The Wednesday Wars: A Newbery Honor Award WinnerHarperCollins, 18 Mei 2009 - 288 halaman In this Newbery Honor–winning novel, Gary D. Schmidt tells the witty and compelling story of a teenage boy who feels that fate has it in for him, during the school year 1968-69. |
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... Danny's raised hand, and then she turned to look at me again. “Meryl Lee Kowalski,” she called. She found Meryl Lee's hand, and looked at me again. She did this every time she looked up to find somebody's hand. She was watching me ...
... Danny Hupfer, who was our goalie. “In front of him!” His voice was cracking, probably because he was imagining the propulsion of a soccer ball as it left Doug Swieteck's brother's foot and hurtled toward the goal, and wondering what it ...
... Danny Hupfer, my own hollering as I clutched my crushed foot. Then there came an iron thunk against the goal post ... Danny Hupfer—a very relieved Danny Hupfer—ran up to thump me on the back. “You sure did take him out!” “I didn't mean ...
... Danny. I limped back into school, trying not to look at an unhappy Mrs. Sidman, who was holding the wobbling Doug Swieteck's brother at the same time that she was using her rain hat to do not very much. Liverwurst is like that. Meryl ...
... Danny Hupfer: He kicked the round ball into the goal. Here's the sentence she gave to Mai Thi: The girl walked home. This was so short because it used about a third of Mai Thi's English vocabulary, since she'd only gotten here from ...