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Spoon

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Sixteen-year-old junior Macy was the starting setter on the varsity volleyball team last year. Now she’s the backup for new girl Alliyah, who is a standout both on and off the court. With her conflict-averse personality, this new role suits Macy just fine . . . until a game called Spoon takes the school by storm.

The rules of Spoon are Decorate a plastic spoon. Keep the spoon with you at all times. If someone demands to see your spoon, you must show it within five seconds. If you can’t, you’re out.

At first, the game seems harmless. Though Alliyah's competitive streak annoys Macy, and her actions threaten to break the school's Code of Conduct, Macy knows reporting Alliyah would get the starter benched, hurting the team's playoff chances. But when Alliyah begins pulling increasingly dangerous stunts in order to win at Spoon, Macy must ask What does it mean to put her team first?

Characterized by exciting, fast-paced plots and themes that are relevant for high school students, Horizon’s Hi-Lo books are both engaging and easy to read. Short chapters, simple sentence structures, and an accessible format make these books perfect for teen reluctant readers. Horizon books are written at a 2nd- to 3rd-grade reading level with an interest level of ages 14 and up.

160 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2025

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Stephanie Peters

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
9,126 reviews130 followers
February 2, 2025
A volleyball star – and the rest of her team – have to suffer a bitchy new player on the roster, and the weirdly successful 'game' she invents, that takes the school by storm. So on the one hand you have people seeking old school team cohesion and abiding by the rules, and on the other you have trial by mobile phone footage and the modern, almost social media-driven phenomenon. And the balance is a pretty good one – although if you don't know or like the sport concerned this could well be a struggle. For me, three and a half stars does kind of acknowledge I'm not the intended reader here.
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