LoserHarper Collins, 2009年10月13日 - 240 頁 From renowned Newbery-winning author Jerry Spinelli comes a powerful story about how not fitting in just might lead to an incredible life. This classic book is perfect for fans of Gordon Korman and Carl Hiaasen. Just like other kids, Zinkoff rides his bike, hopes for snow days, and wants to be like his dad when he grows up. But Zinkoff also raises his hand with all the wrong answers, trips over his own feet, and falls down with laughter over a word like "Jabip." Other kids have their own word to describe him, but Zinkoff is too busy to hear it. He doesn't know he's not like everyone else. And one winter night, Zinkoff's differences show that any name can someday become "hero." With some of his finest writing to date and great wit and humor, Jerry Spinelli creates a story about a boy's individuality surpassing the need to fit in and the genuine importance of failure. As readers follow Zinkoff from first through sixth grade, it becomes impossible not to identify with and root for him through failures and triumphs. The perfect classroom read. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 12 筆
... She calls down, “Donald, you wait!” Her voice is firm, for she knows how much her son hates to wait. By the time she comes downstairs, he's gone. She yanks open the door. People are streaming by. Mothers hold the hands of younger kids ...
... she has told him once, she has told him fifty times: Do not wear it to school. The school is only three blocks away. He will be there before she can catch him. With a sigh of surrender she goes back into the house. The first-grade ...
... she has to tell him that he cannot keep the hat with him. She hopes he won't break out bawling. First-graders can be so unpredictable. You never know what might set them off. She tells him. She keeps an eye on his lower lip, to see if ...
... she carries the three-foot hat to the cubbyholes at the back of the room. She labeled the cubbies the day before, and now she suddenly realizes she doesn't know which one belongs to the boy. She turns. “What's your name, young man?” He ...
... She goes straight to the last cubbyhole and inserts the giraffe. The space is not deep enough to hold it all. It looks as if a baby giraffe is napping in there. The thought comes to her that Donald Zinkoff, in more ways than cubbyholes ...
內容
第 19 節 | 109 |
第 20 節 | 117 |
第 21 節 | 119 |
第 22 節 | 127 |
第 23 節 | 133 |
第 24 節 | 137 |
第 25 節 | 143 |
第 26 節 | 154 |
第 9 節 | 28 |
第 10 節 | 34 |
第 11 節 | 42 |
第 12 節 | 50 |
第 13 節 | 60 |
第 14 節 | 71 |
第 15 節 | 78 |
第 16 節 | 84 |
第 17 節 | 94 |
第 18 節 | 101 |
第 27 節 | 161 |
第 28 節 | 170 |
第 29 節 | 177 |
第 30 節 | 181 |
第 31 節 | 187 |
第 32 節 | 197 |
第 33 節 | 206 |
第 34 節 | 211 |