Tangerine | Teen Ink

Tangerine

May 14, 2014
By pasha PENCE BRONZE, Cincinnati, Ohio
pasha PENCE BRONZE, Cincinnati, Ohio
1 article 0 photos 0 comments

After reading Tangerine, I was extremely surprised and happy. Being a soccer fan and a player I love the sport. This book is perfect for me and anyone else who likes to play soccer. This book is very interesting. I would say you can judge a book by it's cover in this case, judging that it is an amazing book. You would be marveled at the first chapter and would want to go on reading forever.


Edward Bloor talks about a young boy, Paul Fisher, who is adjusting to a new state, a new school, and a new climate. This can be difficult. It can be extremely difficult if you wear bulky, bug-eyed glasses and are certified as legally blind. Paul Fisher is a 12-year old seventh grader, whose family moves from Houston, Texas to the sunshine state of Tangerine, Florida. Tangerine is a bizarre town in which muck fires burn continually, lightning strikes every day, and sinkholes occasionally swallow up schools. However, Paul is determined to merge into the new Tangerine crowd. This may not be that easy for Paul. With his unusually thick glasses and his older brother Erik, the football star, Paul is going to have to go to extra lengths to be noticed.

I recommend this book to people who play soccer because, it is
a soccer book that most people like and it will hook the reader.
If it hooked me then I think it will hook other people.I would take away the star Paul’s brother so he can get the fame and not his
brother. His brother gets all the fame even if Paul saves a beautiful shot. My opinion on the book would be the best book ever. It has a blind kid ok now that is cool if a blind kid play goal and wins his whole league and the chaperons to I would be surprised that he can save shots without seeing the ball that is
some pretty cool powers.


The author's comments:
I read the book tangerine.

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