Synopses & Reviews
This story relates the painful and embarrassing aftermath of name-calling and bullying from the perspective of the bully. J. J. Jax has been tormenting an overweight boy named Patrick, calling him Pig-Pen and Porky, to the point that Patrick is now afraid to go to school. Learning of his son's behavior, J. J.'s father lectures him to stop bullying Patrick. When that approach fails, Mr. Jax tries another tack and shares an experience he had as a youthful bully and the consequences he recently faced as a result of his actions. Touched by his father's words, J.J. reaches out to Patrick in a school arm-wrestling contest and experiences the "alley oops" moment of empowerment and self-esteem that comes from doing the right thing. Snappy dialogue highlights the harmful, lasting effects of bullying and the importance of finding common ground toward conflict resolution. Believable contemporary illustrations bring the story to life with expressive body language.
Review
An Accelerated Reader book
Review
Storytelling World Award Honor Title
Review
International Reading Association has cited Alley Oops as a source for their title, Bright Beginnings for Boys: Engaging Young Boys in Active Literacy
Review
"A valuable lesson about name-calling and hurting people's feelings." Children's Literature
Review
"An entertaining book with a compassionate message." Long Island Parenting magazine
Review
"A 'must have' for classroom teachers, counselors, or school libraries." National Center for Youth Issues (NCYI)
Review
"Powerful message without being goody-goody." New York State Reading Association
Review
"A little gem . . . [that] will empower your children to wrestle with big choices and take a look at their own actions and reactions." AcademicPlanet.com
About the Author
An Accelerated Reader bookStorytelling World Award Honor Title
International Reading Association has cited Alley Oops as a source for their title, Bright Beginnings for Boys: Engaging Young Boys in Active Literacy"A valuable lesson about name-calling and hurting people's feelings." Children's Literature"An entertaining book with a compassionate message." Long Island Parenting magazine"A 'must have' for classroom teachers, counselors, or school libraries." National Center for Youth Issues (NCYI)"Powerful message without being goody-goody." New York State Reading Association"A little gem . . . [that] will empower your children to wrestle with big choices and take a look at their own actions and reactions." AcademicPlanet.com