Meet Me on the Court

David Aro

Book - 2019

Cam, Tyler, and Markus are upset that their school cut the basketball team because of lack of funding. They decide to make their own! They don't have jerseys, a coach, or even a regular court to practice on. There's one more problem--they need at least two more people on the team to play. Can the team find two more players? Can they win their first game against the snooty prep school kids that keep stealing their court?

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : West 44 Books, an imprint of Enslow Publishing 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
David Aro (author)
Physical Description
53 pages : illustrations ; 18 cm
ISBN
9781538382127
9781538382110
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

In this slim, fast-reading series opener, readers meet the ambitious co-ed Alton Heights basketball team as they challenge the privileged kids from a nearby prep school to a showdown.Best friends Cam, Tyler, and Markus have been waiting for Center Park Elementary's basketball season to start for what seems to be an eternityso they are deflated by the news that the program has been cut. Mrs. Avery intervenes, creating space for the three boys to practice in the school's dusty gym after they get their work done. The boys practice, practice, and practice some more up until they run into the Golden Roots Prep team in the park. They challenge Golden Roots Prep to a game, but there's only one problem: A basketball team is five players, and the boys only have three. Where will they find two more competent players? There's Jasmine and Brianna, who are pretty goodbut they are girls. Can they team up to defend the honor of their home, the Alton Heights housing complex, against the rich kids with resources? The story comes from a good place, but it doesn't devote enough warm-up time to developing whole, authentic characters. Racially coded names, a reference to Cam's braids, and a stylized depiction of their hands done in black ink will likely have readers inferring that the Alton Heights kids are black, but class issues share space with basketball as dominant themes.Here's hoping a fun basketball series develops in its later installments. (Fiction. 7-11) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.