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Children's
Literature: Jamie
learns it's not the glove that makes the player, but the player
that makes the glove. A good story with a concluding history section
that includes illustrations and facts about baseball gloves. Marilyn
Courtot
- Accelerated
Reader Quiz #17567 Disk #H14 (Accelerated Reader is a national
program for schools; For more info call: 1-888-656-2931)
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The
Golden Glove
ISBN:
1-56145-133-9; $4.95
To order: Click the cover at left.
When
Jamie loses his lucky glove, his parents refuse to buy him a new
one. He thinks two guys in the neighborhoodthe Porter brothersstole
it and he sets out to get it back. After a tense few minutes secretly
rummaging through the boys' garage, Jamie gives up looking for it.
He ends up borrowing a glove, but it's not the same as his old one
and his self-confidence sinks. He begins to believe in himself when
he discovers some interesting things in the back room of a local
sports shop.
The
first baseball players didn't even wear gloves. Those who tried
were heckled and called sissies until "cool guy" Albert Spaldingthe
great Chicago White Stocking pitcher and founder of the sporting
goods companydonned a glove. He had moved off the pitcher's
mound to first base and put on a black leather glove. Instead of
making fun of him, baseball players imitated him. The gloves were
really small and dorky but plenty Hall of Famers became great using
them.
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