kidnaps him to double her share of the inheritance! Life at the Plaza Hotel is no fun when you're a prisoner. Will Sport manage to return his life to normal? From the Hardcover editionDefine Regarding Books Sport (Harriet the Spy #3)
Title | : | Sport (Harriet the Spy #3) |
Author | : | Louise Fitzhugh |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 224 pages |
Published | : | March 12th 2002 by Yearling Books (first published March 28th 1980) |
Categories | : | Fiction. Childrens. Young Adult. Middle Grade |
Rating Regarding Books Sport (Harriet the Spy #3)
Ratings: 3.73 From 850 Users | 63 ReviewsAssessment Regarding Books Sport (Harriet the Spy #3)
Mind-blowing. On the first page, Sport's (hated, and justly so) mother tells him, 'You've got a goddamned literal mind.' Such a shot across the bow is Fitzhugh's warning that this will not be your standard middle-school fare. It put me in mind of Susan Patron's dropping in 'scrotum' on page one of 'The Higher Power of Lucky' and all the fuss that caused. Come to think of it, Lucky Trimble owes a debt to Harriet Welch; she's even also a spy. 'Sport' is a sequel to 'Harriet the Spy' and sent meHarriet the Spy was a childhood favorite.
Sport (1953) is Fitzhugh's darkest of the Harriet trio. Kidnapping, custody issues, ugly racial tensions between police and the neighborhood, n-word two times. It's also the first book I read, and until this year, the only one I read of the trilogy. I still really enjoy it, and now that I'm older, the concept of a mother kidnapping her own son for custody and money no longer seems so farfetched and the idea of Sport parenting his own father seems even more tragic. Even before I became a food
I think I started Sport in fifth grade because I loved Harriet the Spy so much but was turned off by the first chapter, where Sport's cartoonish rich mother is interacting with him. She is over the top and reminiscent of Beth Ellen's mother in The Long Secret. So now I decided to read it as an adult and give it more of a chance, and it was an interesting book with the same feel of the others. Sport's mothers mindless pursuit of money and kidnapping her son is a little ridiculous, but I was
Mind-blowing. On the first page, Sport's (hated, and justly so) mother tells him, 'You've got a goddamned literal mind.' Such a shot across the bow is Fitzhugh's warning that this will not be your standard middle-school fare. It put me in mind of Susan Patron's dropping in 'scrotum' on page one of 'The Higher Power of Lucky' and all the fuss that caused. Come to think of it, Lucky Trimble owes a debt to Harriet Welch; she's even also a spy. 'Sport' is a sequel to 'Harriet the Spy' and sent me
I loved Harriet the Spy when I was a kid, but man I FLIPPED for this book. I can still see the blue library copy I must've read a dozen times.
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