by Matt Christopher
Summary
Eleven year old Cole Richards loves karate more than anything. Currently he is a blue belt, practicing hard for his test to become a green belt. He is a very kind boy, but a girl Monique who already has her green belt just rubs him the wrong way. Cole is faced with a dilemma when he hears about a kata contest, create your own karate routine, and receives an invitation to test for his green belt on the same day. He goes to the park to practice and is confronted with high school bullies. One of them seems especially keen to fight Cole, but he doesn't. One of the other boys warns Cole to be careful is he is ever left alone with Darren. Cole goes to practice with one of his friends and Monique, and after she leaves they find her kata plan, even though she had told them she wasn't planning on entering. His friend Marty says taking it is not the karate way, but he takes it anyway. On his way home he sees Monique working with Sensei Ann to ward off weapons, and Darren finds him. It turns out to be Ty, the boy who warned Cole about Darren, in an attempt to prove to Darren that he shouldn't mess with Cole. Through Ty's story about quitting karate, Cole learns that as a young girl, Monique had a violent encounter with a stranger, so he now understands why she works so hard. Cole completed his testing for his green belt and earned it, and for the kata contest he and Marty learned Monique's kata and surprised her by performing it with her. He explained at the end that he learned again that he needs to remember to respect everyone, as that is one of the main lessons in karate.
Discussion
This book is written very well, and is appropriate for grades 2-3. Matt Christopher has the number one sports series for kids, and I understand why. His writing is engaging yet filled with factual information about the sport it focuses on. It embodies the worries of younger children as they incorporate sports into moral stories of growth. In this case, Cole learned that respect is key in growth, which also happens to be a key in karate. The facts about karate are clear, and they would make any child studying karate very engaged in this book, as it is a sport that is rarely written about. This is much better for an independent read, and can be placed in a classroom for free read but probably should not be read aloud due to the select crowd it addresses.
Christopher, M., & Peters, S. (2009). Karate Kick (Matt Christopher Sports Fiction). New York: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
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