Dead End In Norvelt (Hardcover)

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Author:  Jack Gantos
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Product Summary

Format: Hardcover
ISBN-10: 0374379939
ISBN-13: 9780374379933
Buy.com Sku: 219182186
Publish Date: 9/13/2011
Buy.com Sales Rank: 5806
Dimensions:  (in Inches) 8.5H x 6L x 1.25T
Pages:  352
Age Range:  14 to 18
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In the historic town of Norvelt, Pennsylvania, twelve-year-old Jack Gantos spends the summer of 1962 grounded for various offenses until he is assigned to help an elderly neighbor with a most unusual chore involving the newly dead, molten wax, twisted promises, Girl Scout cookies, underage driving, lessons from history, typewriting, and countless bloody noses.
Annotation:
Hell's Angels, town obituaries, copious nose bleeds, and history are just a few of the topics in author Jack Gantos's quasi-autobiographical peek into the summer of 1962 in the town of Norvelt, Pennsylvania. After many bad moves on his part, Jack was grounded for the summer, so he took up reading Landmark Books and helping the arthritic Miss Volker write the town obituaries. Deeply humorous, very silly, and including a surprisingly deep historical vein, this middle grade novel will earn Gantos new fans. Winner of the 2012 Newbery Medal.
Praise
"An exhilarating summer marked by death, gore and fire sparks deep thoughts in a small-town lad not uncoincidentally named 'Jack Gantos'...Characteristically provocative gothic comedy, with sublime undertones." (Starred review) 08/15/2011

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1
 
 
School was finally out and I was standing on a picnic table in our backyard getting ready for a great summer vacation when my mother walked up to me and ruined it. I was holding a pair of camouflage Japanese WWII binoculars to my eyes and focusing across her newly planted vegetable garden, and her cornfield, and over ancient Miss Volker’s roof, and then up the Norvelt road, and past the brick bell tower on my school, and beyond the Community Center, and the tall silver whistle on top of the volunteer fire department to the most distant dark blue hill, which is where the screen for the Viking drive-in movie theater had recently been erected.
Down by my feet I had laid out all the Japanese army souvenirs Dad had shipped home from the war. He had been in the navy, and after a Pacific island invasion in the Solomons he and some other sailor buddies had blindly crawled around at night and found a bunker of dead Japanese soldiers half
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