Description:
  Breaking, bank shots, slices, and safeties-fifth grader Mickey Vernon  can shoot pool better than some guys twice his age. His philosophy is simple: "I  think a lot of the world's problems could be solved by a couple of guys shooting  a few racks down at the local hall." But sometimes that's hard to remember when  he's facing down seventh-grade bully Buck Pender. Buck is determined to beat  Mickey in the annual youth tournament down at Vernon's, the pool hall owned and  operated by Mickey's grandma Poppy. And he just might do it, too. Except  Mickey's got a secret weapon. Joseph Alvarez, a big rig trucker and family  friend, has returned to town, and he was coached by the best pool player on the  nine-ball professional circuit--Mickey's dad, who died shortly after Mickey was  born. So with the help of Joseph and his two best friends, 10-year-old math  genius Arlen and magician extraordinaire Francine, Mickey just might have a shot  at the championship. Then Buck baits him into playing a game in which Mickey  badly sprains his stick hand, just three short weeks before the tournament. Has  Mickey just scratched the cue ball of his dreams?  Fun, folksy, and big-hearted, Joan Bauer's first novel for middle-grade readers  is sweeter than a 90-degree bank shot off the rail and into the corner pocket.  Mickey's unselfconscious and humorous narration ranks with that of Archie in  How I Became a Writer and Oggie  Learned to Drive by Janet Taylor Lisle or Peter in Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing  by Judy Blume. (Ages 9 to 12) --Jennifer Hubert
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