Synopses & Reviews
Review
'\"[The Rhyming Season] will attract readers who are on the brink of transformation in their own lives.\" SLJ'
Review
Kirkus Reviews
"The sprinkling of recognizable poems...will titillate teenage poetry buffs, and the approachable emotive aspects will please readers." BULLETIN Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
"[The Rhyming Season] will attract readers who are on the brink of transformation in their own lives." SLJ School Library Journal
Synopsis
Seventeen-year-old Brenda Jacobsen comes from a family of tall people. In the small logging town of Hemlock, Washington, being tall makes you better at trimming the high spots on trees or at playing basketball. Brendas life has always revolved around basketball, particularly the career of her older brother, Benny, the towns rising star. But Benny died in a car accident last year, leaving Brenda and her parents without the star of their family and without a way to fill the huge hole in their lives.
Though Hemlocks dreams of basketball glory died along with her brother, Brenda is looking forward to playing on the lessimportant girls team. This year the girls planned to get the recognition they deservebut that was before their coach left to take a better job. Now theyre faced with a new coach, whose offbeat philosophy has the girls reciting lines from poems as they play. It brings them recognition, but not the kind they were hoping for. Still, when the sawmill closes down and Brendas parents seem to be on the verge of breaking up, she and the rest of the team find inspiration in the last place theyd ever have expectedpoetry.
About the Author
Edward Averett was born in the Pacific Northwest and, except for four years in the wilds of Spain, has lived in the state of Washington all his life. He is the author of Homing and The Rhyming Season.