- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
Baseball camp is over, and Roy knows he’s in for a dreary, soggy summer. But when he returns home, he finds a foster kid named Sturgis sprawled out on his couch. As if this isn’t weird enough, just a few days after Sturgis’s arrival, the sun comes out. No one can explain why the rain has finally stopped, but as far as Roy’s concerned, it’s time to play some baseball. It’s time to get a Moundville team together and finish what was started 22 years ago. It’s time for a rematch.
To understand baseball, you have to understand percentages. For example, if a guy is hitting .250, he only has about one chance in a thousand of going five-for-five in a single game. Over a season, though, the odds get better. Like about one in seven. Not great, but not that bad. If he plays long enough, he'll probably do it. That's how a guy can go into every game feeling positive. He knows if he plays enough games, eventually he'll have a perfect day at the plate.
It's the same thing with rain. Maybe you read in the paper every day that there's a 25 percent chance of rain. That means there's about one chance in a thousand of having it rain five days straight. It's not likely, but it's not impossible. If you're twelve years old, like I am, you've probably even seen it happen.
If you take all the teams in the history of baseball, then percentages start making funny things happen. For example, Walt Dropo of Detroit once got twelve hits in a row; he went five-for-five one day and seven-for-seven the next. The odds of that are like one in two million, but there's been way more than two million tries, if you think about all the baseball players and all the games they ever played in, so it had to happen eventually. Dropo was just the guy who did it.
That's how I explain the fact that it's been raining for twenty-two years in Moundville. The earth is a big place, and it's been around for a long time. If you think about all the towns in the world and all the years the earth has been around, it was bound to happen somewhere sooner or later. It just happened to be my town and my lifetime. It's percentages.
I'm trying to explain this to Adam on the last day of baseball camp while we're packing up to go home. Camp is at the state university, and we've been sharing a dorm room about the size of a breadbox.
"Everybody's hitting .250?" he asks me. "Even the DH?"
"For the sake of argument, yeah."
"Sounds like a pretty lousy baseball team." He shakes his head. "The manager would send some guys down or something. Maybe make a trade."
"That's not the point."
"It is so the point! If your whole team is batting .250, you don't wait around until the end of time because maybe eventually a guy goes five-for-five. You do something about it."
"We can't do anything about the weather, though."
"You can move."
"It's not that easy. My dad's business is in Moundville."
"He can start a business somewhere else."
"He rainproofs houses," I remind him. "It's not like there's a big demand for that anywhere else."
"I would move anyway," he says. "No baseball? That's nuts."
"It's not such a bad place to live. Anyway, there's lots of places where it rains all the time. London. Seattle."
"It doesn't rain every day for twenty-two years straight."
"It could, though."
"Whatever."
I like Adam pretty well, but I'm kind of mad at him for dumping on Moundville. Sure, it's wet, but it's still my hometown.
Fortunately, we're interrupted by a half dozen people practically knocking down the door. It's Steve and his family.
Steve is also from Moundville. We've known each other since kindergarten. His parents and his little sisters and his grandma came down to watch the Camp Classic, and now they're all heading home.
The Camp Classic is a four-team tournament meant to end camp with a bang. Adam and I were on the winning team. He pitched the first game, and I caught both games. My shins still feel like they're about to fall off at the knees, but it was worth it.
"You're coming with us!" says one of Steve's sisters. It must be Shauna because she's wearing a red T-shirt. They color-code the twins so everyone can tell them apart.
"Your dad can't make it!" the other sister, Sheila, explains.
"Shush," says their dad. "Let the man talk to his father." He passes me a cell phone.
"Yeah?" I shout into the phone.
"Hey, kid. No need to yell." My dad's voice is as clear as if he's standing right next to me, a testament to Mr. Robinson's commitment to high-end gadgetry. "I hear you won a trophy?"
"It's nothing." I figure Steve's dad must have told him about my Camp Classic MVP trophy.
"It didn't sound like nothing."
"Those trophies are like immunizations. Everybody has to get one." It's true, too. Adam won a trophy for "best competitor," which meant he took the game too seriously, and Steve won one for "best sport," which meant he didn't take the game seriously enough.
"Anyway," he says, "I've got tied up with some stuff here in Moundville, so I asked Steve's dad to give you a lift back."
"Sure. What's going on?" Usually it means someone's rainproof house is leaking and my dad has to go and fix it. He gives out a five-year warrantee that's no end of grief.
"It's kind of a surprise. You'll find out when you get home. See you soon!" He hangs up on me, and I hand the phone back to Mr. Robinson.
"Thanks for giving me a ride."
"We're happy to have you along. Maybe the girls will bug you instead of bugging the rest of us." Mr. Robinson thinks this is hilarious, and so do Steve's mom and grandma. "Anyway, we're parked right outside. See you in a bit."
We can hear the twins racing to the end of the hall and their mom begging them to slow down before the door swings shut behind them.
"So I guess I'll see you when we're in the big leagues?" Adam asks as we leave the dorm for the last time.
"Sure thing. Get drafted by the same team, okay? I don't want to hit your stuff."
Adam is the only kid I know with a legitimate curveball. I've seen him carve up batters like they were turkeys with that thing. He's small, though. You don't see too many pint-sized pitchers in the majors. So who knows if he'll make it to the bigs?
We trade a clumsy hug, and that's that.
Readers Guide Discussion Questions
1.Many people, Peter especially, believe that the town of Moundville is cursed, but Roy believes it has to do with statistics. What do you believe and why?
2.Sturgis exhibits both good and bad behavior. Why do you think he acts this way?
3.How does Roy react to Sturgis’s arrival? Why do you think he acts this way? How would you react?
4.Roy and Sturgis go from strangers, to teammates, to enemies, to cousins. Describe how Roy and Sturgis’s relationship progresses throughout the book and how these changes affect their perceptions of each other.
5.Sturgis lies to Roy about how he got the scar on his face. Why?
6.Why does Sturgis eventually join the Sinister Bend team? What would you have done if you were Sturgis? If you were Roy, would you have reacted the way he did?
7.The rematch is considered to be very important to many people. It brings back Roy’s mom, Bobby Fitz, and more. Why is so important to everyone? Is it just about baseball?
8.What does the Moundville team learn that helps them win against Sinister Bend? Explain the irony.
9.When Roy initially forms the team, he is elected captain. How does this change him as a person?
10.How do Sturgis and Roy’s relationships with their fathers differ? How does Roy’s dad try to be like a father to Sturgis?
Anonymous
Posted December 26, 2011
You wont be able to put it down
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.My 12 year old son loved this book about baseball. He says the entire book is great.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.careycorp
Posted February 15, 2010
Kurtis Scaletta's MUDVILLE is heartwarming and original. Young baseball enthusiast Roy's passion for the game is infectious and will have you craving hotdogs and pitcher's duels, even if you don't eat, drink, and breathe America's National past-time. The author's take on defining moments will have you looking at your own life in a different way. I can't wait to discuss with my fourth-grade son.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.This is an engaging story that features a cast of quirky, likable characters. Even if you're not a baseball fan, you will like these people enough to want to enter their lives and hear their story.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.-The last baseball game in Moundville was over 22 years ago, well before 12-year-old Roy was born. The game against archrival Sinister Bend was never completed because of a twenty-two year rain delay! Then one day, the rain just stops. The sun came out and Moundville was "Mudville" no longer. Roy and his newly adopted brother, Sturgis, decide to restore the old baseball field and just have fun practicing. Soon, other boys and even two girls join them, and a new Moundville team is born. Roy loves being the coach and catcher. Sturgis ends up being quite the pitcher. Team member Rita throws a screwball that nobody can touch, so the team has back up for Sturgis. Rumor has it that there's a new Sinister Bend team, too.
The two teams schedule a game and tension held back for 22 years by the adult populace is ready to burst in anticipation of this rematch.
The big day arrives and both teams are out for blood. Moundville has never won against Sinister Bend because of the anger and supposed curse of a young Dakota boy, Ptan Teca, and his father, Ptan Tanka, or so the legend goes. Ptan Teca was a great athlete way back when and could beat the white colonists at their own game - baseball. Was he the one who "punished" Moundville with the 22 years of rain? What would be next? You will just have to read this fantastic book to see who won the game, to immerse yourself in the game of baseball and the weird weather surrounding Moundville.
I LOVED this book! It made me laugh, cry, guffaw, howl, and be drawn totally into the weird world Author Kurtis Scaletta created and have it feel "normal". Most of all, I "felt" every pitch, catch, fly ball, etc., and remembered all the nuances of living and breathing baseball like I did when I was that age, also! Bravo, Kurtis, for a terrific job well done! Wohoooooooo!
BY: Gayle Jacobson-Huset Stories for Children Magazine
I am a 15 year old male. This book would be good for 7th graders. I enjoyed the book because I am a huge fan of baseball. The story begins with you meeting Roy at his summer baseball camp at a local university. He gets home he finds out that he has a new roommate. His father told him that the boy was from a foster home that his father had signed up for. The town in which they live, Moundville, has been going through a 22 year span of rain everyday. The new roommate has never played baseball before. One day, about a week after he moved in, the rain stopped. After the rain stopped, Roy and Sturgis,the new roommate, started throwing the ball back and forth, and Roy thought he would be a good pitcher. Since the town as not had a dry day in a while, the kids in the town decided to start a new baseball team. Roy was elected captain. Everyone in the town was really excited that they had a team again, because before the rain started every 4th of July the Moundville team would play against their rivals, the Sinister Bend team. But they can not do that anymore because the place where Sinister Bend used to be is now completely distroyed from the rain. The team asks the local private high school to play a game against them. To find out more about Roy, Strugis, and Moundvill, you will have to read the novel for yourself, and believe me, it's worth it!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted February 4, 2012
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted November 3, 2011
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted October 16, 2008
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted May 8, 2011
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted April 16, 2011
No text was provided for this review.
Anonymous
Posted March 10, 2009
No text was provided for this review.
Overview
Welcome to Moundville, where it’s been raining for longer than Roy McGuire has been alive. Most people say the town is cursed—right in the middle of their big baseball game against rival town Sinister Bend, black clouds crept across the sky and it started to rain. That was 22 years ago . . . and it’s still pouring.Baseball camp is over, and Roy knows he’s in for a dreary, soggy summer. But when he returns home, he finds a foster kid named Sturgis sprawled out on his couch. As if this isn’t weird enough, just a few days after Sturgis’s arrival, the sun comes out. No one can explain why the rain has finally stopped, but as far as Roy’s concerned, it’s time to play some baseball. It’s time ...