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Sports Pages

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Poems about the experiences and feelings of young athletes involved in various sports.

80 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

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About the author

Arnold Adoff

45 books14 followers

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Emily.
1,360 reviews24 followers
July 29, 2016
Sports Pages is a book many teachers and librarians may be tempted to simply hand any male child to interest him in poetry. The tactic may work; it may not. This book by Arnold Adoff is less about the glory of sport and more about athletic struggles, disappointments and the dark side of athletics. While each poem could be read individually, some speakers show up in multiple poems throughout the book. For example, one speaker is a boy who injures his knee. Poems with his voice are scattered throughout the book – first the game where he gets hurt, then at the doctor’s office, the weight room retraining his knee and finally, at a game where he is forced to sit on the sidelines and watch his teammates play without him. Adoff creates a sense of action and tension in his language that echo the action and tension of sports. Illustrations in this collection are blocky pencil sketches by Steve Kuzma. The starkness of the illustrations echo the disappointment often evident in the voice of the speaker. While a variety of sports are covered in this book, most poems are about football and basketball and only a very few have female voices.
Profile Image for Cortney Perkins.
87 reviews2 followers
November 18, 2015
This is a great read of poems about sports. It is inspiring and about following your dreams. It shares fears, determination, accomplishments, goals, rewards and all other feelings that we encounter when we play sports. It would be a wonderful book to have in a classroom library. It is short and an easy read.
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