Showing posts with label high school sports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high school sports. Show all posts

Friday, August 7, 2015

Gail Pallotta Presents Stopped Cold - A Wonderful YA Tale of Sports and Steroids...And a Loving Sister...

"Thanks for being there for me,
Margaret. At least my failure to qualify
 for first string quarterback
isn't a stinger."
 What was he talking about?
 How could I help if I didn't understand?
 "What's a stinger?
 That feeling you sometimes get when
 you pull a muscle overdoing in sports?"
 "That too, but I meant a bad personality
 trait like a temper or a big ego.
Something that can upset other people.
For instance, I can't throw great passes,
but that doesn't degrade anyone else.
It's a shortcoming, not a stinger."
 I hugged him around the neck.
"You make people happy. You're the
 best whether you ever play first string
 quarterback again or not."
 We had each other.
"I'll deal with it." Sean lifted
his chin and marched up the
oak staircase.
~~~
This Saturday Dad perched in the rust and green-checked easy chair with his feet propped on the matching footstool. Wrinkles creased his forehead like rivers on a map, his grayish blue eyes cold. He glared at Sean who stood in front of him like a page having an audience with the king. The urge to rush in the den and tell Dad to stop upsetting Sean filled every fiber of my being. All I could do was stand outside the door and wait in the lonely hall with its cold parquet floor and empty beige wall. Sean shook his head. 
"Coach is taking me out, sir. I'm not winning enough games." Sunshine seeped through the mini blinds creating a peaceful glow that seemed out of place.
"Son, you'll have to get back that position. To clinch your college football career you need to be the number one quarterback for Meriwether Christian High."
Sean looked up and sidled around, probably to get out of Dad's line of view. "I had a meeting with Coach Rogers." Dad turned up his large palm and gestured. "Good. That's a start." Sean ranked at the top of his class, but he struggled with sports. He may have looked like Dad, but he inherited our mom, Kelly's, mediocre athletic ability.
"No, I mean I met with him when he told me he was replacing me as first-string quarterback." Sean glanced at me. I nodded to give him support. Sean shifted his weight. "A new guy, Harold Gravitts, will start. He moved here two weeks ago from Greenstown, North Carolina. You were there the last two games. You know we lost because I threw bad passes in the end zone."


Dad bounded out of the chair as though he'd been shot from a cannon and knocked the coffee cup off the walnut occasional table. "What can this guy do that you can't?" 
"He's no better than I am in scrimmages." Dad lowered himself into the seat and tapped his lips. "Hmm. Maybe he's a jock who holds back in practice, but Coach Rogers sees his special talent."
"I don't know what it is, but—"
"Of course you don't. You're not a coach." 
Sean wrung his hands. "He wouldn't have to be Super Bowl quality to have something on me." Sean's quivering voice pierced my heart. "I'm not a great quarterback like you were." 
Six-foot-three, Dad had earned the nickname Bullet when he broke the passing records at the University of North Carolina in the 1980s. Often when he introduced himself as Randolph Sean McWhorter, he'd grin and add, "aka. Bullet. I played quarterback at U.N.C." 
"Maybe you need more strength in your throwing arm. Lift more weights. Do whatever it takes to get back that position." 
Dad's humiliating words had to hurt Sean. Was Sean's heart falling to his toes like mine did when I had to confess something less than perfect? Seeing that disappointed look on Dad's face always hit me in the gut. Sometimes Dad teased me and cheered me up if I was sad. Mom said he worked hard to give us a good home, but he could make me feel as little as a worm. Did Sean feel that way now? Fists formed involuntarily at my sides as I swallowed back my fury. 
Dad picked up the coffee cup and peered at the coffee-soaked spot on the rust-colored carpet. "Just look at that mess." He rubbed his shoe across it. 
What about the stain Dad put on Sean's heart?
~~~

Stopped Cold

By Gail Pallotta

It's been years since I had the chance to read a novel by Gail Pallotta (Do click over and read review of Love Turns the Tide)  so I was happy to see a recent notice about her young adult book and grabbed it!

Stopped Cold is narrated by Margaret, a teenager with a brother, Sean, and a father who, as a former jock, who drives his kids to both succeed in sports as well...unfortunately...

Sean has been the quarterback for his local high school team and his father has already been guiding him to be prepared to move on to college ball, probably at his Alma mater, University of North Carolina... It all starts falling apart when Sean is suddenly replaced by a new student who has just entered Mistville. And his father immediately stresses to Sean that he must get the quarterback position back in order to be selected at the college level...

And Sean does exactly what his father wants--he does whatever it will take to get the position back...

But the steroid he had taken put him in a coma in the hospital instead...

"Sean's never had a health problem. He's an athlete. What caused this?" Mom asked.
 "I'm sorry to tell you, but we found Winstrol V in Sean's system." A hint of compassion rang in Dr. Salis's official-sounding tone. 
Mom's gaze grew distant. "What's that?" 
"It's an anabolic steroid used in veterinary medicine. It carries many adverse side effects, including kidney and liver dysfunction. In some people there's a risk of heart attack or stroke." 
Dr. Salis spoke in a matter-of-fact tone. "Why would anyone take it?" Mom's questioning voice trailed off.
Dr. Salis took a deep sigh. "It enhances athletic performance."
 "In what way? I can't imagine Sean taking something like that." Mom spoke softly as though she talked to herself. Dr. Salis raised his gray eyebrows. "Steroids build muscle mass and shorten the recovery time needed after strenuous workouts. Jocks who use them grow stronger and can practice more often."
Mom's eyes snapped open. Was she thinking of the pressure Dad put on Sean?
"I don't feel well. Margaret, would you get me some water?" Dad asked. He was as white as Mistville's winter snow. So fit, so strong, he rarely got sick, weak, or pale. Anxious over the sight of him, I bounded off the bed, grabbed one of the paper cups out of the dispenser beside the sink, and filled it... Mom's eyes snapped open. Was she thinking of the pressure Dad put on Sean? 
"I don't feel well. Margaret, would you get me some water?" 
Dad asked. He was as white as Mistville's winter snow. So fit, so strong, he rarely got sick, weak, or pale. 
Anxious over the sight of him, I bounded off the bed, grabbed one of the paper cups out of the dispenser beside the sink, and filled it...
                                                                                                                 ~~~


But not win? He'd made aiming for number one a goal for Sean and me for as long as I could remember. If I weren't winning, would he still care about me? Anyway, I wasn't sure I  could turn my competitive drive off like a spigot.
Being known as the Meriwether Shark who won butterfly gave me a feeling of accomplishment and pride. 

Mom gazed at me, tears glistening in her eyes.  "Well, Margaret."
Poor Mom. How could she think I'd even consider drugs? She never would have imagined Sean would either. That's how.
"I won't take steroids, Dad. I promise."
"Good." Dad rubbed his hands on his knees as he often did when he ended a conversation and got up to do something else.
"Let's get back to the hospital."
~~~

Margaret also is a sports star--in swimming. She is the school's top swimmer for the butterfly stroke.

Margaret had an extremely hard time absorbing Sean's being in the hospital and not able to talk...Soon all she could think about was where and why Sean had taken the steroid... She hated what somebody had done to her beloved brother.

And that's when the book becomes a mystery! Margaret is determined to discover who had given him the steroid (and within herself she knew gain revenge. When the steroid was discovered, the entire family became involved with a special undercover investigator and he did ask for Margaret's assistance related to the school crowd...

He did not, however, realize that she had talked with two friends from school and they begun following leads that were being discovered... 


Margaret had overheard one of the jock groupies asking a football player if he was heading for the Temple. She realized that she was talking about an old log cabin that had once housed Buddhists priests. It no longer was used as a Temple and everybody had thought it was deserted... Jimmy, one of her friends also confirmed that he'd heard something about going to the Temple...
Jimmy flashed a wide smile. "No, but thanks." He thumped his fingers on the table. "It was after a scrimmage. A soccer player was talking to one of his teammates. He said, 'We can get steroids at the Buddhist Temple in the woods. If we beef up now next year we can play first string.' I don't know their names." Jimmy tilted his head. "I didn't know there was a Buddhist Temple around here." 
Emily sat straight up and snapped to attention like a soldier. "It's a log cabin built in the early 1900' s. Monks migrated here to live a reclusive lifestyle. It's deserted now. At least that's what I've been told." "Where is it?" Jimmy asked. 
"I don't know. I'm Buddhist, but I've never gone to it." Emily's voice trailed off as though she regretted her words. 
I didn't expect her to know where the temple was. I did fear more than ever someone had told Sean a bunch of lies to make him think he could out-perform Harold Gravitts, if he took Winstrol V... but who? If only I'd known, I would've told Sean not to take that junk. Football was just a game, a contest usually forgotten the week after it was played. Sean cared about people, and he was smart enough to make a difference in the world. I couldn't believe a steroid intended for animals may have robbed him of all the things he could do.
~~~


Pallotta has written a truly inspirational book about how a family grows and comes closer together after a traumatic experience. If indeed some of us believe that there is a plan controlling our lives, this book surely supports the type of miracles, power of prayer, and the strength derived through God's presence... At the same time, she hits hard and straight into the drug problem within American sports, especially, through the father of the family characters intense desire and pressure on today's children to succeed. And even more so, as the surprise ending catches everybody by surprise.

Highly recommended for both young adults and for parents and grandparents of teenage children. I'm one of those individuals in today's world that worries about the emphasis on talent and becoming "the best" for our young people. While I love to listen to or watch programs featuring young people sharing God's gift to them, I deplore the pitting of young people against each other for ridiculous sums of money as rewards...  And then creating star-struck children who follows extremist stars who will do anything to gain popularity and sell their image... Is this the future for our teenagers and children?

Kudos to Pallotta for presenting a though-provoking novel that forces all of us to examine what our children face from every corner of their lives!


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Award-winning author Gail Pallotta's a wife, Mom, swimmer and bargain shopper who loves God, beach sunsets and getting together with friends and family. She's been a Sunday school teacher, a swim-team coordinator and an after-school literary instructor. A former regional writer of the year for American Christian Writers Association, she won Clash of the Titles in 2010.

Her new teen book, Stopped Cold, is a best-seller on All Romance eBooks, finished fourth in the 16th Annual Preditors and Editors Readers Poll, and is a Grace Awards Finalist. She's published short stories in "Splickety" magazine and Sweet Freedom with a Slice of Peach Cobbler. Some of her published articles appear in anthologies while two are in museums.

Readers can find her on the internet on the staff of Clash of the Titles, http://www.clashofthetitles.blogspot.com, at her blog, http://www.gailpallotta.blogspot.com, on her Web Site, http://www.gailpallotta.com on Authors and More on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/authorsandmore and twitter, Gail Pallotta @Hopefulwords

Monday, July 4, 2011

Savage Provides Gripping Tale Surrounding Sports Gambling!

BasketballImage via WikipediaState Champions


By W. Jack Savage


--Gripping


--Tense


--Satisfying 


Although the title and the blurb highlight that this book is about high school sports, I think it is important to say that, in my opinion, this is definitely an adult book. It is filled with violence, stories of sexual abuse and escapades, as well as much about the gambling surrounding sports, even at the high school level. Not being an avid sports fan and a non-gambler, I admit I was surprised at the story line which, I assumed, had to have some basis of reality upon which it was created. That said...

Jack Savage has an ability to create amazing lead characters. Readers become so involved in watching the life of that character unfold, that you soon find yourself caught up not only in his total life but the world surrounding him. In State Champions, Bill Henry becomes a hero...

State ChampionsBill has an extensive sports background which you will learn about only by meeting people who talk about it on the way. He's insecure in one very important area of his personal life, and that is reflected in many of his choices made along the way. Bill is a husband and father with two young daughters. The daughters do not biologically belong to him or his wife.

Alice was married at the time Bill met her. She had met her husband through some unusual circumstances, but had dated and married him in good faith, enjoying the opportunity to become mother to his two daughters. Before long, however, her husband was murdered. Bill was a prosecutor with the Justice Department at that time and upset by all that happened in relation to placing Alice and the children in witness protection, Bill resigned and took on the job himself. Along the way, they married and, for the first time, Bill had a wonderful family. However, he refused to change his name and the family moved, but not very far away from where they had been located.

Bill became a high school teacher and was asked to be assistant coach. You will enjoy what happened as all of a sudden Bill is the head coach and his team is in the finals for the state championship, which they won.

Haskiell was a strange small town. For the last ten years, sports had developed into the "best gambling" pot around. The former coach had lived well beyond his means, which Bill had noticed. But it was only when the team, under his direction, won the championship that he came to know the extent of corruption. So, while becoming a beloved coach to that high school team, Bill also dusted off his love of justice and started to speak out, investigate, and, needless to say, ruffle many feathers.

Perhaps a man who is capable of being a hero just has to do what he has to do...

Because by being spotlighted through the high school tournaments, he had also spotlighted the present residence of he and his family as those protected by the Justice Department. With those town individuals who were upset with the gambling results, together with those of  the crime family looking to recapture the money owed to them by Alice's former husband, Bill and Alice are thrown into turmoil beyond anything they could have imagined.

While all the time, Bill coaches and trains and prepares his second team to "play to win" the next year's championship.

Intimate relationships between Bill and Alice and others become openly known and discussed in that small town. Envy, jealousy and sex soon become just another factor in the underlying tension developing and expanding. An explosion was sure to happen! But it sure wasn't what readers will expect! I didn't like some of Alice's decisions, but even that proved to make the overall story stronger and more realistic. Sometimes we just do what we want and need to do, no matter what...

I made an exception to my rule for typographical errors; there are many and you should be aware of this. The story, in my opinion, allows readers to become so involved that these small errors soon are not as distracting. From this proofreading fanatic, that's saying something in itself. This story is so much a part of today's world that you will be appalled that it exists, as the hero finds out what is happening and openly ridicules and fights against it. Speaking out against sports scholarships which fail to ensure a scholastic degree is just one issue that our hero attacks when he gets the spotlight opportunity. Life at its worst makes a quiet hero stronger... Highly recommended.


Book received
Via Facebook Reviewers Roundup


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