1 / 7

The Boy Who Saved Baseball: A Tale of Friendship and Community

In the heart of Dillontown, a group of young players from a struggling little league baseball team faces a daunting challenge: save their beloved baseball field from being lost forever. With realistic characters and relatable conflicts, "The Boy Who Saved Baseball" explores themes of friendship, resilience, and the importance of community. This engaging story emphasizes the passion for the game and the power of teamwork as they devise a plan to reclaim their field and keep the spirit of baseball alive in their town.

ulric
Télécharger la présentation

The Boy Who Saved Baseball: A Tale of Friendship and Community

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genre Project English 10 Mrs. Reddish

  2. The Boy Who Saved BaseballBy John H. Ritter Garrett Taylor

  3. What is it? The setting takes place in Dillontown and is about a towns little league baseball team who’s trying to save the baseball field they play on. Attribute: Realistic characters in the book that you could know in real life. Title: The Boy Who Saved Baseball What is your book’s genre? Write it here: Realistic Fiction Attribute: The setting seems real as if you could go and visit them. Like it’s a town in the middle of nowhere. Attribute: This novel is Realistic fiction because the conflict is possible in a industrializing town. Example: The Outsiders by S.E Hinton Example: A Corner of The Universe by Ann M. Martin Example: A Boy At War by Harry Mazer

  4. Realistic characters in the book that you could know in real life. Middle “We’ll simply drill on [the] fundamentals.(100-101) End Beginning “Warm up. I want you to throw some batting practice.(101) “Yep, And Tom and I have a plan to get it. Tell’em Tom.(56)

  5. The setting seems real as if you could go and visit them. Like it’s a town in the middle of nowhere. Beginning End Middle “But they agree on this. From the old-times in their overalls over on Main Street, to the seventy-seven keyboard clicking kids down at Scrub Oak Community School, they’ll each and all tell you.”(1) “They’re like these beautiful silver highways circling a giant pearl.” “They’re just a bunch of dust and rocks and boulders,” said Frankie.(121) “He turned and gave the small mountain beyond right field a glance and a nod.” “And I learned to do that right up there.” He began to walk. “Let’s go.”(93)

  6. This novel is Realistic fiction because the conflict is possible in a industrializing town. End Middle Beginning “And when they saw the Indians leave, they swarmed in. They figured the Indians were moving away for good. And by the time the Kumeyaay migrated back the next season, their land was occupied.”(66) “I want each of you to grab a rake or a shovel or a wheelbarrow, and let’s get this field into playable condition.”(34) “Yesterday the mayor stopped by for about the hundredth time. Him and that new banker fellow from Texas who’s been buying up all the land.”(4)

  7. EVALUATION: Is The Boy Who Saved Baseball a good example of Realistic Fiction? • The Boy Who Saved Baseball is a good example of realistic fiction because of the setting, the characters and how they could be standing in front of you and the events how a realistic conflict could happen in any town or city. With some kind of importance not known to those who don’t support it like a playground or in this case an old baseball field.

More Related