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Loading... How Angel Peterson Got His Name (original 2003; edition 2004)by Gary Paulsen (Author)
Work InformationHow Angel Peterson Got His Name by Gary Paulsen (2003)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. The book is about a 13 year old boy named Carl and he did a lot of crazy things. One of the crazy things he did was to try to break the speed record on skis; he had to go seventy-four miles an hour to break the record. There were no hills that would allow him to get to this speed, so he decided to use a car. Another crazy stunt was peeing on an electric fence and getting electrocuted and ended up doing a backflip. This is biography is humorous retelling of these crazy stunts that lead to Carl never being called Carl, agin but instead Angel. Classroom: This would be a fun read aloud, as it is a very funny book. Depending on age, might have to have a discussion as to how dangerous these stunts really were and that possibility of injury. Booktalk: Before I tell you about this book, I must warn you: Do not try this stuff at home. In fact, there will be a lot of things that you're going to read about that sound exciting, that might even be fun. But don't be fooled: the crazy stunts you're going to read about could get you seriously hurt or even killed. So what are these crazy stunts? Well it all starts when 12-year-old Gary reads an article called "Fools Who Shoot the Falls" which tells about several men who tried to go over Niagara Falls in a barrel. Though almost all of them died...it sounded like a pretty cool idea! (Read from last para of p. viii "and so I found" through the end of page ix, "and I would gain fame only as the first boy stupid enough to drown in a barrele.") Miraculously, the barrel is caught up in the current and lifted to the edge of the dam, dropped off the edge to fall the 12 feet below where it hits a river below where it hits a sharp rock, breaks into pieces, and leaves our hero stunned and with a bloody nose, but still alive. Think that's the end of the crazy stunts? Of course not! But if you ever come across an empty refrigerator box and three full-force M-80 firecrackers...just leave them alone. Audiobook as narrated by Patrick Lawlor is even funnier than reading it! no reviews | add a review
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Author Gary Paulsen relates tales from his youth in a small town in northwestern Minnesota in the late 1940s and early 1950s, such as skiing behind a souped-up car and imitating daredevil Evel Knievel. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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We read this for my children's book club and the kids loved just rehashing all the insanity. We talked about why people do crazy stuff. ( )