Joy in Mudville
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
It had been only twenty-four hours since Mighty Casey struck out, plunging fans of the Mudville team into gloom and despair. But a new game day dawned, and Casey once again proved his might with a homer in the eighth. The Mudville nine took a one-run lead, but in the bottom of the ninth, their hurler walked three straight.
Bases loaded and the starting pitcher spent, the Mudville manager was not bullish about his bullpen. With the game on the line, he called for rookie Joy Armstrong to take the mound. Could she bring joy to Mudville again—and prove that a girl can play ball as well as any boy?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The Mudville Nine are looking for redemption after Mighty Casey's disheartening strikeout the day before. It arrives in the form of a relief pitcher who, as Raczka puts it, also happens to be "a she." Her first name, Joy, alludes to the beloved baseball poem's last line, and her last name, Armstrong, proves an accurate description of her pitching skills, which also showcase her talents for football, tennis, and basketball. Raczka's versifying lacks the mock-heroic cheekiness and confident lilt of Thayer's original (reprinted at the end); the clunky rhymes ("confidence" with "cleared the fence") and obvious messaging ("She'd show them soon enough that girls/ excel in many sports") are the poetic equivalent of bunts. But Dibley is a visual power hitter. His settings conjure up a beautiful day on a dusty, small-town field, while his characters' broad, red noses (an artistic signature) and imperturbable miens feel right on the mark. Ages 4 9.